Dereliction of Duty Report May
Transcription
Dereliction of Duty Report May
Dereliction of Duty The CHA’s Shadow Budget & Public Funding for Phantom Apartments Report Release May 15, 2013 Executive Summary The Chicago Housing Authority was chartered as a municipal corporation in 1937 to provide quality affordable housing to low-income families in Chicago. The Housing Authority was authorized to construct and rehabilitate apartments which would be rented at below-market rates. CHA intended to serve as the primary steward for Chicago’s publicly owned, long-term affordable housing resources. Today, the Chicago Housing Authority has shifted its focus away from its original charter, focusing its energies on social reengineering projects in addition to housing development, and developing a sizeable portfolio of market-rate and for-sale housing options, in addition to lower-rent apartments. The Chicago Housing Authority’s shift in focus distracts the Agency from its most fundamental work: That of providing housing to Chicago’s low-income families. The Agency’s state of distraction shows in poor asset management practices and stalled development projects. In 2011, CHA left over 3500 taxpayer funded apartments vacant. The level of motivation behind the CHA’s vacancy problem appears to vary development by development: In communities the CHA intends to redevelop, manufactured vacancies stem clearly from a deliberate intention on the part of the Housing Authority to limit and reduce public housing resident populations so as to reduce the CHA’s obligation to provide replacement housing. Since a Housing Authority’s replacement housing obligations are based on the number of occupied apartments, rather than standing apartments, the CHA’s decision to freeze leasing years in advance of beginning a redevelopment project---- as has been done at Lathrop Homes (where leasing was frozen in the year 2000)--- has been and remains an incredible tool to manipulate the CHA’s shortand long-term obligations to the public. In contrast, in communities not slated for redevelopment, many of the CHA’s vacancies appear to arise predominantly from negligence, inattention, and poor asset management and leasing practices. In 2000, at the start of the Plan for Transformation, the Chicago Housing Authority negotiated an atypical funding formula for itself, which exempts the CHA from the penalties and consequences normal Housing Authorities receive when they leave taxpayer-funded apartments vacant. The CHA is paid by the federal government, at equal rates, for all standing public housing units, regardless of whether they are occupied or not. The lack of financial consequences for vacancies creates a situation where the CHA has no incentive to lease Chicago’s scarce affordable housing resources at appropriate levels. CHA is paid the same amount, either way. Analysis of HUD and CHA financial reports indicate that with 2011 vacancy rates, the CHA received over $34 Million in funding from HUD for apartments the CHA left unoccupied in 2011. CHA claims the majority of these “offline” apartments are “uninhabitable” but Chicago Housing Initiative review of building court records of all known vacant scattered site addresses uncovered only 2 addresses with publicly recorded physical defects; Meanwhile developments like Lathrop Homes, with 748 vacancies, continue to pass federal physical inspections and remain habitable though suffering from decades of disinvestment. Not only is the CHA paid at the same rate for vacant apartments as for occupied ones, the CHA also continues to receive capital grants from the federal government on the basis of demolished housing that no longer physically exists. CHA is eligible to receive these grant funds for 5-10 years after demolition is complete, and in most