Dayton Daily News

HOUSING UNITS FOR HOMELESS

Nonprofit provides 700 sq.-ft. spaces for residents of shelters.

- By Wayne Baker Staff Writer

A nonprofit that KETTERING — opened a housing developmen­t in Kettering is targeting low-income and homeless people an

— investment of about $6 million in tax credits, state and local funds.

Dayton-based Miami Valley Housing Opportunit­y bought the property at 3908 Wilmington Pike, about a block north of Stroop Road. It completed a three-story, 40-unit apartment building that covers about 39,852 square feet, according to Debbie Watts Robinson, chief executive officer of MVHO.

“We’re excited about the site and its proximity to various amenities like the library,” Robinson said.

The developmen­t provides permanent, supportive housing for men and women who have been homeless and are staying in Montgomery County shelters. The apartments are one-bedroom units with a kitchen and bathroom, encompassi­ng about 700 square feet each. The building also includes some common areas.

There will be no children housed in the developmen­t, according to MVHO.

Elizabeth Gilmore, 23, who grew up in Kettering, and Daniel Kephart, 21, who made his way here from Orlando, both live there and say it has worked out well for them.

“It’s been amazing,” Gilmore said, of the housing developmen­t that opened last November. “You get your own free will and get to have your own space and cook when you want. You get rules, but you can make the rules for your apartment. It goes both ways. The apartments are pretty huge. The property has been kept up.”

“I personally enjoy having all the help from the case managers and the landlord that is here,” Kephart said. “And being able to get the food pantry that comes here.”

“Yeah, definitely the food pantry that comes in is a good thing,” Gilmore said.

Constructi­on crews bulldozed the former Red Lobster building on the property to prepare the space for the new building.

Gary James, who lives near the developmen­t and frequents the library a block down from the property, said he hasn’t noticed any prob- lems with the new shelter.

“This place is kept up and you don’t see anything crazy going on,” he said.

The nonprofit received low-income housing tax credits and Capital Funding to End Homelessne­ss from the Ohio Housing Finance Agency. Other funding came from the Federal Home Loan Bank of Cincinnati, the Ohio Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services, and Montgomery County Housing Trust Funds and County Corp.

Robinson said tenants will apply through Mont- gomery County and will be thoroughly vetted. Some of the supportive services at the facility include lifeskills training for residents and two Five Rivers Health Centers exam rooms.

Terry Welker, chief build- ing official for the city of Kettering, said the apartment complex is on a visible street and right on a major bus line, but the proj- ect is not one that the city is involved in.

In 2014, more than 4,400 different people stayed at one of the community shelters at least one night in Montgom- ery County. That included 549 families — or 1,714 people — plus 2,610 single adults and 79 unaccompan­ied minors.

Miami Valley Housing Opportunit­ies has worked with the city of Kettering multiple times, Robinson said, and the housing initiative will help individual­s find permanent residences when they normally would be on the streets or in a shelter.

 ??  ??
 ?? PHOTOS BY WAYNE BAKER / STAFF ?? The Miami Valley Housing Opportunit­y nonprofit bought a former Red Lobster site at 3908 Wilmington Pike in Kettering, and after bulldozing it, built a housing developmen­t for low-income residents and the homeless. The three-story, 40-unit apartment complex opened in November.
PHOTOS BY WAYNE BAKER / STAFF The Miami Valley Housing Opportunit­y nonprofit bought a former Red Lobster site at 3908 Wilmington Pike in Kettering, and after bulldozing it, built a housing developmen­t for low-income residents and the homeless. The three-story, 40-unit apartment complex opened in November.
 ??  ?? Elizabeth Gilmore, 23, who grew up in Kettering, and Daniel Kephart, 21, who made his way here from Orlando, both live in the housing developmen­t and say it has worked out well for them. “I personally enjoy having all the help from the case managers,” Kephart said.
Elizabeth Gilmore, 23, who grew up in Kettering, and Daniel Kephart, 21, who made his way here from Orlando, both live in the housing developmen­t and say it has worked out well for them. “I personally enjoy having all the help from the case managers,” Kephart said.

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