Los Angeles Times

Watts project to get jobs center

HUD Secretary Ben Carson announces a $3.7-million grant for Nickerson Gardens.

- By Gale Holland

Ben Carson, the U.S. secretary of Housing and Urban Developmen­t, went to Watts on Wednesday to announce a $3.7-million grant for a new job center at Nickerson Gardens, the biggest public housing developmen­t west of the Mississipp­i.

The grant to the Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles is part of HUD’s Jobs Plus Initiative Program, which prepares and trains public housing residents for employment and places them in jobs. The program, which started in 2005, has proved successful in dozens of other housing projects, which are among the poorest communitie­s in the country.

The Nickerson Gardens center, the first Jobs Plus project in Los Angeles, will concentrat­e on employment in the healthcare and constructi­on industries, including union jobs at Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport and the new NFL stadium in Inglewood, officials said. The housing developmen­t has 3,100 tenants; 44% of the working-age adults are unemployed, HUD said.

Participan­ts who increase their incomes through the program will not face rent increases for four years, a departure from normal housing authority practices.

Because public housing tenants pay 30% of their earnings for their units, marriage, a promotion or a new job can mean rising rents, which discourage­s some from improving their financial situation, Carson said.

“We want to give people ladders of opportunit­y to climb so public assistance doesn’t become the end goal,” Carson said during his brief appearance on the basketball court and gym at Nickerson Gardens.

Some residents of the 1,066-unit developmen­t were excited about the grant, which they said follows years of abandonmen­t by federal and local agencies that once ran recreation, training and education programs at the projects, particular­ly for young people.

“I feel like we’ve been overlooked as a neighborho­od,” said Danny Joubert, who has lived at Nickerson Gardens for all but one of his 58 years. “Just knowing there is going to be a job center here is huge. It will give young guys an opportunit­y to ready themselves to get jobs.”

HUD said Jobs Plus is aimed at “building a culture of work and making working families the norm,” a point Carson underscore­d by saying that some people “don’t have the vision they are going to be successful.”

Eddie Williams, president of Nickerson Gardens’ resident advisory council, said tenants want to work and can envision success.

One of Nickerson Gardens’ most successful former residents, Anthony “Top Dawg” Tiffith, who founded hip-hop artist Kendrick Lamar’s music label, arrived Wednesday at the housing project just as Carson, whose flight from Washington was delayed by weather, was leaving.

But Williams said as many as 75% of residents have criminal records — the result of over-incarcerat­ion and LAPD corruption, he said — that disqualify them from employment.

Others lack education for today’s cutthroat job market, where even some McDonald’s restaurant­s ask for college degrees, Williams said.

“Everybody wants to work,” he said. “But everybody doesn’t accept people with a background.”

The Nickerson Gardens grant is part of a $10.6-million round of funding for the Jobs Plus program. Housing projects in Stockton; Toledo, Ohio; and Gainesvill­e, Fla., were also awarded grants.

 ?? Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? HOUSING Secretary Ben Carson, second from left, visits Nickerson Gardens, where a new jobs center will focus on the healthcare and constructi­on industries.
Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times HOUSING Secretary Ben Carson, second from left, visits Nickerson Gardens, where a new jobs center will focus on the healthcare and constructi­on industries.

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