For 40 Years, CEDAC Has Catalyzed Positive Change

For 40 Years, CEDAC Has Catalyzed Positive Change

Early-Stage Assistance Has Helped Build Housing, Transform Communities

By Roger Herzog

Special to Banker & Tradesman

In 1978, then- state representative Mel King introduced legislation that created the Community Economic Development Assistance Corporation (CEDAC), the nation’s first state agency designed to provide technical assistance to the burgeoning non-profit community development movement.  The idea of such an agency grew out of the Wednesday Morning Breakfast Group meetings convened by Mel at MIT with community activists and planners.  In Boston, the Group’s primary focus was the desire to establish community control over the redevelopment of acres of land in the heart of neighborhoods in the southwest area of the city that the state had taken by eminent domain for an inner belt highway.  The highway was stopped through community activism and by 1978, it had become clear that there was a need for an agency like CEDAC.

In the 40 years since we were established by an act of the legislature, Massachusetts and the community development sector have changed tremendously. And so has CEDAC.  We started as an economic development organization that provided technical assistance to community-based non-profits focused on small business development and job creation. But as the Commonwealth’s economy changed, we’ve evolved into a community development financial institution that provides early stage financing and technical assistance to non-profits seeking to produce and preserve affordable housing and non-profit early education facilities, through our affiliate, Children’s Investment Fund.

While it’s not easy to sum up 40 years of community development work, with its complications and challenges, the best way to share our accomplishments is to look at a sample of some of the non-profit development projects we’ve assisted:

Preserving affordable housing – the Chapman Arms story: since the early 1980s, CEDAC has fought to preserve the long-term affordability of subsidized multifamily housing, which is threatened by the time-limited use restrictions used as part of federal and state financing programs in the 1960s and 1970s.  In 2009, the state passed an affordable housing preservation law, Chapter 40T, which provided the Commonwealth with new tools to monitor and address this expiring use challenge. One of the key tools is purchase rights that allow the Commonwealth’s Department of Housing and Community Development (DHCD) or its designee to acquire and preserve expiring affordable housing projects if an owner proposes to sell a building.  In 2011, Chapman Arms, in Cambridge’s Harvard Square, became the first major project whose affordability was preserved through the use of Chapter 40T’s purchase rights. CEDAC delivered technical assistance to DHCD and its non-profit designee, Homeowner’s Rehab Inc., as well as a rapid commitment and closing on acquisition financing to preserve this mixed income 50-unit property.

Revitalizing neighborhoods – Northampton’s Live 155: Last year, Way Finders, a community development corporation (CDC) focused on Western Massachusetts, opened Live 155 in Northampton.  The mixed-use, mixed-income, new construction development of 70 apartments has helped to transform an important neighborhood in that city, a gateway into the downtown district.  CEDAC provided $2.6 million in early stage acquisition and predevelopment funding for that project, and similarly provided financing for Lumber Yard Apartments, a project by the Valley CDC across the street. These two projects have spurred significant public investment from the city, the state, and private partners.  This is only one recent example of the effective role of CEDAC’s early stage assistance that supports community non-profits’ transformative efforts.  Boston’s Jackson Square (where the original neighborhood battle against highway construction was waged) and Worcester’s Kilby-Gardner-Hammond are also examples where we’ve worked with community partners to reinvigorate those neighborhoods.

Supporting equitable transit-oriented development – the Residences at Fairmount Station: Late last year, Southwest Boston CDC and their development partner Traggorth Companies opened the Residences at Fairmount Station in Hyde Park, a 27-unit affordable housing development.  The Residences represent equitable transit-oriented development – affordable housing built near the MBTA’s new Fairmount Corridor commuter rail line.  Locations near transit offer opportunities for increased development density, and CEDAC and its financing partners provided $1.2 million in acquisition and predevelopment financing to ensure that low and moderate income residents can access these desirable locations.

CEDAC is celebrating our 40th anniversary at an event this March and we will honor Mel King for both his vision and his belief in the power of people to strengthen their communities.  In the four decades since he introduced that legislation, Massachusetts has evolved into a national model of community development, in large part because of the institutional framework he helped to create.  It’s gratifying for us to look at the innovative projects above and recognize we are carrying on an important legacy.

Roger Herzog is the executive director of the Community Economic Development Assistance Corporation.

