The neighbors who live and work near 1920 LaSalle prepared an extensive task
force report on Plymouth Church's Lydia House, which described in detail the
hyper-concentration in our neighborhood of people who require supportive
services, fully 31% of the total population within 1/4 mile of the proposed
project when Lydia House is opened.

The full neighborhood task report is online at www.TheLydiaHouse.com

Among the solutions proposed by the neighbors to Plymouth

(1) Undertake a more needed use for the building, such as 24-hour child care
for which there is a desperate requirement, one supported by a Plymouth
Church study, or undertake affordable housing for families, another serious
need.  Unfortunately, there are no taxpayer dollars to pay for these uses.
Plymouth gets $5.2 million in grants along with a $500,000 developer's fee
for itself with its proposed use.  It refused to discuss any alternative
uses with the neighbors.

(2) The neighborhood task force identified 30 properties for sale currently
for Plymouth's Lydia House project, many more suited to supportive housing,
many which cost less per square foot, and were in neighborhoods with no
supportive facilities. Some locations where in neighborhoods where (gasp!)
some of the Plymouth Congregation actually live. Response: Plymouth Church
was not willing to discuss these alternative locations for Lydia House.

(3) After the City Council approved all the zoning variances for Lydia
House, 4 more supportive facilities (19, 20, 21 and 22) were announced in
our neighborhood, two within a 1/4 mile of Lydia House.  The Minneapolis
zoning law required there be no more than one supportive facility per 1/4
mile.  We are now faced with the prospect of 22.

The neighbors proposed to Plymouth that it work with the Zion Baptist
Church, which purchased one of the proposed facilities (2208 Blaisdell
Avenue) for supportive housing to locate the facility in one of the 30
Minneapolis neighborhoods without any supportive housing.  No response from
Plymouth.

Plymouth Foundation Board Chair Steve Wellington told one neighborhood group
that it is "Plymouth's property and they can do whatever they want with it."
It is this hard-line approach to neighbors, Plymouth's refusal to discuss
alternative uses for 1920 LaSalle and it's statements that it intends more
projects in our neighborhood that led to filing of a lawsuit against
Plymouth Church and the Plymouth Church Neighborhood Foundation.

The lawsuit complaint text is available at www.livableneighborhoods.com

What more would others have us do?

Are 22 facilities enough? If not how many should we take before 56
neighborhoods are required to take their 1st or 2nd facility?  And at what
number of facilities in our neighborhood do we become a ghetto where special
needs populations are de facto required to live because that's where all the
facilities are?  Is this discrimination?  Is this segregation?

And how much do you expect me and my neighbors to do support this
population?  And lastly, should Plymouth have the right to do what it wants
with property it bought with taxpayer dollars, and for which it collects for
itself a $500,000 developer's fee, paid by taxpayers?

John Cevette
Whittier


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
Gregory Luce
Sent: Saturday, December 29, 2001 9:44 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [Mpls] Lydia House Goes to Court


List member and Strib writer Steve Brandt has a story this morning about the
Lydia House dispute, which is headed to court:

http://www.startribune.com/stories/462/928208.html

I suspect the CVI project in Phillips is likely on the same route--I've been
told David Lillehaug is now representing Ventura Village, Inc.

Here's an asked and as yet unanswered question:  what are opponents to the
projects (and/or opponents to the placement of the projects) doing to engage
other neighborhoods to take their so-called "fair share" of supportive
housing?  I'd really like to know if anyone is working on this, because
opposition without solution is rather counterproductive.

Gregory Luce
North Phillips (work)

North Phillips Press is a publication of Project 504,
a housing related neighborhood organization based in
the Phillips neighborhood.
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