Neighborhoods


Strategic Neighborhood Transformation

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Wednesday, March 2, 2016

On Monday, February 29, YNDC hosted the last of three Lots of Green Youth Greening Grant application workshops at our office.

This opportunity will fund vacant land reuse projects that center around youth across the city. Forty-six individuals from neighborhood groups, organizations, businesses, and churches attended the trainings, which walked participants through the process of applying for the grant. YNDC anticipates making 10-15 grant awards in 2016, to be announced in early April. If any individuals or groups were not able to attend a training, a short individual meeting can be arranged. Please contact Liberty at 330.480.0423 with any questions about this program.

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The Youngstown Neighborhood Development Corporation is providing free classes to those who want to start their own business.

The classes teach the elements it takes to start a small business like cash flow, how to look at pricing and create a mission.

“It can really help to be ahead of some of the challenges you may face as you start a small business. Especially as you go from doing something you may be doing in your spare time, to thinking how do I make my entire living from this business, which is what we want to see people doing. That’s success,” says Liberty Merrill the Land Reuse Director at Youngstown Neighborhood Development Corporation.

Merrill will teach some of the classes, along with instructors from the Ohio State University Extension and small business owners. The classes, underwritten in part by Cortland Banks, are designed to help entrepreneurs write a business plan and learn about the resources, both financial and mentoring, available.

The classes are every Tuesday night from 6 to 9. The classes start April 5, and go through May 17.

If you want to sign-up for the classes, call Liberty Merrill at 330-480-0423 or e-mail her at lmerrill@yndc.org, to set up a one-on-one meeting to discuss the services and fill out application materials.

To read the whole story from WKBN, please click here.

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The Ohio Department of Transportation has approved the city’s Safe Routes to Schools Travel Plan, and grants to fund improvements for McGuffey and Williamson school areas are next on the agenda.

City council Wednesday approved two ordinances regarding the plan.

One authorizes the city’s board of control to apply for a $375,000 grant from ODOT for safe routes funding for the William Holmes McGuffey and Williamson elementary schools.

“It will add sidewalks around the schools and crosswalk at Williamson [Avenue] and Market Street and new pedestrian crossing signage” at that intersection, said Tom Hetrick, neighborhood planner at the Youngstown Neighborhood Development Agency.

Some streets around McGuffey don’t include sidewalks so those will be installed. Signage will be added as well as flashing school zone lighting and bike racks at both schools, he said.

A second ordinance approved Wednesday seeks $30,000 from ODOT to fund a two-year, part-time safe routes to school coordinator.

Hetrick said the city will do some work around the schools including some engineering work, signage and crosswalk striping.

The citywide Routes to Schools Travel Plan was developed by YNDC in cooperation with the city and the city schools.

It identifies four priority schools: Taft, McGuffey, Williamson and Harding elementary schools.

Taft was the pilot project, selected first because a majority of its students, 82 percent, live within a mile of the school.

The city received a $200,000 grant through Ohio’s Safe Routes to School program for improvements around that school. That work is expected to be completed next year.

Hetrick said the city already has funding for work surrounding Harding awarded through an Eastgate Regional Council of Governments program.

The plan’s approval allows the city to submit grants to fund the Safe Routes projects.

To read the whole story at Vindy.com, please click here.

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Wednesday was the last day for a viable business to submit bids for the purchase the former Bottom Dollar grocery store on Glenwood Avenue in Youngstown.

The city received two bids, just as the deadline at noon neared.

One came from Valley Christian Church — a new church looking for a location. The other was submitted by the Big Dipper Food Company, currently located on Youngstown’s Superior Street, according to T. Sharon Woodberry, the city’s economic development director.

Big Dipper sells items like popcorn and peanuts and would use the building for packaging and distribution.

The city will now examine both bids and make a decision. Further details on the proposals have not yet been released.

The building is valued at $1.5 million, but there was no minimum bidding price.

Until Wednesday, there had been no interest expressed in the building that closed last January when Aldi purchased the Bottom Dollar chain and closed five local stores.

The city wanted a grocery store in the building, since local residents are forced to travel to Boardman or elsewhere to grocery shop, but it said it would consider other proposals.

