Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Mayor details LR safety program

100 residents to get free energy inspection­s, minor repairs

- CHELSEA BOOZER

About 100 residents in seven neighborho­ods in Little Rock will receive free home safety and energy inspection­s and minor repairs in the coming year through a new program created with federal grant money.

Little Rock Mayor Mark Stodola announced the AmeriCorps Neighborho­od Safety Corps outside the house of the program’s first beneficiar­y Friday morning.

There’s a chance the grant will be extended for two additional years, Stodola said. The goal is to work on at least 100 houses each year.

Single family homeowners in the Hope, Central High and Wright Avenue, Wakefield, Upper Baseline, Westbrook and West Heights Place, Brownwood Terrace, and Windamere neighborho­ods who are considered to have a “low to moderate” income will be eligible to apply.

Anyone in the defined areas is eligible to receive safety inspection­s, no matter their income.

To receive energy efficiency upgrades or any rehabilita­tion work on the home through the program, the household income must be at or below 200 percent of the federal poverty line.

That means taking in $23,760 or less for a one-person household, $32,040 or less for a two-person household, $40,320 or less for a three-person household, $48,600 or less for a four-person household, and $56,880 or less for a five-person household.

The city will take applicatio­ns throughout the year. The initial households will be chosen from a list of people who have already applied for rehabilita­tion assistance through the city’s Department

of Housing and Neighborho­od Programs.

Those interested in applying can call the department at (501) 371-6825. If a resident does not own the house he lives in, the landlord will have to approve any work before it can be done.

The city has already hired 15 AmeriCorps crew members for this program and will hire 15 more. Ten of them are full time and are paid $12,630 for the 11 months they will spend working on the crew, and 20 are part-time and will be paid $6,315. Upon completing their service, they get a stipend to use at a post-secondary educationa­l institutio­n, including some technical schools, or to repay student loans.

Little Rock competed for and was selected to receive a $276,579 initial grant from the Corporatio­n for National and Community Service to start the program. The city will spend $165,229 as a match in the first year. It is eligible to receive the grant for two more years if the first year goes well.

Residents selected through the program will get a home security check, which could include installing deadbolt locks, painting house numbers on curbs or trimming bushes. Crews also will retrofit the house with energy-efficient light bulbs, weather stripping and low-flow shower heads.

Residents may also be able to get limited rehabilita­tion work done, such as repairs to siding, porches or railings.

The AmeriCorps team is “going to be looking at our streetscap­es, they’re going to be looking at bushes that need to be cut, houses that need to be painted, trash that’s on the street. They’re going to be looking at houses that need improvemen­ts, and they’re going to be making a transforma­tion and a change in the lives of many, many people,” Stodola said.

He said the program is not only meant to revitalize neighborho­ods but to help combat crime in targeted areas. The seven areas were chosen by the Little Rock Police Department. Officers selected single-family neighborho­ods that have seen a higher than average number of burglaries.

“We know the police can’t do it all by themselves, and this is an excellent opportunit­y to reduce crime in Little Rock,” said Victor Turner, director of the city’s Housing and Neighdirec­tor

borhood Department.

Assistant Police Chief Alice Faulk said the Police Department will work in the seven areas to help residents start neighborho­od watch programs.

Turner said the city will work with people who apply for the program to see if they are also eligible for other federally funded housing rehabilita­tion programs.

Gregory Wilson, 57, is a recent beneficiar­y of one of those programs. The announceme­nt of the Neighborho­od Safety Corps program was made Friday outside his home on 18th Street.

Wilson will get the safety and energy inspection­s. He also requested that railings be installed on his front porch steps. He has cystic fibrosis and uses forearm crutches to walk.

He grinned while showing off the work the city had done to his home Friday. A drooping bedroom ceiling had been replaced and a large hole in his bedroom wall had been repaired with new sheet rock. He received a new bathtub, sink vanity, closet, toilet and heater in his bathroom and new flooring in his kitchen.

“It’s a blessing,” he said. His neighbors around the corner on Wolfe Street watched from their front porch as the news conference that included U.S. Rep. French Hill took place.

A brick pillar holding up Lorre Cunningham’s porch is leaning and in bad need of repair. Cunningham, 56, wondered if she would qualify for the new program and if she could get the porch fixed. Its railings are also loose.

“This would be a great opportunit­y for anyone, especially if they need help with the finances. We need [repairs,] but we just can’t afford it,” said Cunningham, who lives at the home with her mother, Rose.

“My worst thought is what if a big storm, a hard wind comes in here? Our whole front porch is going to come down. My 87-year-old mother don’t need that,” Cunningham said. “We need all the help we can get, and I’m the only income coming in other than her Social Security. Paycheck to paycheck just don’t get it.”

 ?? Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/STATON BREIDENTHA­L ?? Little Rock Assistant Police Chief Alice Fulk, (from left) City Director Joan Adcock and Pamela Bingham, president of the Upper Baseline Windamere Neighborho­od Associatio­n, on Friday examine a map of areas where a grant will allow AmeriCorps members to...
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/STATON BREIDENTHA­L Little Rock Assistant Police Chief Alice Fulk, (from left) City Director Joan Adcock and Pamela Bingham, president of the Upper Baseline Windamere Neighborho­od Associatio­n, on Friday examine a map of areas where a grant will allow AmeriCorps members to...

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