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SourceBanker & Tradesman

Affordable Housing Next Frontier in Health Care

Affordable Housing Next Frontier in Health Care

New Programs, Partnerships and Funding Prioritize Health Improvements

By Roger Herzog and Sara Barcan

Special to Banker & Tradesman

Affordable housing is the next big frontier in health care, and community development practitioners are catalyzing the growing discussion on social determinants of health, defined by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) as “conditions in the places where people live, learn, work and play that affect a wide range of health risks and outcomes.”

In Massachusetts, we are at a critical juncture: health care policymakers seek to rein in high costs while their housing counterparts are increasing efforts to reduce chronic homelessness and address affordable housing shortages. These challenges are intertwined, especially when reviewing the growing body of research that demonstrates the negative health outcomes and high health costs for homeless and rent-burdened families.

On the housing side, the Department of Housing and Community Development (DHCD) and CEDAC have funded over 3,000 supportive housing units since 2013. We’ve achieved this through a twofold effort that includes improved coordination between housing and health/human services agencies, and increases to the state’s capital budget for housing, especially supportive housing for people experiencing homelessness, elders, persons with disabilities, veterans and unaccompanied youth.

The state makes innovative use of health care and human services resources, including Medicaid, to pay for clinical supports and services that stabilize tenancies and allow residents to succeed in community-based housing. This year was a very important year, as the Legislature and the Baker administration enacted a $1.8 billion housing bond bill, which authorized the capital funds that the state uses to construct supportive housing.

For decades, CEDAC has managed supportive housing capital programs on DHCD’s behalf. Several of these programs, including the Facilities Consolidation Fund and the Community Based Housing program, help to ensure that people with chronic disabilities may live in the community rather than the institutions that housed them previously. Residents of this housing access care and supportive services in their own homes. Medicaid waivers pay for many of these services; we know that they help to keep people out of institutions and can save health care dollars. So it’s nothing new for Massachusetts to capitalize on the intersection of housing and services: for decades, we’ve provided capital and operating subsidies for buildings while Medicaid has covered the supports.

Social Determinants Become Larger Consideration

In recent years, the health care sector has begun to connect its growing understanding about the impacts of these social determinants into their planning and investment decisions. The federal Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act established new opportunities to foster increased collaboration between housing and health care providers. Attorney General Maura Healey and the Department of Public Health have issued updated guidance for community benefits from hospitals and determination of need rules, both of which serve as the oversight framework for hospital performance and accountability. The health sector is responding, with innovative approaches in the community health needs assessment process and plans to utilize financial and real estate assets to align with their mission.

For instance, Boston Medical Center (BMC) recently announced it would invest $6.5 million and work with community partners to support new affordable housing to reduce medical costs. As BMC’s Dr. Megan Sandel has said, “housing is a critical vaccine that can pave the way to long-term health and wellbeing.”

BMC’s initiative was significant not only because of the $6.5 million but also because, as stated in its press release, it “represents the first time that a Massachusetts hospital has put all its required community health investment into one social determinant of health – in this case, housing – to satisfy the requirements of the Massachusetts Department of Public Health for a determination of need.”

BMC’s efforts are not restricted to the housing stabilization initiative it is creating with two nonprofits, Pine Street Inn and Boston Health Care for the Homeless Program. The hospital’s Elders Living at Home Program is working with the nonprofit Roxbury-based Madison Park Development Corporation and Winn Management to create a pilot project, a community based Complex Care Management program, at Madison Park Village. A community health advocate and a community wellness nurse work on-site to provide services with the goal of improving health outcomes, independence and housing stability for residents.

These activities bode well for future collaboration between the health care and affordable housing sectors.

A vibrant community development sector in Massachusetts with a proven track record in real estate development is working to strengthen the relationship with health care institutions. And as our experience with supportive housing shows, CEDAC stands ready to help with policy development, early stage financing and technical assistance.

Roger Herzog is the executive director of the Community Economic Development Assistance Corporation. Sara Barcan is CEDAC’s director of housing development.

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SourceBanker & Tradesman

Back in session: Carter School turning into apartments

It’s been more than 30 years since the sounds of learning have been heard inside the three-story brick building at 261 West St.

Soon, adults and children will be walking the halls again — and this time, they will call it home.

A ceremonial groundbreaking ceremony Wednesday, Aug. 29 marked the start of the conversion of the former Carter Junior High School into 39 units of affordable housing.

The building will have 14 one-bedroom apartments, 21 two-bedroom units and four three-bedroom units when work is complete, which is expected to take about a year and cost about $17 million.

There will also be storage for tenants, an exercise room, community space and parking. The building’s exterior and its boiler will be historically restored.

