logo
Former tenants start moving back to Prospect Homes

Former tenants start moving back to Prospect Homes

Yahoo26-02-2025
JOHNSTOWN, Pa. – Approximately 45% of the residents who were displaced from the Prospect Homes almost two years ago have indicated that they intend on returning to the Johnstown Housing Authority-owned public housing complex when units are available.
JHA Executive Director Mike Alberts said 25% have declined an offer to come back, while 30% are undecided or have not responded yet, when giving a presentation during the board's regular monthly meeting Tuesday.
More than 200 people were required to vacate the buildings, beginning in March 2023, after multiple structural issues were found, specifically ceilings that were in danger of collapsing.
So far, less than 10 families have received keys to move back into units, with JHA planning to pay the moving expenses for former residents who return to Prospect.
'They got the keys,' Alberts said. 'But did they physically move back in yet? Some of them might still be in that process.'
Alberts said there are signs of 'normal activity' such as people going in and out of the units and CamTran buses making the rounds.
Only a few buildings are ready for occupancy.
Others will be habitable once construction work is complete.
As of the end of January, 77% of the general contracting, 78% of the plumbing and 78% of the electrical was finished, according to Alberts. He said the original contracts call for all work to be done by March 12, noting that no extension has been requested as of this week.
'I feel like it's going good,' Alberts said. 'We were very, very excited to get the first ones done. Now it's just waiting for the next batch. We knew this was going to be a phase-in process. The first phase is done. Now we've got to wait for the next batch of buildings to be turned over to us, so we can go and do that. It's still some waiting. But overall, things are going well.'
Tenants were relocated to other public housing units, Section 8 rental properties and residences not affiliated with JHA.
The authority originally thought some buildings might be ready for occupancy by Thanksgiving, but that did not materialize.
'I just want to get it done,' said Jeffrey Matula Jr., leader of a group of former Prospect residents that formed after they were required to leave the complex. 'Everybody's frustrated. We just want back. It's all boiled into that, we just want back. We're tired of the games. We want our normality back. We miss our front porch, our yards.
'We miss kids being able to play with each other, not having to worry about being jumped, beat up on or picked on. We just want our normality back.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Target Donates $300K To Black Church Group, Activists Want It Returned
Target Donates $300K To Black Church Group, Activists Want It Returned

Black America Web

time2 hours ago

  • Black America Web

Target Donates $300K To Black Church Group, Activists Want It Returned

Source: (Photo by) / (Photo by) In what several activists and spiritual leaders view as an underhanded effort to court Black dollars, Target donated $300,000 to the National Baptist Convention amidst several ongoing Target boycotts nationwide. According to USA Today, both Rev. Jamal Bryant and activist Nekima Levy Armstrong say the church group accepting the donation does a disservice to their separate, ongoing Target boycotts. Bryant initially called for a 40-day Target boycott before going on to call for a full boycott over the company rolling back its diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) initiatives earlier this year. Levy Armstong, a Minnesota activist, called for a Target boycott in February for similar reasons. Bryant, who is Senior Pastor of New Birth Missionary Baptist Church in Stonecrest, Ga., made several demands in his call for a Target boycott. The boycott calls for Target to honor a $2 billion pledge to the Black business community the company previously made, invest in Black-owned banks, establish retail centers at HBCUs, and for the company to fully restore its DEI initiatives. 'The black eye for us is that they [National Baptist Convention] walked away with nothing that we asked for,' Bryant told reporters. Levy Armstong, founder of the Racial Justice Network, had similar concerns. She issued a letter to the National Baptist Convention asking them to return the donation and to 'reconsider its alignment with a corporation that has caused such profound harm.' 'This $300,000 payment does not heal – it deepens the wound. It appears to be a payout for silence and an attempt to regain Black consumer trust without accountability,' the letter reads. National Baptist Convention President Boise Kimber has defended the partnership, telling USA Today its partnership with Target is based on a 'shared commitment to community empowerment through small-business and entrepreneur development, investments in education and student support, and workforce and skill development that unlocks growth across our communities.' Kimber added that the money from the donation will 'provide scholarships, support senior citizens, and invest in entrepreneurship programs that uplift our people and the future.' 'We're proud to be sponsoring NBCUSA's conference series as one of the many ways we invest to make a meaningful impact in communities across the country by supporting access to education, economic development initiatives and entrepreneurship programs,' a Target spokesperson said in a statement sent to USA Today. I'll be the first to tell you I'm incredibly cynical when it comes to the motivations of any corporate entity. The widespread backtracking of DEI initiatives at corporations nationwide this year has only furthered my belief that corporate morality boils down to whatever is most profitable and politically expedient at the time. This donation feels like a blatant attempt by Target to say 'See? We don't hate Black people. Now please, spend money with us again.' Lord knows the company needs our dollars as the Target boycotts have proven remarkably effective so far. The company has consistently reported lower foot traffic, and posted a first-quarter sales decline, and its woes have been so pronounced that other companies are now warning their investors of the risks posed by consumer boycotts. If Target was serious about mending fences with the Black community it would address the root concerns that triggered the boycotts in the first place. Instead, it's trying to throw money at the problem in the hopes it will buy our silence. Considering the energy Black folks have been on, I don't see that plan working. SEE ALSO: Target Messed Around And Found Out, Reports 1st Quarter Sales Slump They Scared: Target, Walmart Warn Investors About Consumer Boycotts SEE ALSO Target Donates $300K To Black Church Group, Activists Want It Returned was originally published on

