Hillsborough County News

August 3, 2012

Contact: Wanda Sloan, Office of Neighborhood Relations, (813) 307-3564

 August 17 Is Deadline To Apply For Hillsborough County Neighborhood Mini-Grants

 The deadline for neighborhood associations to apply for mini-grants up to $2,500 for fiscal year 2013 is Friday, August 17, at 5 p.m. The mini-grants are used by associations to fund projects that improve communities and increase civic involvement. 

 Applications for the mini-grants are available on the County’s website at www.hillsboroughcounty.org/onr/minigrant. Recipients will be notified by November 30.

 These mini-grants support community projects in neighborhoods located in unincorporated areas of the County, and the cities of Plant City, Tampa, and Temple Terrace. Previous grant-funded projects include shrub and flower planting, subdivision entrance signs, playground equipment, neighborhood festivals, crime watch programs, websites, newsletters, and education activities.

 Completed applications may be dropped off or mailed to Office of Neighborhood Relations, 601 E. Kennedy Blvd., 1st Floor, Tampa, FL 33602, or faxed to 813-276-2621.

 The Mini-Grant Program was established in 1988 by the Hillsborough County Board of County Commissioners to improve and revitalize communities, and strengthen neighborhood associations.

 For more information, call ONR at 813-272-5860.

 

Commissioner Murman quoted in this Tribune article on Budget Workshop:

 Commissioners hold off on ‘rushing’ on TrailBridge referendum

 By MIKE SALINERO | The Tampa Tribune
Published: July 26, 2012
Updated: July 27, 2012 – 6:16 AM

 TAMPA —  A number of hurdles must be cleared in quick succession if a property tax referendum to rebuild the Friendship TrailBridge is to appear on the Nov. 6 ballot.

Despite the ticking clock, however, Hillsborough County commissioners decided today against directing the county attorney to start drafting language for the ballot question.

“I believe we’re rushing into something,” said Commissioner Sandy Murman, “and when you rush into something, you know what happens – failure looms.”

Murman made her comments at a two-hour budget workshop. In other business at the meeting, commissioners heard a plea from Clerk of Circuit Court Pat Frank to fund one-time bonuses of $1,200 for court employees.

Commissioners are considering putting an $80 million bond issue on the November ballot. The bonds would be paid off with a property tax increase of $25 a year for a house valued at $165,000.

The money would be used to rebuild the deteriorating Friendship TrailBridge into a linear park connecting Hillsborough and Pinellas Counties, as well as for a number of parks and recreation projects.

But commissioners must first hold a public hearing Aug. 18 on the proposed tax, and send the ballot language to the Supervisor of Elections Office in early September. That means they likely will decide next Thursday whether to have the county attorney draft the ballot language.

Commissioner Mark Sharp suggested getting started on the ballot language right away. Sharp, who supported a sales tax referendum for transportation in 2010, said the commission waited too long in that case to draft language. The measure failed.

“It was a real problem,” Sharp said. “We could never get the approval to move forward with the language, and when we did there were a lot of arguments over whose language we were going to use.”

But Murman and other commissioners said they wanted more time to review the list of parks and recreation projects that would be funded by the bond issue. They include upgrades at recreation centers around the county, land acquisition and engineering for the next phase of the Upper Tampa Bay Trail, and a $15 million soccer complex.

The projects and the tax will be discussed further at the commission’s Tuesday budget reconciliation workshop. At that meeting, the commission will set property tax rates for the coming year, but those rates could change if the bond issue makes it to the ballot and voters approve it.

In other business, Frank told commissioners it wasn’t fair that some of her employees are getting a one-time salary adjustment of $1,200, while others are not.

County Administrator Mike Merrill, in his 2013 budget, proposes the one-time pay hike for county employees, including 286 who work for Frank on county commission functions such as payroll and keeping minutes.

The remaining 501 clerk of court employees who work with state court services wouldn’t get the pay adjustment under Merrill’s proposal. Frank pointed out that the excluded workers are county, not state, employees.

“It raises questions of fairness and equity,” Frank said.

It would cost $762,955 to extend the salary benefit to the court employees, but Frank said it could come out of $1.1 million she will be returning to the commission at the end of the budget year, Sept. 30.

The clerk, an independent official elected by voters, cannot by law carry a surplus at the end of the year. The extra money came in part from an insurance refund the county gave the clerk’s office. The rest came from cuts to the clerk’s budget, Frank said.

