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Former supermarket manager Adrienne Aye, left, has lived at Marcadet since 2011. Her two-bedroom apartment (right) was one of the first in the building to undergo upgrades. Photos by Grist / Colin Kinniburgh.
That points to an essential challenge for American housing authorities as they weigh renovations. Replacing fossil fuel appliances with electric ones is at least as important to decarbonization as improving energy efficiency.
“We have to stop burning fossil fuels in buildings, period,” said Bomee Jung, a green buildings expert at the firm Steven Winter Associates and former vice president for energy and sustainability at NYCHA. U.S. retrofits should prioritize switching to electric heating systems such as heat pumps, Jung said. (Paris Habitat didn’t respond to Grist’s request for comment on why it elected to stick with gas boilers.)
Electrification is a major undertaking, but one that Lovci said NYCHA is already planning for. Lovci also said the public housing allocation in the Democrats’ reconciliation package would go a “long, long way” towards making it a reality.
The Democrats’ proposal falls short of the Green New Deal for Public Housing championed by Bowman and other progressives in Congress, but advocates see it as a clear step in that direction. Their greatest concern now is whether it will actually pass. If conservative-leaning Democrats like Senator Joe Manchin of West Virginia get their way and cut the bill down, public housing will face fierce competition with other party priorities. But housing advocates are pressing Democratic leaders to get the funding onto Biden’s desk.
“This is the bare minimum,” said Cea Weaver, an organizer with New York’s Housing Justice for All coalition and the national Homes Guarantee campaign, which sent a delegation of renters to D.C. last week to keep up the pressure on Democratic leaders.
U.S. housing authorities need some fixes, however, that no amount of money can buy. Chief among them is rebuilding trust, as decades of mismanagement and outright fraud have left tenant organizers skeptical that agencies like NYCHA are prepared to spend a massive infusion of federal dollars wisely.
La Keesha Taylor, organizer and co-founder of the Holmes-Isaacs Coalition, which represents NYCHA tenants on the Upper East Side, said tenants had been “fighting for this money for a long time” and that NYCHA needs to “open the books” if it really wants to show that it can turn around.
NYCHA has already undertaken significant organizational reforms since 2019, when it reached a court agreement with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development over its mishandling of lead paint, mold, and other issues. A federal monitor now oversees all of NYCHA’s major decisions and repair work, including the $2.2 billion in spending that the city forked out under the agreement.
Lovci credited the additional funding with dramatically speeding up repairs, and moreover pointed to the agency’s renewed efforts to involve residents in decision-making as evidence that real change is afoot.
”The linchpin of the current capital program,” Lovci said, “is stakeholder engagement.”
Still, change is slow, and organizers remain on their guard. They are adamant that any new spending to restore public housing is conditioned on keeping it fully public, and not shifting tenants to Section 8 vouchers. Ramona Ferreyra, a tenant organizer at the Bronx’s Mitchel Houses and co-founder of Save Section 9, says it’s also important that retrofit jobs go to union workers.
For Taylor, a 48-year-old mother of two and lifelong resident of NYCHA’s Holmes Towers, these kinds of conditions are just the start of the improvements she wants to see. Beyond technical fixes like mold remediation, she would like to see green spaces expanded and gates torn down so that developments like hers feel more open and free.
“We should not feel boxed in,” she said.
Moreover, Taylor said, real change would mean respecting tenants’ efforts to improve their own living conditions. She described a recent cleanup day that she and the Holmes-Isaacs Coalition led with the development’s community center — only to find themselves accosted by a building manager, who assumed they were dumping trash rather than picking it up.
“I was like, ‘What is wrong with you?’” Taylor said. “It doesn’t need to be that way.”
This article originally appeared in Grist at https://grist.org/housing/paris-shows-how-to-make-public-housing-greener-and-more-habitable-at-the-same-time/.
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