Each unit would be classified as affordable, according to documents from the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, including 16 units that would be affordable to households earning less than 30 percent of the region’s median income.

The hope, according to a press release from building owner NewVue Communities, is for the building to be certified by Enterprise Green Communities and placed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Built in 1904, the former Carter School was named after James Gordon Carter, a Leominster native, teacher and member of the first Massachusetts Board of Education. It served as the city’s high school until 1963; in fact, the building still bears the Leominster High School inscription above the front entrance. Then, from 1964-84, the Carter School was a junior high school.

The City of Leominster sold the Carter School to a private developer in 2000, but attempts to redevelop the building were not successful. NewVue Communities, based in Fitchburg, bought the building in 2016.

“It was such a significant part of Leominster’s rich history, and it broke my heart to see it in such terrible condition,” said NewVue Vice President Bill Brassard, Carter Junior High School Class of 1981. “I am proud to be part of a team that will revitalize this building and create a new use for it.”

NewVue Communities teamed up with city officials, Davis Square Architects, Hutter Construction and Wingate Companies to bring the Carter School project to the phase celebrated last week. Wingate, which will manage the building for NewVue, will start accepting apartment applications in the summer of 2019.

“We are excited to be here today,” Leominster Mayor Dean Mazzarella said. “This building was in such tough shape that we did not know how to redevelop the building. Given NewVue’s track record of taking on the most challenging projects with great success, I was thrilled when they asked us to partner with them to create affordable housing that is such an important part of Leominster’s history.”

The Carter School is NewVue’s second affordable housing project in Leominster. The first was Water Mill Apartments on Water Street.

Project partners and funders for the Carter School renovation include the City of Leominster, the Fitchburg-Leominster HOME Consortium, the state Department of Housing and Community Development, the Massachusetts Housing Investment Corporation, Avidia Bank, the Massachusetts Historical Commission, the Massachusetts Affordable Housing Trust Fund, the National Park Service, NeighborWorks America, the Community Economic Development Assistance Corporation, the Massachusetts Housing Partnership and the TD Charitable Foundation.

SourceLeominster Champion

Soldier On receives funding for housing project

Soldier On has received $125,000 in predevelopment financing from the Community Economic Development Assistance Corporation to develop affordable housing in Pittsfield.The organization is proposing to develop 14 units of permanent supportive housing serving veterans as part of its Gordon H. Mansfield Veterans Village — Phase II project. CEDAC previously committed $125,000 in predevelopment loans to Soldier On, which provides both affordable housing and supportive services to help end veteran homelessness.CEDAC has also approved a $65,000 commitment for technical services to help Worcester Common Gound Inc. developed 31 units of affordable housing in that city.CEDAC is a public-private community development finance institution that provides financial resources and technical expertise for community-based and other non-profit organizations engaged in effective community development in Massachusetts.

SourceThe Berkshire Edge

Former Leominster school being converted to affordable housing

NewVue Communities is helping to breathe new life into the former Carter Junior High School, which has been vacant more than 30 years.

Wednesday, state and local officials and community leaders, some of whom attended Carter Junior High at 261 West St., across from the West End Diner, gathered under a tent for a groundbreaking ceremony outside the three-story brick school building to kick off its redevelopment into 39 affordable housing units.

Leominster Mayor Dean J. Mazzarella said that in 1985, former Mayor Richard J. Girouard Sr. asked Mr. Mazzarella and his business partner, who were in construction at the time, to tour the deteriorating building and consider redeveloping it. The school – built in 1904 and named after Leominster native and teacher James Gordon Carter, who was a member of the first Massachusetts Board of Education – served as the city’s high school until 1963, then a middle school from 1964 until 1984, when it was left vacant.

“I walked through the building with my partner and said, ‘If you give us the building and $100,000, we’ll do it over,’ ” Mr. Mazzarella said, adding that the cost of the project outweighed the benefits at the time.

After showing it himself to potential buyers “a million times,” the mayor said, he is excited about NewVue’s team effort and passion to see the project through. NewVue is a regional nonprofit that specializes in redeveloping properties into housing.

“Given NewVue’s track record of taking on the most challenging projects with great success, I was thrilled when they asked us to partner with them to create affordable housing (in a property) that is such an important part of Leominster’s history,” Mr. Mazzarella said.

In 2000, the city sold the school to a private developer, but after multiple unsuccessful attempts to redevelop it, NewVue Communities stepped in, officials said, and acquired the building in 2016.