cases, has solicited these grants from HUD for the full 10 years. Analysis of the most recent data available from HUD reports on CHA’s capital funding (2011) indicates the CHA received over $39 Million in funding on the basis of demolished housing under a HUD grant program called Replacement Housing Factor. The intended, exclusive purpose of this federal grant funding is to construct and rehabili- tate replacement public housing. Unfortunately, CHA’s deregulation under the Moving to Work program relieves the agency of all planning and reporting requirements normally tied to this funding stream. As replacement housing produced under the Plan for Transformation has ground to a halt, this Report questions whether replacement housing grants are being used for their intended purpose. It raises questions about who is overseeing the CHA to ensure CHA uses our public funds towards their intended purpose. First and foremost, this Report calls on the Mayor, who appoints the CHA’s CEO and Commissioners, to call the CHA back to its original mission. In Chicago, the need for low-income housing is high. In 2010, University of Illinois researchers released a report indicating that there are over 310,000 low-wage workers in Chicago--workers whose wages are so low that even working full-time, their wages wouldn’t lift them above poverty. The study indicated that somewhere between one in three and one in four Chi- The need for low-income housing in Chicago cago households are headed by a low-wage worker, earning less than $30,000 a year. As Chicago’s economy increasingly shifts from industrial and managerial jobs to a service economy, more and more Chicago workers will be on the lower end of the income spectrum. In fact, the DePaul Real Estate Center released a report recently showing a growing gap between real incomes and real rent levels: Between 2000 and 2010, the average household income in Chicago dropped 10% while rents rose by 14%. Currently, a worker would need to make $18.11/ hr to afford the average two-bedroom in Chicago. All told, DePaul estimates that by 2020, Cook County will lose two affordable rental units for every one that is built, meaning that the need for affordable rental housing in Cook County will outstrip the supply by 233,000 units. The growing gap between incomes and rents also means that more and more families, including working families, are homeless. Chicago Coalition for the Homeless estimates 90,000 individuals experience homelessness in the City of Chicago each year, while the Mayor-endorsed new Plan to End Homelessness (2.0 Plan) indicates 16,000 Chicago Public Schools students experience homelessness each year. Not surprisingly, when the CHA opened its family housing waiting list for one month in 2010, over 210,000 families applied, competing for 40,000 spots in line. Today, over 60,000 households and 210,000 individuals languish on the waiting lists for CHA housing. While these families continue to struggle, CHA receives sizeable amounts of public money ostensibly to mitigate homelessness in Chicago to the greatest extent possible with existing resources. While the CHA, as all Public Housing Agencies, has been subject to funding cuts since 2010, the Agency remains by far the largest organization in Chicago funded to provide affordable housing resources to lower income families. CHA receives over 18 times the financial resources for low-income housing as the City receives from all other sources, making the CHA the City’s Go-To Agency most responsible for addressing Chicago’s homelessness problem, and providing decent affordable housing to those who need it. IWhy is the Mayor allowing the CHA to move forward with plans that undermine the very Plan to End Homelessness the Mayor endorsed last spring? Why is the CHA proposing the