Full-Time
Posted on 9/17/2025
Public housing authority administering housing vouchers
$70k - $75k/yr
No H1B Sponsorship
Chicago, IL, USA
Hybrid
This position may be eligible for remote work following a successful completion of a 90-day probationary period according to CHA’s established policies and procedures.
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The Chicago Housing Authority (CHA) provides affordable housing in Chicago by owning and managing over 21,000 public housing units and administering the Housing Choice Voucher (HCV) program for low-income residents. Its housing options combine direct property management with voucher assistance to help families secure safe homes and navigate housing options. CHA differentiates itself through its Plan for Transformation and community development efforts, partnering with private businesses and organizations to reintegrate residents into the urban fabric and expand economic opportunities, including the Family Self Sufficiency (FSS) program that supports asset building. Its goal is to provide stable, affordable housing while promoting neighborhood revitalization and economic growth for residents, guided by a Board of Commissioners appointed by the Mayor of Chicago.
Company Size
501-1,000
Company Stage
N/A
Total Funding
N/A
Headquarters
Chicago, Illinois
Founded
2004
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Paid Vacation
Paid Sick Leave
Health Insurance
Dental Insurance
Vision Insurance
Life Insurance
Short-Term Disability Insurance
Long-Term Disability Insurance
Long-Term Care Insurance
Pet Insurance
Commuter Benefits
Prepaid Legal Services
Brightstar 529 College Savings Plan
Identity Theft Protection
Hospital Indemnity Insurance
Voluntary Critical Illness Insurance
401(k) Company Match
401(k) Retirement Plan
Hybrid Work Options
Top Johnson aide says there will be 'consequences' for CHA power struggle over new CEO. Cristina Pacione-Zayas, Mayor Brandon Johnson's chief of staff, says the CHA board will have to answer for hiring a new CEO after what the administration claims was an illegal process that violated the Illinois Open Meetings Act. Apr 3, 2026, 11:51am PDT A top mayoral aide said Friday there will be "consequences" for the Chicago Housing Authority's decision to hire a new CEO whom Mayor Brandon Johnson has never met, after what the administration claims was a secret process that violated the Illinois Open Meetings Act. Mayor Brandon Johnson's chief of staff, Cristina Pacione-Zayas, refused to say what those consequences would be for a CHA board that bypassed Johnson's recommendation of former Ald. Walter Burnett (27th) in favor of Keith Pettigrew, who currently serves as executive director of the District of Columbia Housing Authority. But she hinted that Johnson was prepared to wage a legal battle with the CHA board that defied him and, as she put it, "knowingly" violated its "oath to uphold the law of the land locally, state as well as federal." "If this board operated in a way that violated one of the key pieces of any public body - and that is the Open Meetings Act to ensure the transparency of all the steps that these officials are required to take when you are fiduciary of public resources - then there will be some consequences around that," she said. "I can't say what they are, but I can tell you that we don't have these laws just to say them. They actually do have teeth and they do have expectations... There will be some activity in the coming weeks that you will see and we'll have to see how this plays out. The mayor stands firm [in his belief that] the process did not follow what is statutorily required and [CHA Board Chair Matthew Brewer] is going to have to answer to that as the chair." Pacione-Zayas compared what she called the CHA's secret process to the transparent process at Chicago Public Schools that culminated in the partially elected, partially appointed school board's decision to give Interim CEO Macquline King the permanent job with a three-year contract at a starting salary of $380,000. "It was posted well in advance that a contract would be executed with a named candidate for a special meeting. These are pretty basic guidelines and standards," Pacione-Zayas said. Earlier this week, Johnson took his power struggle for control over the CHA to a new level. The mayor acted to remove Brewer as board chair and interim operating chairman in apparent retaliation for Brewer's role in engineering Pettigrew's appointment. The CHA board's 7-2 vote was a political defeat for Johnson, who favored Burnett and has spent months seeking the federal waivers needed to resolve Burnett's apparent conflicts of interest. Brewer argues that Johnson's issues with the CHA board's vote have "nothing to do with violating the law." "They have to do with the mayor not getting the person he wanted as CEO," he said. Brewer said he is "very confident" that the CHA board he chairs "complied with all applicable laws," including the Open Meetings Act that allows personnel matters to be listed as such and debated behind closed doors. "I am a lawyer who hates lawsuits. So I'm never going to say, 'Bring it on.' I'm not picking a fight. I'm not inviting a fight. But if we have to fight, we will fight," Brewer said. The embattled CHA chair maintained that the mayor's office interviewed Pettigrew about a year ago. It was only then at the end of a search process that dragged on for more than a year that Johnson, as Brewer put it, said, "'I want my guy to come in' and disregarded this entire process." "It's ironic that they're saying that I violated process and I made some unilateral decision," Brewer said. Pacione-Zayas questioned how Pettigrew can preside over a $1.4 billion agency that serves 65,000 households and includes some of Chicago's poorest residents. "I'm personally confused. I don't know how, if you're a candidate and you have not met the principal that appoints the board - I don't know how you can really move forward. It's really striking," Pacione-Zayas said Friday. "If I were the candidate, I would be asking the board, 'How come I haven't met the principal and I'd like to set that up.'