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Mayor Patrick McCrory Works
With Local Leaders to Bring a Special Needs Housing Project to Charlotte
By Dana Bykowski
July 30, 2002
Mayor Patrick McCrory hosted a CitiesFirst®
Roundtable on May 29th in Charlotte, North Carolina. The roundtable
focused on finding ways to combat some of the affordable housing
needs in Charlotte by bringing together local community leaders
to the table. Kristin Faust, Director of Community Development &
Real Estate for Nehemiah Corporation, represented CitiesFirst®.
We believe in partnership, said
Mayor McCrory. We are so glad that the Conference of Mayors
has partnered with the Nehemiah Corporation, and they are here today
to offer their guidance and resources.
CitiesFirst® selected Charlotte to be one of
their NULT
(Nehemiah Urban Land Trust) cities. NULT is designed to acquire,
manage and preserve housing for social service agencies that assist
low-income, special needs families and individuals. By purchasing
these properties, NULT is able to preserve the long-term use and
affordability for the agency. In mid-July, Nehemiah Corporation
of California and the city of Charlotte held an application session
for local organizations seeking additional funding and housing resources
for their clients. Ten organizations sent in Request for Proposals
(RFPs) to the NULT program. NULT is now working with the city
of Charlotte to choose an organization that will receive funding
for the NULT project. As soon as that part of the process is completed,
CitiesFirst® will work as quickly as possible with that organization
to house those who are in need of a particular social service.
Some of the other issues that were discussed at the
roundtable centered on increasing education and awareness for homebuyers,
improving the type of financial resources that are made available
to organizations that help put people in homes, establishing specific
smart growth policies that are homebuyer friendly, encourage people
of various economic statuses to live in same neighborhoods, and
fulfill the demands of special needs housing facilities.
The issue of affordable housing itself
is so complex. It is simply a challenge to define affordable
housing when it encompasses so many things. We need to make
sure we are spending money and allocating resources in the right
way to the right programs for the residents of Charlotte,
said Richard Hathcox, of the City of Charlotte Department of Neighborhood
Development.
Participants included: Charlotte City Council, Youth
Homes, Inc, Mechanics Farmers Bank, Centralina Development Corporation,
Charlotte Regional Realtors Association, Charlotte Apartment Association,
Habitat for Humanity of Charlotte, Charlotte Fannie Mae Partnership
Office, Charlotte Emergency Housing, City of Charlotte Office Of
Neighborhood Development, Charlotte Metropolitan Housing Partnership
Board, Crossland, Inc., Urban League of Central Carolinas, Citizen
Action, and Residential Support Services. For more information about
CitiesFirst® please contact Dana Bykowski, located at The U.S.
Conference of Mayors, at (202) 861-6764 or visit the website at
www.cities1st.org.
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