Rome News-Tribune

Cave Spring Housing Authority eyeing elementary school site

- By Doug Walker Dwalker@rn-t.com

The Cave Spring Housing Authority is looking at the possibilit­y of using Cave Spring Elementary School once the county school system vacates it.

“The property is contiguous to the existing housing authority property, so that’s not a surprise,” said Cave Spring Mayor Rob Ware.

The Northwest Georgia Housing Authority currently manages Cave Spring’s 20 public housing units and 37 Section Eight housing units. Its executive director, Sandra Hudson, said the idea is still in the infant stages.

Once the Cave Spring Housing Authority is in the position to seek control of the property, the next move would be to get public input.

“It’s all brainstorm­ing right now,” Hudson said.

Floyd County Schools Superinten­dent

Glenn White said the school board received a copy of a letter indicating interest, and that the board has had some other partie asking about the property as well.

“We’re just listening to people right now,” White said. “We’ve got a whole year.”

The Northwest Georgia Housing Authority, which owns properties in Rome and Rockmart, is simply the management agency, Hudson emphasized.

“The Cave Spring Housing Authority will oversee (any redevelopm­ent) and make all the decisions,” she said.

Betty Sue Hickman, who chairs the Cave Spring Housing Authority, said they generated the letter to the City

Council as a courtesy.

“This is business and I’m sure there are going to be other people with proposals,” she said.

The letter sent to Ware and the city council states the authority is interested in maintainin­g local control of the property once the school is closed. They hope to submit a more detailed proposal within 60 days.

“Ultimately, whatever goes

there, the (County) Board of Education has the say on that,” Hickman said.

None of the other interested parties have submitted formal proposals, White said.

The system’s greatest concern, White said, is that whoever takes on the property has the financial resources to take care of the property for 30 to 40 years into the future.

“We don’t want it to become an eyesore,” he said.

CARROLLTON — Judges in at least two Georgia counties are refusing to acknowledg­e a federal order meant to protect most tenants from eviction because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The magistrate­s in Carroll and Coweta counties are not halting evictions because of the order from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which says losing housing may cause the spread of COVID-19.

“The CDC, as far as I know, has no control over Georgia courts,” Carroll County Chief Magistrate Alton Johnson told WABE-FM.

Katie Duren said her family fell behind on rent at a townhome south of Villa Rica after she and her husband lost work during the pandemic and neither was approved for unemployme­nt.

After several months, Duren’s landlord filed for eviction. Her family filled out the CDC form seeking protection, but when they showed up for court, Johnson told Duren that Carroll County doesn’t honor the CDC order.

“He should have just ripped it up and threw it in the trash because that’s how I felt when he said that,” Duren said.

Johnson said he doesn’t believe the CDC’S authority overrides state law. Asked why most other Georgia magistrate­s have come to a different conclusion, Johnson said he didn’t know.

“I think that if the federal government wanted to do this correctly, they would have done it by passing a law,” Johnson said, “and properly compensate those that are out of resources or money.”

He said the eviction moratorium seems to violate landlord rights. He acknowledg­ed that Congress passed $25 billion in rental assistance at the end of December, but said that the funding was not available yet.

“When you have somebody who owes a mortgage, is it fair for that individual to bear the burden of what should be a government’s responsibi­lity?” Johnson asked. “That’s the way I look at it.”

Johnson said he could be wrong in his reasoning and said he wishes the state would send down more instructio­ns.

Under the first federal moratorium, the Georgia Supreme Court issued a rule for magistrate courts to follow. Landlords had to swear that the eviction ban, which only covered those with government­subsidized loans, did not affect them.

The state Supreme Court said it would be improper to weigh in on a judge’s interpreta­tion of the CDC order unless a case arrived on appeal. Johnson said he has invited tenants to challenge his decisions to a higher court.

But that can be harder than it sounds, said Susan Reif of the Eviction Prevention Project at Georgia Legal Services. She said state law requires tenants pay rent while an appeal is pending, or they could still be evicted.

“Most of our clients, when they realize they’re not going to be able to remain in possession, have to focus their energies on finding housing and alternativ­e arrangemen­ts for their family,” Reif said.

Tenants who must leave despite CDC protection­s have little recourse at the federal level.

They could wait to see if the U.S. Justice Department will enforce the CDC moratorium. The order said violators could face a $100,000 fine.

Johnson ordered Duren’s family to leave the property and pay back $5,000 in rent. A few days later, Duren and her husband tested positive for COVID-19.

Because of the diagnosis, her landlord, who declined comment, allowed them to remain in their townhome for another two weeks. Duren said they were still sick when the six of them moved into their SUV. It was two nights before they got enough money for a Villa Rica hotel, where they’ve now stayed for a month.

“The CDC, which is federal, said that if we did all of these things that we couldn’t be evicted,” she said. “But this one county decided that they could make their own rules.”

 ?? File ?? The Cave Spring Housing Authority is considerin­g a proposal to convert Cave Spring Elementary School into affordable family housing once it is vacated by Floyd County Schools in the summer of 2022.
File The Cave Spring Housing Authority is considerin­g a proposal to convert Cave Spring Elementary School into affordable family housing once it is vacated by Floyd County Schools in the summer of 2022.
 ??  ?? The public housing complex in Cave Spring is located directly adjacent to Cave Spring Elementary School.
The public housing complex in Cave Spring is located directly adjacent to Cave Spring Elementary School.

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