County Commissioner
Barbara J. Jordan has unveiled a three-point
multi-million-dollar renovation plan for the
depressed Triangle neighborhood in Opa-locka.
''The money that is
available through these programs can be used to make
a wide range of improvements,'' Jordan said at a
press conference June 1. ``But it's also going to be
used to bring about more pride in our community.''
Some $1.2 million
from Miami-Dade County surtax revenue will fund the
county's Opa-locka Home Rehabilitation Program as
Part One of the city's makeover.
Low-income homeowners
in the Triangle are eligible to receive up to
$30,000 in assistance to rehabilitate their
properties.
''It is a deferred
loan with a zero interest rate that is due when the
homeowner sells or no longer lives in the home,''
said Willie Logan, president/CEO of the Opa-locka
Community Development Corporation.
The process begins
when the owner provides a list of repairs and works
with an inspector to put together a bid packet.
''Roof, doors,
windows, even air conditioning,'' said Logan. ``Some
of these homes were built back in the '50s or older,
before central air.''
Around $1.97 million,
also from the county surtax, has been set aside for
the Opa-locka Beautification Program, the second
renovation phase.
And up to $3,900 is
available to owners in the Triangle for painting and
landscaping.
''It's a one-year
forgivable loan,'' said Tessie Lee, project
coordinator for H.J. Russell & Co. ``We have a
list of contractors to choose from. All people need
to do is come in, fill out an application and show
proof of ownership.''
Renters who want to
open the door to the American dream will have a
chance to benefit from the last component: the
Homeownership Program.
''It is the piece of
legislation that I am particularly proud of because
a lot of the problems that we have had in the
Triangle have had to do with abandoned [homes] or
houses that were formerly public housing that were
boarded up,'' Jordan said. ``There are about 26
properties that we made a request to HUD in
Washington and asked their permission to convert
those public housing units into private home
ownership.''
According to Jordan,
17 of the 26 three-bedroom, 992-square-foot homes
earmarked for the project are in the Triangle -- an
area bounded by State Road 9 on the south, Northwest
17th to 22nd avenues on the east and west and
Northwest 151st Street on the north.
''There is a priority
for those homes in the Triangle,'' said Sherra
McLeod, Miami-Dade Housing Agency's public
information officer. ``First are the current
occupants in the unit. . . Then public housing
residents, Section 8 [housing choice voucher
recipients], county employees and then city
employees.''
One Opa-locka
resident didn't mind being placed at the bottom of
the list.
''I'm excited about
it,'' said Mayor Joseph L. Kelley. ``Most people
just talk, talk, talk. We've had governors come, had
the drug czar, we've had all kinds of things said
but to finally see . . . dollars being put into this
community -- over $4.1 million -- is a good first
step.''