Boston Herald

AG strikes deal on housing

Fenway women's apartment building to remain affordable

- By Flint McColgan flint.mccolgan@bostonhera­ld. com

One of the lowest-cost housing options for women in Boston will remain that way following an agreement secured with the state attorney general’s office.

The Our Lady Guild House, a single-occupancy apartment building on Charlesgat­e West, lists its smallest room, a 10-by-11 footer, at $810 and its largest, a 12-by-14, at $950 — Boston steals, especially at easy walking distance to several arts and parks, including Fenway.

The property is owned by the Daughters of Mary of the Immaculate Conception, though state’s filing lists a separate entity named for the building since 1981, and has its apartment building open for residency by about 130 “women of all faiths and national origins” — but the Attorney General’s office said a sale is pending that could could have put the affordabil­ity of this housing in jeopardy.

On Wednesday, the AG’s office announced that it had secured a deal with the owners and management of the House that provides “protection­s against evictions and rent increases while the sale of the building is pending,” settles allegation­s of age and disability discrimina­tion against long-term tenants and secured a $115,000 penalty payment that will be mainly distribute­d to seven longterm residents of the House.

“Our elders and residents living with disabiliti­es deserve more than just our respect. We owe them an opportunit­y to live long and healthy lives, free from discrimina­tion and the fear of being pushed out of their homes,” AG Andrea Campbell said in a statement. “This settlement provides stability and safety for the women who have called Our Lady’s Guild House home for years, and our office will continue to protect access to affordable housing across the Commonweal­th.”

The agreement tosses out pending eviction claims, keeps the building affordable housing “in perpetuity” and allows six of the long-term residents to stay and subject only to “limited rent increases.”

Residents first filed complaints in 2018 when the House’s management “brought no-fault eviction proceeding­s to rid the building of long-term tenants in violation of fair housing laws,” according to a statement from Margaret Turner, the senior attorney at Greater Boston Legal Services.

At that time, residents told the Herald that the management of the building had changed in 2012 and that it began catering toward college students, with the elderly being pushed out.

 ?? MATT STONE — BOSTON HERALD ?? The ministry of the Daughters of Mary of the Immaculate Conception, housed at Our Lady’s Guild House, at 20 Charlesgat­e West, will remain affordable.
MATT STONE — BOSTON HERALD The ministry of the Daughters of Mary of the Immaculate Conception, housed at Our Lady’s Guild House, at 20 Charlesgat­e West, will remain affordable.

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