By Yamiche Alcindor
Monday, Dec 21, 2009
Martha Holmes's small, frail body often bumps into things in her new apartment, which seems like a maze to the 87-year-old woman with Alzheimer's disease. In the last month, she has been hospitalized twice, and police have found her wandering the streets, attempting to walk back to the public housing apartment in Alexandria that she called home for more than 40 years.
Now living in Ladrey, a public senior-housing building five blocks away, Holmes is among those at the center of a dispute between James Bland public housing residents who say they are being disregarded and housing authorities who say the residents are uncooperative and antagonistic to development plans.
Residents say they know they have to move out of Bland, which is scheduled to be demolished early next year as part of a $55 million redevelopment plan that will usher in market-rate homes and transform the government-owned buildings constructed in 1945 near Old Town into a mixed-use neighborhood.
However, some say officials at the Alexandria Redevelopment and Housing Authority are forcing them to make hard moves during the holidays and imposing unreasonable deadlines. They also argue that housing officials are picking and choosing whom to reimburse for moves rather than paying for everyone's expenses.
Housing officials say residents are not communicating with their offices and are attempting to slow development plans. Roy Priest, the housing authority's chief executive officer, said postponing moves until after the holidays would hurt development plans and stall demolition of the buildings.
He also said that residents who are being moved to smaller apartments do not have to be reimbursed under the authority's policies and can be fined for living in an apartment that has more rooms than they require. However, several residents said some were reimbursed for moving into smaller units and others were not.
The situation has left many residents angry and confused. Holmes's daughter, Martha Crump, said housing officials forced her mother to leave her apartment in Bland because they wanted to move Holmes, who lives alone, from a two-bedroom apartment to a one-bedroom unit.
Crump said ARHA sent her mother a letter in September stating that she was being moved from Bland to Ladrey. Crump immediately filed a request for her mother to stay, arguing that although Holmes lives alone, she requires 24-hour care. That means the "extra" room is used by her mother, a nurse or a family member, Crump said. In addition to Alzheimer's, her mother suffers from congestive heart failure, hypertension and rheumatism.
Crump and housing authority officials differ on what happened.
"Her [housing] workers never got back to me about the form," Crump said. "I never had any feedback, and they would never answer my calls." In October, Holmes received a letter from the authority stating she had three days to move, her daughter said. Crump said she stalled the move for weeks, hoping that her mother would receive approval to stay in the area.
For her mother, the five blocks could mean the difference between life and death because of the progression of Alzheimer's, Crump said. She said doctors warned her that moving her mother might worsen her memory. Crump said she made multiple calls and visits to ARHA to plead for her mother to stay.
Crump said she received no word from housing officials. In the first week of November, moving officials from the housing authority appeared at her mother's apartment. They packed up her things and moved her to Ladrey, her daughter said.
"When you pull them out of their surroundings, you just lose them," Crump said of her mother.
Housing officials say Holmes's family chose to have her move from the building even though she was approved to stay. They did not show written documentation to The Washington Post. Last week, Priest said he thought Crump was happy in her new home. "Our story is clear -- we have done what we are legally required to do and what we are morally required to do. If we have done something wrong, sue us," he said.
More than a dozen residents, community leaders and clergy said Holmes's case illustrates the lack of communication between residents and the housing authority. For some who live in the areas of Bland that will be demolished next year as part of the first redevelopment phase, the last few months have been filled with stress and heartache.
Hattie Thompson, a retail worker, has been living at Bland for three years. She received 120 days' notice that she would be relocated and said officials had promised that they would give residents a choice in where they would move. Last week, she said, she was given an address and told to move by Monday. "It's politics and dollar signs. They don't care about us," Thompson said. "They want us in the shadows."
Mae Helen Lanier, a 13-year Bland resident, is also bound by the Monday moving deadline. Her aunt died last week. She said her options are moving and missing the funeral in Atlanta, or leaving and risking being thrown out of public housing.
Last week, Lanier sat amid half-packed boxes and black trash bags with tears rolling down her face. "I'm not trying to cause any problems, but they're just rushing us," she said. "All I'm asking for is more time."
