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Tag: Coalition for a Better Acre

  • Community Preservation Act funding cycle begins

    Community Preservation Act funding cycle begins

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    LOWELL — The owners of the Wannalancit Mills are asking for almost $97,000 in Community Preservation Act funding to restore the towering, red-brick smokestack off Suffolk Street.

    The 210-foot structure not only acts as a wayfinding beacon during the day, but also doubles as an industrial-sized green-and-white Christmas tree during holiday nights.

    In its application, the Farley White Management Company called the structure “One of Lowell’s ‘Industrial Redwoods.’”

    The project is one of 12 applications totaling $5 million submitted for eligibility consideration during September’s Community Preservation Committee meeting.

    Historically, about $2 million in funding is allocated every year to invest in community housing, preserving open and recreational spaces and historic preservation.

    Chair Adam Baacke reviewed the CPA funding with the nine-member board, which includes Department of Planning and Development Director/Assistant City Manager Yovani Baez-Rose, members of the city’s historic, planning and parks boards, and other appointees.

    “At this time of the year, we’re hearing the eligibility applications and the eligible applicants are then given the opportunity to submit full applications,” Baacke said.

    Past approved projects have included Rollie’s Farm as conservation land and agricultural education, restoring stained glass windows at City Hall and affordable housing projects like Acre Crossing.

    The Community Preservation Act was signed into law more than 20 years ago. In 2019, Lowell voters overwhelming approved putting a 1% surcharge on local property taxes to be used for community preservation projects.

    Exemptions were approved by the city for the first $100,000 of a residential property’s value, full commercial property value and low-income and low- or moderate-income senior homeowners. The city also receives a state match from the commonwealth’s Community Preservation Fund.

    Some of the applicants, like Suffolk Place and Mass Mills IV, are past recipients of CPA funding.

    “They can come to the well as many times as they want,” Baacke said.

    Surprisingly, there were no applications for the recreation or open space category, but several in historic preservation and four requesting funding for affordable housing projects.

    St. Anne’s Episcopal Church submitted a request for $800,000 to restore three historic buildings on its footprint that faces Merrimack Street bounded by the Merrimack Canal on one side and Kirk Street on the other.

    Manny Cavaleiro requested $59,000 to replace the windows in the historic building at 573-579 Lawrence St., home to Cavaleiro’s Steakhouse.

    Historic renovations comply with both the letter and spirt of the CPA law.

    “This funding is collected from all of the taxpayers from the community of Lowell,” Baacke said. “The general impression in this community and other communities in the state is that the historic preservation component of these funds should be used on things that are visible to the community that is paying for them.”

    He noted that the committee has not funded in the past projects that involved site landscape or interior renovations to buildings that didn’t also involve a community housing component.

    Coalition for a Better Acre submitted a request for $500,000 to construct nine affordable homeownership housing units, part of a $5 million project. Committee member Daniel Tenczar questioned that math that he said had each unit costing almost $600,000 per unit.

    “I would say that’s pretty on brand for subsidized housing development per unit cost,” Baez-Rose said. “Pretty standard numbers.”

    That cost metric highlighted the challenges for developers to construct subsidized/affordable-rate housing in the state. Most private housing building projects in the city are for market-rate housing.

    Mass Mills IV applied for an additional $1.5 million in CPA funds to restore the historic Boiler Building and Main Power Plant off Bridge Street and construct community housing.

    The buildings were the scene of a façade collapse last March that dumped tons of bricks on the newly opened Riverwalk along the Merrimack River. The pathway is still closed pending the securing of the buildings and restoration of the damaged walkway.

    The East End Club development, in the city’s Centralville neighborhood, requested $100,000 to construct two affordable housing units. And Suffolk Place applied for $300,000 toward the construction of 33 affordable housing units in the Acre.

    “If we’re fortunate enough, we’ll close in November of this year to commence construction,” said Steve Joncas, a real estate consultant who is working on the Suffolk Place project with the developer.

    The committee voted all 12 applications as eligible.

    “We use our fall meetings to hear presentations, to answer any questions and to ask questions of the applicants,” Baacke said.

