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VHDA Homeownership Education Program
Sat Nov 22
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Renovated house in Church Hill Close to downtown MCV, VCU, State offices. Located at 1305 N 28th Street 1500 square feet - 3 bedrooms 2.5 bathrooms W/D brand new appliances Central heat and air Back deck off kitchen PETS welcome 804.503.1858
2610 E. Marshall $115,000 Gutted to the studs & much mechanical work finished. Manageable square footage, even for the first timer. Walk to everywhere cool! Shannon RE/MAX Commonwealth 484 0367 shannonharrington.net
718 Chimborazo Blvd. Move in ready, 3 Bedrooms, newly renovated, great for students. On the busline. Willing to rent two individual rooms for $500.00 or the entire unit for a $1000.00. Rent includes water and sec. system. Call 221-6310 for showings.
512 N 26th St - room for rent, private entrance & private bath. Utilities included for $675. Call 804.683.4821 for more info.
Lease/Purchase at the Villas of Oakwood. Condos on the east tip of Church Hill most priced under $100,000. Lease for $650-$675 mo. Darlene Brent 477-3807 Long & Foster
HOME FOR SALE: 2703 M.STREET $219,000 - 3BR/2.5BA- FULLY RENOVATED W/ ATTENTION TO HISTORIC DETAIL AND MODERN LIVING. CALL KAREN STEPHENS FOR MORE INFORMATION & PRIVATE SHOWING 804.484.3348 (OPEN HOUSE SUN. NOV. 16TH 12-1:30PM)
Korpal Landscape and Design is now serving your neighborhood! Let us get your lawn and garden ready for winter. Call for a free estimate 804-240-2284 - No Obligation
Korpal Landscape and Design is now serving your neighborhood! Let us get your lawn and garden ready for winter. Call for a free estimate 804-240-2284 - No Obligation
Legal secretary with 20+ yrs exp. will help you get a VA uncontested divorce. 3+ me successful divorces so far; know the procedure, have and will type forms and give complete steps on the process. Fee of $60.00. Contact lucienepenny@comcast.net.
Experienced carpenter and painter specializing in historic home repairs. Highly reasonable rates; excellent references available. Contact Bill at (804) 317-7578 or at wswbalvis@hotmail.com for free estimate.
Historically appropriate storm windows, window restoration and old house consulting. Call Old House Authority, 804-648-1616.
EAST END FELLOWSHIP: a multi-ethnic neighborhood congregation meeting on Sunday afternoons at 4pm. Come join us at Franklin Military Academy, 701 N. 37th St. Contact coreyjwidmer@gmail.com




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comment   post to delicous
November 18, 2005

City Edition on public housing

The November 14 edition of the print-only City Edition has a long article by Paul Spicer on the current discussion on the future of public housing in Richmond.

Much of the article is informed by the point of view of Marylin Olds, Tenant Council President of Creighton Court on the RRHA’s Board of Commissioners and life-long Creighton Court (.pdf) resident.

The article also quotes Sheila Hill-Christian, reiterating the RRHA’s commitment to its 5-year Strategic Plan (.pdf) and stated objectives that include “develop mixed use/mixed income planned communities” and to “deconcentrate poverty”.

Posted at 8:32PM under Creighton, community, redevelopment

3 Responses to “City Edition on public housing”

  1. posted by Bob Stokes at November 21, 2005 1:18 pm :

    The recent stories in the press about PH in Richmond, along with the news of the recent shootings, led me to the RRHA web site.

    A cursory examination of the RRHAs demographic report from 2001 revealed that of the 9000 residents in the city’s non-elderly developments, over 5000 (55%) are children under 18 (the city average, removing PH residents is 21%). There were a grand total of 26 married couples in these developments in 2001. The average income for a household was $9200 (which resulted in an average rent payment in the non-elderly apartments of $180 a month). Public housing residents comprised 25% of the city’s poverty total of 38000. The average length of stay was around 8 years. There were but 2 non-minority headed households out of the 3240 non-elderly households in 2001.

    So, if these places are so bad, why is there a large (and recently re-opened) waiting list to get into one of these developments? I am guessing that $180 in monthly rent for a roof over your family’s head transcends any thoughts on the future social and economic impacts that living in these developments portends for your household. Or, is it much different from the life chances you get from most low income neighborhoods. Thus the question..is public housing itself the culprit, or does the demographic composition of its residents predict its failure? While research on poverty deconcentration programs has revealed mixed/positive results, one thing is sure, doing nothing virtually guarantees failure.

  2. posted by john at November 22, 2005 3:56 pm :

    A related story on nbc12.com doesn’t really say much:

    Richmond’s poorest neighborhoods could get a face-lift in the coming years, but the idea has some families worried they’ll lose their homes.A proposal by the Richmond Redevelopment Housing Authority would get rid of low income developments and create more “mixed income” neighborhoods.Some residents say they can’t afford the homes the plan would create. The proposal is in committee right now.

  3. posted by Bob Stokes at December 4, 2005 1:28 pm :

    Here’s a story in Sunday’s Philadelphia Inquirer about their efforts at reforming public housing (Rising from Ruins).

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