To read the whole story from WKBN, please click here

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The city received two proposals for reuse of the vacant former Bottom Dollar supermarket at 2649 Glenwood Ave., one from a business and the other from a church.

Hand-delivered to the city finance department at 10:50 a.m. Wednesday was a proposal from Big Dipper Food Co. Inc., 50 Superior St., Youngstown.

Marty Seidler, who founded that company in 2005 with John Cayten, declined to comment on the company’s proposal Wednesday afternoon. The company supplies handmade, gourmet peanut, almond, cashew and pecan brittle items produced in small batches.

The other proposal came from Valley Christian Church, 5500 Market St., Boardman. The church’s proposal arrived at 1:15 p.m. Tuesday by priority mail.

“Our vision is to turn it into a worship center and a community center,” said the church’s pastor, Len Derico.

The church hopes the city will donate the building to the church, and the church expects to spend $100,000 to renovate it, he said, adding that five other churches have agreed to cooperate on this project.

Pastor Derico said the plan calls for a flexible main space that can be transformed from a worship sanctuary into a gym or theater as needed.

Plans call for an Internet cafe in the front of the building and for a counseling center, said Derico, who is a pastoral counselor.

Possible future uses of the building include establishment of a homeless shelter, soup kitchen and free clothing-distribution center for needy people, he added.

“This is only the beginning in our minds. We desire to establish this worship/community center and then begin other ones in other parts of the city very much like it,” the pastor said.

The proposals were not immediately opened in the finance department, but they were to be evaluated by T. Sharon Woodberry, the city’s community-planning and economic-development director.

Noon Wednesday was the new deadline after the city extended the proposal acceptance period one month after receiving no proposals by the original Feb.1 deadline.

The city sought proposals from those interested in buying the 18,000-square-foot, city-owned Glenwood Avenue building, with preference to be given to plans to reopen it as a grocery store.

The city did not establish a minimum sale price.

The Glenwood store, built on 5.1 acres in 2011, has been unused since Bottom Dollar closed in January 2015. ALDI Inc., which acquired 66 Bottom Dollar stores, including this one, turned this store over to the city last year after removing the equipment from it.

Mayor John A. McNally has said he wants to see a full-service grocery store, not a convenience store, in this location.

The Fosterville neighborhood around the store remains a food desert without a grocery store, according to Sarah Lown, public finance manager for the Western Reserve Port Authority and a former economic-development specialist with the city.

The other former Bottom Dollars in the city are at Mahoning Avenue and Meridian Road on the West Side, owned by a private landlord, and at Midlothian Boulevard and Zedaker Street on the South Side, owned by ALDI.

To read the whole story at Vindy.com, please click here

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Ohio will be getting more than $97 million from the U.S. Department of Treasury’s Hardest Hit Fund, and Youngstown may get a good chunk of those funds.

The Hardest Hit Fund provides funding for community stabilization programs and demolishing abandoned structures. It was created in 2010 using money from the Troubled Asset Relief Program to deal with the devastating effects of the foreclosure crisis.

Ian Beniston, executive director of the Youngstown Neighborhood Development Corporation, said a lot of the money would go to the area land banks for demolishing vacant homes that couldn’t be refurbished.

The organization has staff that surveys the city to determine which houses are vacant and what conditions that they are in.

When a home can be renovated, that’s when YNDC steps in and works to revitalize neighborhoods. The first step is using public records to find out who the house belongs to.

YNDC has purchased a few homes, but many are given to the organization through the land banks, private donors or bank real estate owned (REO) properties. There are nearly 4,000 vacant properties across the city, but YNDC focuses mainly on transitional neighborhoods.

“You really have to look at the whole street, because if we have one house that could be rehabilitated but it’s central to 10 other vacant houses that need to be demolished, then it’s not a good investment,”said YNDC Housing Director Tiffany Socol.

YNDC receives funding from several different sources, including government grants and funds, like money through the Hardest Hit Fund.

“We are a private nonprofit, and so we’re not controlled by the government, but we certainly do receive a lot of funding through government sources, both federal and local,” Socol said.