Yang says he's been ‘in touch' with Musk on America Party
Yang says he's been ‘in touch' with Musk on America Party

The Hill

time3 hours ago

  • The Hill

Yang says he's been ‘in touch' with Musk on America Party

Andrew Yang, a former Democratic presidential candidate and cofounder of the independent Forward Party, recently said he's been in touch with Elon Musk about the tech billionaire's formation of his own third party, the America Party. 'I'm excited for anyone who wants to move on from the duopoly, and I'm happy to help give someone a sense of what the path looks like,' Yang told Politico in a statement on Monday. Fox News reported that it independently confirmed the duo's conversation and received the same statement with no additional details. The Hill has reached out to Yang but didn't immediately hear back. 'If it breaks the duopoly I'm all for it,' Yang posted on the Musk-owned social platform X on Monday. The Forward Party's official account similarly posted a supportive message about Musk's new party. 'We welcome the growing realization that the two-party system isn't working and that the majority of Americans want more choices and more accountability,' the party said in the post. 'It's also an opportunity to reiterate that while Independent movements begun from the top down have had minimal long-term impact (such as Perot and Bloomberg), a grassroots movement — like Forward — focused on shared principles can make lasting change a reality.' 'We encourage all new, Independent movements to prioritize healthy reform and real solutions above all else,' the Forward Party added. Musk, 54, announced over the weekend that he would form the America Party as a third-party option after the disintegration of his once-close relationship with President Trump chiefly over the president's massive tax and spending overhaul known as the 'One Big Beautiful Bill Act.' Trump signed the package into law on Friday, but Musk has argued that it adds too much to the federal debt, rather than reducing spending as he had pushed. Yang, 50, sought the Democratic nomination for president in 2020 and unsuccessfully ran as a Democrat for New York City mayor in 2021 before founding the independent Forward Party. The Forward Party is scheduled to hold a volunteer call Tuesday evening. Shortly after its creation, the Forward Party announced that it had merged with right- and left-leaning groups to create a larger movement. 'Building a positive unifying third party movement is going to be difficult but is also exactly what millions of Americans have been waiting for,' Yang said in a statement to The Hill in 2022 about the effort. 'That's why we will succeed.' Musk, who was once one of the president's closest allies and parlayed his massive Trump campaign donations into a special adviser role at the White House overseeing the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), has vowed to back independent candidates in future election cycles, particularly ones who will challenge Republicans who voted for Trump's spending package, which he has referred to as a 'disgusting abomination.' 'When it comes to bankrupting our country with waste & graft, we live in a one-party system, not a democracy,' Musk wrote Saturday on X. 'Today, the America Party is formed to give you back your freedom.' Yang similarly blasted Trump's legislation. 'I hate the bill and see it as irresponsible and dehumanizing,' he wrote in a Monday post on Substack. 'It has something to despise for everyone.' 'How does something like this pass?' he added. He also urged people to join the Forward Party to counter Republicans and Democrats in Congress. 'How to breed leadership in a system that rewards its opposite?' he asked. 'By changing the system itself. It's the only path out.' Trump, meanwhile, has sought to tamp down third-party talk, noting in a Truth Social post that 'they have never succeeded in the United States.' Trump briefly ran as a third-party presidential candidate in 2000 but quit after testing a few Reform Party primaries. He again mulled an independent run in 2012 before emerging as the GOP's White House candidate four years later. 'The System seems not designed for [third parties],' Trump wrote online Sunday evening. 'The one thing Third Parties are good for is the creation of Complete and Total DISRUPTION & CHAOS.'

