Google Ads help pay the expense of maintaining this site
|
|
ggg
|
Click Here for the Neighborhood Transformation Website
Fair Use Disclaimer
Neighborhood Transformation is a nonprofit,
noncommercial website that, at times, may contain copyrighted material
that have not always been specifically authorized by the copyright
owner. It makes such material available in its efforts to advance the
understanding of poverty and low income distressed neighborhoods in
hopes of helping to find solutions for those problems. It believes that
this constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as
provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. Persons wishing to
use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of their own that
go beyond 'fair use' must first obtain permission from the copyright
owner.
|
July 17, 2009 - Miami Herald
Opa-locka organization helps
low-income home buyers
An Opa-locka organization
offers financial assistance to low-income home buyers.
BY NADEGE CHARLES
ncharles@MiamiHerald.com
On a sweltering hot morning, Tina Coats and her 2-year-old daughter
Shania Mears fan themselves under a tent in front of a home in
Opa-locka, one that Coats hopes will be hers soon.
''I want a better life for me and my children,'' the mother of two said.
About 25 community supporters and dignitaries were on hand to kick off
Opa-locka Community Development Corporation's Neighborhood
Stabilization Program of South Florida.
''At some point someone will be handed the key to this house and to
their future,'' said president of AT&T Florida, Marshall Criser.
With a $50,000 check from AT&T and a commitment from Miami Heat
forward James Jones to assist in the down payment and closing costs,
the Opa-locka Community Development Corp. plans to place 70 low-income
families into foreclosed or abandoned properties.
For a family of four, that is less than $50,000 a year.
So far, 20 applicants have been mortgage approved.
''If we had 20 homes right now, they could move in immediately,'' said
Willie Logan, president of Opa-locka Community Development Corporation.
Funds for the program will come from the organization's $250,000 home
budget and assistance from Jones.
Organizers hope to gain more financial backing by partnering with
municipalities to use money from the federally funded Neighborhood
Stabilization Program.
Jones, a Miami native who grew up in nearby Carol City, used the
opportunity to remind the audience of the importance of community
building.
''You can't help but notice how the foreclosure crisis has affected our
community; families and children are being cheated out of a stable
environment. If we can do something to help a family find a place in
this community, then we should do it,'' he said.
The three-bedroom two-bath turquoise home at Northwest 33rd Avenue and
177th Terrace is a dream for Coats, who was renting a three-bedroom
duplex until the property owner went into foreclosure last year.
``It was a very bad situation for me and my kids because we didn't find
out until someone came knocking on the door serving us papers. I don't
ever want to experience that again.''
Before Coats can move into her dream home, two illegal room additions
by the previous homeowner and a porch must be torn down. Hogan expects
the home to be ready by the end of December.
In the meantime, Coats faces an obstacle that may thwart her
homeownership vision. After attending homeowners counseling and getting
pre-approved for a mortgage, she was fired from her job as manager at a
retail chain. ''The assumption is that she'll find a job by the time
the home is completed or she gets passed over for the next available
applicant,'' Logan said.
Now a full-time student, Coats is hopeful she'll find employment.
''I'll be working by the time the house is ready,'' she said. `I
claimed it, it's mine.