Through the funding, the organization renovates the homes to sell or rent. The market surrounding the homes determines the sale price and how much is put into renovations.

“Youngstown’s a very affordable place to live, so I think that all of our homes are for sale for a very affordable price, and they’re a great value, because they’re full rehabilitated and move-in ready,” Socol said.

To read the whole story from WKBN, please click here

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A foundation that helps local community projects celebrated its successes on Thursday night.

The Raymond John Wean Foundation showcased the works of its 2015 grant recipients. A total of 28 projects were awarded funds.

The funds were awarded as part of Neighborhood SUCCESS, an 8 year-old Wean Foundation program that supports a wide range of projects with an intentional focus on encouraging, cultivating and supporting resident engagement and leadership development.

“That there is some element of collaborative involvement, so it’s just not one or two people doing something. They are involving the residents around them or the neighborhood groups around them,” said Lori Wiebe, administrative and capacity building officer at the Wean Foundation.

The grants range from $500 to $5,000.

This year, the foundation received more than 60 applicants. Forty-three of those projects were accepted and will share the $143,000 in grant money.

This year’s recipients are:

  • 2017 Willard Lot C.A.B.L.E.: $5,000
  • 4 Square Block Watch New Beginning Neighborhood Beautification: $2,110
  • 6th Ward Citizens Coalition Community Mobilization Event Series: $3,100
  • Boulevard Park Block Watch Beautiful Boulevards of Rush and Euclid: $4,975
  • Central City Neighborhood Association Central City Unity Garden & Pocket Park: $4,507
  • Citizens Uniting Citizens Project Family Ties: $3,064
  • Community Volunteer Council Pantry Cooking 101: $1,630
  • Crandall Park North Neighborhood Association Crandall Park Improvement Project: $2,127
  • Dandee’s Lion of the Field Ministry Blossoming Dandies: $793
  • Earth Angel Farm Urban Farm Cooperative Project: $2,948
  • Economic Justice Team Bus Stop: $3,350
  • Friends of the Mahoning River 5th Annual Mahoning River Fest: $2,395
  • Friends of the Warren Heritage Center Black History Timeline: $1,058
  • Game Changers Leadership and Peer Mentoring Initiative 2016 Leadership Empowerment Day: $2,830
  • Garfield Community Garden All Ages Community Involvement: $2,900
  • Heart Reach Ministries, Inc. Adopt A Block Operation Restoration: $2,830
  • Historic Perkins Homestead Neighborhood Assoc. Perkins Rose Garden Revitalization: $4,069
  • Just Because Children’s Fun and Health Fair: $3,285
  • Lit Youngstown Youngstown Stories: $2,600
  • Mahoning Commons Association Mahoning Avenue Corridor Public Art Project: $4,740
  • Mahoning Valley Sojourn to the Past, The Sojourn to the Past: $5,000
  • Martin Luther Lutheran Church Hope for Newport Community Garden: $3,225
  • Neighborhood Ministries Rockford Health and Fitness: $4,000
  • Northeast Homeowners and Concerned Citizens Association McGuffey Road Neighborhood Pocket Park Beautification Project: $5,000
  • Pointview Children and Families Garden Dirt, till, watering systems, and shed: $3,430
  • Popcorn, Cookies, and Jazz (PC&J) PC&J Annual Afternoon in Crandall Park: $3,075
  • Quilts from the Heart Quilts from the Heart: $5,000
  • RCF Family Life Center “Portraits of Promise” Family Nights: $1,082
  • Robins Project, The Movies in the Community: Taking the theater into the Neighborhood of Warren: $5,000
  • Sewing Bank, The Mending The Community: $1,166
  • Southside Community Garden Yr. 5 – Butterfly and Garden Enhancement: $4,991
  • Southside Fine Arts Academy Groovin’ the City: $2,934
  • St. Patrick’s Church of Youngstown St. Pat’s Community Gardens & 4-H Oak Hill Clovers: $2,036
  • Stop One Place Help is Available, Inc. Assistance to the less fortunate of Trumbull County: $5,000
  • T.N.R. of Warren, Inc. Purrfect Solution to Community Cats Phase 2: $5,000
  • Taft School Area Block Watch Taft Wildflower/Pollinator Garden: $554
  • Upper North Heights Neighborhood Association Crandall Park Project 3: $1,515
  • Upton Association, The 4th Grade Ohio History Concentration on Warren: $3,810
  • Warren Interfaith Community Action Committee Interfaith Park Revitalization Project Phase One: $4,989
  • West Side Community Center Healthy Lifestyle Family Project 2016: $4,589
  • Youngstown Early College Expanding STEM education through inquiry learning with 3D-printing: $2,948
  • Youngstown Urban Minority Alcoholism & Drug Abuse Outreach Program, Inc. Martin Luther King After School Program: $3,475
  • YSUscape YSUscape Blight Club: $5,000

