Inside and out: CHA rehabs are getting mixed reviews.While the teardowns of high-rises as dominated talk of the Chicago Housing Authority s The Chicago Housing Authority (CHA) is a public housing authority focusing on public housing in the city of Chicago, founded in 1937. It has built a number of public housing projects over the years. sweeping transformation of public housing, more than half of the agency's buildings will not be torn down. Many changes to public housing are occurring through rehabs of existing developments. Nearly all of the CHA's scattered-site and senior developments have been rehabbed. And, during the past year, the CHA n. 1. Tea; - the Chinese (Mandarin) name, used generally in early works of travel, and now for a kind of rolled tea used in Central Asia. A pot with hot water . . . made with the powder of a certain herb called chaa, which is much esteemed. - Tr. J. has introduced hundreds of rehabbed units at family developments like Altgeld Gardens and the Bridgeport Homes. Lawns, landscaping and playgrounds dot the courtyards between houses. Inside, air-conditioned units provide relief from sizzling siz·zle intr.v. siz·zled, siz·zling, siz·zles 1. To make the hissing sound characteristic of frying fat. 2. To seethe with anger or indignation. 3. summer temperatures. But, at some units, counters, doors and ceilings are already giving way, while residents are still awaiting other amenities. Some residents said that a school bus stops by Altgeld Gardens every Saturday morning to pick up residents and drive them about two-and-a-half miles to Mama's Coin Laundry A business establishment with washing and drying machines operated by coins, where items such as articles of clothing may be laundered and dried by the customer. See also: Laundry in south suburban Riverdale. "When we came to the new rehabs, they made us leave our washers and dryers," said Reba Johnson, a resident of Altgeld Gardens. "There's no washers in the new place." Residents have taken their complaints to U.S. Rep. Jesse Jackson Noun 1. Jesse Jackson - United States civil rights leader who led a national campaign against racial discrimination and ran for presidential nomination (born in 1941) Jesse Louis Jackson, Jackson Jr., whose 2nd Congressional District Noun 1. congressional district - a territorial division of a state; entitled to elect one member to the United States House of Representatives district, territorial dominion, territory, dominion - a region marked off for administrative or other purposes includes Altgeld Gardens. In March, Jackson relayed those concerns to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. In response, the CHA told HUD Hud (h d), a pre-Qur'anic prophet of Islam. Hud unsuccessfully exhorted his South Arabian people, the Ad, to worship the One God. officials that it would provide five
to seven on-site laundry facilities at Altgeld Gardens, according to according toprep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. a letter, dated April 14, 2006, from Joseph P. Galvan, the regional director for HUD Region V. The letter did not indicate by when the facilities would be installed. "We have been assured that no resident would have to walk more than 400 feet to the closest laundry facility," Galvan said in his letter to Jackson. In the meantime Adv. 1. in the meantime - during the intervening time; "meanwhile I will not think about the problem"; "meantime he was attentive to his other interests"; "in the meantime the police were notified" meantime, meanwhile , some residents drive or carpool car·pool n. also car pool 1. An arrangement whereby several participants or their children travel together in one vehicle, the participants sharing the costs and often taking turns as the driver. 2. to a laundromat. Others haul laundry to friends' apartments in Altgeld-those yet-to-be rehabbed units that still have washers and dryers. But the lack of washers and dryers is at the top of a laundry list laundry list A popular term for a long list of Sx, diseases, or etiologies that share something in common–eg, differential diagnosis of acute abdomen of changes that have altered decades-old ways of life in Altgeld. There's no walking on the lawns, no hanging pictures on the walls, no pets and no barbecues in the front yard. Any violations are met with a $50 fine, and repeat offenders can face eviction The removal of a tenant from possession of premises in which he or she resides or has a property interest done by a landlord either by reentry upon the premises or through a court action. . "This is the first time these properties are rehabbed and it will be the last time," says Robert Whitfield, an attorney representing public housing residents. "Because, if it don't work this time, next time it's the wrecking ball. It's a cold, hard fact." But some newly rehabbed units are already declining, for reasons that have little to do with residents. Altgeld residents showed off units, only months old, with closet doors hanging off their hinges, kitchen countertops that can be lifted from the sink with the press of two fingers, ceilings with drywall bulges and rooms that lack light Fixtures. Organizers with People for Community Recovery, an Altgeld-based community group, suspect that the CHA lacked money to do the rehab right. When asked about these rehab fixture problems, CHA Board Chair Sharon Gist Gilliam said, "I'm not aware of those particular problems. Among this past year, we privatized the whole rehab construction process. If people will report those kind of things to their property manger, we will get in and fix any of those last punch-list items." The rehab of the Bridgeport Homes, a all development near 31st and Halsted streets, has generated a different response. As Sherry Cruz walked out of her Bridgeport Homes apartment on a balmy June afternoon, she was approached by an Asian woman with a street map in hand. "How much are these condos?" the Asian woman asked. "They're not condos. It's the projects," Cruz told her. "Oh, it's for poor people," the woman responded. "Yeah," Cruz said. "It's for poor people." With its rehab about halfway completed, the Bridgeport Homes look like a plastic surgery before-and-after picture. To the west is the old Bridgeport Homes, a ghost town ghost town, term for any once flourishing American community that has been abandoned, generally for economic reasons. While most of the towns have little or no population, they often contain old buildings, which may serve as tourist attractions. of dirty brick walk-ups, cracked asphalt backyards and chained-link fences. To the east, cream-colored two-flats rise from green lawns, flowered landscaping and sturdy wrought-iron fences. "We get a lot of traffic with [Chicago White] Sox games. Everyone driving by always used to look at us like we're freaks," Cruz says. "Now they think we live in condos. They don't stare anymore." But there are some drawbacks. There are no five-bedroom units, and four-bedroom units are scarce. "I've had to take three of my kids off my lease," said Gloria Osorio, who has 10 children. "They live with my mother now." The CHA no longer guarantees housing for large families who moved into public housing after October 1999. A resident may have their lease terminated, forfeiting their future right to housing vouchers or public housing of any sort, if they do not move family members out of their house. |
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