Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byKelly Beasley Modified over 9 years ago
1
Whose Backyard Is It Anyway? Overcoming NIMBY Presentation by Pamela L. Michell Executive Director, New Hope Housing, Inc. Alexandria, VA July 11, 2007
3
Washington, D.C. Region Population data and map from the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments, Growth Trends to 2030: Cooperative Forecasting in the Washington Region, Fall 2006. Income data: 2005 American Community Survey. Metropolitan Region population in 2005: 4,978,700 Population of Fairfax County, Virginia: 1,041,200 2005 median household income: Washington D.C. MSA: $74,708 Fairfax County, Virginia: $94,610
4
Homelessness in the Fairfax and Falls Church communities 1,813 homeless persons on January 25, 2007 730 single individuals 1,083 persons in families (307 families with 674 children under 18)
5
Housing costs are high while incomes are low 82% of single individuals 54% of homeless families Most homeless have incomes below poverty Only 4.4% of county population is below poverty
6
The average 1-bedroom rent is $1,093/month Income needed is $43,720/year 90% of singles have income below $15,000 The average 2-bedroom rent is $1,306/month Income needed is $52,240/year 82% of families have income below $30,000 Housing costs are high while incomes are low
7
395 square miles, with 1,041,200 people No downtown; several commercial areas Lack of old hotels, warehouses, etc. SF neighborhoods, condo, townhouse communities, and garden apartments Increasing density Limited undeveloped land Fairfax County: a suburban/urban county
8
Fairfax County Politics 10 Member Board of Supervisors 9 magisterial districts, each with 1 supervisor At large chairman of the Board Magisterial “veto” Dillon Rule state
9
Three Stories Siting a shelter Siting a safe haven Siting affordable housing
10
Siting a Shelter Task force recommendation in 2000 County Project: Support and involvement of senior staff Support and involvement of elected officials County land County funds
11
Neighborhood concerns – the usual Response: –Hold public meetings and private conversations –Have a consistent message –Listen and respond to concerns Siting a Shelter
12
Hanley Shelter Neighbors
13
Hanley Shelter
14
Hanley Shelter Neighbors
15
Siting a Shelter When local government puts its weight behind something, it will happen. It may be slow but it will happen. Moral:
16
Hot potato project of the Continuum of Care in 1995 Site identification Meeting with local elected supervisor Open community meeting Siting a Safe Haven
17
Use by right Fair housing Consistent message Listen and respond to concerns Siting a Safe Haven
18
Max’s Place – a safe haven
19
Max’s Place Neighbor
20
Siting a Safe Haven Stick to your vision and the law Buy a flack jacket In the end, it will be okay Moral:
21
33 acres owned Fairfax County, purchased with CDBG funds Vacant/passive parkland 5 acres zoned commercial 18 acres zoned R-2 11 acres zoned R-MHP, 6 units/acre Siting Affordable Housing
22
North Hill
23
Hypothermia and the faith community, then and now Efforts of local faith coalition on affordable housing/SROs Local supervisor moves from no how/no way to over-riding his own advisory committee Siting Affordable Housing
24
Elected officials want political cover Mobilized and motivated individual citizens can provide it Moral: Siting Affordable Housing
25
Use by right Want county funds for match Need supervisor letter of support Next: Siting a Samaritan Initiative
26
Pamela L. Michell Executive Director New Hope Housing, Inc. 8407-E Richmond Highway Alexandria, VA 22309 703-799-2293 ext.17 pmichell@newhopehousing.org www.newhopehousing.org www.fairfaxcounty.gov\homeless Contact Information
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.