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©
2003 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Tamarack
Village to offer affordable housing The
first housing in Sisters with income-based rent will open its doors to residents
in mid-September.
The people behind the creation of Tamarack Village Apartments,
555 N. Larch Ave., celebrated an open house including neighbors, members
of the Central Oregon Regional Housing Authority (CORHA) and city and
state officials on Wednesday, August 20.
Amidst many accolades and sighs of relief, the theme at
Wednesday's gathering was warm appreciation for the opportunity to help
neighbors who might have it a little rough.
"The families that come here are not always in the easiest
of times," said Cyndy Cook, director of CORHA. "Our mission is fostering
dignity through affordable housing."
Describing Deschutes County as one of the fastest-growing
counties in the United States, County Commissioner Tom DeWolf spoke of
the challenge to keep housing livable and affordable.
"Two of my main partners in this task have been Habitat
for Humanity and CORHA," DeWolf said. "While everybody else is talking
about it, they're out doing it. One of my problems with being a Republican
is I tend to take my entire philosophy from George Bailey in 'It's a Wonderful
Life,' but that's not always the same with other Republicans. I think
of how Bailey Bank and Loans wouldn't loan to some places because they
wanted to give to some individuals and families who really needed help."
Twenty-three of the 33 two- and three-bedroom apartments,
renting from $300 and up, have already been assigned to renters, apartment
managers said.
Rents are based on income and are set according to state
regulations. The 10 remaining apartments must be rented for $520 to $640
to people with a median income between $22,740 for one person, and up
to $40,320 for a household of seven.
The apartment community includes a resident center with
a computer workstation, an outside play structure. apartments feature
a washer and dryer, private porch entries and double wall construction.
The number of residents in need of affordable housing
in Sisters is significant and projected to increase, according to CORHA
reports. Of the 397 households in Sisters in 2000, approximately 100 or
24.9 percent lived in housing that was not affordable given their incomes,
CORHA reports. Of these households, the majority (93 percent) had annual
incomes under $35,000, the report states. CORHA projects that number to
increase to 139 in 2003 and 198 in 2008.
Sisters' population totaled 959 in 2000 and is projected
to increase to 1,345 in 2003 and 1,923 in 2008, according to the report.
A group of volunteers called Sisters Area Affordable Housing
Solutions (SAAHS) approached CORHA for help after an aged local housing
complex called "The Pines" closed in November of 1998 and 24 families
lost their homes. After years of meetings, CORHA proposed Tamarack Village
as the solution, Cook said.
Construction began last December after CORHA obtained
state funding through federal tax credits and an approximately $1.2 million
construction loan from Bank of the Cascades.
"This project is here because it was community-led," said
Bill Willitts, a resident who worked with SAAHS. "It was driven largely
by the displacement in The Pines. Many families were forced to leave this
community and many to leave one of the finest school districts in the
nation.
"Tamarack Village is a place of hope, a place of safety
for kids, a place where adults and children can learn and grow, a place
where single moms can come and hopefully learn and grow and move on to
a better place." Willitts said. "There are balconies which overlook the
park, a play area and most of all, a place for kids to be kids." |
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