Commissioners will consider the clerk’s request at the Tuesday meeting.

 

Hillsborough County News

July 6, 2012

Hillsborough Businesses, Non-Profits Eligible for Low-Interest Loans to Recover Economic Losses Caused by Tropical Storm Debby

 Hillsborough County small businesses, including small agricultural cooperatives and small aquaculture businesses, as well as most private non-profit organizations of all sizes, may apply for the US Small Business Administration’s (SBA) Economic Injury Disaster Loans to recover from financial, working capital losses caused by Tropical Storm Debby. Landlords who have lost revenue from their rental properties are also eligible. This Economic Injury Disaster Loan assistance is available regardless of whether the business suffered any physical property damage. At this time, Hillsborough County businesses and non-profits are not eligible for cost recovery for any physical storm damage.

Interest rates are as low as 3 percent for non-profit organizations and 4 percent for businesses with terms up to 30 years.  Loan amounts and terms are set by the SBA and are based on each applicant’s financial condition. The deadline to return economic injury applications is April 3, 2013.

Additional details on the loan application process and eligibility are in the attached fact sheet, and also by calling the SBA Customer Service Center at 800-659-2955, 800-877-8339 for the deaf and hard-of-hearing, or by sending an e-mail to disastercustomerservice@sba.gov. Impacted businesses may apply online using Electronic Loan Application on the SBA’s secure website at https://disasterloan.sba.gov/ela/.

Individual homeowners suffering home damages can seek assistance from Hillsborough County’s Homeowner Rehabilitation Program by calling 813-612-5397.

To be considered for other disaster assistance, call the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) at 800-621-FEMA (3362), (TTY) 800-462-7585 for the deaf and hard-of-hearing.

 

We’re Open For Business, Just Not Business As Usual  

With the Republican National Convention coming to Tampa in late August, Hillsborough County services will be getting closer to the people we serve.

Tens of thousands of convention delegates, media members, visitors and more will be converging on downtownTampaduring the RNC.  The national and international spotlight will be onHillsboroughCounty, bringing a new visibility to our beautiful communities like never before. At the same time, street and public garage parking may be at a minimum.  So for your convenience, the same quality County services you receive downtown will be relocated out into the communities we serve. 

Need to file a permit?  You can do it.  Want to register to vote?  You can do that, too.  Have to renew your car’s registration and tag?  Yes, you can.  And, many services will be located in several branch offices, so you’ll have a choice of locations.

To find out where the County can provide you with what you need, visit http://www.hillsboroughcounty.org/index.aspx?NID=2737 or call ourCountyInfoLine at  (813) 272-5900.

And, remember, we’re open for business, just not business as usual.

 

Commissioner Murman quoted extensively in this Times article on Channelside Plaza:

Jeff Vinik’s vision for Channelside: spruced-up, pedestrian-friendly, and maybe a new hotel

By Jamal Thalji, Times Staff Writer
In Print: Wednesday, July 4, 2012

TAMPA — Jeff Vinik doesn’t just plan to remake Channelside Bay Plaza. He wants to re-imagine it.

The Tampa Bay Lightning owner plans to make the troubled development more pedestrian-friendly; add retail and possibly a hotel to bring in more visitors; and link it to the Tampa Bay Times Forum and Florida Aquarium to turn the Channelside district into a seamless waterside entertainment area linked to Tampa’s Riverwalk, the 2.2 mile waterfront walkway.

“We want more people to come downtown,” said Hillsborough County Commissioner Sandra Murman, “and this whole concept is just going to enliven this area.”

Vinik and his partners are negotiating with the Anglo Irish Bank of Dublin to take over the 234,520-square-foot structure. Their plans are just ideas and concepts at this stage. They are not firm and have not been made public. But they were shown to the Tampa Port Authority’s governing board, which Murman sits on.

The Vinik group, according to board members, compared their concept to the Los Angeles sports-entertainment L.A. Live complex. It’s a massive mix of condos and hotels, restaurants and shops, next to the Staples Center, home of the NBA’s Lakers and NHL’s Kings. The two projects have a family link: L.A. Live executive Tim Leiweke is the brother of Lightning CEO Tod Leiweke.

“Tampa Live,” Murman said. “That’s my version.”

