The Colorado Springs Pro-Housing Partnership (COSPHP) is seeking a full-time Lead Tenant Organizer to spearhead its structure-based organizing work with tenants in Colorado Springs, building a base of tenant power and helping tenant leaders create the structures needed to wield that power effectively in the short- and long-term.
About the COSPHP
The COSPHP’s mission is to build power among housing insecure residents of Colorado Springs to win concrete changes to city policy, resource allocation, and development processes needed to ensure everyone in Colorado Springs has a safe, stable, and affordable place to live. It was founded in 2019 as an informal housing advocacy group and shifted direction in 2022 to focus on grassroots organizing. In 2024, it hired its first and only full-time staff member, opened an office space, and was recognized by the IRS as a 501(c)3 non-profit. It is now ready to expand to three full-time staff, including an Executive Director, Lead Tenant Organizer, and Lead Neighborhood Organizer. The founder and current Interim Executive Director has chosen to transition into the role of Lead Neighborhood Organizer.
Our organizing work focuses on specific neighborhoods, apartment buildings, and mobile home parks, as well as with the unhoused community—the places the housing crisis is showing up most severely—because we believe the people most impacted by housing injustice must lead the movement to address it. We organize residents around issues they identify—displacement due to gentrification, mistreatment from landlords, over policing, etc.—with the dual goals of winning changes on their issues and building power towards city-level housing policy change in the future.
Right now, we are organizing within four such communities:
– The Mill St neighborhood, to combat gentrification and displacement through a Community Benefit Agreement
– Tenants of public housing, against mistreatment from building managers
– The unhoused community, to improve local shelter, outreach, and long-term housing solutions
– A coalition of five neighborhoods at risk of gentrification, to create an anti-displacement toolkit for the city
Responsibilities
The Lead Tenant Organizer will be responsible for:
– Spearheading the COSPHP’s current tenant organizing efforts, supporting the Centennial Plaza Tenants Association and tenants at other buildings working to organize their neighbors with the support of the COSPHP.
– Creating and executing a strategy to expand the COSPHP’s tenant organizing work, including with tenants of both publicly and privately owned housing.
– Collaborating with current tenant leaders and others in the community interested in tenant organizing to create the structures needed for a citywide tenants union in Colorado Springs.
– Plugging into, wherever possible, the state- and nationwide tenant movement.
– Leading event planning for events related to the COSPHP’s tenant organizing work
– Communicating about the COSPHP’s tenant organizing work to the organization’s Board, potential funders, the media, and the general public, whenever appropriate.
– Collaborating with the Lead Neighborhood Organizer and Executive Director on the COSPHP’s other work, including the Mill St CBA campaign, other neighborhood-based organizing drives, the Colorado Springs Homeless Union, and fundraising, occasionally taking the lead on these efforts as needed. (The Lead Tenant Organizer will also be able to count on similar support from the COSPHP’s other two staff members for all of their primary responsibilities.)
– Participating in relevant organizing training and regular organizing skills practice with other staff at the COSPHP.
– Other duties as needed
Qualifications
Required:
– At least 1.5 years of structure-based organizing experience. Structure-based organizing refers to organizing work that happens within existing social structures that people belong to because of life circumstances rather than values or ideology. Examples of structures include workplaces, apartment buildings, mobile home parks, neighborhoods, houses of worship, and schools. It is distinct from issue-based organizing/mobilizing, which brings together people who share a set of values, such as concern over climate change, police brutality, or gun violence.
– A demonstrated understanding of and commitment to grassroots organizing as the primary vehicle for positive social change
– Ability to organically relate to people of all backgrounds, including people with lived experience with homelessness and housing insecurity
– Ability to work well with a team
– Experience leading democratic decision-making processes
– Proficiency in English and Spanish
Strongly Preferred:
– Knowledge of local, statewide, or national housing policy and market dynamics
– A history of grassroots community work in Colorado Springs
– A working understanding of how city/local governments operate
Time Commitment
The Lead Tenant Organizer will work 30-50 hours per week, recognizing that organizing work ebbs and flows—some periods of time will be busier than others. Hours are irregular, with frequent work evenings and weekends, but the ability to flex hours to take personal time during regular working hours (9-5) to compensate for work in the evenings and on weekends. Work is primarily in-person, with the option to work virtually available when it doesn’t interfere with the organization’s work. The Lead Tenant Organizer must live in the Pikes Peak Region.