... It's concerning." Burnett's apparent conflicts of interest, according to the CHA and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, were with his 30-year record as alderman and longtime ownership of properties rented to housing voucher holders. Since 2007, Burnett and his wife have collected more than $260,000 as CHA voucher landlords. The board has been unable to consider Burnett, whom many CHA residents opposed, until the agency receives HUD-approved conflict waivers. 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Chicago Housing Authority appoints Keith Pettigrew as new CEO. The board vote comes after 18 months without a permanent CEO at the housing authority. Mar 17, 2026, 8:50am PDT The Chicago Housing Authority appointed a new CEO: Keith Pettigrew, the executive director of the District of Columbia Housing Authority. The vote comes after 18 months without a permanent CEO at the housing authority and marks a win for the CHA board over Mayor Brandon Johnson. The CHA voted seven to two with one abstention at its Tuesday board meeting. The Sun-Times previously reported that Pettigrew said he withdrew his application for the CHA job in May 2025. This is a developing story. Chicago Sun-TimesContributor As part of a weekly audio segment, we want to help you tackle your personal finance questions. Keep Watching Fire department 'heartbroken' after firefighter battling Rogers Park blaze dies Fire department 'heartbroken' after firefighter battling Rogers Park blaze dies Next Up In News
Chicago Housing Authority moves to revoke board member's housing subsidy. The head of the CHA asked Mayor Brandon Johnson this week to consider removing longtime Commissioner Debra Parker from the agency's board. Mar 13, 2026, 3:24pm PDT The Chicago Housing Authority is trying to take away the housing subsidy it gives to one of its own board members, alleging longtime Commissioner Debra Parker was caught violating the rules of the agency's voucher program, the Sun-Times and WBEZ have learned. CHA Board Chair and interim Operating Chairman Matthew Brewer told Mayor Brandon Johnson this week that he should consider removing Parker from the board after a hearing officer for the agency upheld the termination of her voucher last month. "The findings of fraud and intentional deception in relation to CHA housing programs raise substantial concerns regarding Commissioner Parker's fiduciary responsibility," Brewer wrote to Johnson in a letter sent Wednesday and obtained by the Sun-Times. "These shadows of fraud and deception threaten public confidence in the integrity of both the Chicago Housing Authority as well as the city of Chicago," Brewer wrote. In an interview Friday, Parker said the CHA "violated my civil rights." Court records show Parker sued the CHA and Brewer in Cook County Circuit Court, seeking an emergency hearing to prevent the revocation of the housing subsidy. A judge set a hearing for Wednesday. "I cannot afford the full rent for my unit; I depend on the CHA subsidy," Parker wrote in a court filing Thursday. "By stopping the subsidy while my petition is pending, I will be evicted by my landlord and I will become homeless." Parker has been on the CHA board since 2018, when she was appointed by then-Mayor Rahm Emanuel. At that time, Parker was touted as the first voucher beneficiary to become a commissioner. The voucher program, widely known as Section 8, is the nation's primary subsidized housing initiative, with tenants in privately owned housing paying 30% of their income toward rent and the housing authority covering the rest. State law requires the housing authority's 10-member board of commissioners to include three CHA residents. Johnson's spokesperson said Friday officials had begun looking into the issues raised in the letter, but she did not know whether the mayor had made a decision. "This is an important issue for us and for the mayor," the spokesperson said. Parker told WBEZ in a text message on Friday, "I'm remaining on the board." A WBEZ investigation revealed in October that the housing authority had paid a total of more than $22 million to companies owned by Parker's longtime boyfriend, her sister and her daughter. The commissioner has denied helping her boyfriend and family members to get lucrative business with the CHA, saying board members have no role in contracting decisions at the agency. Parker's alleged 'intent to deceive or mislead' In his letter to the mayor, CHA leader Brewer told Johnson that a hearing officer for the agency's Housing Choice Voucher program - which gives subsidies to low-income renters - conducted a multiday hearing and "affirmed termination of Commissioner Parker from the HCV program" last month. Brewer summarized what he said were the hearing officer's findings for the mayor. Parker "underreported income and household members, resulting in receipt of housing subsidy for which she was not eligible," according to the letter. Brewer also wrote that Parker did not disclose income from a job with "another housing authority." Although Brewer did not name that housing authority, documents obtained by WBEZ through an open-records