    In January the committee will craft its recommendations before submitting the list to the City Council for final funding determination in time for the city’s budget discussion in May.

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    Melanie Gilbert

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  • The Five Minute Read

    The Five Minute Read

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    6 Degrees of the Acre gala

    LOWELL — Tickets are now on sale for Coalition for a Better Acre’s annual “6 Degrees of the Acre” gala on Thursday, June 27, from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m., at Taffeta, located in Western Avenue Studios, 110 Western Ave. This year’s theme is “Midsummer’s Magic.” Guests will enjoy an enchanting night of live music, dance and say goodbye to CEO Yun-Ju Choi, who is stepping down after 10 years.

    Tickets are $50 general admission, $35 for young professionals under 40 years of age. To purchase tickets, visit bit.ly/3yeeSET.

    CBA is a membership-based community development corporation dedicated to resident empowerment and sustainable community revitalization for current and future residents of Lowell. For more information, call 978-452-7523.

    Streetcar Museum

    LOWELL — The National Streetcar Museum is open every Saturday and Sunday from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., at 25 Shattuck St. General admission is $3, seniors and youth ages 3-12 are $2, and children under 3 are free. To purchase tickets, go to bit.ly/3VsBid4. For information, email info@trolleymuseum.org.

    Used book sale on May 18

    TYNGSBORO — The Friends of the Tyngsboro Public Library will host a used book sale and bake sale with a corrected date of Saturday, May 18, at the library, located at 25 Bryant Lane.

    Come by between 8:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. for bargains on books, DVDs, CDs, puzzles, jewelry and more. Proceeds benefit the library. For information, call 978-649-7361 or email tynglibfriends@gmail.com.

    Doors Open Lowell returns

    LOWELL — The free, popular Doors Open Lowell, that provides a behind-the-scenes look at some of Lowell’s most historic landmarks, returns during National Preservation Month on Saturday, May 18, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., at 19 different locations throughout the city.

    Doors Open Lowell is the community’s signature preservation, architecture and design event, the first of its kind in the United States when it debuted in 2002. The Masonic Temple on Dutton Street, Gates Block on Market Street, Tremont Gatehouse at Suffolk Street at the Western Canal, the Counting House Lofts at Jackson Street are among some of the other magnificent buildings.

    For more information, visit bit.ly/4bwAcDK.

    At Home in Greater Lowell summit

    LOWELL — Register now for the Northern Middlesex Council of Governments At Home in Greater Lowell Strategies Summit on Tuesday, June 4, from 4 to 6 p.m., at the Lowell Senior Center, 276 Broadway St. NMCOG will present updates on research; share the goals created with the input from all nine of its communities; and break into small groups to brainstorm and discuss strategies to achieve these collective goals.

    At Home in Greater Lowell is a yearlong planning process that will result in a new regional housing plan. The plan will not only include measurable, achievable benchmarks and strategies based on data analysis and community input, but will go beyond this by documenting the first-hand experiences of people living in diverse housing situations in their own words. The first summit was held in March. To learn more about NMCOG’s economic development and housing plan, visit nmcog.org/ahgl.

    Registration is required by Friday, May 31 at 5 p.m., at surveymonkey.com/r/RS87263. For information, email Deputy Director Kelly Lynema at klynema@nmcog.org.

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    Melanie Gilbert

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  • Coalition for a Better Acre nets $1M from MacKenzie Scott fund

    Coalition for a Better Acre nets $1M from MacKenzie Scott fund

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    LOWELL — On Wednesday, the Coalition for a Better Acre announced that it was investing the $1 million it received from billionaire philanthropist MacKenzie Scott’s Yield Giving platform in affordable housing.

    “Two weeks ago, there was a property that came on the market in the Acre neighborhood, and the sale price was $999,999,” CBA CEO Yun-Ju Choi said by phone. “We just signed off on the paperwork today.”

    The deal brings CBA closer to its plan to build 40 affordable apartment units for residents earning up to 60% of area median income, which is considered lower income.

