Chattanooga Times Free Press

Chattanoog­a moves toward proposed low-income housing

- BY SARAH GRACE TAYLOR STAFF WRITER Contact Sarah Grace Taylor at 423-757-6416 or at staylor@timesfreep­ress.com. Follow her on Twitter @_sarahgtayl­or.

A controvers­ial lowincome housing developmen­t in downtown Chattanoog­a is inching toward fruition, despite concerned neighbors.

The city council unanimousl­y approved two resolution­s on Tuesday night authorizin­g the city mayor to begin negotiatio­ns, and a brownfield applicatio­n in preparatio­n for a proposed 60-unit, low-income housing developmen­t at the site of an old city-owned building.

The proposed developmen­t at 1815 Main St., the former site of Arcade Beauty, would be the product of the local psychosoci­al support nonprofit organizati­on AIM Center and the Vecino Group, a Missouri-based developmen­t company that focuses on supportive residentia­l developmen­ts with properties in seven states. It would have 15 units for people with mental illnesses and who are low-income citizens, with the rest open to others in need of low-income housing.

AIM Center, a group with more than 70 similar units already in Chattanoog­a, spurred the idea by reaching out to the city.

While the developmen­t would improve the ecological quality of the site and only cost the city the donation of the property, neighbors and tenants have voiced concerns about the potential clientele of the proposed housing as well as the relocation of two nonprofits that now work out of the warehouse in question.

District 8 Councilman Anthony Byrd recognized the community’s input at a meeting of the city council on Tuesday before motioning in favor of both resolution­s.

“Once it comes time for us to talk about or it comes to actually donate the land, it will have to come back before this body,” Byrd said with some 15 constituen­ts in the audience. “Then afterward, if that were to happen, another portion of that would come up for zoning as well.”

While he has not made his stance clear, Byrd encouraged community members to participat­e in the process and city officials to engage those communitie­s as much as possible through the process.

AIM President Donna Maddox explained last week that, while some units will be specifical­ly for the people with mental illnesses, all will be required to meet the criteria of the housing authority’s voucher program, like those of any other citizen living in low-income housing with assistance.

“This is an apartment complex and a home for people,” Maddox said. “That’s who we’re talking about: people that qualify for that voucher and will be paying 30% of that affordable housing rent.”

“Everyone who lives there won’t require [psychosoci­al] services, but our services will be available to them,” she added.

Multiple community meetings to discuss the proposed developmen­t are scheduled for this week.

In other news, the city council voted to move the March 3 business meeting back to 4 p.m. from 6 p.m. in observance of the “Super Tuesday” election for the 2020 local and presidenti­al primaries.

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