request show Parker began working for the Aurora Housing Authority in 2024 and was earning a salary of $55,000 a year there as of November. Brewer wrote that the CHA "incurred overpayments of at least $12,000" involving Parker's voucher, but the exact amount "remains unknown" because Parker would not produce the tax documents and business income records that the agency requested. "The hearing officer found a 'pattern of actions made with the intent to deceive or mislead, constituting a false statement, omission, or concealment of a substantive fact,'" Brewer wrote to Johnson. Brewer added that the agency also determined that Parker's "undisclosed business income was associated with more than $1 million in CHA contracts connected to a household member." Brewer did not identify that household member in the letter. WBEZ reported last year that the CHA had paid more than $1 million to her daughter's company, about $15.1 million to her sister's company and nearly $6 million to Parks and Bell Cleaning Co., owned by Parker's longtime boyfriend, Charles Bell. Parker was involved with Parks and Bell as a board member when it was founded more than a decade ago but stepped down from that role after becoming a CHA commissioner, according to public records. Although court documents show Parker gets a subsidy to rent a house on the South Side, emails obtained from the CHA indicated that she and Bell toured and applied to rent a market-rate unit in a luxury high-rise in River North in 2023, with an agent offering them a one-year, $4,000-a-month lease for an apartment there. Asked about that situation last year, Parker and Bell told WBEZ that they do not live together and that only Bell lives in the apartment near downtown. In her new court case against the CHA, Parker noted that the agency terminated rental assistance for her in a letter on Feb. 27, and that the agency will no longer pay for part of the rent as of the end of this month. The same day that she got the revocation letter, Parker went to court and filed "for judicial review of the final decision of the CHA to terminate my benefits." She argued that the revocation of her voucher was "not in accordance with the law," court records show. Parker filed the case herself but the court referred her to a legal-aid group that could provide free services, records show. Asked about Parker's complaint against him and the CHA, Brewer said in an interview Friday, "I don't think I personally should be named, but I understand she's exercising her right to have a potential stay in the termination of her voucher." Brewer said he has not heard back from Johnson or his aides since sending the letter about Parker to the mayor. The letter was copied to the mayor's chief of staff and the Johnson administration's top lawyer. Brewer said he felt his letter was "very compelling" but would not say whether he thought the mayor should remove Parker from the CHA board. "I think the facts speak for themselves," Brewer said. "The mayor, if he asks my opinion, I will tell him." The mayor has sole authority to nominate and remove CHA board members. Parker was reappointed for a second three-year term as commissioner by then-Mayor Lori Lightfoot in 2021, with City Council confirming that decision. Parker has continued to serve after the term expired in July 2024. The mayor made an effort in February to shake up the housing authority board by moving to replace two other commissioners whose terms had expired with two new board members, but the appointments were stalled in the City Council. The mayor wants retired Ald. Walter Burnett to be the CHA's next CEO but doesn't have much support for that from the current agency board. The housing authority has been without a permanent CEO since Nov. 1, 2024, when Tracey Scott resigned from that post. Accusations against Parker's sister, daughter. While Parker has been fighting to keep her voucher, her sister and daughter have disputed the findings of investigations into them by the office of CHA Inspector General Kathryn Richards. Angela Parker, the commissioner's sister, tried to overbill the agency repeatedly, for a total of more than $175,000, according to a report last year from Richards' office. The IG alleged that Parker was confronted about her "exorbitant proposals" to the housing authority and then turned hostile toward the CHA staff who questioned her, threatening to complain to the CHA's chief executive or the board. Richards recommended that CHA officials punish Angela Parker however they "deemed appropriate," with the options including terminating her contract or blocking her from doing any more business with the agency. But a CHA official decided instead "to issue a warning letter" to Angela Parker, who has denied any wrongdoing. The CHA also recently reversed course and cleared Debra Parker's daughter, Lovie Diggs, to do business with the agency after another investigation by the IG's office. Diggs was arrested by Chicago police in February 2023 and indicted by a Cook County grand jury, accused of using another woman's identity to get more than $5,000 in merchandise from a Bob's Discount Furniture store in Calumet City. The case was closed in 2024, when prosecutors agreed to drop a felony identity theft charge and Diggs entered a guilty plea to a misdemeanor disorderly conduct charge. Richards' office concluded that Diggs' legal issues were cause to block her from doing business "on a permanent basis" as a prime contractor, subcontractor or supplier on any CHA deal. Agency officials then began the process to debar Diggs but dropped the matter last year, after Diggs protested the proposed sanction. Lizzie Kane is a freelance reporter for the Sun-Times. Dan Mihalopoulos is an investigative reporter for WBEZ. Chicago Sun-TimesContributor WBEZInvestigations reporter Keep Watching With Big Dance next, is Illinois a fatally flawed team? Has to be asked after déjà vu loss to Wisconsin With Big Dance next, is Illinois a fatally flawed team? Has to be asked after déjà vu loss to Wisconsin