Priest defended the authority's decisions and deadlines. "The policy doesn't say choice," he said of ARHA's relocation rules. "We can't delay." He also said it's impossible to give individuals choices because public housing options in the area are few and vacancies are rare.
Alexandria Mayor William D. Euille (D) said he understands the limited housing options but is dismayed that the moves are being done during the holidays. "You just don't treat people as cattle," he said. Euille said, however, that there is little he can do. His office does not control the decisions of the housing authority, which is overseen by a board of commissioners appointed by the City Council and the mayor.
Meanwhile, as residents move and communication problems continue, Crump hopes her mother will be allowed to return to Bland.
"My mom loved this community," Crump said, her dark eyes filled with worry. "She isn't going to last a whole year in Ladrey."
en Espanol: Alexandria Act Espanol
"Alexandria Gazette Packet" VOICE Action with Governor Kaine, 20 July 09
http://www.connectionnewspapers.com/article.asp?article=331068&paper=59&cat=104
Speaking Up for Oral Health-Care Funding
Letter to the Editor, Washington Post, June 29 2009
Having watched a patient suffer with severe pain from a periodontal abscess that could have been prevented if she had access to oral health care, I'm compelled to agree with the June 23 Health article "Putting Teeth in Health-Care Reform." Oral health care must be part of the health-care package Congress is debating.
Unfortunately, Virginia is among the few states that do not provide oral health care to its poorest adults, even those who qualify for Medicaid.
Since the fall of 2008, Virginians Organized for Interfaith Community Engagement (VOICE), a nonpartisan coalition of more than 40 Catholic, Islamic, Jewish and Protestant congregations, has sought to change that. VOICE has convinced government officials of Alexandria, Arlington County and Fairfax County that providing funding to assist individuals in getting oral health care makes sense. The combined effort will generate services worth an estimated $350,000 to $400,000 through approximately 1,800 appointments.
While it's a good start, it's not enough. Virginia needs to join other states that provide oral health care to adult Medicaid recipients, and Congress needs to ensure that oral health care is part of an overall health care package.
THOMAS WILSON , Executive Director, Northern Virginia Dental Clinic, Falls Church
Secured agreement with Mayor Euille to preserve Housing Funding at 2009 Level in FY 2010.
Secured $25,000 in FY 2010 to support dental service expansion thru the Northern Virginia Dental Clinic.
Organized tenants at 200 unit Bland Public Housing Development to document housing code, health (sewer backups) issues, and electric utility overcharge issues.
Secured commitments at 125 person VOICE Alexandria Action from Roy Priest, Executive Director, Alexandria Housing & Redevelopment Authority (ARHA), to address the housing and sewer issues in 30 days. Negotiated agreement to recalculate reimbursements due residents for exorbitant electric bills.
Organized 25-leader local action with Mayor Euille to inspect ARHA’s maintenance repairs and graded ARHA’s performance. Demanded action on incomplete work within 7 days.
Seven VOICE clergy and lay leaders met with Mayor Euille to brief him on the VOICE action regarding maintenance at the Bland Housing Project. The mayor expressed his support for those efforts, and agreed to assist as needed. Mayor Euille agreed to preserve Housing Funding at 2009 Level in FY 2010. The mayor also committed $25,000 in FY 2010 to support dental service expansion thru the Northern Virginia Dental Clinic.
Since early 2009, VOICE leaders from VOICE Alexandria congregations have organized several meetings and community walks/inspections with Bland residents. 50 Bland residents came out in March to express their concerns about the maintenance efforts of the Alexandria Redevelopment and Housing Authority (ARHA) and share their stories about the unacceptable living conditions at Bland. VOICE leaders are helping Bland leaders organize to hold ARHA accountable for making changes. James Bland Public Housing complex, operated by ARHA, has 192 units and is located just off Rt. 1 near Old Town Alexandria and the Braddock Metro Stop.
Here are a few photos of Bland Public Housing maintenance issues documented from a VOICE Walk-Through February, 2009.

Al Anderson of St Joseph Roman Catholic Church makes a commitment at the VOICE Founding Action
For more information about VOICE of Alexandria or if you would like to be added to the VOICE Alexandria email distribution list, email Jean at Alexandria@voice-iaf.org