NewVue Communities Vice President Bill J. Brassard, who attended Carter from 1979 to 1981, said he was happy to see the school restored.

When renovations are completed in 2019, the building will have 14 one-bedroom apartments, and 21 two-bedroom and four three-bedroom units. It will also have tenant storage, an exercise room, community space and parking. The exterior of the building and the existing boiler will be historically restored, officials said. The goal is for the building to be certified by Enterprise Green Communities and placed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Janelle Chan, undersecretary for housing and community development for the state’s Executive Office of Housing and Economic Development, said her office was glad the building will benefit future generations and become an asset for Leominster.

Ms. Chan said it is “pretty cool” that people who attended the school want to come back to live there and that children will be back in the hallways. Her office, she said, is proud to support the project.

The $17.4 million project is using historic and low-income housing tax credits, she said, along with state and local subsidies and private loans to rehabilitate the building that is in significant disrepair. Four units will be reserved for formerly homeless households, she said, who will have supportive services provided by the Massachusetts Opportunity Council. All units will be available to tenants at or below 60 percent of the average median income, and 16 units are reserved for tenants at or below 30 percent.

Marc Dohan, executive director of NewVue Communities, said the development team also includes city officials, Davis Square Architects, Hutter Construction and Wingate Companies, who have been working on bringing the project to fruition over the past five years.

Project partners and funders include the city of Leominster, Mr. Mazzarella, the Fitchburg-Leominster HOME Consortium, the Department of Housing and Community Development, Massachusetts Housing Investment Corporation, Avidia Bank, the Massachusetts Historical Commission, the Massachusetts Affordable Housing Trust Fund, the National Park Service, NeighborWorks America, the Community Economic Development Assistance Corporation, the Massachusetts Housing Partnership and the TD Charitable Foundation.

SourceTelegram

Worcester Common Ground to get $65K toward Chandler St. apartment project

The state Community Economic Development Assistance Corporation recently committed $190,000 in pre-development financing to two nonprofit organizations in Worcester and Pittsfield to develop affordable housing.

Worcester Common Ground Inc. plans to develop 31 units of affordable rental housing on two sites along Chandler Street in Worcester. CEDAC approved a $65,000 commitment for technical services for the project. The project will convert a medical-supply warehouse and an adjacent building into one-, two- and three-bedroom family-friendly apartments.

In Pittsfield, Soldier On proposes to develop 14 units of permanent supportive housing serving veterans as part of its Gordon H. Mansfield Veterans Village project. CEDAC previously committed $125,000 in pre-development loans to the nonprofit organization.

“Worcester Common Ground and Soldier On are developing the kind of affordable housing projects that reflect the needs of their communities and that will strengthen Worcester and Pittsfield,” CEDAC Executive Director Roger Herzog said. “CEDAC is pleased to be supporting both of these projects, which will help vulnerable populations in those cities.”

SourceTelegram

Sisters of Providence break ground on $10M affordable housing with elder care services in West Springfield

WEST SPRINGFIELD — The Sisters of Providence have broken ground on Hillside Residence, a $10 million project to build 36 units of affordable, elder care housing on the 27-acre Providence campus at 2112 Riverdale St.

The project calls for integrating housing for residents age 62 or older with the health services they will need as they grow older, according to Sister Kathleen Popko, president of the Sisters of Providence.

“At times, the dream seemed futile,” Popko told the crowd gathered Friday at the site where the housing will soon rise, recalling the ups and downs of trying to secure project funding over the years.

The goal, the Catholic nun said, is to build safe, affordable housing for “frail elders” who will also require health services as they age. That is where Mercy LIFE’s PACE program — “Program for All-inclusive Care of the Elderly” — enters the picture.

PACE, a Medicare and Medicaid program, will help low-income seniors at risk of being institutionalized who also need the level of care provided in nursing facilities. Because the project has secured a commitment from the state to help with rental subsidies, the housing cost for residents of Hillside will be capped at 30 percent of their income, according to Popko.

In addition to helping at-risk seniors secure a home, Joseph Larkin, executive director of Mercy LIFE, says Hillside will provide older residents with the human connection they need, including opportunities to share meals and other forms of socialization.

“Loneliness is a significant risk factor,” Larkin said.

Popko praised West Springfield Mayor William C. Reichelt for his ongoing support of the project. “He has facilitated our efforts,” she said of the mayor, calling him “a friend and supporter.”