More than 1,500 seniors walk the red carpet at 42nd annual CHA Senior Gala. Event supports CHA's mission of ensuring the well-being of seniors. CHICAGO (Dec. 22, 2025): For the 42nd year, Chicago Housing Authority seniors gathered to celebrate the season - and themselves - at the CHA Senior Gala. More than 1,500 CHA seniors converged on the Marriott Marquis on Dec. 13 for an afternoon of holiday cheer. They were bused in from all over Chicago for the event, which featured lunch, music, dancing and good times. Operating Chairman Matthew Brewer said the Senior Gala speaks to CHA's mission of ensuring the well-being and health of the more than 26,000 seniors that live across all CHA programs. "Today is a special day because it's an opportunity to give flowers to you all," Brewer told the gathering. "You are the backbone of our communities, the protectors of our families and we appreciate the work you've done and the commitments and sacriices you've made. So today is a day we can take the opportunity to say thank you." "Our seniors continue to enrich our city every day, their wisdom and lived experiences are a valuable guide for us all. As a city, we must do everything we can to embrace, support, and empower our elders - that's why events like this are so important. I want to thank CHA Commissioner, Dr. Mildred Harris, and the entire CHA team for making today happen." For 42 years, the seniors have dressed up in their finest attire, mingled with friends and had a good time. Saturday was no different on the red carpet. Ann Milsteis is a building ambassador at CHA's Hattie Callner Apartments. It was her first time attending the Senior Gala. "I was gifted a ticket to this wonderful event, and here I am," Milsteis said. "It was a wonderful afternoon and was nice getting together with everybody and the meal was wonderful. It was great to see the solidarity of all the people housed in CHA. I am very pleased and I will be back next year." Attendee Michael G. Smith said this was his first CHA event in several years. "What brought me here was to see if I could run into some legacies from when I was a shorty growing up in CHA housing. And that happened," he said. "We all want to shed a tear but I was holding it in. But it was very emotional. And now that I have photos of that I can post it. And this is how you pass on those legacies."
Chicago Housing Authority sues HUD over new anti-dei grant requirements. The city agency, which provides subsidized housing for low-income individuals, is seeking a temporary restraining order in the case to halt the implementation of the new grant prerequisites. The Chicago Housing Authority is suing President Donald Trump's administration over new requirements targeting "diversity" that could threaten up to 13% of the agency's annual budget, according to a news release from the housing agency. The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development recently changed their grants, requiring recipients sign on to certify none of the funds will be used for "diversity, equity and inclusion mandates, policies or programs," gender ideology; elective abortions; and immigration-related policies. The federal lawsuit filed by the CHA is challenging that new mandate, and is seeking a temporary restraining order to halt the implementation of the new prerequisites. HUD's grant applications are due Oct. 21, but city officials argue they were unable to apply because the federal agency, "provided no additional information or clarification on these requirements" outside quoting recent executive orders. "This lawsuit is intended to secure the future of funding for our 135,000 residents throughout the city of Chicago, including thousands of senior residents and children who rely on us. We are asking the court to step in and provide guidance on the lawfulness of the conditions HUD is seeking to impose," said CHA Operating Chairman Matthew Brewer. "This intervention is a necessary last resort since our discussions with HUD have been limited due to the government shutdown." HUD didn't immediately respond to a request for comment, citing the federal government shut down. In a statement, city officials pointed to a recent preliminary injunction in a similar Rhode Island case in which domestic violence and housing advocacy groups sued over similar changes to grant application requirements. In that case, U.S. District judge Melissa R. DuBose didn't mandate the dispersal of funds, but temporarily restricted the new federal requirements for grants from moving forward. Her order cited potential violations of the Administrative Procedure Act - which prohibits the federal government from imposing specific conditions on a subset of grants - as well as "irreparable harm" to the groups seeking the funds. "The Plaintiffs stand between a rock and a hard place, and surely such a high stakes dilemma constitutes irreparable harm in the eyes of this Court," DuBose said in her order. "Without preliminary relief, the Plaintiffs will face irreparable harm that will disrupt vital services to victims of homelessness and domestic and sexual violence. Defendants will merely need to revert back to considering grant applications and awarding funds as they normally would." Chicago Sun-Times News reporter