More than 220 properties in the Middle Hill District that the URA had planned to buy at a city treasurer’s sale have been pulled after two community leaders said they had concerns about the transaction.
The Urban Redevelopment Authority intended to buy the tax-delinquent properties — mostly vacant lots — at the April 28 sale to clear title for redevelopment, said Kevin Acklin, Mayor Bill Peduto’s chief of staff and board chair of the URA.
But Marimba Milliones, executive director of the Hill District Community Development Corp., said the community needs to know more about what that redevelopment would look like. Carl Redwood, a board member of the Hill District Consensus Group, also said he was concerned that the community wasn’t going to have control over the process.
Ms. Milliones said the community does not support “large-scale development that doesn’t make sure residents can be property owners if possible. We want equitable development,” with a balance of affordable and market-rate housing. She said the scale of URA’s intent was “a matter of concern.”
The Hill District Consensus Group and Hill District Community Development Corp. are holding a public meeting at 6 p.m. Thursday at the Grayson Center, 1825 Enoch St., to discuss the matter.
Mr. Acklin said Wednesday the city “needs to build a trust relationship” and that the administration will be inviting community members to participate in the process.
“The mayor has called for a meeting with the Hill District community so that they are driving the process,” he said.
Most of the properties fall into a an area roughly three blocks north to south and eight blocks east to west, from Bedford Avenue to Wylie Avenue and from Chauncey Street to Hollace Street. Some others are scattered beyond that area.
Mr. Acklin said the timing of the treasurer’s sale coincided with a $500,000 Neighborhood Choice grant the city received from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development last year to plan the redevelopment of Bedford Dwellings.
“We wanted to have the properties ready” in case there is implementation money to follow, he said.
Bedford Dwellings is the oldest public housing complex remaining in the city. Its 411 units would be demolished and replaced one for one, and new construction would use some properties from the treasurer’s sale, Mr. Acklin said. The rest could be redeveloped in any number of ways, he said.
Housing authority officials have previously said Bedford redevelopment would be years in the future. That is, if it comes at all. “We are still hopeful HUD will keep the program, though it is on chopping block,” Mr. Acklin said, referring to the proposed elimination of the program in President Donald Trump’s proposed budget.
HUD Choice Neighborhoods focus on replacing old public housing with mixed-income housing, improving educational results for neighborhood youth and encouraging additional private and public investment in amenities that typically attract people to neighborhoods.
Without Choice funds, Mr. Acklin said, “we have other options. We can work with the land bank [which has yet bank any land], and there is talk about a community land trust in the Hill. But we have to take the first step of clearing titles,” before anyone can move forward. The properties likely will be placed in the next quarter’s treasurer’s sale, he said.
“We’re not opposed to them clearing titles,” said Mr. Redwood of the Hill District Consensus Group. “But that’s not all they want to do. We want a community land trust to have more control over what happens. The thing for me is housing for low-income residents who have been displaced and want to come back, and all they have gotten so far is promises.”
Diana Nelson Jones: djones@post-gazette.com or 412-263-1626. Kate Giammarise: kgiammarise@post-gazette.com or 412-263-3909.
First Published: April 20, 2017, 4:18 a.m.