Slavic Village Development
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Slavic Village Development (SVD) is a non-profit community development corporation serving the North and South Broadway neighborhoods of Cleveland, Ohio. Over a period of 22 years, SVD has invested $160 million in these neighborhoods through various housing projects.[1]
Mission statement
"Our mission is to preserve, empower, and advance Slavic Village as a thriving diverse neighborhood. Essential to our neighborhood is its unique identity with quality housing anchored by excellent recreational, educational, cultural, religious, and institutional anchors supported by a vibrant retail, commercial, and industrial base."[1]
History
Slavic Village Development (SVD) is a non-profit community development corporation with over 25 years experience in neighborhood development and community building in Broadway Slavic Village, a community of 30,000 people in southeast Cleveland. Historically an ethnic
Projects, past and present
Slavic Village Development has a long history of highly successful physical development and community building,[
In recent years,[when?] SVD has refined its programming and has increasingly used community organizing and community building activities to address quality of life issues, such as activities for youth, safety, and recreation. Arts programming, including public art, concerts, festivals and parades have become more important as has the development of parks, green space and recreational amenities, SVD has been instrumental in the creation of several new parks, and in 2006 opened Morgana Run Bike Trail, a 3-mile trail developed on an abandoned rail line. SVD leveraged the development of the trail and created a new park and history center capitalizing on the Mill Creek waterfall, and linked the Morgana Trail to the Ohio Erie Canal Towpath, an extensive trail system just south of the neighborhood.[2]
Foreclosure crisis
An overview of the history of the crisis in Slavic Village
Cleveland was hit earlier and harder by the foreclosure crisis than almost any other city in the United States. In 2007, one of the
Poor housing quality from fraudulently appraised, unrehabbed homes, which often have been sold for inflated prices two or three times, has added to the devastation of the foreclosure crisis. When an owner is facing foreclosure on a property they bought for tens of thousands of dollars more than its actual value, they usually never make any of the necessary repairs and instead abandon the property. Instead of homes in good repair sitting empty for years (as is the case in other hard-hit states like California and Florida), homes that are in desperate need of repairs sit for years rotting away. As these homes decay, they are broken into, vandalized, and stripped of any piping or wiring of value.[6] This leads to the home becoming a haven for squatters, juveniles, drugs, and arson.[7]
Response to the foreclosure crisis
According to executive director of Slavic Village Development Marie Kittredge, at first Slavic Village had to battle predatory lending with local help only. She wrote in a May 2009 editorial,
"Cleveland officials began fighting predatory lending in 1999. At the state and national levels, there was no interest in addressing the problem, so it continued to escalate until 2007, when we began implementing responses like decorating boarded-up houses to let people know we were here and fighting back. At the same time, we partnered with other community development corporations, Neighborhood Progress Inc. and state, local and national funders to craft a programmatic response: Opportunity Homes. This sophisticated program joins aggressive foreclosure-prevention strategies with targeted demolition of obsolete houses and full rehab of good-quality abandoned homes.
In our neighborhood, the rehabbed homes are frequently doubles, which we are converting to singles and packaging with adjacent vacant lots to create larger yards, thereby reducing density and meeting contemporary standards. The rehabbed homes are sold using attractive financing. For families with ruined credit, a
...Even before the ['Re-Imagining a More Sustainable Cleveland'] report, we have been "growing smaller, growing smarter" with real, measurable results in Broadway/Slavic Village. We consolidated commercial uses and expanded industrial uses with updated zoning. We built our bike trail on an abandoned rail line and demolished obsolete buildings on Broadway Avenue to create two new trailheads and our own
Other SVD programs in response to the crisis
Mr. Blue project
The "Mr. Blue" project was an effort started by Slavic Village Development in 2006 to try to make abandoned homes seem more lived in, and to try to soften the desolate effect of many shuttered homes on one street. SVD works with block clubs and other community volunteer groups to paint boarded homes with cheerful images, such as pies cooling, sleeping cats, and flower vases resting on window sills. The project got its name from the signature blue person painted on all the boarded doors as if it is peeking out to wave at a visitor.[9]
Notes
- ^ Slavic VillageDevelopment Corporation. Retrieved on July 1, 2009.
- ^ a b Business Volunteers Unlimited "Organization - Slavic Village Development". Archived from the original on 2012-12-28. Retrieved 2009-07-01. Retrieved on 2009-7-01.
- ^ "Foreclosures: Hardest hit ZIP codes - Jun. 19, 2007". money.cnn.com. Retrieved 2023-04-04.
- ^ Jones, Tim. "The Chicago Tribune - 3/20/2007." Policy Matters Ohio. 02 July 2009 <"The Chicago Tribune - 3/20/2007". Archived from the original on 2008-08-07. Retrieved 2009-07-02.>.
- ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-04-04.
- ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-04-04.
- ^ Jones, Tim. The Chicago Tribune - 3/20/2007. Policy Matters Ohio. 02 July 2009 <"The Chicago Tribune - 3/20/2007". Archived from the original on 2008-08-07. Retrieved 2009-07-02.>.
- ^ Racquel Robinson, The Plain Dealer (2009-05-10). "Slavic Village is battling back against the foreclosure crisis". cleveland. Retrieved 2023-04-04.
- ^ Jones, Tim. "The Chicago Tribune - 3/20/2007." Policy Matters Ohio. 02 July 2009 <"The Chicago Tribune - 3/20/2007". Archived from the original on 2008-08-07. Retrieved 2009-07-02.>.