L.A. Live’s plans include a proposed football stadium to lure the NFL back to Los Angeles. As the Tampa Bay Rays look for a new home, Murman said, Vinik’s proposal would transform the Channelside District into an ideal spot for a future baseball stadium — should the Rays ever relocate to downtown Tampa, that is.

“Hopefully we’ll be able to attract a sports venue down the road,” Murman said.

Lightning spokesman Bill Wickett declined to comment on behalf of Vinik and his partners.

• • •

If Vinik reaches an agreement to purchase Channelside, it will still need approval from the port’s governing board. The Port Authority controls the land beneath Channelside and has the final say on who will take it over.

It is one of the most sought-after properties in Tampa Bay — one that has long under-performed. It has a movie theater and restaurants but has struggled to consistently attract crowds since it opened in 2001. It has been in limbo since 2010, when the old owners defaulted on a $27 million loan.

The plaza’s shortcomings were apparent to all the groups that bid to take it over, said Port commissioner Patrick Allman.

“I think all of them recognized that right now the perception of the public is that it’s a nightlife only place,” Allman said. “What they were all looking to do … was try to get more of a mix of businesses down there so they can get families down there … so they can widen the variety of people that would come to Channelside.”

The Vinik group proposed doing that by changing the marketing and branding of Channelside, and the mix of tenants. They want to bring in tenants who would keep people coming to Channelside throughout the day, not just at night — more retail shops (one commissioner suggested they could bring in a grocery store) and a big draw such as a hotel.

The likely location for that big draw would be the parking lot at Beneficial Drive and Channelside Drive, a 3 ½-acre property owned by the Port Authority and zoned for retail, office or hotel space.

“The concept is called ‘heads in beds,’ ” Murman said. “That’s what they say in the tourist industry. That’s what makes a real difference, when people come over and stay overnight.”

Commissioners said there was no definitive plan for what would be put there. But acquiring the parking lot would connect Channelside to the properties that Vinik acquired near the Tampa Bay Times Forum when he bought the Lightning in 2010. The Forum, Channelside and the Florida Aquarium would all be linked.

Murman said there were also plans to enhance the entrance to Channelside to make it more inviting from the Forum:

“It’ll be much bigger and more attractive.”

• • •

Commissioner Lawrence Shipp said that the Vinik group also proposed a marketing campaign to draw more people in and cosmetic changes to tie Channelside much more closely to the condo towers and neighborhood that have risen since the project broke ground 14 years ago with a price tag of $35 million.

“It really wasn’t designed for the community around it,” Shipp said. “Now you have a community around Channelside and they’re looking to make it inclusive for all the community, to make it a place that they can go to and they can enjoy.

“They’re looking to make it a busy place 365 days a year.”

No radical reconstruction was proposed. But the designs call for a significantly spruced-up Channelside.

“I think it’s very colorful, attractive, very eye-catching,” Murman said.

One significant addition: an elevated pedestrian bridge between the parking garage and Channelside that would get pedestrians off Channelside Drive, which is already busy with traffic,cruise ship passengers and a trolley car.

To Allman, that idea showed that the Vinik group understands what must ultimately be done to improve Channelside: Not only do patrons need more reasons to go there — to eat and shop, to see a movie or spend the weekend — but it must also become easier to use to keep them coming back.

“They have to meet the expectations of customers to bring them back,” Allman said, “so they’ll be repeat customers.”

Times researcher Caryn Baird contributed to this report. Jamal Thalji can be reached at thalji@tampabay.com or (813) 226-3404.

 

Commissioner Murman quoted in this Tribune article on ballot referendum for parks and recreation:

 Commissioners weigh tax hike referendum

 By MIKE SALINERO | The Tampa Tribune
Published: June 29, 2012 Updated: June 29, 2012 – 12:00 AM

 TAMPA — Hillsborough County commissioners weren’t exactly enthusiastic Thursday about the idea of putting a property tax increase before voters in November, but they didn’t rule it out either.

Meeting in a budget workshop, commissioners got their first chance to comment publicly on a proposal by County Administrator Mike Merrill to put an $80 million bond issue on the Nov. 6 ballot. The bonds would be paid back with a property tax increase of 21 cents per $1,000 worth of value, or $25 a year for the owner of a house valued at $165,000.

Merrill said the tax and bond issue would be a way to catch up on languishing parks and recreation construction projects, as well as pay for reconstruction of the now-closed Friendship Trail Bridge.