    The Yield Giving Open Call was announced last March, soliciting community-led, community-focused organizations whose explicit purpose is to enable individuals and families to achieve substantive improvement in their well-being through foundational resources.

    CBA was among only 361 organizations — from a total of more than 6,000 that applied — to receive an award. Eligible organizations had annual budgets of between $1 million and $5 million, and unlike the majority of other funding, comes with no strings attached.

    Choi said the “once-in-a-lifetime, pie-in-the-sky” award is one-third its budget, but gives the nonprofit “a lot of flexibility.”

    “There are no conditions,” Choi said. “They’re just giving one-time money to use any way we see fit. They don’t even need a report on how we spent the money.”

    The Open Call award allowed a small, one-off developer like CBA to bring money to the table for a market-rate housing opportunity.

    “It was a good fit and perfect timing,” Choi said. “When you have site control, it helps us with the funding.”

    The nonprofit will borrow, secure tax credits and find different funding sources to be develop the as-yet unnamed project located not far from the Stoklosa Middle School. Choi said the housing development will bring $25 million to $30 million of investment into the Acre neighborhood.

    “It’s giving us a project that’s going to be leveraged into 25, 30 times more than what Yield Giving is giving us,” she said.

    Development Coordinator Sanary Phen took on the grant writing duties of the application process, which included submitting a video. The 90-second clip features founder Charlie Gargiulo talking about the community empowerment origins of the organization.

    Established by a group of residents, clergy, businesspeople and nonprofit leaders in 1982, CBA mobilized residents to fight to save the Acre Triangle from an urban renewal plan that would have displaced hundreds of residents.

    “The people who had been here for many years, we thought they should benefit from that revitalization, not be victims of that revitalization,” Gargiulo said in a historical clip.

    One year after its founding, CBA revitalized 38 housing units in the Acre Triangle, making it possible for 24 low- and moderate-income families to become homeowners and providing rental units for 14 others. The homeownership rate in the Acre Triangle neighborhood increased dramatically, from 1% to 25%.

    Today, the member-driven, nonprofit community development corporation provides 556 units of affordable housing and a range of free programs that support resident empowerment, said CBA Director of Programs Cecilia Gutierrez Yapur.

    “Housing by itself is not going to get [people] out of the cycle of poverty,” she said during her video segment, going on to discuss CBA’s other offerings, including English classes and a food pantry serving 550 families. “We target people who are in need of jobs. We offer sewing classes, we offer an after-school program, sports programs through our Roberto Clemente League, civic engagement, where to vote, how to vote, get registered, who is running.

    “We feel like communities that eat together, party together, stay together and work together,” she closes the clip.

    Choi said that when she saw the video the CBA staff had created, she thought, “We’re going to win that money.”

    The Acre has become a focal point of housing development with dozens of units coming online starting in April.

    The Acre Crossing project at Merrimack and Cabot streets will be home to a five-story Jeanne D’Arc Credit Union office building. It will also consist of 32 newly constructed condominiums, including 24 two-bedroom and eight three-bedroom units, that will come on market this summer to first-time homebuyers earning at or below 100% area median income.

    Suffolk Place at Market and Suffolk streets, around the corner from Acre Crossing and just blocks from City Hall, will bring 33 newly constructed condominiums to first-time homebuyers earning at or below 100% area median income.

    It’s the kind of mixed neighborhood development that City Councilor Paul Ratha Yem said is much-needed and long overdue.

    “This is exciting news and congratulations to CBA for receiving this grant to further their missions of providing affordable housing to the residents of Lowell, particularly in the Acre,” Yem, who represents the District 7 neighborhood, said by phone on Wednesday. “Our time has come.”

    The award comes just months before Choi steps down this June after nearly 10 years of leading CBA, but she feels like the award strengthens the nonprofit’s housing mission to meet the needs of current and future residents of Lowell.

    “This award didn’t just give funding to CBA, it is a gift to the city of Lowell,” Choi said.

    More information on the Yield Giving Open Call and other initiatives can be found at leverforchange.org.

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    Melanie Gilbert

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