The D.C. Cooperative Housing Coalition exists to advance
the common interests of cooperative housing associations
in the District of Columbia and promote cooperative
housing as a desirable form of home ownership. It is
therefore both an advocacy organization that articulates
the interests of members before government officials and
regulatory agencies and a service organization that
provides information and education to members.
Membership is open to all District housing cooperatives,
regardless of size. A volunteer board of
directors, elected by member co-ops, governs the
Coalition. At least five seats on the board must be filled
by representatives of small (50 or fewer units)
cooperatives. Activities are financed through annual dues
determined by the members at the annual meeting.
The Coalition grew out of an ad hoc group of District
cooperatives that formed in response to a judicial ruling
that had cast a cloud over many cooperatives by banning
proportionate voting. By marshaling the forces of more
than 3,000 units, the ad hoc group persuaded the D.C. City
Council to resolve the matter. Recognizing the importance
to the cooperative housing community of speaking in a
single voice and maintaining the ability to respond
quickly and knowledgeably to matters affecting cooperative
housing, the ad hoc group decided to form a permanent
organization. The Coalition was established in 1984
and was incorporated as the DC/CHC, Inc., a nonprofit
organization in the District of Columbia, in 1993.
The Coalition's most important accomplishment was its work
toward the passage of the Cooperative Housing
Procedure Act of 1988 (D.C. Law 7-205), a law that
provides for uniform procedure and an equitable formula
to assess real property owned by cooperatives.
Up to that time, the District did not have a prescribed
method to estimate fair market value, and as a result
the assessments were arbitrary and unpredictable. It also
successfully opposed a move to charge each cooperative
association $3.00 per unit to fund a new government
agency to oversee cooperatives and condominiums.
It testified before the City Council in support of a
recycling tax credit in lieu of the city collecting
recyclables and successfully opposed a 50 percent
reduction in the trash collection tax credit,
which co-ops and condominiums receive in lieu of the
city collecting their trash.
At the heart of many of these efforts was the defense of
cooperatives before the City Council to maintain parity
between cooperative homeowners and single-family
homeowners rather than to be treated as rental
complexes. Perhaps most important, the Coalition
successfully defended the assessment system it had worked
hard to put in place in 1988 when it warded off proposals
to change the system in recent years.
The Coalition has co-hosted mayoral candidate forums and
recognized Council members who work on behalf of the
interests of housing cooperatives. It has also promoted
public awareness and interest in cooperative ownership by
sponsoring events, most notably a tour of several D.C.
housing cooperatives in 1995 to mark the 75th anniversary
of the first housing cooperative in the District.
One of the most important benefits Coalition members
receive is timely information. The Coalition has conducted
seminars and issued newsletters covering topics as diverse
as elevators, rentals, taxes and oil and gas bulk
purchasing agreements, among others. As a consequence,
members receive information that enable them to anticipate
and address changes affecting their operations.
As it heads toward its 25th anniversary, the Coalition remains the
premier organization devoted to advancing and protecting
the interests of the owners of the approximately 15,000
cooperative units in the District of Columbia.