Most of the commissioners were noncommittal, though several tipped their hand as to which way they’re leaning on the proposal.

Commissioner Victor Crist, who faces a conservative challenger in the August Republican primary, said he is not opposed to tax referendums per se. But before the commission takes such a politically precarious step, Crist said, commissioners should first look at other ways to meet recreation needs, such as merging the county parks department with similar departments in Tampa, Temple Terrace and Plant City.

“I want to see more due diligence … that there are no other ways (to fund park projects) and I don’t feel that way right now,” Crist said.

Commissioner Sandy Murman said she, too, is uneasy with asking voters to tax themselves unless commissioners are sure the parks and recreation projects are needed. Murman, who chairs an economic prosperity committee made up of businessmen and other residents, said the commission should focus on economic development.

“I’d have to say I’m like Commissioner Crist: I’m not there yet,” Murman said.

Commissioners Mark Sharpe and Ken Hagan, countering Murman’s comments, said quality parks and other outdoor recreation venues are economic development tools. Sharpe, in quick-fire fashion, named a half dozen financial publications that rate quality of life factors, such as parks and schools, more important than low taxes to corporations looking for new facility sites.

Hagan agreed.

“There is a direct correlation between parks and recreation and economic development,” he said.

Commissioners generally agreed that Merrill’s staff needs to closely look at the $57.5 million in parks projects that would be funded by the bond issue in addition to the Friendship Trail. The list includes upgrades to recreation centers across the county, land acquisition and preliminary engineering for phase 4 of the Upper Tampa Bay Trail, and a $15 million countywide soccer complex.

Reconstruction of the Friendship Trail Bridge as a linear park would cost an estimated $27.5 million. The county already has $4.4 million it had set aside for the bridge’s demolition. But on Wednesday, commissioners delayed awarding the demolition contract so engineers can so further assess the bridge’s high span, or hump.

These are the important dates if county commissioners decide to put a property tax increase and $80 million bond issue on the Nov. 6 ballot:

  • July 18 or sooner: The county commission authorizes the county attorney to draft ordinance with referendum language. The ballot language must be 75 words or less.
  • Aug. 2: Commissioners must set a public hearing date on the referendum. The ordinance must be in final form.
  • Aug. 16: Public hearing on the ordinance. The ordinance would set referendum date, approve the form of the ballot question and provide for bond issue.
  • Aug. 31: Ballot language due to county supervisor of elections.
  • Nov. 6: Election and public vote on referendum.

 

Commissioner Murman mentioned in this Patch.com article:

The Riverview Woman’s Club had 49 women at its June 20 luncheon to hear featured speaker, County Commissioner Sandy Murman.

By D’Ann White

With the promise of County Commissioner Sandy Murman as the featured speaker, 49 women attended the June 20 meeting of the Riverview Woman’s Club at the Doc’s Grill at the Summerfield Crossings Golf Club, 13050 Summerfield Blvd., Riverview.

“We were so happy. It was a great turnout and Sandy did such a great job,” said Donna Lee Fore, vice president of the club. “She talked about empowering woman and how women need to join forces and work together to achieve success.”

Fore said the club is now scheduling speakers for its July 18 and Aug. 15 lunches at Doc’s Grill. Dr. Earl Lennard, supervisor of he elections, will be the guest speaker at the Sept. 19 luncheon. The luncheons and the business meeting begins at 12 noon.

Fore also was pleased to report that the newly formed club now has 40 members.

The club was incorporated as a nonprofit organization in April. Since then, the club has had several successful monthly luncheons and a zumba fundraiser June 9 to help establish a scholarship for a Riverview High School student.

The next event will be a bunco fun night in July.

The club is open to all women in the area. The membership fee is $25 a year.

For information on joining or reservations for the next luncheon, contact Fore at 813-528-0902 or email contact@pfautoglass.com.

 

Housing Counselor honored; Commissioner Sandy Murman commends Florida Home Partnership for making home ownership reality

 28/06/2012 11:06:00

By MELODY JAMESON, Ruskin Observer News

 RUSKIN – Some folks are legends in their own minds, rarely losing the opportunity to say so.

 Then there are a rare few who are legends in their own time. And everyone but them knows it.

 Walter Walker Jr. is one of the latter. Hundreds of his grateful clients, his appreciative fans, his respectful colleagues said so, publicly, here, last weekend.

