Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Showing some love

Litter cleanup, LR funds help fix up city’s Love neighborho­od.

- CHELSEA BOOZER

Wright’s rant in a grocery store a few years ago is likely responsibl­e, at least in part, for hundreds of thousands of dollars of rehabilita­tion efforts in her central Little Rock neighborho­od.

Wright’s complaints were overheard by at-large City Director Joan Adcock, who encouraged Wright to get involved in the Love Neighborho­od Associatio­n, now run with just four active members.

Adcock also started going to the meetings, and what began with neighborho­od cleanups and small, short-term rehabilita­tion projects — like porch work for elderly residents — has now turned into the city purchasing and fixing up homes.

The city set aside $230,000 in its general fund budget for the Love Neighborho­od Revitaliza­tion Project. The funds are being used to purchase houses, rehabilita­te them and then sell them to low-income buyers.

About $70,000 has been spent so far. Four homes have been purchased, and work has begun on them.

“When I moved over here in 1973, it was a nice neighborho­od,” said Wright, who is 70. “Then gangs moved in, and they destroyed the neighborho­od. The older people died out. Their children didn’t do anything with the properties. It became a bunch of boarded-up homes, burnt-out homes and weed lots everywhere. Then it was littered. Even still, people come over here and dump their stuff.”

The neighborho­od associatio­n applies for the city’s $1,000 Love Your Block grant every year and uses it for litter cleanup. The organizati­on donated trash cans decorated by youths and placed them along Charles Bussey Avenue to deter littering. It also has youths who are sentenced to community service to help pick up litter.

City street improvemen­t funds have been used to add sidewalks and improve drainage in the area. There’s ongoing constructi­on on Asher Avenue that will replace a ditch with sidewalks.

The hope is that homeowners and private developers will see the city’s efforts and join in.

Since January, 13 permits have been granted to private investors or homeowners to complete $213,000 in rehabilita­tion on structures in the Love neighborho­od, Adcock said.

“The thing was always that if the city would get involved in these neighborho­ods and put money into them, then private developmen­t is going to follow,” Adcock said. “But it’s important to note that the government cannot just say, ‘We are going to do that neighborho­od next.’ It has to start with the community, with the neighborho­od people coming together and saying what they want for their neighborho­od.”

She said residents of the Love neighborho­od have “buyin” through their input and their own efforts.

Wright said she hopes her neighbors, a lot of whom are renters, start getting more involved.

“I was 26 when I moved here. It has been a really bad place to be. It went from bad to worse. But now it’s starting to look better. There are less and less shootings over here. We’re just glad things are beginning to look better,” Wright said.

The four active neighborho­od associatio­n members clean up vacant lots through the city’s weed-lot program and use proceeds to buy garden tools and equipment for a community garden that they set up at 2218 Valmar St.

Adcock is showing off the rehabilita­tion efforts to try to persuade Habitat for Humanity to build homes in the area with some grant money it expects to receive, the city director said.

If not Habitat for Humanity, Adcock wants to work with another developmen­t group.

“The city is not looking to make a profit,” Little Rock Community Developmen­t Manager Kevin Howard said. “We’re just looking to put someone in those houses that’s a low- to moderate-income person and try to help them receive that home ownership and help them so they can have suitable living.”

Howard manages the real estate portion of the revitaliza­tion project, finding structures in the neighborho­od for possible city purchase.

He walked through the two-bedroom, one-bathroom house at 2218 S. Martin St. last week, pointing out work that the city has started after buying the house earlier this year.

Water, sewage and gas pipes have been replaced; a dilapidate­d addition at the back of the house has been torn out, and plans are to rebuild it; new electrical wires have been run through the house; and a new roof has been added.

The house will be fully renovated before the city tries to sell it.

Across the street sits a vacant lot next to a run-down house. The city has tried to buy that house, as well, but it hasn’t had cooperatio­n from the owner, Howard said.

In contrast, the property adjacent to 2218 S. Martin has a well-manicured lawn and keptup house. Across the street from it, women sat on new frontporch chairs Friday morning with a view of their neighbor’s lush garden.

Howard said he’s seen private developmen­t spurred by government investment before, pointing to rehabilita­tion work the city does with federal grants through the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t’s Neighborho­od Stabilizat­ion Programs.

“The key is to clean up the area as far as the lots, dilapidate­d properties and burned structures. Once you get those cleaned up and start doing developmen­t, people come in and start buying structures. You enhance the area. These things have to happen in order to revitalize the area,” Howard said. “You see people starting to take pride in their homes.”

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 ?? Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/JEFF MITCHELL ?? Kevin Howard, Little Rock’s community developmen­t manager, shows the city’s latest housing rehabilita­tion effort, at 2218 S. Martin St., on Friday. The city is buying and renovating properties in the Love neighborho­od in an effort to spur more private investment in the area.
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/JEFF MITCHELL Kevin Howard, Little Rock’s community developmen­t manager, shows the city’s latest housing rehabilita­tion effort, at 2218 S. Martin St., on Friday. The city is buying and renovating properties in the Love neighborho­od in an effort to spur more private investment in the area.
 ?? Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/JEFF MITCHELL ?? Little Rock is in the process of renovating the house at 2218 S. Martin St., s1a2iTdHKS­eT.vin Howard, the city’s community developmen­t manager. The city will then sell it to a low- to moderate-income buyer.
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/JEFF MITCHELL Little Rock is in the process of renovating the house at 2218 S. Martin St., s1a2iTdHKS­eT.vin Howard, the city’s community developmen­t manager. The city will then sell it to a low- to moderate-income buyer.
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