Pubdate: Sun, 13 Jun 2004 Source: Athens Banner-Herald (GA) Copyright: 2004 Athens Newspapers Inc Contact: http://www.onlineathens.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1535 Author: Joe Johnson HELPING HANDS REACH OUT The west Athens neighborhood known as Henderson Extension may have its share of crime, poverty, blight and other serious problems, but that does not mean its residents have been forsaken by the larger community. In recent years, government agencies such as the Athens-Clarke County Police Department and Athens Housing Authority, as well as church and grass-roots organizations, have been developing ideas for breathing new life into the neighborhood, to make conditions better for those already living there and attract new residents. During a recent walk through the neighborhood, also known by many as ''Rocksprings'' for its proximity to the Rocksprings Homes public housing complex, one man at the forefront of improvement efforts pointed out the lone business the neighborhood once had, a grocery store at the corner of Henderson Avenue Extension and Columbus Street, now boarded up and under slow assault by encroaching kudzu. ''We're hoping to talk to Publix or some other grocery chain to see if we can convince them to open a satellite store,'' said Alvin Sheats, director of the Hancock Community Development Corp., a non-profit organization established in 2000 with a mission to revitalize Henderson Extension and other neighborhoods of an area of west Athens known as the Hancock Corridor, encompassing parts of West Broad, Baxter, Rocksprings, Pulaski and Old West Broad streets, as well as Hawthorne and Prince avenues. Surrounding the former Justin's Grocery, which closed its doors earlier this year after operating for only several years, are vacant, boarded-up houses, some of which police said are used as crack dens and for prostitution. Half a block up, at the corner of Henderson Avenue Extension and Paris Street, loitered a small group of young men referred to by Sheats as ''street pharmacists'' - his term for street-level drug dealers. Noting a lack of job opportunities in the area, in a community where 43 percent of children fail to finish high school, Sheats observed, ''These guys are out here hustling, and while I don't condone that, I understand it.'' Successful strategies During that walk of just a few blocks, Sheats was able to point out the three major problems plaguing the neighborhood: poverty, crime and lack of job opportunities. Sheats is hoping that the Hancock Community Development Corp. will be able to help Henderson Extension residents pull themselves up by the bootstraps, by mirroring successes a similar group has enjoyed in a problem area of East Athens. Created in 1993, the East Athens Development Corp.'s mission was to revitalize the Triangle Plaza area, a neighborhood surrounding the site where Vine Street, Nellie B Avenue and Gressom Street come together. The area was once known as the ''Iron Triangle'' because of its reputation for extreme poverty and a high crime rate. One of EADC's success stories has been its outreach center, which provides a referral service to educate neighborhood residents about programs that are available to help in areas such as housing, employment, child care and health care. The center has also coordinated neighborhood watch groups, neighborhood cleanup and recycling efforts, free legal advice from University of Georgia law students and job-training seminars. In its first 10 years, EADC has developed three basic types of programs: housing, education and finance. Sixty-five people have taken business classes offered by the non-profit group, spawning 33 new businesses, according to the EADC. The U.S. Department of Agriculture awarded the corporation $50,000 to continue the classes, recognizing the success of a program that teaches how to write a business plan, develop a marketing strategy and draw a budget. Sheats said his group had begun providing some career counseling, although not at the same level as EADC, and is just getting its feet wet in the area of developing affordable housing. Economic development is still a ways down the road, he said. Learning to crawl According to Athens-Clarke County Commissioner Tom Chasteen, the Hancock group is still taking baby steps, just as the EADC did a decade earlier. ''They are trying to collaborate with the (county) Department of (Human and) Economic Development and the Athens Housing Authority, but they are not quite at that point where they can carry the load,'' Chasteen said. ''That's how things started for the EADC, and given time it will be tremendous what they can do when they are able to deal with grant-writing and focus specifically on that area.'' The Hancock Community Development Corp. is primarily funded by HED, which reduced its last year's contribution of $115,000 to about $78,000 this year. Chasteen said it was decided to provide just enough funding for HCDC administrative salaries until its personnel become fully trained in providing career counseling and grant writing. ''We had gotten a little ahead of the game, so we decided to step back and allow them time to become qualified and certified to be counselors,'' Chasteen said. ''Mr. Sheats is within a few hours of where he can be qualified to hold classes to help people manage budgets and that sort of thing so when they have opportunities to move into a house they will have the knowledge they need, about things like utilities, general upkeep, etc., in order to own a house.'' Businesses wanted The small patch of land on which the former grocery store stands, at the corner of Henderson Extension and Columbus Street, is the only area now commercially zoned in Henderson Extension. Sheats said that is why bringing business into the area remains a long-term goal while the HCDC and others work to address the immediate problems of housing and job training. Whether the neighborhood is rezoned in the future to allow in more businesses ''will have to be weighed against the elimination of housing'' it would cause, according to Chasteen. ''The first thing you have to do to bring businesses in is