 This week, Walker, a housing counselor at the non-profit Housing and Education Alliance (HEA) inTampa, was back at his desk focused on helping first time homebuyers, insisting “I’m really a shy and withdrawn person.”

 There’s a plaque on his wall, though, that says differently. It’s the 2012 Dorothy Duke Award for Outstanding Community Service recognizingWalker’s dedication to homebuyer education. On it, in plain and simple English, are forever engraved the words: “Walter Walker, you are a Legend in HillsboroughCounty.”

 Walker, says Earl Pfeiffer, executive director of Florida Home Partnership, the local developer of several affordable housing communities, is an extremely competent housing counselor who relates well to people, talks anyone’s language and genuinely cares about homebuyers before and after their purchases. Pfeiffer knows becauseWalkerhas taught hundreds of FHP home buyers the intricacies and responsibilities of home ownership.

 But, the depth and intensity ofWalker’s dedication goes way above and beyond, Pfeiffer relates. If proof were needed, it came when HEA lost a substantial portion of its funding a while back. Disappearance of the money meant one thing immediately: layoff of personnel. When the sad announcement was made to the HEA staff though, Pfeiffer recalls,Walkerdeclined to leave, saying that if it was all the same to everyone, he’d stay in place, doing the job, without pay. Other staffers followed his lead, making the same commitment. The dry spell lasted for weeks, Pfeiffer notes. However, together, inspired byWalker, they weathered the fiscal storm. The agency continued delivering its multiple, invaluable services.

 None of this, naturally, was mentioned by the counselor asWalkerresponded to questions from The Observer this week. Instead, he spoke of the important broad spectrum impacts of home ownership; the social and economic and personal stability that exists when people have legal possession of and responsibility for their own homes. “Home,” he said, “is a place to retreat, a place where everyone feels comfortable, even a place to leave to children.” And it’s something everyone needs, he suggested.

 As a housing counselor,Walkerdeals with another spectrum of related subject areas. His role, he said, primarily is teaching home buyer education. That includes instructing them about financial capability, responsible use of credit, getting established in the marketplace. Then, there are the lessons to be learned about navigating the home purchase process and getting a handle on the meanings of myriad closing documents. And, sometimes there are the matters of loss mitigation; finding a solution for keeping a home when financial disaster threatens or, if nothing else, implementing the best exit strategy, be it deed-in-lieu-of-payment or short sale or foreclosure.

 In a single, eight-hour class, Walker may cover budgeting to create solid family financial foundations, credit from the lender perspective, types of mortgages, dealing with real estate agents, obtaining home inspections separate from appraisals and getting acquainted with the players at a transaction closing. For this, the prospective buyer pays $25. For the homeowner with a property “under water” – a market value less than the mortgage due – or otherwise out of his depth financially and facing foreclosure, there is no charge for counseling,Walkeradded.

 He got his start during the banking crisis of the 1980s with the Resolution Trust Corporation, helping liquidate troubled banks. And later, after acquiring “seat of the pants” education in connection with the pitfalls of home buying, joined a former colleague in 2002 to help get HEA off the ground. He learned, he said, he could command a podium and “found my calling. I come out of my shell and I’m compelled to share what I’ve learned.”

 Over the years, he figured he‘s touched the lives of an estimated 10,000 individuals in families of all sizes. And it still gives him a thrill, he added, when former students spot him and rush “across the mall to tell me about their new home and how much it means to them and how what they learned from me made it possible.”

 It may not be outlined in so many words on the plaque, but this, too, backsWalker’s award which led the presentations Saturday during the annual FHP Home Ownership Month Event in Bayou Pass Village III. The celebration featured a full Sonny’s meal of barbecued chicken or pork underwritten by TD Bank.

 Walkershared the day with Tammye Trevino, rural development administrator in the U.S. Department of Agriculture, who ceremoniously signed a large replica of the $2.04 million grant check from the agency, and with Moises Loza, executive director of the Housing Assistance Council inWashington, who formally presented another $2-plus million in grant monies for the local affordable housing program.

 Florida Home Partnership, too, came in for kudos, receiving a Certificate of Commendation signed by all seven Hillsborough County Commissioners and formally given FHP by Commissioner Sandy Murman. The commendation, Murman said, expresses the gratitude of commissioners for making home ownership a reality as low and modest income buyers “build the dream they call home.”