demolition of habitable housing resources, while at the same time receiving massive amounts of federal funding for the express purpose of housing Chicago’s lowest income families? As CHA and the Mayor craft the “Plan for Transformation 2.0”--- touted as a bold new vision Solutions and blueprint for the future of public housing in the City of Chicago, we urge the Mayor and CHA leaders to focus on: Achieving full occupancy and minimizing vacant taxpayer-funded apartments. Apartments ought not to be left idle except where the CHA can document there are life and safety reasons that the apartment should not be leased. Full occupancy must be maintained in all developments even as the lengthy and sometimesdecades-long planning processes to determine the future of these developments get underway. Families should not be relocated from a development until actual construction work is approved, financed, and scheduled. Preserving and rehabilitating remaining public housing units; Rehabilitation remains the most cost efficient and swift method of bringing public housing units in stalled projects back online and restoring these public resources to serving their intended purpose--- that of providing affordable housing for Chicago’s lowest income households. Leasing public housing apartments to families making 0-50% AMI rather than holding units for higher income households. The gap between the supply of affordable housing and the demand for affordable housing is highest amongst families making 0-30% of AMI, and second highest for families at 30-50% of AMI. Meeting Chicagoan’s affordable housing needs means targeting affordable housing resources where they are most needed--- which is to families on the lowest ends of the income spectrum CHA’s Phantom Apartments Chicago Housing Authority continues to receive capital grants from HUD for public housing it demolished years ago--- HUD intends these grants to be used for the creation of replacement public housing, but is that where the dollars are going? Ida B. Wells Madden Park Homes Demolished 2001-2011 Demolished by 2003 Harold Ickes Homes Demolished 2009-2010 CHA received a $26.2 Million capital grant in 2011 for 10,122 “replacement housing factor” units. CHA received a $564,171 capital grant in 2011 for 218 “replacement housing factor” units CHA received a $2.08 Million capital grant in 2011 for 803 “replacement housing factor” units Cabrini 1230 N Burling William Green Homes Demolished 3/30/2011 Demolished 1995-2011 Francis Cabrini Ext. Demolished 2002 CHA received a $346,785 capital grant in 2011 for 134 “replacement housing factor” units. CHA received a $659,927 capital grant in 2011 for 255 “replacement housing factor” units. CHA received a $1,803,801 capital grant in 2011 for 697 “replacement housing factor” units. CHA’s Phantom Apartments Chicago Housing Authority continues to receive capital grants from HUD for public housing it demolished years ago--- HUD intends these grants to be used for the creation of replacement public housing, but is that where the dollars are going? Ida B. Wells Madden Park Homes Demolished 2001-2011 Demolished by 2003 Harold Ickes Homes Demolished 2009-2010 CHA received a $26.2 Million capital grant in 2011 for 10,122 “replacement housing factor” units. CHA received a $564,171 capital grant in 2011 for 218 “replacement housing factor” units CHA received a $2.08 Million capital grant in 2011 for 803 “replacement housing factor” units Cabrini 1230 N Burling William Green Homes Demolished 3/30/2011 Demolished 1995-2011 Francis Cabrini Ext. Demolished 2002 CHA received a $346,785 capital grant in 2011 for 134 “replacement housing factor” units. CHA received a $659,927 capital grant in 2011 for 255 “replacement housing factor” units. CHA received a $1,803,801 capital grant in 2011 for 697 “replacement housing factor” units. Replacement Housing Funding In 2011, CHA received $39 Million in HUD Capital Grants earmarked exclusively for the construction or acquisition of public housing units to replace what the CHA has demolished. 