to stabilize the community to make it a safer community for people to live in and for businesses to thrive in,'' he said. Once funded for economic development, Sheats said, the search for a Publix or other business to take the place of Justin's Grocery will commence. ''We need to bring in someone from whom people can learn to be entrepreneurs,'' he said. HCDC is just beginning to become involved in developing affordable housing in the Henderson Extension area, a role now prominently played by Athens Housing Authority. Getting into the ACT The Athens Housing Authority is using its ACT I Homes program as part of its long-term strategy to aid in community efforts to develop affordable homeownership opportunities in downtown neighborhoods. Working with the HED, the authority receives federal Community Development Block Grant money and other funding to purchase vacant lots or abandoned houses in East Athens and the Hancock Corridor. According to agency literature, the housing authority then constructs new homes in a style compatible with the surrounding neighborhood. To purchase an ACT I home, families must meet income eligibility requirements, but earn at least $18,000 per year; be able to obtain a mortgage; have some down payment funds available; be a first-time home buyer and be residents of Athens-Clarke County, housing literature states. ''The concept behind this is neighborhood revitalization,'' said Rick Parker, executive director of the Athens Housing Authority. ''When you have dilapidated units and vacant land in in-town neighborhoods, that property isn't generating much in tax revenues and not supporting the economic revitalization of the neighborhood.'' In East Athens, three ACT I homes were bought and sold by the AHA some time ago, Parker said, and another four recently came on the market. Within the Henderson Extension area, he said, a total of nine properties have been acquired for the ACT I Homes program, all of which have existing houses on them. A review is under way to determine whether the houses should be demolished and rebuilt, or rehabbed. ''Neighborhoods can be healthy with a mix, and that mix includes home ownership,'' Parker said. ''Most people would believe having a homeowner in their neighborhood rather than a (vacant) lot is a positive, so home is something that in our community we certainly want to focus on.'' In its initial foray into housing rehabilitation, Sheats said, HCDC brokered a deal for a dilapidated house on Henderson Avenue Extension for rehabilitation under the ACT I Home program. ''That house was once a house of drug distribution,'' he said. ''There is an ongoing need for housing rehab over here, which is something we at the HCDC will be focusing on once we get the funding.'' Turning on The Light Another person heavily involved in Henderson Extension improvement efforts is Mary Redman, director of The Light, a ministry of St. James United Methodist Church based on the corner of Paris Street and Henderson Avenue. At The Light, area residents can pick up needed food items that are distributed weekly and eat at a soup kitchen. But the Methodist mission is concentrating its efforts on reaching the minds of children, through computer literacy training and mentoring, Redman said. ''I don't know if people wake up one day and say 'I'm going to deal drugs,' or whether it's just the environment they grew up in,'' she said. ''But I think some of the problem stems from people not knowing what's out there and available, or not knowing even what's inside themselves.'' Redman said with Henderson Extension's problems now under close scrutiny by the community at large, ''agencies are coming into the area, and hopefully we will see gaps being filled in.'' On the public safety side, a police substation is planned for next year at the corner of Baxter Street and Collins Avenue, the site of a former bar and grill that is just a few blocks south of Henderson Extension. Sheats said he expected to see a drop in criminal activity from the increased police presence the substation will bring. ''We still have concerns about our 'street pharmacists,' but I do believe in time we can correct these concerns, especially with the upcoming police substation,'' he said. Athens-Clarke Police Chief Jack Lumpkin was scheduled to speak to residents Saturday during a gathering at Rocksprings Community Park, to bring them up to speed on the substation's progress as well as other efforts by his department to combat crime. ''I will remind the group that, as long-term residents and business owners of the area have known, the rate and severity of crime and order problems have been less frequent and less noticeable over the last six years, and thus, gentrification has become an option for many investors,'' Lumpkin said last week. ''Also, as long-term residents know, Henderson Extension has at least a 70-year history of alcohol-dependent individuals frequenting that area,'' he said. ''National drug dependency studies seem to indicate that a significant percentage of individuals that once became alcohol-dependent currently are becoming crack cocaine-dependent.'' The police chief added, ''Of course we would like to see all drug sales eradicated from that area as well as other areas in Athens-Clarke County. Many of the individuals that frequent the area to sell drugs do not live within miles of Henderson Extension. The ACCPD will continue to arrest criminal and order violators in the area and seek their vigorous prosecution.'' Doug Bachtel, professor of housing and consumer economics at the University of Georgia, commended the multi-pronged approach being taken toward solving ills in what he called on of the most poverty-stricken areas of Athens-Clarke County. ''They're providing hope, but equally important they're providing structures so that folks can get jobs and stay in school, to provide the means so that people can work their way out of that situation,'' Bachtel said. ''Educational, vocational, housing, mentoring, transportation, day care - in order to solve these problems it has to be solved as a total package.'' - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D