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December 1, 2008 Contact: Researchers investigate Atlanta public housing relocation from residents’ perspectives
ATLANTA — High-rise public housing for senior citizens and disabled individuals should remain in the wake of plans to demolish the last of Atlanta’s public housing communities, according to one of the findings in a report issued today (Dec. 1) by Georgia State University researchers. “Most of the senior high-rise residents do not want to move and many have multiple health and service needs that might not be met once relocated”, say Department of Sociology assistant professors Deirdre Oakley and Erin Ruel, who together led this research initiative. The study represents one of the only independent research efforts of Atlanta public housing residents in recent years and investigated the residents’ experiences and perceptions as they face the prospect of relocation. Overall, findings emphasize that a one size fits all relocation plan will make moving very difficult for many of the residents. Currently there is only one relocation option: move to private market housing with the help of a Housing Choice voucher subsidy (formerly Section 8). Key issues facing residents are the prospects that destination neighborhoods may not be as readily accessible to public transportation as public housing; the decreased financial security of subsidized private market housing; the disproportionate amount of poor health among residents and the need to maintain the regular access to healthcare services that they currently have living in public housing; and the fact that many of the senior residents in particular do not want to relocate.
Aside from maintaining the senior high rise housing, the report also recommends preserving at least a portion of the current public housing stock and providing some sort of short-term transitional housing for those who lose their homes and/or jobs, especially during the current economic downturn, to help prevent homelessness. Download the report in PDF format here (5.5 Mb)
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