The university additionally pledged financial and
educational support for the future mixed-income housing complex
Mayor Nutter announced Tuesday that Philadelphia will
receive the $30 million CHOICE neighborhood grant from the U.S. Department of
Housing and Urban Development that will help renovate the Norris Apartments
east of Main Campus. As part of the revitalization project, Temple will provide
an additional $1 million and create programs to aid local public schools.
The grant will partially fund a renovation of the 147
low-income units in the Norris Apartments complex, which are owned by the
Philadelphia Housing Authority. These will be replaced with 300 low-income
eco-friendly housing units.
The project is expected to take five years and is set to
begin in six to nine months.
Additional plans for the project include an expansion of the
complex’s community center, a new workforce center, 2,000 square-feet of
commercial retail space, a community park and 75 underground parking spaces.
The grant is a part of a transformation plan which aims to
revitalize and rebuild the distressed North Central Philadelphia neighborhoods,
an area that has 64.9 percent of its households living below the poverty line,
according to PHA.
The grant will also allow for the implementation of a loan
fund to assist in the founding of businesses on Germantown Avenue, as part of a
citywide effort to provide jobs and help strengthen the neighborhood.
“Our strategy builds on programs that work,” said Melissa
Long, deputy director at the Office of Housing and Community Development. “They
are proven and we’re building taking those programs and moving them to get that
market stronger and moving up and north.”
An additional $125 million in funding for the project is
expected to come from the city, state and private sources over time.
The area that will be affected by the combined funding will
be approximately bounded by 6th Street to the east, York Street to the north,
16th Street to the West and Cecil B. Moore Avenue to the south.
“I look forward to implementing this grant and working to
continue to rebuild this neighborhood so it will genuinely be a neighborhood of
choice,” said City Council president Darrell Clarke, whose fifth district
includes the neighborhood.
Temple, a partner in the plan to transform the surrounding
neighborhood, promised $1.2 million in funding dispersed over 5 years for
neighborhood improvement programs. The university has partnered with the
nonprofit organization, EducationWorks, to provide high school training
programs offering afterschool tutoring, college and career training and
counseling to residents. A new educational engagement coordinator position will
also be created with university funds.
Gregory Anderson, the dean of the College of Education,
could not be reached for comment.
One of the plan’s phases involves relocation of the 373
residents currently living in the Norris Apartments. The residents will receive
145 vouchers to relocate for the duration of the construction, with temporary
homes available throughout the United States and Puerto Rico. They have been
promised first pick of the newly built homes as long as they are in
“good-standing” with their lease.
Residents that are being relocated during the construction
of the new mixed income housing fear they may not be able to come back as
promised or afford the new units.
“How can the low income people afford to come back here?”
said Norrman Summer, a resident of the Norris apartments. “It’s impossible you
promising something that basically can’t happen.”
Jo’Rhodie Smith, an elderly resident of the Norris
Apartments for more than 30 years sat outside during the announcement of the
grant. She said she was not notified about the press conference taking place
and found out about it after hearing a noise outside of her home.
“I don’t want to go to no man’s land,” Smith said. “I know
that we do need to make a change but I’m not going nowhere. I’ll fight that.
I’ve been here too long.”
This $30 million grant is the second of its kind for PHA in
the last year. In November 2013, the housing authority received a $500,000
CHOICE neighborhood planning grant.
Source: Temple
News
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