Neighborhoods


Strategic Neighborhood Transformation

Sidebar images:
, ,
Body:

Monday, December 16, 2024

On Thursday, December 12, 2024, the Youngstown Neighborhood Development Corporation was awarded $1,500,000 in grants from the Federal Home Loan Bank of Pittsburgh’s Affordable Housing Program for affordable housing development. PNC Bank is the member bank supporting YNDC’s application and partnering on the projects.

The grant award will assist with the construction of three new duplexes in the City of Youngstown along Glenwood Avenue and the renovation of four homes on Pearce Avenue and Lake Drive.

“YNDC is happy to announce this investment that will allow for the creation of another ten high quality new housing units along the greater Glenwood Avenue corridor as part of our long term and incremental neighborhood stabilization work. We are grateful to our partners at the Federal Home Loan Bank of Pittsburgh, PNC Bank, Mahoning County Land Bank, City of Youngstown, Mahoning County, The Raymond John Wean Foundation, Flying High and others for their support and partnership in creating this success,” said Ian Beniston, YNDC Executive Director.

The projects will be completed in 2025. 

Sidebar images:
Body:

The Youngstown Neighborhood Development Corporation announced Tuesday that it will receive $1.5 million in grants from the Federal Home Loan Bank of Pittsburgh’s Affordable Housing Program for affordable housing development.

To read the full story from The Business Journal, click here. 

Sidebar images:
Body:

The Youngstown Neighborhood Development Corporation (YNDC) is receiving $1.5 million in grants from the Federal Home Loan Bank of Pittsburgh for affordable housing development.

To read the full story from WKBN, click here.

Sidebar images:
Body:

YNDC was awarded $1,500,000 in grants from the Federal Home Loan Bank of Pittsburgh to construct three new duplexes and renovate four abandoned houses in Youngstown.

To read the full story from WFMJ, click here.

Sidebar images:
Body:

Wednesday, December 18th, 2024

On December 18, 2024, Huntington Bank donated the property at 3310 Sheridan Road to YNDC. The vacant home will be renovated and resold to a homeowner and the vacant lots will be utilized for future development. YNDC is currently renovating another house at 3222 Sheridan Road. Both projects are part of long term neighborhood stabilization efforts in the Powerstown neighborhood. Many thanks to Huntington Bank!

Sidebar images:
Body:

The Youngstown Neighborhood Development Corp. received a $1.5 million grant from the Federal Home Loan Bank of Pittsburgh to build affordable housing in the city.  The grant will assist with the construction of three new duplexes along Glenwood Avenue and the renovation of four houses on Pearce Avenue and Lake Drive on the South Side.

To read the full story from The Vindicator, click here

Sidebar images:
Body:

City council agreed to spend $1.98 million in American Rescue Plan dollars and redirect another $2.1 million from the federal program for different projects, including up to $1.8 million to purchase a new fire truck. Council approved several ARP ordinances Wednesday, less than two weeks before the federal deadline of Dec. 31 to have all of the funding allocated or lose what it did not allocate. Youngstown received $82,775,370 in ARP funds and with the legislation passed, it will have allocated all of the dollars, said Mayor Jamael Tito Brown.

ARP funds have to be obligated by the end of this month and expended by the end of 2026 under federal law.The most expensive legislation had council remove $1.8 million from a fund for land acquisition for community and economic development projects. Up to $1.8 million will go toward the purchase of a new 100-foot ladder truck for the fire department’s downtown station.

Finance Director Kyle Miasek said he didn’t know how much ARP money would go toward the truck, but it could be the full $1.8 million amount. It largely depends on how much ARP money is unspent by the city, he said.The fire truck, which will be in service next year, costs $2.19 million.

The city also agreed Wednesday to pay $200,000 in ARP funds to the Intentional Development Group to provide start-up costs, planning and expansion for the Cornerstone Food Co-op at 2649 Glenwood Ave., the long-closed Bottom Dollar grocery store.  The project aims to address food insecurities while encouraging economic growth, job creation and improving the community through an agricultural incubator program, a community kitchen and a marketplace co-op, according to a city document.  The $200,000 is being redirected from a $1.5 million ARP allocation, approved Oct. 2 by city council, to redevelop the former 18,285-square-foot grocery store building.

The board of control today is expected to approve a $1,028,900 contract with Brock Builders of North Lima for that work — which is under the $1.5 million allocation.

The Village of Healing, an infant mortality clinic, will be the building’s main tenant, using 6,063 square feet with the food co-op using 4,194 square feet. A third group tenant, not yet determined, would use 5,141 square feet and there is 2,887 for a common area under the city’s proposal.  Also, council agreed Wednesday to use $100,000 of the money left from the $1.5 million initially set aside for the Bottom Dollar project to give to Ohio Urban Renaissance Center at 421 North Ave. to upgrade its facilities.  Ohio Urban Renaissance’s ARP allocation was increased Nov. 18 by city council from $150,000 to $389,000 to help at-risk youths from funding from the $2 million given to Councilwoman Samantha Turner, D-3rd Ward. The city is adding another $100,000 in ARP funding to the organization with the increase to be finalized today by the board of control. In about a month, the project’s funding from ARP dollars is going from $150,000 to $489,000.

Other ARP allocations approved Wednesday were $50,000 more for a residential roof replacement project and $200,000 for the Youngstown Neighborhood Development Corp. to serve as fiscal agent for the Youngstown Restorative and Opportunity Center (YoROC). The latter is being developed to help younger city residents who are unemployed or underemployed with focuses on training in health care and the culinary arts.

To read the full story from The Vindicator click here

Sidebar images:
Body:

Youngstown City Council voted to allocate the rest of the city's American Rescue Plan dollars before it's end-of-year deadline. Hundreds of thousands will be going to the Youngstown Neighborhood Development Corporation to improve housing, plus more money is being focused on blighted or abandoned homes around town. $80k is going to the 4th ward for pedestrian safety improvements.

To read the full story from WFMJ, click here

Sidebar images:
Body:

In one critical area of the city of Youngstown’s identity, things certainly will be looking up come 2025. After decades of slow but steady work to tear down aging, dilapidated, blighted and public health-threatening properties in every quadrant of the city, efforts will begin in earnest early in the year to build up the city’s housing stock.

Since 2007, an eye-popping 6,939 vacant houses have been demolished in Youngstown with 424 homes taken down this year. According to Ian Beniston, executive director of the Youngstown Neighborhood Development Corp., “We’ve all but eliminated housing in need of demolition.”

To read the full story from the Tribune Chronicle, click here.

Sidebar images:
, , ,
Body:

Monday, December 23, 2024

On December 20, the Western Reserve Health Foundation, a supporting organization of the Community Foundation of the Mahoning Valley, awarded a $20,000 grant to the Glenwood Fresh Market (Market).

The Market is located in a storefront at YNDC’s plaza at 2915 Glenwood Avenue and provides year-round access to free fresh fruits, vegetables, and other healthy food items for low-income residents. The Market also provides space for cooking demonstrations, nutrition education, health screenings, and other community health resources. Since it began operation in April 2022, the Market has provided free fresh and healthy produce to 2,578 unique members. Big thanks to the Western Reserve Health Foundation for the support of this community resource!