Daily News analysis: Habitat for Humanity neighborhoods not havens for crime
| By Jessica Lipscomb, Naples Daily News, Fla. | |
| McClatchy-Tribune Information Services |
Two or three men rode by leisurely on bicycles. Across the street, a woman loaded her child into a minivan.
Rangel, who moved into a
"When you hear about Rosemary, it's usually not that good," Rangel said. "Since I recall (Habitat) started building in here, it's changing in a positive way."
This fall, about a mile away from Rangel's neighborhood, construction will begin on a new 26-home Habitat development called Red Hibiscus on
It's a concern law enforcement officials say and an analysis of
"We've found that lower-income developments mirror the communities where they are," said Capt.
Residents in the Forest Mere community say they worry about the lack of infrastructure in the neighborhood for children, like a playground. Having two dozen homes for low-income, multi-children families in such close proximity, they said, is bound to be trouble.
"Twenty-six homes in one small circle creates a slum environment," neighbor
One woman in the crowd, who declined to give her name at the
"She doesn't want it around her," neighbor
"The crime within this particular area is minimal," said Capt.
RELATED: See a map showing all the Habitat for Humanities communities in
Ramsey said
"I would feel safer today in that
"I think it's the total opposite of that," she said. "I used to think people didn't live in those houses because it's so quiet."
A 28-home Habitat community on
The remaining five completed Habitat developments in
Guerette, who has been with the
"They tightened right up," he said.
Habitat officials in
"When the market was going crazy, we had
On a national level,
"Except for one, all of the studies, utilizing many methodologies, determined that property values are not affected by these housing facilities," the authors wrote. "The only study examined which suggested that facilities might have a negative effect on neighboring property values could not conclusively determine whether the affordable housing in question was responsible for lower property values, or whether it was caused by other neighborhood concerns."
Red Hibiscus will be the fourth Habitat neighborhood in
The issues -- "partially crime, partially just neighborhood issues" -- were compounded by the fact that the neighborhood was not designed with a homeowners association in place, she said. While some homeowners take pride in keeping their yards landscaped and manicured, others come home to yards filled with weeds and driveways that have seldom seen a pressure washer.
Still, crime maps show the neighborhood is comparable or less problematic than surrounding areas in Dunbar. In the past six months,
"You get the violence calls, unfortunately, but it's not like a bad, bad neighborhood," Lt.
Green said the board passed a policy in March to run background checks on all potential homeowners and their families, meaning those in the Red Hibiscus development will be screened before they move in. There also will be a homeowners association she said would be just as restrictive, if not more so, than the one in Forest Mere.
"I thought about that too," she said. "But it's baloney."
Rayburn said since meeting her neighbors and doing her research, she's changed her opinion of the program. She encouraged
"I'm really sorry I wasn't informed better," she said, "and I think that's what the public needs to know."
--
How people qualify for a
Homeowners must fall within certain income guidelines; in
Habitat also requires that its homeowners perform "sweat equity" -- time spent building other Habitat homes. In
In
Staff writer
___
(c)2014 the Naples Daily News (Naples, Fla.)
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