13 years into a now-15-year Plan for Transformation, the CHA has stalled out on providing replacement units: The Agency remains 2500 units short of its 25,000 unit commitment. ABLA Homes Brooks Homes Demolished 2001-2007 Demolished 1998-2001 CHA received a $385,604 capital grant in 2011 for 149 “replacement housing factor” units CHA received a $147,513 capital grant in 2011 for 57 “replacement housing factor” units Robert Taylor Homes Stateway Gardens Demolished 2007 Demolished 2000-2007 CHA received a $3.3 Million capital grant in 2011 for 1,281 “replacement housing factor” units CHA received a $1.5 Million capital grant in 2011 for 590 “replacement housing factor” units LeClaire Courts Demolished 2011 CHA received a $776,385 capital grant in 2011 for 300 “replacement housing factor” units Lawndale Annex Demolished 2007 CHA received a $483,946 capital grant in 2011 for 187 “replacement housing factor” units HUD’s “Replacement Housing Factor” Pro- What is it? The “Replacement Housing Factor” (RHF) Program is a HUD grant program that funds a Public Housing Authority (PHA) to build or acquire replacement public housing to replace units the PHA has demolished. Through the RHF program, a Housing Authority receives the same amount of capital grant funding for each unit that has been demolished as it would have received for the units if they were still standing. The Housing Authority is eligible to receive this same level of grant funding each year for 5-10 years. The Housing Authority can accrue the funding for five full years before beginning to spend it in order to undertake major capital construction projects. A PHA can choose not to receive Replacement Housing grants if it does not intend to provide replacement public housing. For 2013, the Chicago Housing Authority is committing to replace only 345 physical public housing units. The Agency can only identify the location of 88 of these What’s the Problem? No Plan is required: CHA is not required to submit a Replacement Housing Plan detailing where these replacement housing dollars will be spent, how many replacement housing units will be provided, where they will be located, or what the benchmarks are during the development process. Oversight is lacking: At the end of the year, CHA is not required to report on where the funds designated to provide replacement public housing have actually been spent, or how many units have been replaced with them. Performance verified from Housing Authority’s Self-Certification: No one--- not HUD as the grant-making agency, not the Mayor who appoints CHA CEO and Commissioners--- conducts an independent review to assess the Housing Authority’s performance on producing replacement housing with the replacement housing grants. Compliance is verified based on the Housing Authority’s self-certification that funds went towards their designated purpose. De-Regulation allows income streams to be commingled: Tracking whether funds go towards their intended purposes is nearly impossible. Development Number Development Name Standing Units "Replacemen t Housing Factor" Units Formula Units Final Grant Amount Per Unit Grant Amoun t Money received for demolished housing through "RHF" Program Ward IL002001000 ABLA; Mostly demolished 20012007 Robert Brooks Homes Ickes Homes; DEMOLISHED 20092010 Ickes Homes; Demolished 2009-2010 371 149 520 $1,345,732.00 $2,587.9 5 $385,604.55 2 0 57 57 $147,513.00 $147,513.15 2 0 65 65 $168,216.00 $2,587.9 5 $2,587.9 4 $168,216.10 3 0 738 738 $1,909,904.00 $2,587.9 5 $1,909,907.10 3 Ida B Wells