Sen. James T. Welch and Rep. Michael J. Finn, West Side’s Statehouse delegation on Beacon Hill, were also on hand for the event, which drew about 100 people including local and state dignitaries. Popko says Welch and Finn have been strong supporters of the project by the Sisters of Providence.

“This really is the next cutting-edge of health care in Massachusetts. These are the types of projects we’re always continuously looking for,” Welch, Senate chairman of the Joint Committee on Health Care Financing, said of Hillside Residence.

“Congratulations and thank you for your tenacity and stick-to-itiveness,” he said, directing his remarks to the Sisters of Providence and Mercy LIFE officials in attendance.

“We’re all here today because we’re invested in Hillside Residence,” said Janelle Chan, newly appointed undersecretary for Housing and Community Development, which oversees the state’s affordable housing programs, community service, and assistance for homeless people.

State Elder Affairs Secretary Alice Bonner noted that Popko and Sister Mary Caritas Geary, vice president of Sisters of Providence, have been “powerful and tenacious” advocates for the Hillside Residence project, never giving up “despite rejection after rejection.”

“It’s about creating campuses where people can age together with the services they need,” said Bonner, adding that Hillside Residence will serve as a model for how to live and age well in Massachusetts. To create a truly integrated support system for older residents, “it has to be about housing plus services,” she said.

The project will cater to people age 62 or older with incomes at 50 percent of the area median income or lower, and those whose healthcare needs and “housing instability” can be helped by the integrated program.

The project is being financed by public and private sources, including state and federal assistance, $750,000 in Community Preservation Act funds from the Town of West Springfield, and grants from the Harry and Jeanette Weinberg Foundation.

Also speaking at the event were Roger Herzog, executive director of the Community Economic Development Assistance Corporation, and Paul Boudo, chairman of the West Springfield Community Preservation Committee.

Boudo and Popko pitched the project to the West Springfield Town Council in January. The following month, the council unanimously authorized using $750,000 in CPA funds for the project.

Boudo says Hillside Residence will help West Side reach its state-mandated 10 percent affordable housing goal. Only around 3.5 percent of the town’s housing is considered affordable.

The project’s “development team” includes Kathleen Lingenberg of Community Outcomes LLC; John Wesolowski, chief financial officer of Sisters of Providence Inc.; architects Greg Zorzi and Chris Novelli of Studio One Inc.; Randall Locklin of Locklin Construction Co., and Christopher Boino and his team at Western Builders Inc.

Bishop Mitchell T. Rozanski, leader of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield, gave the closing blessing at Friday’s ceremony.

SourceMassLive

Brookview House breaks ground on affordable rentals

Assembled for last Tuesday groundbreaking for Brookview III were, from left: Roger Herzog, executive director, Community Economic Development Assistance Corporation; Pamela Feingold, senior VP of Eastern Bank; Mayor Martin J. Walsh; Deborah Hughes, president & CEO of Brookview House; Governor Charlie Baker; Representative Russell E. Holmes, and City Councillor At-Large Annissa Essaibi-George.
Randy H. Goodman photo

With Gov. Charlie Baker and Mayor Martin Walsh looking on approvingly, Brookview House, a Dorchester-based provider of services to homeless women and children, broke ground on a new affordable housing building on Hansborough Street last Tuesday. The building, dubbed “Brookview III,” will include a dozen new two- and three-bedroom apartment units, bringing the total number at Brookview to 54.

“We recognize that family homelessness is a multi-faceted issue, but one of the primary causes of the high rate of family homelessness in Massachusetts is the lack of affordable housing for low-income families,” said Deborah Hughes, the president and CEO of Brookview House Hughes. “This new building will help us assist even more families each year in addressing the trauma of homelessness and set them up for long-term stability and independence.”

The need to address family homelessness has grown more urgent in recent years, with a 2017 Boston Foundation study showing that more than 60 percent of the 13,000 homeless individuals in Massachusetts are children. Family homelessness in the state has nearly doubled since 2016, with Boston ranking as the city with the fourth most homeless families nationwide. Hughes said she hopes Brookview’s new facility with help address this crisis.

Brookview III will be located off Blue Hill Avenue on Hansborough Street, just north of Mattapan Square and a block from the original 12-unit building at 2 Brookview St.

Each year, the facility provides 370 homeless women and children with a safe, supportive living environment as well as a variety of programs and services including health, education, life skills, employment training, civic engagement, and financial, emotional, and behavioral support.

