Various community groups have used squatting as a tactic both to call for improved housing and to house the homeless. The
Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN) made a national campaign in 1979. Operation Homestead (OH) occupied 300 units in
Seattle in the early 1990s. In New York City, squatters occupied 32 buildings, some of which the
Urban Homesteading Assistance Board (UHAB) then helped to legalize.
ACORN Community organizations have helped the homeless to take over vacant buildings not only as a place to live but also a part of larger campaign to shine a light on inequity in housing and advocate change in housing and land issues. The
Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now (or ACORN) was one of the first organizations in the US to launch a national squatting campaign to challenge and transform federal and local housing policies to provide for more affordable housing. In 1979, ACORN launched a squatting campaign to protest the mismanagement of the
Urban Homesteading Program. This housed 200 people in 13 cities between 1979 and 1982. In 1981, ACORN and the Inner-City Organizing Network moved hundreds of people into vacant buildings in Philadelphia. The actions created such an upheaval that the Federal government got involved, offering housing to the squatters in the 67 federally owned buildings if they agreed to leave. Between June 15 and August 2, 1985, ACORN supported homeless people to take over 25 city-owned buildings in the
East New York neighborhood of
Brooklyn. During the incident, 11 people were arrested. The City responded by granting the former squatters 58 city owned buildings, money for technical and architectural aid, and $2.7 million in rehabilitation loans. In order to preserve democratic decision making and affordability to the buildings the squatters organized themselves into collective members of a
Mutual Housing Association. In a mutual housing association, neighborhood residents form a collective, contributing some money and a lot of
sweat equity to rehabilitate buildings for their own use in return for public support and limited ownership. The collective – in this case the
Mutual Housing Association of New York – retains title to the land. If owners choose to sell, the association has the right to repurchase for a price reflecting only individual investment, not the market. As a direct result of the protest, the building was renovated and turned into 37 low-income housing units. Arion Court became the first self-managed permanent housing project for previously homeless people in Washington State. Residents decide the rules and how to enforce them. In 1992, OH occupied the Pacific Hotel, prompting the house to be turned over to a nonprofit for low-income housing. It functioned as an emergency shelter until it was renovated and converted into 113 affordable housing units. OH also did occupations of the McKay Apartments and the Gatewood Hotel. Another community organization is
Take Back the Land, a Miami-based, self-proclaimed "housing liberation" group that formed in 2006. They break into vacant, unused bank-owned foreclosed homes and move homeless people inside. Take Back the Land organized a shantytown called the Umoja Village to squat a vacant lot in 2006 and 2007.
Homes Not Jails in San Francisco advocates squatting houses to end the problem of homelessness. It has opened "about 500 houses, 95% of which have lasted six months or less. In a few cases, squats have lasted for two, three or even six years." Other groups working for housing justice include Picture the Homeless (New York City), MORE (Missourians Organizing for Reform and Empowerment – St. Louis), Right 2 Survive (Portland, Oregon), Organizing for Occupation (New York City), PUSH (People United for Sustainable Housing – Buffalo, New York), ONE DC (Washington DC), LIFFT (Low Income Families Fighting Together – Miami). as a movement with members squatting and encouraging the practice of squatting.
New York City . In New York City, the
Urban Homesteading Assistance Board (UHAB) was at the forefront of a
homesteading movement in the 1970s and 1980s. In 1995, a preliminary injunction was granted against the eviction plans, but this was overturned by state appellate. More recently, in 2002 the UHAB liaised with the city to legitimize the efforts of squatters in 11 buildings on the Lower East Side. The first project to successfully renovate was
Umbrella House. In 2012, the
Museum of Reclaimed Urban Space opened at a fourth project,
C-Squat.
Homeless people squatting in underground spaces in New York City such as
Freedom Tunnel have come to be known as
Mole People which was the subject of a documentary film
Dark Days. ==Legal==