Homes; Demolished 20012011 Stateway Gardens; Demlished 20002007 Stateway Gardens; Demolished 20002007 Ida B Wells Homes; DEMOLISHED between 2001-2011 0 1,261 1,261 $3,263,400.00 $2,587.9 5 $3,263,404.95 3 0 498 498 $1,288,797.00 $2,587.9 5 $1,288,799.10 3 0 92 92 $238,091.00 $2,587.9 5 $238,091.40 3 0 152 152 $393,368.00 $2,587.9 5 $393,368.40 3 Madden Park; DEMOLISHED by 2003 Robert Taylor Homes; Demolished completely 2007 Robert Taylor Homes; Demolished completely 2007 Ida B Wells Homes; DEMOLISHED 2001-2011 0 218 218 $564,172.00 $2,587.9 4 $564,170.92 3 0 454 454 $1,174,928.00 $2,587.9 5 $1,174,929.30 3 0 827 827 $2,140,231.00 $2,587.9 5 $2,140,234.65 3 0 2,490 2,490 $6,441,859.00 $2,587.0 9 $6,441,854.10 3 IL002222222; formerly IL002001, Ida B. Wells IL002003000 Ida B Wells Homes; DEMOLISHED 2001-2011 0 6,219 6,219 $16,086,766.0 0 $2,586.7 1 $16,086,749.4 9 3 Bridgeport Homes 130 5 135 $341,852.00 $12,661.20 11 IL002027 Lawndale Annex; DEMOLISHED 0 187 187 $483,946.00 $2,532.2 4 $2,587.9 5 $483,946.65 12 IL002039000 Washington Park 252 32 284 $734,075.00 $82,712.64 20 IL002024000 Leclaire Courts 0 300 300 $776,384.00 $776,385.00 23 IL002004000 Cabrini-1230 N Burling- DEMOLISHED 3/30/2011 Cabrini Extension 0 134 134 $346,785.00 $346,785.30 27 0 697 $1,803,801.15 27 0 255 255 $659,926.00 $659,927.25 27 IL002093000 William Green Homes Horner Westhaven 552 64 616 $1,586,666.00 $164,848.64 27 IL002048000 Callner Apts 0 173 173 $377,608.00 $444,395.48 44 IL002051000 5040 N Kenmore $165,628.80 48 $30,832.92 11 or 6 $214,564.13 2,12,24,27,28 IL002003 IL002016 IL002016000 IL002017000 IL002020 IL002022 IL002031; now IL002222222 IL002033 IL002037A IL002037B IL002111111; formerly IL 002001 IL002089000 IL002092000 IL002040000 Wentworth Gardens 100 343 IL002035000 Scattered Sites West 249 Total PHA $1,803,798.00 36 136 $351,961.00 12 355 $912,140.00 83 332 $858,258.00 15,198 16,498 $44,396,376.0 0 $2,584.7 7 $2,587.9 5 $2,587.9 5 $2,587.9 5 $2,587.9 5 $2,575.7 6 $2,568.7 6 $2,587.9 5 $2,569.4 1 $2,585.1 1 $2,430.6 3 $39,389,332.3 7 CHA’s Vacant Housing Cabrini Rowhouses Chicago Avenue & Hudson 423 Vacancies 69th & Harper SS-South Shore 36 vacancies 3605 W. Douglas SS- N. Lawndale 6 vacancies Lathrop Homes Diversey & Clybourn 750 Vacancies 2600 W. Cortland SS- Logan Square 3 Vacancies 1616 N. Artesian SS- Humboldt Park 3 vacancies Lake Parc Place 3939 & 3983 S. Lake Park 120 Vacancies Parkview Apartments 3936 W. Washington 1407 S. Spaulding SS- N. Lawndale 3 vacancies CHA’s Vacant Housing 1903 S. May Street SS- Pilsen 3 vacancies 2128 N. Moody SS-Belmont Cragin 2 vacancies 2620 W. Potomac SS- Humboldt Park 3 vacancies 7600 S. Coles SS-South Shore 2 Vacancies 2301 W. Warren SS-Near West Side 2 vacancies 8330 S. Mackinaw SS- South Chicago 1 vacancy 5045 N. Ashland SS-Uptown 3 vacancies 1021 W. Cullerton SS- Pilsen 2 vacancies 501-547 w 58th Street SS-W. Englewood 10 vacancies (estimate) 2739 W. Crystal SS- Humboldt Park 2 Vacancies 1700 W. Wallen SS- Rogers Park 6 Vacancies Occupancy Rates at Lathrop Homes 1000 900 800 700 600 500 400 300 200 100 0 81% 69% 64% 58% 50% Occupied Units 24% 18% 20 10 20 09 20 20 29% 11 34% 08 36% 07 20 06 20 05 20 04 20 03 20 02 20 20 01 41% 00 20 76% Total Units Occupancy Rates at Lake Parc Place 350 300 78% 82% 78% 90% 79% 250 68% 63% 200 47% 150 100 50 No Information 0 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 Occupied Units Total Units Occupancy Rates at the Cabrini Rowhomes 700 600 500 400 80% 84% 79% 74% 69% 65% 63% 56% 49% 300 40% 200 No Information 100 22% 0 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 Occupied Units Total Units Funding Received for Vacant Apartments Development Number Development Name Standing Units IL002068000 Wicker Park Annex 225 IL002001000 ABLA; Mostly demolished 2001-2007 Midwest