Established in 1990, Brookview House has garnered nationwide acclaim for its successful model; 92 percent of mothers who have lived there maintain permanent housing after leaving and 88 percent of the children who participate in Brookview’s Youth Development Program graduate from high school, compared to the national average of only 25 percent.

In addition to commercial loans and Brookview’s own fundraising, the $5.5 million needed to finance Brookview III was secured with $1.5 million from the city of Boston’s Department of Neighborhood Development (DND) and Boston Community Development, and a $450,000 grant from the Early Education and Out of School Time (EEOST) facilities improvement fund, which is financed through the state’s capital budget and jointly administered by the Department of Early Education and Care and the Community Economic Development Assistance Corporation (CEDAC), and its affiliate, the Children’s Investment Fund (CIF).

Mayor Walsh acknowledged the importance of planning for future affordable housing. “In Boston, we are committed to making sure that every person has a place to call their home,” he said. “Providing families a roof over their heads and the wraparound services needed to build a better life is critical to tackling homelessness. I thank Brookview for their role in creating stable, affordable housing that is vital to the health and success of our neighborhoods.”

Brookview III is slated for occupancy starting next June.

SourceDorchester Reporter

Baker-Polito Administration Announces $8 Million in Funding to Support Nearly 100 Units of Supportive Housing

Seven housing projects will provide comprehensive supportive services for individuals, families and seniors

 

Executive Office of Housing and Economic Development
Housing and Community Development
Office of Governor Charlie Baker and Lt. Governor Karyn Polito

DENNIS, MA — Today, the Baker-Polito Administration awarded nearly $8 million in funding to support the creation or preservation of almost 100 units of supportive housing. Lt. Governor Karyn Polito and Housing and Community Development Undersecretary Janelle Chan joined Roger Herzog, Executive Director of Community Economic Development Assistance Corporation (CEDAC), Kathy Ohman, President of FORWARD, and members of the Legislature to announce the awards which include $5.5 million in state funding, 28 project-based state housing vouchers, and will leverage $2.5 million from the National Housing Trust Fund. These seven developments will provide housing with supportive services for vulnerable populations across the state, including homeless families and individuals, veterans, persons with disabilities and adults with autism. Since 2015, the Baker-Polito Administration has supported the creation or preservation of more than 600 units of housing with comprehensive support services, including today’s awards.
“The Baker-Polito Administration is committed to creating housing opportunities across Massachusetts that meet the needs of all our residents,” said Governor Charlie Baker. “The awards we are announcing today will create, expand and preserve critical housing resources for those who need it most and our Administration is proud to continue supporting these developments throughout the Commonwealth.”“I am proud to join FORWARD in Dennis to announce these important awards, which will provide services to communities across the Commonwealth, from here on Cape Cod, to Pittsfield,” said Lt. Governor Karyn Polito. “Our Administration looks forward to continuing to working with our partners at the local level to develop new housing opportunities for cities and towns in Massachusetts.”Lt. Governor Polito and Housing and Community Development Undersecretary Janelle Chan made the announcement at the future site of FORWARD at the Rock. The development will create eight units of supportive housing for adults with autism. FORWARD, Friends or Relatives With Autism and Related Disabilities, is an advocacy group founded in 2013, and will work with Housing Assistance Corporation on Cape Cod to develop the project with specific supports for this community.

“Today’s awards will provide critical, wraparound services for low-income individuals with disabilities, formerly homeless veterans, families, and adults with autism,” said Housing and Community Development Undersecretary Janelle Chan. “These projects will provide residents with long-term stability and opportunities to thrive by locating comprehensive services where they live.”

The National Housing Trust Fund is a federal program to support the development of affordable housing for low-income individuals and households, with supportive services. The Department of Housing and Community Development worked in coordination with the Community Economic Development Assistance Corporation (CEDAC) to make the combined $8 million available for the seven projects. Comprehensive support services, may include education, skills training, childcare, substance abuse treatment, mental health services, and comprehensive case management.

“CEDAC is pleased to work with DHCD on these important supportive housing projects benefitting veterans, disabled persons, elders, and other low income families in seven Massachusetts communities,” said Roger Herzog, Executive Director, CEDAC.  “We continue to look for new opportunities to work with local communities and non-profit organizations to create and preserve affordable housing options that meet the needs of all families and individuals in Massachusetts.”