To read the whole story from WKBN, please click here

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The Youngstown Neighborhood Development Corporation is providing free classes to those who want to start their own business.

The classes teach the elements it takes to start a small business like cash flow, how to look at pricing and create a mission.

“It can really help to be ahead of some of the challenges you may face as you start a small business. Especially as you go from doing something you may be doing in your spare time, to thinking how do I make my entire living from this business, which is what we want to see people doing. That’s success,” says Liberty Merrill the Land Reuse Director at Youngstown Neighborhood Development Corporation.

Merrill will teach some of the classes, along with instructors from the Ohio State University Extension and small business owners. The classes, underwritten in part by Cortland Banks, are designed to help entrepreneurs write a business plan and learn about the resources, both financial and mentoring, available.

The classes are every Tuesday night from 6 to 9. The classes start April 5, and go through May 17.

If you want to sign-up for the classes, call Liberty Merrill at 330-480-0423 or e-mail her at lmerrill@yndc.org, to set up a one-on-one meeting to discuss the services and fill out application materials.

To read the whole story from WYTV, please click here.

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Today’s entertainment picks:

“Increase the Peace” (today at 6:30 p.m. and Sunday at 6:30 a.m. on MyYTV): Host Andrea Mahone’s guest will be Ian Beniston and Tiffany Sokol from Youngstown Neighborhood Development Corp., who will discuss business training and volunteer opportunities.

To read the whole story at Vindy.com, please click here.

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For many years, the community of Youngstown has been underserved by banks, in terms of receiving loans in order to purchase homes.

In fact, there are few programs that actually inform and educate the inner city communities of the importance of good credit, how to maintain it or how to rebuild it if necessary. Schools aren’t requiring students to learn healthy banking, saving and spending habits into their curriculums, and young adults are pushed out into the world to fend for themselves, with no knowledge of how to maintain a healthy financial state. It seems like there is no hope for the people of Youngstown who would like to become homeowners, but Youngstown Neighborhood Development Corporation is working very hard to combat and eventually extinguish the problems faced by underprivileged communities

Youngstown Neighborhood Development Corporation or YNDC was founded in 2009. It was a collaboration between the City of Youngstown and the Raymond John Wean Foundation. The team saw a need for the communities in the city to be revitalized and to make homeownership for the community achievable and affordable. YNDC’s goal is to create a more sustainable city, using the available resources more wisely, and utilizing a strategic model to do so. Housing director, Tiffany Sokol spoke with YoLife in depth about the goals and plans of YNDC, the process by which they obtain and remodel homes and how YNDC helps to get families into their homes

Anyone is able to purchase a home from YDNC, but the bulk of their clientele happens to be people with low to moderate income, or who are unable to be approved for a loan from a bank. “What we do is we work with those people in our HUD approved housing counseling program. [We have] a program where we pull people’s credit reports, look over their financial situation, help them develop a household budget, and then we look at all that information, and determine what steps they need to take to get themselves to a place where they can get a home loan,” Sokol shares. After a client comes to YNDC about purchasing a home, and the budget and action plan has been written up for them, YNDC actually meets with the client, once a month, to make sure that they are on track, until they are able to meet the goal of getting a home loan