Terrace Apartments Nondwelling units Essential Employee units VACANT Money received for vacant housing through capital fund 218 4 1 2 $5,142.46 $13,151.04 $18,293.50 371 310 2 0 59 $152,689.05 $387,955.68 $540,644.73 129 125 4 0 0 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 IL002067000 Sullivan Apartments 482 375 5 0 102 $262,975.38 $670,703.04 $933,678.42 IL002070000 Jones Apartments 116 113 3 0 0 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 IL002106000 One South Leavitt 2 2 0 0 0 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 IL002116000 Roosevelt Square 125 122 0 0 3 $2,820.33 $19,726.56 $22,546.89 IL002120000 Jackson Square West End Roosevelt Square Phase II 57 56 0 0 1 $940.11 $6,575.52 $7,515.63 120 119 0 0 1 $940.11 $6,575.52 $7,515.63 IL002042000 IL002133000 Occupied Units Money received for vacancies through operating fund Total Funding received for vacant units IL002013000 Dearborn Homes 730 532 8 0 190 $489,996.70 $1,249,348.80 $1,739,345.50 IL002052000 Lincoln Perry Apartments 267 249 7 0 11 $28,273.74 $72,330.72 $100,604.46 IL002052100 Lincoln Perry Annex 183 175 4 0 4 $10,310.68 $26,302.08 $36,612.76 IL002078000 43rd and Princeton Homes 339 299 6 1 33 $84,853.23 $216,992.16 $301,845.39 IL002099000 Hilliard FamilyHolsten P1 59 58 0 0 1 $940.10 $6,575.52 $7,515.62 IL002100000 Hilliard SeniorHolsten P2 Oakwood Shores 1A 94 94 0 0 0 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 63 63 0 0 0 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 IL002115000 The Pershing 27 27 0 0 0 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 IL002125000 Park Boulevard 1B 54 54 0 0 0 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 IL002127000 Hansberry Square 83 83 0 0 0 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 IL002134000 Hilliard FamilyHolsten P2 58 58 0 0 0 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 IL002113000 Funding Received for Vacant Apartments (2) Development Number Development Name Standing Units Occupied Units Nondwelling units Essential Employee units VACANT Money received for vacant housing through capital fund Money received for vacancies through operating fund Total Funding received for vacant units IL002135000 Hilliard SeniorHolsten P1 94 94 0 0 0 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 IL002139000 Robert Taylor Legends South C -2 Offsite 52 52 0 0 0 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 IL002018100 Lake Park Place 300 144 10 0 146 $368,232.4 4 $960,025.92 $1,328,258.3 6 IL002020000 Quincy; 600-602 E. 41st Street 27 27 0 0 0 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 IL002021000 Langston; 722 E. Bowen Ave. 29 28 0 0 1 $940.10 $6,575.52 $7,515.62 IL002077000 Lake Michigan Homes 124 116 4 0 4 $10,230.44 $26,302.08 $36,532.52 IL002079000 4930 South Langley Apartments 174 162 6 0 6 $15,430.44 $39,453.12 $54,883.56 IL002083000 Judge Green Apartments 154 148 3 0 3 $7,708.89 $19,726.56 $27,435.45 IL002084000 Judge Slater Apartments 407 296 5 0 106 $273,343.2 6 $697,005.12 $970,348.38 IL002087000 Washington Park 92 89 1 0 2 $5,175.90 $13,151.04 $18,326.94 IL002105000 Lake Park Crescent 60 60 0 0 0 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 IL002119000 Jazz on the Boulevard 30 30 0 0 0 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 IL002130000 Oakwood Shores 1B 63 60 0 0 3 $2,820.33 $19,726.56 $22,546.89 IL002137000 Madden Wells 2A - Oakwood Shores 81 78 0 0 3 $2,820.33 $19,726.56 $22,546.89 IL002140000 Lake Park Crescent Condos 22 21 0 0 1 $940.08 $6,575.52 $7,515.60 IL002145000 Oakwood Shores (P2 B1) 29 28 0 0 1 $940.10 $6,575.52 $7,515.62 IL002081000 61 East 69th Street Apartments 125 122 3 0 0 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 IL002041000 9141-77 S. South Chicago Apartments 282 263 6 0 13 $33,426.64 $85,481.76 $118,908.40 IL002117000 Taylor Mahalia Place 54 53 0 0 1 $940.11 $6,575.52 $7,515.63 Funding Received for Vacant Apartments (3) Development Number Development Name Standing Units Occupied Units Nondwelling units Essential Employee units VACANT Money received for vacant housing through capital fund Money received for vacancies through operating fund Total Funding received for vacant units IL002002000 Altgeld Gardens I 910 749 10 0 151 $389,063.5 8 $992,903.52 $1,381,967.1 0 IL002002100 Altgeld Gardens II 590 228 26 0 336 $856,164.9 6 $2,209,374.7 2 $3,065,539.6 8 IL002002300 Philip Murray Homes 500 304 6 0 190 $489,565.4 0 $1,249,348.8 0 $1,738,914.2 0 IL002038000 Trumbull Park Homes 465 433 12 1 19 $48,825.25 $124,934.88 $173,760.13 IL002003000 Bridgeport Homes 130 98 10 0 22 $55,709.28 $144,661.44 $200,370.72 IL002046000 Armour Square 392 369 19 1 3 $7,634.34 $19,726.56 $27,360.90 IL002066000 Shields Apartments 116 113 3 0 0 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 IL002095000 Lawndale Gardens 124 109 4 0 11 $28,133.82 $72,330.72 $100,464.54 IL002039000 Washington Park 252 219 4 0 29 $74,958.33 $190,690.08 $265,648.41 IL002080000 6401 South Yale Avenue 224 212 4 0 8 $20,636.40 $52,604.16 $73,240.56 IL002082000 Kenneth Campbell Apartments 165 161 3 0 1 $2,570.85 $6,575.52 $9,146.37 IL002086000 Major Lawrence Apartments 193 185 3 0 5 $12,891.00 $32,877.60 $45,768.60 IL002108000 St. Edmund's Meadows 14 13 0 0 1 $940.14 $6,575.52 $7,515.66 IL002122000 Keystone 38 36 0 0 2 $1,880.22 $13,151.04 $15,031.26 IL002025000 Frank Lowden Homes 127 123 3 0 1 $2,573.14 $6,575.52 $9,148.66 IL002024000 Leclaire Courts Ext 0 0 $776,385.0 0 $0.00 $776,385.00 IL002061000 3030 West 21st Apartments 350 336 5 0 9 $23,170.68 $59,179.68 $82,350.36 IL002063000 1611 Racine Apartments 212 209 3 0 0 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 IL002107000 West End/Archer Courts 14 14 0 0 0 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 IL002112000 West End/Archer Courts 4 4 0 0 0 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 IL002019000 Westhaven Park 552 463 1 0 88 $82,729.68 $578,645.76 $661,375.44 IL002027000 Mohawk North 16 15 0 0 1 $940.13 $6,575.52 $7,515.65 IL002028000 North Town Village 39 38 0 0 1 $940.10 $6,575.52 $7,515.62 IL002043000 Eckhart Park Annex 378 306 2 1 69 $178,224.9 3 $453,710.88 $631,935.81 Funding Received for Vacant Apartments (4) Development Number Development Name Standing Units Occupied Units Nondwelling units Essential Employee units VACANT Money received for vacant housing through capital fund Money received for vacancies through operating fund Total Funding received for vacant units IL002044000 Flannery Apartments 252 239 6 1 6 $15,415.74 $39,453.12 $54,868.86 IL002050000 Franklin Blvd. Apartments 149 146 1 0 2 $5,163.28 $13,151.04 $18,314.32 IL002088000 Oldtown Square 16 15 0 0 1 $940.13 $6,575.52 $7,515.65 IL002090000 Orchard Park 13 9 0 0 4 $3,760.32 $26,302.08 $30,062.40 IL002091000 Frances Cabrini Homes 584 123 6 0 455 $1,170,191.7 5 $2,991,861.60 $4,162,053.3 5 IL002093000 Horner Westhaven 552 463 1 0 88 $226,666.88 $578,645.76 $805,312.64 IL002097000 Mohawk Partner 5 5 0 0 0 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 IL002101000 Domain Lofts 16 14 0 0 2 $1,880.26 $13,151.04 $15,031.30 IL002104000 & IL002102000 Old Town Village West and East 66 63 0 0 3 $2,820.33 $19,726.56 $22,546.89 IL002109000 North Town Village 40 39 0 0 1 $940.10 $6,575.52 $7,515.62 IL002121000 WHP Tower 34 34 0 0 0 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 IL002126000 Parkside of Old Town 72 70 0 0 2 $1,880.22 $13,151.04 $15,031.26 IL002131000 Parkside Phase 1B Rental 35 34 0 0 1 $940.11 $6,575.52 $7,515.63 IL002132000 Westhaven Park Phase IIB 70 68 0 0 2 $1,880.22 $13,151.04 $15,031.26 