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#16 | |
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Join Date: May 2004
Location: former west sider, now in Mpls.
Posts: 1,840
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Heaney speaks out again . . . Anybody else?
"Joe Citizen":
Who are you & what is your interest in Bflo's poverty? Where do you live? How many meetings addressing poverty have you attended? Have you ever spoken at one? I would feel like a fool to advocate a 'poverty plan' to a group of 'hoods', always at the ready to attack, while doing nothing visible about the problem themselves. Here is the latest from Jim Heaney on his blog. Who at SUWNY is 'ready to rumble'? Quote:
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Richard Kern, MSW |
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#17 | |
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Gold Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: God's Own Country ... the Southern Tier
Posts: 5,670
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Quote:
You're good at criticizing what others do, but you offer nothing. It's time to put up or SHUT UP! What IS your plan to "fix" Buffalo, Kern? |
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#18 | |
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Gold Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Posts: 101
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Quote:
I do have a respect for your observations and give you credit for speaking up and saying things that no one else wants to acknowledge or even talk about. I sincerely want to know what your thoughts are on a poverty plan and/or housing plan for the city. I really don't believe that you are afraid of being "attacked." You have been "attacked" before and weren't afraid to stand up to people while you roamed the halls of the city and BMHA. Why would you be afraid of being attacked on a harmless message board? |
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#19 | |
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Gold Member
Join Date: May 2004
Location: former west sider, now in Mpls.
Posts: 1,840
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Bflo News keeps hammering
Below is the latest Bflo News' editorial about the city's dramatically failed 'anti-poverty program'.
Sadly, Bflo News has been going easy on BMHA, the city's flagship of a massively HUd-funded "poverty Industry" . . long more effective at creating patronage jobs & developer profits, than at reducing Bflo's shameful leveles of poverty, while spending even more annually than the periodlically condemend waste of blockgrant funds. SUWNY is no better. Despite repeated (anonymous) demands that I provide my 'poverty plan', I would be a fool to try serious discussion of poverty on SU. "Linda D" had relentlessly condemned me (from her home in the Southern Tier) for 'hating the poor'. As a social worker long pushing for reform of wasteful, corrupt BMHA, "Linda D" relentlessly attacks any question I raise about BMHA's endlessly building new $200K apartments for the (55 yr-old) "elderly" in a city with 25,000 to 27,000 housing vacancies . . . where a typical workingclass family lives ina house worth $50K . .or much less. Is there hope? Quote:
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Richard Kern, MSW |
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#20 |
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Gold Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Posts: 101
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"SUWNY is no better. Despite repeated (anonymous) demands that I provide my 'poverty plan', I would be a fool to try serious discussion of poverty on SU.
What is so foolish about a serious discussion on poverty? Let's make a deal...you can send me a private message on SUWNY and your plan and no one will know but you and I. I have my reasons to stay anonymous and you have your reasons not to discuss your housing and poverty plans in public. |
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#21 | |
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Gold Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: God's Own Country ... the Southern Tier
Posts: 5,670
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Quote:
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#22 |
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Gold Member
Join Date: May 2004
Location: former west sider, now in Mpls.
Posts: 1,840
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Casting Pearls before Swine?
How many SUWNY posters care about Bflo's deep poverty & are willing to do something about it?
There have been 20 (anonymous) posts in response to this thread. About 2/3 of the posts were off topic, dominated by "Dougles" & "Run" battling over who attended the best (worst?) high school. Who cares about Bflo poverty? Why should I waste my time debating a topic of deep concern to me on a potentially powerful forum where few, if anybody, cares . . . as "Linda D" is always lying in wait to swamp the discussion with dis-information . . . from the safety of far away Chautauqua County.
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Richard Kern, MSW |
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#23 | |
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Gold Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: God's Own Country ... the Southern Tier
Posts: 5,670
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Quote:
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#24 | |
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Gold Member
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 5,417
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Quote:
Why can you never see the middle? Putting low-income housing in slums is not right. That is one end of the spectrum. However, the BMHA spending $200k per new unit is not right either. That is the other end of the spectrum. There has to be a middle ground. I would also like to point out that the BMHA is not a great landlord. In fact, one could argue that they are just as much of a slumlord as the average person. The BMHA is driven by greed and well paying jobs for those who work there. The biggest challenge I see with the BMHA creating housing is the cost of creating it. Because it is a public entity, they have to build things at a much higher cost than the average landlord. Even if the construction was done with the same exact materials and quality, a BMHA project costs much much more. So here is my idea. I have no idea if it is possible but it is an idea: A three-way entity public/private project. It would include Buffalo ReUse, BMHA and private share holders. Step 1 - Develop a plan for a massive land back of continuous land in the city. Do this in an area that is close to mass transit, productive housing and new development. The land that is West of Main St., South of Ferry, East of Jefferson and North of Best comes to mind. It is close to Allentown and the Elmwood Village, the Medical Campus and the Metro line. Set up financing. Step 2 - Set up financing. Have the donate the parcels of land in this area to the new entity or sell for $1 per parcel. Set up a public company where 50% of the shares are given to the BMHA and 50% are sold as stock. With BMHA, start to purchase land (at a reasonable market rate) from people who own in this area. Once purchased, the BMHA turns around and sells that property to the public company for $1 per parcel. Step 3 - Have Buffalo ReUse gut whatever can be salvaged from the existing structures and when sold, the funds on these items go to the public company. Start with