“In 2013, the Town of Dennis perceived a need for affordable housing for adults with autism and identified Town-owned land that could be dedicated to fill that need. At age 22, adults with autism “age out” of special education programs in public schools. This results in 80 percent of adults with autism living at home with little opportunity for social interaction. As parents age, they may no longer be able to care for their children with autism.  There is not enough support or resources for adults with autism, particularly with regards to long term living arrangements,” said Paul McCormick, Chairman of the Dennis Board of Selectmen. “Dennis is committed with the Commonwealth of Massachusetts in supporting our adults with autism through this partnership with Project FORWARD.”

“The partnership between FORWARD, The Housing Assistance Corporation, and the Town of Dennis to create a residential community for adults with autism is an extraordinary accomplishment and an innovative model for other communities to emulate,” said State Senator Julian Cyr. “I want to extend a special thank you to Kathy Ohman, President of FORWARD, for her dogged commitment and leadership of the project; Kathy’s vision of a residence where adults with autism can age-in-place with dignity and respect is now one step closer to reality.”

“I’d like to thank the Baker-Polito Administration, as well as Secretary Jay Ash for their continued commitment to serving persons on the autism spectrum and ensuring access to safe and supportive housing,” said Representative Tim Whelan. “This has been a fantastic collaboration between local, concerned citizens and their state government.”

“HAC is excited to be a part of this project which has received significant support from the community, local representatives and the state,” said Housing Assistance Corporation CEO Alisa Galazi. “Our region badly needs affordable housing and especially for the autistic adults, and this project is exemplifies the kind of housing we need.”

“FORWARD is a unique collaboration of non-profits, state and local agencies to provide much needed affordable housing for cape cod adults with autism and related disabilities here in Dennis,” said Kathy Ohman, FORWARD. ”We are thankful to Undersecretary Chan and the Baker-Polito Administration, and congratulations to the other recipients of these important funds.”

In 2017, the Baker-Polito Administration unveiled the new Housing Choice Initiative, which created a new system of incentives and rewards for municipalities that deliver sustainable housing growth; created a new technical assistance toolbox to empower cities and towns to plan for new housing production; and proposed legislative changes, through An Act to Promote Housing Choices, to deliver smart, effective zoning at the local level.

The Baker-Polito Administration is deeply committed to meeting this housing challenge, through key investments, new initiatives and program reforms. In April, Governor Baker filed a housing bond bill seeking $1.287 billion in additional capital authorization to advance the administration’s commitment to affordable housing and has increased funding for affordable housing by 19 percent and is on course to invest $1.1 billion over five years in affordable housing. The highly effective MassWorks Infrastructure Program continues to be a key catalyst for housing production, supporting the creation of more than 3,000 housing units. The Open for Business Initiative will drive the production of more than 2,200 units of housing on state land. MassHousing’s $100 million Workforce Housing Initiative has advanced the development of 2,309 housing units across a range of incomes, including 616 workforce housing units. And, through An Act Relative to Job Creation and Workforce Development, the administration reformed the Housing Development Incentive Program, which is on track to facilitate more than 900 new units in Gateway Cities.


2018 Supportive Housing Awards

FORWARD at the Rock, Dennis        

FORWARD at the Rock is a production project that will create eight units of permanent supportive, single-room-occupancy (SRO) housing for adults with autism. The project sponsor, FORWARD (Friends Or Relatives With Autism and Related Disabilities), is an advocacy group founded in 2013 for the specific purpose of developing housing for this vulnerable population, and has partnered with the Housing Assistance Corporation on Cape Cod.  CapeAbilities will provide comprehensive supportive services.

Carlos Vega Townhomes, Holyoke

Carlos Vega Townhomes will preserve 18 units of family housing for farmworkers in Western Massachusetts, and provide necessary accessibility improvements to the property, allowing existing households to age in place. The project is owned by Valley Housing Development Corporation. Wayfinders is the project sponsor and will provide resident services to tenants.

Sergeant House Expansion, Northampton

Sergeant House Expansion will update and expand a traditional 15-room SRO owned by Valley Community Development Corporation, and create 31 enhanced SRO units (16 new units; 15 preserved units), each with its own kitchenette and bathroom.

Gordon H. Mansfield Veterans Village Phase II, Pittsfield

Gordon H. Mansfield Veterans Village Phase II, sponsored by Soldier On, Inc., is a new production project that will create 14 units of permanent supportive housing for formerly homeless female veterans. Soldier On will provide supportive services targeted to female veterans who have experienced trauma, including military sexual trauma and post-traumatic stress.

