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North Miami distributes loans for affordable housing
The Community Redevelopment Agency Board recently recognized the 24 people
who will receive the CRA'S first batch of loans for affordable housing.
Posted on Mon, Dec. 24, 2007
BY CARLI TEPROFF
cteproff@MiamiHerald.com
Rosemarie Guerrier and Eliud Guerrier, with daughter Eliussa,
will now have a place to call their own. Bennie Trinidad, from
NANAY introduces the family as one of the first recipients of
the Community Redevelopment Agency's $50,000 loan.
Eliud and Rosemarie Guerrier have
learned about mortgages and taxes. They know about interest and credit.
And now they know what it is like to be able to buy their first home.
The couple is one of 14 families who is part of the first wave to receive a
$50,000 loan from North Miami's Community Redevelopment Agency.
The Guerriers found a two-bedroom condo in the Whitehouse, located at 13700
NE Sixth Ave., for $180,000. The $50,000 loan will be used as a down
payment.
''It really helps because it would be difficult to buy anything without the
help from the CRA,'' Eliud Guerrier said. ``We thank God that we will be
able to have our own property.''
North Miami's Community Redevelopment Agency was created in 2004 to spruce
up a large swath of the city. Part of the goal was to make housing
affordable and help people rehabilitate their existing homes.
While the final details of the Guerriers' mortgage have not yet been worked
out, Executive Vice President of NANAY Bennie Trinidad said he can see the
fruits of the work of the Housing Partnership, which is made up of NANAY,
Little Haiti Housing and Neighborhood Housing Services.
''This has been a mission we have had for a very long time,'' Trinidad said.
Earlier this year the Housing Partnership held an open enrollment for North
Miami residents to apply for four different programs: housing in the city's
future affordable housing development, Pioneer Gardens; loans to buy a new
house; rental assistance; and home rehabilitation. The applicants also went
through several training courses to learn about topics like buying a home.
Francis Jackson, 81, said he has been trying to get his house fixed since
Hurricane Wilma in 2005, but money has been tight.
The loan will help him get the roof repaired.
''This takes a lot of pressure off of me,'' he said.
After extensive reviews of the application, loans were given on first-come
first-served basis as long as the applicants were preapproved. In addition
to the 14 families receiving money to buy homes, 10 people are receiving
between $25,000 and $50,000 to rehabilitate their existing home.
In total, the CRA will dish out more than $1 million generated from tax
revenue, CRA Executive Director Tony Crapp Sr. said. Crapp said the agency
will likely give more loans next year.
''This is very good day for us,'' Crapp said after the Guerriers and other
people receiving help made an appearance at the Dec. 11 CRA Board meeting.
The loans will have to be paid back eventually, Trinidad said, but it is
likely the payments will be between $20-$50 a month until completely repaid.
The payments will be decided on an individual basis, Trinidad said.
For the Guerriers, who have been living in a rental for years, the money
means they and their two children will not have to move around anymore.
''Everything is for our children,'' they said.
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