It is nice to see such heartfelt talk about out retirement years.  I am not
too concerned about it.  It is my plan to be as much of a burden to my
children as I possibly can when I am old and cranky, so I will probably be
living with them.  Paybacks.

Matt Wolfe

_________________________________

Support Sam Katz for Mayor

J. Matthew Wolfe
Law Office of Alice W. Ballard, P.C.
1700 Lewis Tower
225 South 15th Street
Philadelphia, PA  19102
(215) 893-9990
Fax:  (215) 893-9997

4256 Regent Square
Philadelphia, PA  19104
(215) 387-7300


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, March 25, 2003 2:25 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [UC] housing for older years



In a message dated 3/25/03 1:18:56 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

<< I'm glad to see a few folks are thinking beyond their
present  chronological status. It was only a few years ago that this
neighborhood turned down development of a senior citizen complex at 47th
and Warrington, in favor of a restaurant. (It would generate too much
traffic, it wouldn't fit with the existing architecture, it would harm the
long-range development of Baltimore Ave.)  >>

Hi, Fred, I think it was a little more complex than that.  First, one former
neighbor tried to ramrod things through and force the Sr. apts., the UC New
School and Abbraccio WITH a liquor license to all find a way, amongst
themselves, to share the SAME space (probably many laws against a grade
school and an alcohol-selling restaurant being together!).  Then Cedar Park
Neighbors had each group make a presentation, and we asked them some
to-the-point financial questions.  The school just kept telling us how
wonderful they were, but they had no numbers and no financial plan; the Sr.
apts. provider explained that he'd be looking for city and state grants and
loans, and if he didn't get them he wouldn't build; and Roger Harman
explained his, Vincent's & Duane's personal finances and their willingness
to
put everything they had on the line, personally, for Abbraccio.  They
sounded
like the best bet - and a "lively" use for a commercial space, too.  We
suggested that the Sr. apts. provider could buy another building in the area
and rehab it, rather than use a space with commercial zoning for yet another
apartment building.

The builders of Abbraccio also offered to pay market value for the land -
the
school did not, and I forget if the Sr. apts. builder did, but he would have
been using city and state money, so he wouldn't really have been paying
market value.  Soon afterwards, there was a major leak problem in a building
the Sr. apts. provider has at 48th & Chester, and he was not very quick to
make repairs and had some unhappy tenants, somewhat tarnishing his
reputation
as a white knight.

Maybe what we need is a group of neighbors to get together and try to buy a
couple of large apartment buildings with elevators, buildings which can be
made to accommodate seniors - though at this time we'd be competing with the
USP/ Fannie Mae/ Penn partnership, so I'm not sure it would be easy to be
the
top bidder.  Is anyone interested in investing in this sort of arrangement?

Melani Lamond
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