
VHA to move residents off of valuable property
The grand land grab is on
-- John Susce of
Tempo News, special to Venice
Florida! dot com, 11/12/07
-- jsusce@msn.com
Got a comment?
Make
it here.
Get 'em out by Friday
This past Saturday morning, while Grove Terrace residents were enjoying a
beautiful day, the Venice
Housing Authority (VHA) met at the Grove Terrace Public
Housing administration building in Venice. The VHA board
was meeting, making plans
in a three-hour workshop to move the residents
out and add another chapter in the racist
gentrification policies perpetuated by HUD throughout this
country that has been flying under the radar screen for years.
All of the participants in the removal of poor working
folks from the valuable
property were there: the members of the VHA
board, the consultants hired by the VHA (MDS
Strum Housing Services Inc), regional HUD representative from
Miami, Victor Rocher, and Christine Davis, a representative from Sarasota
County’s Office of Housing and Community Development, who is needed to
“rubber stamp” the ethnic cleansing.
Not present were the residents, except for two who
stopped by to see what was going on. Also not present
were any representatives of the Grove Terrace
Residents Council. The reason the Resident Council
wasn’t there is because there isn’t one and there
hasn’t been one for at least three months
(former resident council
president, Carter Canada, says it is
ten months since there was a resident’s
council).
Also not present, who evidently could not find time to attend the
three-hour workshop and will
be required to sign off on any action by the VHA, were any
members of the Venice City Council. The only media representative present
was Tempo News.
The workshop was “run” by Dee Dee Strum, owner and president of MDS Strum,
who flew in from New Orleans where her company is involved in public
housing projects financed by HUD in that city, one of
which is under investigation for a no bid contract
(also flying under the radar screen is an
investigation by the U.S Congress in the awarding of
contracts by HUD, which includes present Director, Alphonso Jackson;
investigations into HUD’s process for awarding
contracts have been going on for years and certainly
are not confined to one political party).
VHA board: clueless
Strum went through the present plan that the
VHA is operating under, which
included so many errors that it took her the
majority of the three hour workshop
to explain them to the VHA, one of the most clueless
advisory boards one can imagine. The VHA
board was also unaware that they had to submit a
monthly report to HUD every month (they
haven’t submitted one since May of this year).
Strum laid out a plan and time frame to remove the residents
from the property, which happens to be in the epicenter of planned multi-million
dollar developments and is adjacent to properties that have been bought
by developer and real estate entrepreneur, Michael
Miller.
If everything goes according to Strum’s plan and time frame, the ethnic cleansing of poor
working folks will be a fait accompli
by the end of this month.
If you want to see the next chapter of the removal of poor working folks
from valuable urban property in Venice, attend the next session listed
in the MDS Strum and VHA time frame for that removal, which is Thursday,
November 15. That is when the VHA will present their plan recommended by
Strum to the Venice City Council. [NOTE:
On November 15, council will hold a special workshop to review the city's
Comprehensive Plan; so far, no mention of Grove Terrace appears on
the agenda. - Ed.]
If you want to read about
how Sarasota is but another example of how HUD works
together with local developers and real estate interests to remove poor
working folks from valuable property, a series
of articles will be appearing in Tempo News over the next months, articles that
we have been researching and working on for months.
By the way, there were no
minutes or recording of what transpired at Saturday's VHA
workshop. Fortunately,
Tempo News was there and we take
excellent notes.
John Susce is a reporter for
Tempo News -- he has been covering
stories about HUD housing in Sarasota County for a number of years. This article
was reproduced with the permission of the author.