Germantown House, Quincy

Germantown House will produce a five-unit congregate home for extremely low income adults with physical and developmental disabilities. The project sponsor is NeighborWorks of Southern Mass., and 24-hour on-site services will be provided by Work, Inc.

Headwaters Replacement Housing, Wareham/Sandwich

Headwaters Replacement Housing, sponsored by Residential Rehabilitation Housing, Inc., will produce 10 units of SRO housing for very low income adults with disabilities. The project design is highly responsive to the particular physical and environmental needs of the population to be served. Twenty-four hour on-site supportive services will be provided by Latham Centers.

149 Belmont Street Preservation and Stabilization, Worcester

149 Belmont Street is an existing supportive housing project owned by Worcester East Side Community Development Corporation. The project currently provides nine studio apartments for formerly homeless adults with disabilities.

 

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Source Executive Office of Housing and Economic Development Housing and Community Development

Four Corners toasts new apartments on Washington Street

Officials and Four Corners residents celebrated the new Upper Washington buildings, which includes 35 income-restricted apartments and two commercial spaces on Washington Street, at a ribbon-cutting ceremony on Tuesday.

The Vietnamese American Initiative for Development (VietAID) helmed the $15.3 million project. Its management team was joined at the ceremony by Mayor Martin Walsh, Trinity Management, the Massachusetts Department of Housing and Community Development, and other local and state officials.

Since its inception, VietAID has created 88 affordable housing units in four Fields Corner projects, and “we’ve had a successful track record in transforming and improving neighborhoods,” said Kim Thai, president of the organization’s board of directors. “The time, effort and struggles from conception to construction,” he added, “are all well worth the joy and happiness that we witness when new tenants move in.”

Dione Teixeira, 26, drove by the Upper Washington apartments every day while they were under construction, going to and from a small basement she shared with her husband. “I used to say, ‘God, this is my home. It’s not ready yet, but this is my home,’” she said.

She choked back tears on Tuesday next to her new home on Washington Street, where they live with their one-year-old son. “Every day I used to say, ‘God, how am I going to raise my son in this little room?’ And I had my husband also,” she said. “And we used to live there but we never gave up.”

Teixeira and her mother came to Boston from Cape Verde 11 years ago. Her mother dreamed of a new house and Teixeira hoped to build a life for herself. After applications and waiting out the housing lottery, she got the call she had been waiting for – she made it, and so did her mother.

“I don’t know how to explain how happy I am,” she said, welling up. “I don’t know how to say how happy it is to see my mom smile, with her own home. Now she calls it home, and I call it home, too.”

Four Corners Main Streets and the new Four Corners Yoga & Wellness will be the commercial tenants in the complex. The artist Iris DuPont presented artwork inspired by the elements to hang inside the community space.

The project — income restricted for those making under 60 percent area median income — includes 5 one-bedroom, 21 two-bedroom, and 9 three-bedroom units.

“Mixed-use development is an important strategy for establishing and maintaining vitality in today’s neighborhoods,” Thai said, noting that VietAID has had “great success” with 1392 and 1460 Dorchester Ave. and that the organization hopes to replicate that experience with the Upper Washington apartments.

Nine of the units are set aside for formerly homeless families. “That’s something that’s really important for us as a city,” the mayor said. “We’ve housed over 1,100 chronically homeless people in the city of Boston over the last three years. We’ve been able to do it because of projects like this, because projects set aside some apartments and then wrap-around services.”

Upper Washington’s Four Corners location benefits from a nearby health center and a supermarket next door, Walsh noted, along with other resources.

“For three decades, a lot of the lots that we see on Washington Street have been sitting vacant,” he said. “Now we see a lot of mixed-use development happening and bringing these lots to life.”

Upper Washington was funded by the City of Boston and the Massachusetts Department of Housing and Community Development (DHCD), and by tax credit equity provided by RBC Capital Markets. The project architect was Utile and the general contractor was Nauset Construction.

Susan Terry, assistant undersecretary at DHCD, said Gov. Charlie Baker’s $1.287 billion affordable housing bond bill will bolster just this type of project if approved by the legislature.

“We believe we’re most effective when we’re partnering with communities and supporting development that’s bubbling up on the local level,” she said. “This project is a prime example of that kind of community-driven development. And as someone who’s originally from Dorchester, I’m not surprised that the Dorchester community was able to come together and create a project like this that brings work, that brings housing, and that creates a strong community. A place that can keep the tradition of Dorchester alive.”

http://www.dotnews.com/2017/four-corners-toasts-new-apartments-washington-street

SourceDorchester Reporter