As if that already wasn’t great news to hear, Sokol lets us in on additional help that YNDC is able to offer to a person who may fall just short of being able to receive a home loan from a bank. “We actually offer financing, […] so they can go through the community loan fund too, […] then of course they will be able to buy one of our homes that are beautiful and totally a great value.” Since 2009, YNDC has acquired and rehabilitated forty-five vacant properties for re-sale, in addition to rehabilitating, repairing and maintaining thirty-five homes that are occupied by low to moderate income home owners

With the decline in the economy in recent years, and while working class America is trying to stay afloat, one may ask, ‘ what is the big deal about buying a home, when I could just rent and call it a day?’ Sokol gives insight on how homeownership is a better option opposed to renting. She says, “first off, there’s the obvious direct benefit of owning a home, you’re making an investment in yourself and in your future. When you’re renting you’re just paying for a place to stay for the month, then the next month you have to pay again. Certainly, with homeownership, typically for the first thirty years you make a payment every month, but at the end of the thirty years, you have something tangible to hold on to.” In addition to having something to hold on to after the mortgage is paid off, it is evident that the homeowner has stronger ties to the community. “It’s for [the homeowner] them, yes, but they are also looking at it like, ‘this is for my kids, because one day I won’t be here and they’ll have an asset,’” Sokol explains, “[…] It provides a sense of security too, because you’re not moving around every year. […] if you’re buying a home you’re a little more committed to it.” Sokol also elaborates on the benefits that homeowners bring to the greater community as well, “If you own your home, you’re going to be taking pride in that, and going to be maintaining it to a higher standard than a landlord or a renter, and so it’s a win-win for everyone.”

As previously mentioned, YNDC is responsible for the homes they acquire, which may be through donation or purchase, and for the renovation of the home before placing it on the market. YNDC’s acquisition process of a home could take about a year, yet, after it’s acquired, it takes about forty-five days to complete renovation. The construction is done by a hired team within YNDC, however there are no open positions available to work in that field. However, if anyone would like to be involved with YNDC there are a few opportunities that are available. The AmeriCorps, service program at YNDC allows people of the community to be a part of the YNDC movement. Sokol explains, “It’s service, but the folks who do it, do receive a living stipend. It’s a one year term of service, forty hours a week and we have two types, AmeriCorps VISTA […] and Revitalize Team positions available.”

The VISTA portion deals with administrative and outreach based work. This team works in the office, and in the community to spread the word about YNDC. The Revitalize Team actually does hands on work at the renovated homes doing landscaping, and in the winter months this team gets to work alongside the construction team. Once the year of service is completed for YNDC, volunteers will become eligible to receive an education award of five-thousand plus dollars, to put toward student loans, or toward continuing education at community college or trade school. In addition to the volunteer opportunities, there are also internship opportunities for soon-to-be and recent college graduates. YNDC always encourages students who are looking to become an intern to send their in their resume to be contacted when a position becomes open

The future of YNDC is looking very bright. Sokol admits, “I think that one day I am going to retire from YNDC, and there’s still going to be work to do—there’s no shortage of work to do in the city of Youngstown.” In the next ten years, the goal for YNDC is to keep doing the things that the corporation has been doing, but on a greater scale, making a greater impact

Sokol and the rest of the YNDC team is working diligently to make sure that the twenty homes they’ve remodeled in 2015 is significantly increased in 2016, and even more in the years to come. “One way of doing that is [we’re] working to become a CDFI (Community Development Financial Institution) with the US Treasury to get more resources in order to lend more money on the homes that we have available to buy,” Sokol mentions. She adds, “Our primary demographic is not necessarily the African American community, but that is one community that has historically been underserved in terms of getting financing, but we are working to help all the populations that have been underserved, which is most of Youngstown, and working to help those folks become homeowners, which is a big part of what we do whether you’re African American, Hispanic or just low income [...]. We’re doing our best to see to it that we help as many people become homeowners and at the same time help our city be the best city it can be by bringing people back into the city.” YNDC is located at 820 Canfield Road, Youngstown, OH 44511 and any questions can be answered by calling 330-480-0423 or by visiting the website www.yndc.org

 To read the whole story from YoLife, click here