Side Streets ~ Neighborhood people and issues

Archive for the 'Community Development Block Grants' Tag

PAVED STREETS, SIDEWALKS AND A GARDEN BRING MILL STREET UP-TO-DATE

April 20th, 2012, 11:12 am by

This diagram is the plan for a community garden in the Mill Street neighborhood. A plumber will build an irrigaiton system then volunteers will install 60 raised beds and other amenities.

Mill Street is one of my favorite neighborhoods — a working class, industrial area south of downtown with about 150 small homes, many built in the 1890s, and 30 or so businesses.

It’s bisected by railroad tracks and sits in the shadow of the Drake Power Plant with its piles of coal and constant train traffic.

Mill Street is an authentic blue-collar neighborhood with plenty of character: gravel streets, missing sidewalks and colorful residents.

That’s right. This neighborhood less than a mile from the trendy restaurants, towering bank buildings and nightclubs of downtown still has gravel streets.

“It’s a neighborhood that was kind of left behind,” said John Himmelreich, neighborhood activist.

Some of its rough edges, however, are being smoothed away thanks to the work of folks like Himmelreich and others. Today, gravel is disappearing under pavement paid for by Community Development Block Grants. Curbs, gutters and sidewalks are being installed along with improved drainage systems and streetlights.

And, in a couple weeks, Mill Street will get a community garden.

We’re talking an irrigated, fenced, organic garden with 60 raised beds, a tool shed and compost area and maybe even a picnic area and outdoor kitchen.

“We’re getting in our time machine and heading 115 years into the future,” Himmelriech joked.

Volunteers led by Larry Stebbins and his Pikes Peak Urban Gardens are building the garden, backed by a $27,000 grant. The largest chunk will pay Colorado Springs Utilities a $9,200 fee to tap into the city water system and for a plumber.

Fencing also is a major expense, along with the lumber, the “grade A” topsoil and manure for planting.

When it’s done, folks will pay $15 a year for water and insurance and just grow.

Larry Stebbins of the Pikes Peak Urban Gardens

All these improvement might never have happened if not for events in 1999 when civic leaders tried to build a $6 million facility to centralize city services for the homeless.

Then Utilities announced it would build a 500-foot-long railroad spur and store coal cars along Mill Street.

Residents organized, fought the shelter and won. The rail spur was built but even it provided benefits when 1.5 acres of cleared land was returned to the neighborhood and used to build affordable housing.

The neighborhood unity had a lasting impact. And Stebbins believes the garden will only help.

“The garden is in walking distance for most of the neighborhood,” Stebbins said. “It will bring the neighborhood closer together as they work and share and grow food.

“It’s going to be a beautiful garden.”

It will be just like the neighborhood. Some of it will be nice and new.

With a little dirt under the nails.

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URBAN COWBOYS

March 1st, 2009, 10:04 am by

It seems El Paso County no longer is a fit place for cowboys. In fact, it officially ranks as an “urban county” as defined by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.

It means there are more than 200,000 people living in the county, outside of the Colorado Springs metropolitan area. Whoa, pardner!

Don’t get too excited. A lot of wide open space remains in the county, hwich encompasses more than 2, 158 square miles or more than twice the area of Rhode Island!

There’s no denying, however, it is growing. By 2010, the Colorado Department of Local Affairs projects El Paso County’s population at 649,217, which would make it the most populous county in the state.

But it’s not as bad as it sounds. The designation as “urban” qualifies the county as an “entitlement community” and makes it eligible to become a direct receipient of lucrative Community Development Block Grants, a program started in 1974 for “neighborhood stabilization” projects designed to provide decent housing, economic opportunities and repair infrastructure for low-income Americans.

In Colorado, HUD distributes CDBG grants both 14 cities and 4 counties and to the state for distribution to small communities. In Colorado, HUD has given millions in response to mortgage foreclosures that have devastated many neighborhoods. Follow this link to its budget.

Here are some of the headlines from HUD’s work in Colorado in recent months:

2009

 

 

02/19/09 Obama Administration Awards Nearly $19.5 Million in Homeless Grants to Local Housing and Service Programs in Colorado
02/02/09 HUD Approves Nearly $4 Million in Neighborhood Stabilization Plans for Colorado Springs Communities Hard-Hit by Foreclosures
01/13/09 HUD announces more than $3.6 Million to two Colorado non-profits to benefit low-income persons with disabilities

2008

 

 

12/29/08 HUD Approves More Than $34 Million in Neighborhood Stabilization Plans for Colorado Communities Hard-Hit by Foreclosure
10/27/08 Secretary Preston Announces Funding for Disaster Assistance in Colorado.

Colorado Springs has been a CDBG entitlement community for years and used the money to refurbish low-income residents’ homes and pave miles of sidewalks, curbs and gutters among other projects in selected “Neighborhood Improvement Areas.”

In the past, El Paso County stood in line with dozens of smaller Colorado towns and counties and only received about $2.5 million over 15 years. Already, it is approved to receive $1 million for 2009, thanks to its new urban designation. Here is a look at the El Paso County Community Development Block Grant program.

The county has hired Tiffany Colvert to oversee the program. Here is her contact information:

Tiffany Colvert
Community Development Specialist

27 E. Vermijo, 5th Floor
Colorado Springs, CO 80909
719-520-6476, fax 719-520-6486

tiffanycolvert@elpasoco.com

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