 And before it was over, a group of youngsters now living inBayouPassneighborhoods told Trevino in their own words what their homes mean to them, from the joy of a claimed bedroom to safety and security. Then, they gave her a framed collection of their small handprints.

 The day that also saw several new homeowners receive the keys to their abodes began with a “playground build” adjacent to the community swimming pool and involving dozens of volunteers including local Home Depot store employees. It was completed by day’s end and praised heartily by Murman who noted “this is what it’s all about. This is community.”

 

 

Hillsborough County News

June 25, 2012

Hillsborough County Road Closures and Sandbags Available

The Following Roads Are Currently Closed:

Hillsborough from Hanley Kelly Road to the Veterans Expressway (road closed)

Hanley Road from Hillsborough Avenue to Hanna Avenue (road closed)

Memorial Highway from George Road to Dana Shores Drive

Twin Branch Acres Road along Double Branch Creek

West Park Village Drive

Ehrlich Road at Winterwind

Knollwood at Hesperedes

West Powhattan from Town ‘N Country Boulevard to the west

Brunswick Road from Hillsborough Avenue to the south

Sandbags Available:

Sandbags are available to the public at the following locations:

–West Service Unit. 9805 Sheldon Drive

–South Service Unit – 8718 Old Big Bend Road in Gibsonton

Filled sandbags will be available to the elderly/disabled. Sandbag materials will be available to those physically able to make their own. Additionally, each citizen will sign their name and provide their home address acknowledging the receipt of 25 sandbags or less.

 Citizens can call the Hillsborough InfoLine at 813-272-6900 to report problems or to request information.

 ###

 

Commissioner Murman mentioned in this Tribune article on homelessness:

 Homeless advocates need to increase coordination

By KEVIN WIATROWSKI | The Tampa Tribune
Published: June 18, 2012 Updated: June 18, 2012 – 7:00 AM

TAMPA —

Everyone, it seems, has a plan to deal with homelessness in Tampa.

There are housing-first advocates. There are treatment-first advocates. There are groups focused on families, on single men, on the mentally ill, on veterans, on homeless teens. There are multi-million-dollar charities and others that barely get by.

Yet for all the time and money poured into the problem here, nearly 16,000 people remain homeless in Hillsborough, Pinellas, Pasco and Hernando counties – the highest rate of homelessness in the country, according to a report released this month by the National Alliance to End Homelessness.

Advocates say homelessness in the region has many causes, partly economic as Florida slowly recovers from the recession and partly societal with people reluctant to help those they may consider to be just lazy.

But part of the problem is also the homeless groups themselves.

They’ve spent years talking about solving homelessness but not enough time actually doing it, said Edi Erb, interim head of the Homeless Coalition of Hillsborough County.

“We didn’t have people committing resources to it,” she said.

That will have to change soon as federal officials – a major source of funding for homeless programs – put more focus on programs that produce results. That will mean moving people out of homelessness quickly rather than keeping them in a limbo-like shuffle among temporary fixes.

Many of Tampa’s disjointed, often-competing homeless charities agree they need to cooperate for a change.

“Everybody has to put their toys in the same sandbox,” said Tracey Crocker, a founder of Covenant House, a nondenominational housing and counseling program.

* * * * *

Tampa’s groups come together under the Homeless Coalition’s umbrella. There, they plan for the region’s needs and share government support passed along by cities and counties. But outside that umbrella, those same agencies are more likely to compete than cooperate – for both private money and clients.

“We have lots of providers here, but they tend to be very much independent,” said Ed Quinn, chief of services for Volunteers of America, a statewide charity headquartered in Ybor City.

Independence has produced a system that doesn’t always meet the needs of the people who use it. From the moment people becomes homeless here, they’re own their own to find a way into the farflung support system.

Those with access to a phone can get some help from the Crisis Center of Tampa Bay, but most depend on law enforcement, hospitals or random chance to put them into the system.

“We all know that system of care,” said Debra Harris, chief of the Crisis Center’s phone-based 211 information system. “There’s no physical (building) that you can walk into and say, ‘help.’ There’s no wrap-around service.”

A disjointed approach to homelessness is common to cities nationwide at a time when recession and foreclosures have caused the demand for the help to skyrocket. But now the pressure is on the region’s homeless advocates to coordinate their efforts.