Target has another big problem amid alarming customer behavior
Target has another big problem amid alarming customer behavior

Miami Herald

time17 hours ago

  • Miami Herald

Target has another big problem amid alarming customer behavior

Target (TGT) , which has almost 2,000 stores nationwide, is struggling to shake a concerning shift in customer behavior that has significantly impacted its sales for several financial quarters. In Target's first-quarter earnings report for 2025, it revealed that its comparable store sales dipped by 3.8% year-over-year. Also, according to recent data from the number of customers visiting Target stores per location shrank by 4.8% year-over-year during the quarter. Related: Target announces generous offers to win back customers The pullback from consumers comes at a time when many are battling inflation and are concerned that tariffs will further increase prices for everyday goods. Also, Target recently faced backlash for scaling back its diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives, which sparked several consumer boycotts. During an earnings call in May, Target CEO Brian Cornell said the company is operating in an "exceptionally challenging environment," with several factors negatively impacting business. "For several years now, we've seen pressure in our discretionary businesses, as spending adjusted down from elevated levels during the pandemic and then moved further away in the face of historically high inflation in needs-based categories," said Cornell. "On top of those ongoing challenges, we faced several additional headwinds this quarter, including five consecutive months of declining consumer confidence, uncertainty regarding the impact of potential tariffs, and the reaction to the updates we shared on Belonging in January." Image source: Universal Images Group via Getty Images Just last month, Target faced a major boycott from consumers, organized by The People's Union USA, for its DEI cuts. Now, another big group is threatening to make a similar move. On June 26, the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) met with Target CEO Brian Cornell to discuss the retailer's decision to roll back its DEI policies in January. The cuts resulted in Target discontinuing its three-year DEI goals and Racial Equity Action and Change initiatives, which launched in 2020 and included advancing the careers of Black employees, instituting anti-racism training for staff members, promoting Black-owned businesses, and sourcing products from Black suppliers. Through these initiatives, Target also pledged to donate $1 million to the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation over five years. Since 2020, the retailer has donated at least $1.4 million to the foundation. The CBC said in a recent press release that the conversation with Cornell was "candid and direct." However, it warned him that "efforts to restore consumer and public trust without genuine action and accountability" would risk causing "lasting damage" to Target's "brand and credibility." Related: Home Depot, Amazon, Starbucks suffer major boycott from customers During the meeting, the group demanded that Target recommit to DEI in a public forum and reinstate DEI policies that were "eliminated or rolled back." The CBC also demanded an update on the status of financial investments and other publicly pledged policies, as well as details of Target's workforce diversity, business supplier diversity, and community investment. However, the CBC is supporting a boycott of Target after the conversation with the company's leadership yielded disappointing results. "Like many of the coalition leaders and partner organizations that have chosen to boycott their stores across the country, we found that the explanations offered by the leadership of the Target Corporation fell woefully short of what our communities deserve and of the values of inclusion that Target once touted," said the CBC in the press release. The CBC also highlighted that Black consumers have a significant impact on Target's "bottom line." "Black consumers contribute overwhelmingly to our economy and to the Target Corporation's bottom line," said the CBC. "Our communities deserve to shop at businesses that publicly share our values without sacrificing our dignity. It is no longer acceptable to deliver promises to our communities in private without also demonstrating those values publicly." The CBC's boycott threat comes after Cornell has been ramping up his efforts to address the backlash over Target's DEI cuts. In April, Cornell met with the Rev. Al Sharpton to advert another potential Target boycott over DEI cuts. More Retail: Costco quietly plans to offer a convenient service for customersT-Mobile pulls the plug on generous offer, angering customersAT&T makes generous offer to older customers The following month, Cornell also reportedly sent an email to Target employees acknowledging that it had been "a tough few months," admitting that the company's lack of communication amid recent controversy had led to "uncertainty." He also emphasized that Target's values of "inclusivity, connection, drive" are "not up for debate" and said that the company is "committed" to sharing how its values create an impact. "The world around us is noisier and more complicated, but that doesn't change who we are," said Cornell. Related: Target faces another massive boycott from customers The Arena Media Brands, LLC THESTREET is a registered trademark of TheStreet, Inc.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store