logo
11 Investigates EXCLUSIVE: Residents claim living conditions aren't much better than being on street

11 Investigates EXCLUSIVE: Residents claim living conditions aren't much better than being on street

Yahoo16-05-2025
11 Investigates spoke exclusively to residents who live at the Wood Street Common on 3rd Avenue in downtown Pittsburgh.
They are speaking out for the first time about living conditions at the apartment building downtown that provides low-income and transitional housing for the homeless.
'Paint is bubbling off the walls, my ceiling, you know what I mean, water, is water damage,' said Dewayne Young, who's been in the apartments for two years.
Young and Andrew Huntley both described living conditions at the Wood Street Commons.
'Cockroaches, bed bugs, mold, loud music,' said Huntley, who moved in earlier this year.
It's a subsidized apartment building with 260 units.
'There's mold. Oh yeah, oh definitely, it's filthy,' said Young.
'There's literally a bed bug on my hoodie right there. I've been seeing bed bugs and cock roaches crawling all over my stuff,' said Huntley, who showed 11 Investigates videos he took while in his apartment.
Residents also sent pictures from inside the building.
In those pictures, there's water damage to ceiling tiles, ceiling tiles that have been removed and wires exposed, and what appears to be mold on pipes, holes in the walls, dirty and broken floor tiles and bathroom residents said out of order for months.
Earle: Did you expect better conditions? Did you expect more from this place?
Dwayne Young: I mean, Yeah, Yeah, I did because like I figured if you're going there and you're paying rent, you know what I mean, it should be.
Young and Huntley, who both rely on federal assistance, moved here from the Light of Life Mission.
Young pays $325.00 per month in rent.
Huntley pays $415.00 a month.
'They know he doesn't have any money, so they're forcing him to get disability and when he gets disability, they take his check,' said Adrienne Young, Huntley's cousin.
Adrienne Young, who founded Tree of Hope, a nonprofit that works with families impacted by gun violence, is Dwayne Young's cousin.
'It's outrageous, unacceptable, deplorable conditions, inhumane conditions,' said Adrienne Young.
Earle: Have you seen the drug dealing in there?
Huntley: Oh yeah.
Earle: There's drug dealing inside the building?
Huntley: Ooh yeah.
One picture sent to 11 Investigates shows the overdose drug Narcan on a shelf in a hallway.
Residents said there's one on every floor.
Several years ago, 11 Investigates told you about a resident who overdosed and died, but wasn't found until days later.
PREVIOUS COVERAGE >>> Family angry after loved one dies & body not found for days in downtown shelter
And according to the Allegheny County Medical Examiner's Office, six people have died here of drug overdoses during the past five years.
'It's horrible. It really is, it's really horrible,' said Dwayne Young.
'This place is not only dangerous, it's unlivable and we need to do something about it soon,' said Adrienne Young.
11 Investigates reached out to the Allegheny County Department of Human Services for a response.
'For the DHS/CHS-funded units, DHS conducts on-site monitoring and housing quality standards inspections to ensure that units meet HUD habitability standards. Our staff have heard some complaints occasionally, and when we hear of these concerns, we share them with the property owner. Our experience has been that the property manager has resolved these concerns appropriately. Generally, DHS receives complaints from recipients of our services through the DHS Director's Action Line; DHS has only received sporadic and infrequent complaints about Wood Street Commons related to building concerns and there has not been an increase in complaints recently. If people are experiencing issues in any DHS program, including the CHS-operated units, we encourage them to reach out to our Director's Action Line at 1-800-862-6783. It is our understanding that the Housing Authority for the City of Pittsburgh inspects units where a voucher is being used.'
11 Investigates went through the city inspection reports for that building, but didn't find anything remarkable.
Since our interview, Dwayne Young has moved out and into another apartment.
Andrew Huntley said he is planning on moving as well.
Download the FREE WPXI News app for breaking news alerts.
Follow Channel 11 News on Facebook and Twitter. | Watch WPXI NOW
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Maine seasonal police officer is being held in Plymouth ICE facility, prison confirms
Maine seasonal police officer is being held in Plymouth ICE facility, prison confirms

Boston Globe

time6 hours ago

  • Boston Globe

Maine seasonal police officer is being held in Plymouth ICE facility, prison confirms

Advertisement Evans also provided his US social security card, work permit, Massachusetts driver's license, and Jamaican passport and birth certificate, according to a Wednesday statement by the police department. The town also checked his criminal history in state and federal databases. In addition, DHS notified the police department Evans was legally permitted to work in the US until his work permit expires in March 2030, Chard said. Patricia H. Hyde, ICE's acting field office director for the agency's enforcement and removal operations in Boston, sharply criticized the local police in a July 28 announcement of Evans's arrest. 'Jon Luke Evans not only broke U.S. immigration law, but he also illegally attempted to purchase a firearm,' Hyde said. 'The fact that a police department would hire an illegal alien and unlawfully issue him a firearm while on duty would be comical if it weren't so tragic.' Advertisement Chard defended officers' work in clearing Evans for hire in her statement. 'Simply stated, had the federal government flagged his information the Town would not have hired Mr. Evans,' Chard said. 'Any insinuation that the Town and Department were derelict in our efforts to verify Mr. Evans' eligibility to work for the Town is false.' Old Orchard Beach police Jade Lozada can be reached at

Appeals court upholds order barring DHS from immigration sweeps based on language, job
Appeals court upholds order barring DHS from immigration sweeps based on language, job

The Hill

time7 hours ago

  • The Hill

Appeals court upholds order barring DHS from immigration sweeps based on language, job

A federal appeals court upheld a lower ruling on Friday barring the Trump administration from solely considering race, language or employment as reasonable suspicion to detain migrants. Their decision blocks Department of Homeland Security (DHS) officials from conducting 'indiscriminate immigration operations' as alleged by the plaintiffs in court filings. A group of five immigrants and four civil rights organizations filed a filed a lawsuit in early July alleging that immigration operations are based on racial bias, reporting harassment as U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents flooded street corners, bus stops, parking lots, agricultural sites, day laborer corners and other places with checkpoints. On July 12, Judge Maame E. Frimpong, a Biden appointee, issued the temporary restraining order after he said he was presented with a 'mountain of evidence' proving ICE's arrests and stops were unconstitutional, according to The Associated Press. A day before Frimpong's ruling, 200 California farm workers were arrested resulting in at least one death. Communities in the Golden State have been protesting the deportation raids and arrests, citing cruelties. The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals said if the Trump administration is not purposefully targeting individuals and communities, Frimpong's order should not block their efforts. 'If, as Defendants suggest, they are not conducting stops that lack reasonable suspicion, they can hardly claim to be irreparably harmed by an injunction aimed at preventing a subset of stops not supported by reasonable suspicion,' the panel of three judges wrote, per the AP. A future hearing for the order is slated for September as reported by the newswire. For now, Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass (D-Calif.) celebrated the ruling as a protective covering for local residents. 'The Temporary Restraining Order that has been protecting our communities from immigration agents using racial profiling and other illegal tactics when conducting their cruel and aggressive enforcement raids and sweeps will remain in place for now,' she said in a Friday statement.

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