one block at a time, but do it block by block. Some blocks in this area, like the one bound by Michigan, Masten, Riley and Laurel have only 10 homes. When close to 50 should be there. Demo everything on the block with the help of Buffalo ReUse. Step 4 - Have the public company develop senior housing complex that is new, of good quality and up to every and all standards. Step 5 - Move the seniors into this housing and provide them with vouchers funded by the BMHA but to the benefit of the public company. Step 6 - For the blocks that have more that 50% of reusable structures, redevelop into quality market rate housing. Take a %, say 30% and rent at market rate to the public. The money from this goes to the public company. In the same block rent, say 70%, to those in Public housing. They rent from the public entity using vouchers provided by the BMHA. For the parcels that are empty lots, new structures would be built funded in whole by the public company. This would allow for a cheaper development cost than what the BMHA pays for new housing. Step 7 - Set up a rules structure that is similar to a HOA, that prevents these units from going to hell. They would also allow for tenants, both on voucher or market rate, to be evicted if they broke the rules. The determination would come from a "board of landlords" which would be made up of 50% BMHA employees and 50% representatives of the shareholders. Step 8 - Develop commercial space that would tie into a business/job development program for the residents of public housing. The commercial tenants would have to abide by a set of rules for operation. Example: beer/wine/liquor could not be sold between 6pm and 9am. Step 9 - With the revenue from the existing complexes and housing, after the cost of maintenance, from both vouchers and market rates, and with the sale of new units and parcels, the cycle would repeat itself until the whole section is redeveloped. Step 10 - Once there was enough housing created to cover all of the BMHA residents under this voucher system, the BMHA would sell the existing public housing complexes on the open market. They could be purchased by anyone with enough scratch. The funds from these sales would directly go into the cost of providing the vouchers. I know it is crazy and I wrote this over my first cup of coffee but at least it is an idea. Something that has not been presented in this thread. |
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#25 | |
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Gold Member
Join Date: May 2004
Location: former west sider, now in Mpls.
Posts: 1,840
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Playing politics with poverty
Obviously one way to address Bflo's deep poverty is to get 'poverty funding' into neighborhoods where it helps the poor help themselves. Instead, the HUD millions are too often kept in City Hall, creating patronage jobs or making 'connected' developers endlessly building costly "affordable housing" in a city drowning in 25,000 to 27,000 housing vacancies ever richer.
Here is the latest from Donn Esmonde about Byron Brown's starving out' Homefront, which has also recently teamed-up with PUSH to revitalize distressed 19th St: Quote:
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Richard Kern, MSW |
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#26 | |
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Gold Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: God's Own Country ... the Southern Tier
Posts: 5,670
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Quote:
$ 49,000 - $ 56,000 (subsidized price) for a 1350-2100 square foot rehabbed house on 19th Street near Hampshire and West Ferry? Not exactly a safe, desirable neighborhood -- and the houses don't really have much in the way of achitectural value, either. How is this different from Sycamore Village, except that these are rehabs and not new builds and so are cheaper, Dickie? |
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#27 |
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Gold Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: God's Own Country ... the Southern Tier
Posts: 5,670
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I see that Mr Kern hasn't yet responded. Why am I not surprised?
![]() FTR, I'm not opposed to what the Homefront organization is doing, especially with the 19th Street project where they're essentially taking a block and rehabbing the homes on it. They also seem to be serious about prepping potential home buyers for a home purchase (see their website). This seems to be the kind of program that the city really needs, and I'd much sooner see the city give grants, subsidies, and tax-breaks to the people who buy these homes than to the wealthy folks who buy condos/townhouses on the waterfront. The people who buy the 19th Street houses -- or those other Homefront properties around the city -- are not only helping themselves and their families, they are helping to save the neighborhoods in which they buy. That said, however, if you continually wail about "subsidized housing" as Kern does, why would you support Homefront? I mean, other than to simply have another excuse to criticize the current regime's policies without having to put forth solutions of your own. |
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#28 |
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Gold Member
Join Date: May 2004
Location: former west sider, now in Mpls.
Posts: 1,840
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Destrutive trolling from Jamestown
It is virtually impossible to have any constructive discussion of dramatically failed housing policy in Bflo when an anonymous troll from Jamestown, apparently living on a NYS pension, trolls virtually every housing-related post I make.
I am repeatedly attacked about being concerned about Bflo from a distance, after pushing for housing reform for decades, as the 'Jamestown troll' is not held equally accountable for 'move back or shut up'. In addition, I do not debate with anybody wearing a 'hood', especially when they call me "Dickie", and have an obvious agenda of sabotage.
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Richard Kern, MSW |
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#29 | |
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Gold Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: God's Own Country ... the Southern Tier
Posts: 5,670
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Quote:
What you really like to do is to post criticisms of current policy that you find in the local media as "evidence" that your crusade against "subsidized" housing in Buffalo has merit. Well, in the case of the Esmonde column, it doesn't. The Homefront organization is all about subsidized housing, Dickie.BTW, you are welcome to call me "Linnie" if you wish. Of course, I don't have to "sabotage" your "crusade" because you do such a good job of that all by yourself -- and have done that repeatedly even before you escaped to Minneapolis. |
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#30 |
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Gold Member
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 61
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Go to the Buffalo WEB site and see what us taxpayers are paying for the people who talk for the people who where elected and the Police (gets paid more than most police officers and just talks the Mayors talker over eighty thousand DAAAAAAAAAAAa. Check the link.
http://www.ci.buffalo.ny.us/Home/May...rnTransparency ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]()
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