110 likes | 116 Views
This report provides an overview of the HOPE VI Cross-Site Study, exploring the impact of the program on residents, developments, and neighborhoods shortly after sites are reoccupied. It analyzes data from 15 early HOPE VI sites and discusses the characteristics of HOPE VI residents, the mixed-income nature of the sites, management of developments, and the program's impact on neighborhoods. The report also highlights observations on the evolution of HOPE VI.
E N D
HOPE VI Forum: National Perspective from the HOPE VI Cross-site Report Larry Buron March 16, 2011
Overview of HOPE VI Cross-Site Study • Study objective: To explore the impact of the HOPE VI program on residents, developments and neighborhoods shortly after sites are reoccupied. • 15 early HOPE VI sites that were the subject of a baseline assessment in 1996 • 1993 or 1994 grantees • 11 of 15 had full or substantial reoccupancy by end of data collection in 2002
Study Sites: 100% Public Housing Developments • Camden – McGuire Gardens • Cleveland – Outhwaite/King Kennedy • Milwaukee – Hillside Terrace • Oakland – Lockwood Gardens • San Francisco – Bernal Dwellings/Plaza East • Baltimore – Pleasant View Gardens
Study Sites: Mixed-Income Developments • Boston – Mission Main • New Haven – Monterey Place • Charlotte – First Ward Place/Autumn Place • Washington DC – Townhomes on Capitol Hill • Atlanta – Centennial Place
How “Mixed” are the Mixed-Income Sites? • Share of non-Public Housing Households: • Boston: 17% • New Haven: 18% • Charlotte: 43% • Washington DC: 50% • Atlanta: 60%
Management of HOPE VI Developments • 8 of 11 are privately managed • Indicators pointed to good management • High occupancy rates • Rent collections at 90% or more • Evictions low after reoccupancy • Turnover typically around 10 percent
HOPE VI Impact on Neighborhood • Limited measurable effect, but early after reoccupancy • Crime rate declined, but only declined faster than rest of city and other PH neighborhoods at 3 of 6 sites. • Census data showed mixed results • Property value analysis at 2 sites did not find significant effect after H6 announcement, start of demolition, start of construction (too early for post re-occupancy) • Clear visible changes and returning PH residents reported improvement
Observations from Study on the Evolution of HOPE VI • Early HOPE VI sites took a long time to complete • Study had a few mixed-finance sites that became more common as HOPE VI evolved • Implicit assumption in early days of HOPE VI was that original residents would return without concerted effort • Supportive service plans did not reflect the fact that residents would be dispersed during relocation and many would not return • Emphasis of many early grants was to replace worst public housing rather than long-term, sustainable improvement of the neighborhood