Federal money, long the backbone local housing efforts, is withering. Over the past two years, Community Development Block Grants have shrunk by 25 percent. Other housing funds have shrunk 30 percent. More federal cuts are looming next year.

With less money to spend, the Department of Housing and Urban Development is pushing agencies to work together to guarantee those dollars are well spent, said Ann Oliva, who oversees HUD’s homelessness efforts.

HUD expects to release new rules in the coming weeks that will force communities to track homeless clients from the point they enter the system through temporary housing to the point they’re back on their own two feet.

“We are going to be measured as a community for how long people are homeless,” Erb said.

That’ll be a new approach here, she added.

“We have people leaving our transitional housing that we have no idea where they went,” Erb said. “That’s not effective.”

In Barbara Bunton’s case, that’s been about 15 years.

* * * * *

After decades of living on the fringes of society, Bunton arrived in Tampa in 1996 with two children, a history of mental abuse and problems with a case of drug addiction.

“I was going to every program in Hillsborough County for help, but nobody would help me,” Bunton said.

Some groups turned her away because of her children, she said. Others, she said, declined to help because of her addiction. In 2004, she put her children in the care of a friend’s mother.

In 2007, after time in jail for drug possession, she attempted suicide beneath the Interstate 275 bridge over Marion Street. A homeless friend called 911.

“When I woke up, I was at Mental Health Care,” she said. The group provides housing and treatment for people with mental illness.

Over the years that followed, she worked her way through a chain of Tampa groups focused on the conjunction of mental illness and homelessness: Mental Health Care, Project Return, Volunteers of America, Covenant House.

It wasn’t easy. Sometimes she relapsed into addiction. Sometimes she spent her days watching TV and smoking.

Bunton credits Tracey Crocker with getting through her problems and putting her life back on track. Crocker, who has her own story of abuse and homelessness, runs the small charity with her husband, Pastor Cory Crocker.

“There are as many reasons people are homeless as there are reasons why people live where they live,” Tracey Crocker said.

Today, Bunton, who once trained to be a certified nurse assistant, works as an in-home aide for an elderly woman in West Tampa. She’s mending her relationship her children and is now a grandmother.

“It’s like a new chapter of my life is beginning,” Bunton said last week.

* * * * *

Homeless advocates say Bunton’s story of substance abuse and mental illness is a common one among their homeless clients.

“A lot of people think they’re just drunks, but mental illness is a real problem,” said Janet Stringfellow, spokeswoman for Volunteers of America. “People need to go beyond the person in the street asking for money.”

It’s easier to raise money for cancer victims or stray animals than it is for homeless people, Stringfellow said.

“People are taking a look at who they’re donating to,” Tracey Crocker said. “Ten years ago, people were donating a lot differently than they are now.”

Private money may get tighter next year as one more group, this one backed by County Commissioner Sandy Murman and supported by pillars of Tampa’s community, puts its hand out for help providing long-term housing for the region’s homeless.

Group members plan to rehab a Suitcase City apartment complex to provide long-term housing and support for people now living on the street. They hope their project will inspire enough donations to house 500 of the region’s most chronically homeless.

Charities are worried a change in federal tax law eliminating charitable deductions will make their jobs harder by giving people less incentive to donate. Social service groups tend to depend on small donations, often given by the people they have helped, said Adriene Davis, spokeswoman for the Indiana-based Center for Philanthropy.

“There’s not an easy answer for that,” said Erb.

* * * * *

Private money helps the community secure larger federal grants. But those are also becoming hard to get as Congress tightens the noose around anti-poverty funds.

That’s why HUD is now focusing on collaboration among agencies at the ground level. The hope is collaboration will do a better job of getting people back on their own more quickly.

The current system favors wheel-spinning over forward momentum, said Ray Tuller, chief operating officer for Volunteers of America.

“It’s never been a results-oriented industry,” Tuller said. “It has to be about getting people out of the pool.”

Tampa could follow Philadelphia’s model and build a central location for homeless people to get help. Or charities could simply agree to use the same vetting process when someone comes to them for help, HUD’s Oliva said.

The important thing is that people go where they can get the help they need, she said.

“People shouldn’t be turned away with no alternative,” she said.

Tampa’s homeless advocates support a more comprehensive approach. It’s not clear when and how they’ll make it happen.

One thing is clear, though, Erb said.

“It does mean giving up a little bit of your turf.”

 
Page 64 of 81« First...102030...6263646566...7080...Last »