IL002141000 Westhaven Park Phase IIC 46 45 0 0 1 $940.11 $6,575.52 $7,515.63 IL002062000 Garfield Park Apartments 151 147 3 0 1 $2,569.27 $6,575.52 $9,144.79 IL002065000 Parkview Apartments 181 0 0 0 181 $468,417.14 $1,190,169.12 $1,658,586.2 6 IL002031002 Scattered Sites North West 442 380 0 1 61 $57,346.71 $401,106.72 $458,453.43 IL002064000 Parkside and Lake Senior 169 163 3 0 3 $7,713.78 $19,726.56 $27,440.34 IL002074000 2720 North Sheffield Apartments 394 359 14 1 20 $51,043.00 $131,510.40 $182,553.40 IL002059000 Harry Schneider Apartments 174 168 2 0 4 $10,308.56 $26,302.08 $36,610.64 Funding Received for Vacant Apartments (5) Development Number Development Name Standing Units Occupied Units Nondwelling units Essential Employee units VACANT Money received for vacant housing through capital fund Money received for vacancies through operating fund Total Funding received for vacant units IL002076000 6400 North Sheridan Apartments 450 403 3 1 43 $111,012.24 $282,747.36 $393,759.60 IL002049000 116 Elm Apartments 269 261 5 1 2 $5,140.94 $13,151.04 $18,291.98 IL002072000 2111 North Halstead Apartments 134 130 4 0 0 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 IL002073000 1845 North Larabee Apartments 83 81 1 1 0 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 IL002098000 Renaissance North 18 17 0 0 1 $940.11 $6,575.52 $7,515.63 IL002053000; formerly IL002048 Callner Apartments; 855 W. Aldine 147 139 3 1 4 $10,351.80 $26,302.08 $36,653.88 IL002144000 Britton Budd 173 170 0 1 2 $1,880.22 $13,151.04 $15,031.26 IL002060000 4645 North Sheridan Apartments 235 217 3 0 15 $38,639.10 $98,632.80 $137,271.90 IL002055000 3920-40 North Clark Apartments 357 348 3 1 5 $12,900.20 $32,877.60 $45,777.80 IL002058000 Mary Hartwell Catherwood; 3930 N. Clark Apts Fountain View 357 348 3 1 5 $0.00 $32,877.60 $32,877.60 14 12 0 0 2 $1,880.28 $13,151.04 $15,031.32 IL002051000 Kenmore Apartments;5040 N. Kenmore 100 97 0 1 2 $5,175.90 $13,151.04 $18,326.94 IL002054000 William Castleman Apartments 201 195 3 1 2 $5,147.84 $13,151.04 $18,298.88 IL002057000 Judge Fisher Apartments 200 194 4 1 1 $2,569.15 $6,575.52 $9,144.67 IL002075000 Loyola and Ridge 181 162 3 1 15 $38,585.40 $98,632.80 $137,218.20 IL002022000 Julia Lathrop 925 167 11 0 747 $1,924,847.1 9 $4,911,913.44 $6,836,760.63 IL002124000 Funding Received for Vacant Apartments (6) Development Number Development Name Standing Units Occupied Units Nondwelling units Essential Employee units VACANT Money received for vacant housing through capital fund Money received for vacancies through operating fund Total Funding received for vacant units IL002031000 Scattered Sites North Central 669 594 3 1 71 $66,448.90 $466,861.92 $533,310.82 IL002071000 Lincoln Park Area/SS 100 98 2 0 0 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 IL002040000 Wentworth Gardens 343 323 7 0 13 $33,402.33 $85,481.76 $118,884.09 IL002034000 Scattered Sites South West 308 226 2 0 80 $206,791.20 $526,041.60 $732,832.80 IL002035000 Scattered Sites West 249 214 4 0 31 $80,138.41 $203,841.12 $283,979.53 IL002033000 Scattered Sites South East 584 441 2 1 127 $327,629.52 $835,091.04 $1,162,720.56 IL002123000 The Larrabee 4 4 0 0 0 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 IL002118000 River Village North 25 22 0 0 3 $2,820.36 $19,726.56 $22,546.92 IL002129000 River Village Point 12 12 0 0 0 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 IL002136000 River Village South 18 17 0 0 1 $940.11 $6,575.52 $7,515.63 IL002032000 Scattered Sites North East 621 533 3 0 85 $219,589.00 $558,919.20 $778,508.20 21,801 17,531 304 21 3,945 $9,944,416. 29 $24,585,869. 28 $34,530,285. 57 Total PHA This page intentionally left blank To reach the Chicago Housing Initiative, please contact: 773-292-4980 ext. 238 (office) 773-292-0333 (fax)