Internal releases and external coverage.

NBC Backyard BBQ

On August 1, NBC 4 Washington Chief Meteorologist Doug Kammerer brought a barbecue and live weather reports to our new Maycroft apartments, as part of his summer 2019 Backyard Barbecue Reports.

Instead of being located in someone’s backyard, the barbecue was held in the front courtyard of the Maycroft apartments. Jubilee residents, staff, and board members enjoyed good food and camaraderie with colleagues from NP Community Solar and Martha’s Table.

Children played on the front lawn as caterers grilled chicken and hamburgers. Neighbors from the Columbia Heights community stopped by to say hello and take pictures with the crew from NBC 4 Washington and Telemundo.

NBC 4 Washington visited Jubilee Housing to promote the organization’s new Resiliency Center, powered by Pepco in partnership with NP Community Solar and the District’s Department of Energy and the Environment. Solar panels on the Maycroft’s roof and a back-up battery in its basement will enable the center to provide three days of emergency power in the case of a city-wide blackout.

In addition, thanks to NP Solar’s community solar network, Jubilee’s most rent-burdened households will receive energy credits on their utility bills, cutting their expenses by up to $50 a month.

Just as Jubilee provides justice through housing (justice housing!), these resiliency features are environmental justice that help to reduce obstacles and enable neighbors facing the greatest barriers to thrive.

If you missed the live Backyard Barbecue Weather Report, you can watch it here. Kammerer also interviewed a representative from PEPCO about the agency’s partnership with Jubilee Housing, which can be viewed here.

Learn more about the Resiliency Center powered by PEPCO here.

New Resiliency Center for the Jubilee Community at the Maycroft Apartments

MEDIA CONTACT:
Candace Tyler
202-559-2342
ctyler@jubileehousing.org

April 29, 2019 – Jubilee Housing and Pepco, along with New Partners Community Solar Corp and the DC Department of Energy and Environment, will launch the District’s first affordable housing resiliency center powered by solar+battery storage at an event on May 1 at 11:30 am. The event will provide a first look at the battery system —  held onsite at the Resiliency Center, Powered by Pepco for the Jubilee Community at the Maycroft Apartments.

The Maycroft will host a 70.2 kilowatt (kw) rooftop solar array, which will be combined with battery storage to power an on-site Resiliency Center capable of powering a community space for three days during power outages – providing refrigeration for medication and perishables, lighting, outlets for charging cell phones and other communication devices, and a television. Pepco, An Exelon Company, made the project possible through a generous grant to fund the battery.

This innovative program addresses, for the first time in DC and with very little precedent nationally, several important cutting-edge issues.  Battery storage is an essential component of a comprehensive integration of renewable energy into the country’s provision of electricity. Integrating a battery storage system with solar production leverages the value of on-site renewable energy in times of energy outages.  And most importantly, the system as a whole is DC’s first-of-its kind effort to channel the benefits of solar+storage to low-income housing residents – who most severely feel the impact of energy outages.   Developing such “resiliency” solutions is at the forefront of the nation’s affordable housing and renewable energy dialogues, and the Pepco/Jubilee project will provide a model to be followed throughout the country.

The Resiliency Center complements New Partners Community Solar’s efforts to provide “Solar for All,” a project led by DC’s Department of Energy and Environment – which is supporting New Partners’ efforts.  One hundred of Jubilee Housing’s most rent-burdened households will be participating in this community solar program, under which they will receive a monthly credit on their electric bill ranging designed to cut their electric burden in half.

New Partners Community Solar, a non-profit solar development company supported by the Nixon Peabody law firm pro bono program, worked hand-in-hand with Jubilee and Pepco to develop this innovative project as part of our mission to promote Environmental Justice. New Partners Community Solar assisted in the design and implementation of the battery system.

“Jubilee Housing is ecstatic to host the city’s first Resiliency Center in an Affordable Housing property, said Jim Knight, president and executive director, Jubilee Housing. “Resiliency is especially important for vulnerable communities that already experience great uncertainty in the course of their lives.”

Jeff Lesk, co-founder of New Partners Community Solar Corp., added, “This collaboration combines Jubilee’s focus on Justice Housing with New Partners’ mission of Environmental Justice, working to make sure that our most challenged households are not left out of the environmental, economic and social benefits of the new green economy.”


Jubilee Housing builds diverse, compassionate communities that create opportunities for everyone to thrive.

Ribbon Cutting Marks Jubilee Housing’s Newest Justice Housing Property in Columbia Heights

The Maycroft will serve 64 families and individuals with deeply affordable housing and supportive services.

Washington, D.C. – On April 11, 2019, Jubilee Housing will hold a ribbon cutting ceremony for the Maycroft, a justice housing apartment community located in the heart of Columbia Heights. The Maycroft has 64 spacious units, a no-cost healthy food market, Jubilee’s Teen Drop-In Center and Family Resource Center, Martha’s Table’s early childhood education center and McKenna’s Wagon, and a Green Enterprise certification. The Maycroft is Jubilee Housing’s tenth apartment complex in Ward 1.

Guests will hear from Ward 1 Councilmember Brianne Nadeau, DHCD Director Polly Donaldson, DCHFA Director and CEO Todd A. Lee, and other community stakeholders. There will also be guided tours of the Maycroft property where attendees can see unit interiors, Martha’s Table facilities, and the Resiliency Room powered by Pepco’s emergency battery.

“Jubilee Housing and Martha’s Table are valued partners in Ward 1, and I am proud to finally have the Maycroft open to provide affordable housing, early childhood and critical community services,” said Ward 1 DC Councilmember Brianne K. Nadeau. “I’m excited to welcome our new residents home.”​

Martha’s Table will operate three programs on the first floor of the Maycroft: their nationally accredited early childhood education program for children six weeks through three years of age; McKenna’s Wagon, a mobile food van that serves hot meals to people experiencing homelessness and hunger at two downtown locations; and a no-cost healthy food market located in the lobby of the building.

“It is important to preserve the affordability in buildings like the Maycroft; which has a rich history and residents committed to their community,” said DC Department of Housing and Community Development (DHCD) Director Polly Donaldson. “That’s why we used a variety of local and federal financing tools to renovate the building and provide supportive and community services. As a result, Maycroft residents are coming home to safe, stable and affordable housing.”

The Maycroft will feature a 50 kilowatt emergency battery funded by a $65,000 grant from Pepco as part of a pilot resiliency project. In the event of a power loss at the building, the battery will power the Resiliency Center for three days. The Resiliency Center will provide refrigeration for medication, a television and radio, lighting, and multiple electrical outlets to charge cell phones and other communications devices.

“We are so pleased to partner with Jubilee Housing to provide this technology that can support our customers when they need us most,” said Melissa Lavinson, senior vice president of Pepco Holdings. “This pilot is part of our ongoing efforts to evaluate new technologies and services that can connect our communities, create new energy choices, and power a cleaner and brighter future for our customers and communities.”

The Maycroft is an Enterprise Green building with a 70.2 kW solar panel array on its roof. The array was made possible through a collaboration with New Partners Community Solar Corp., an independent nonprofit founded by partners at the law firm of Nixon Peabody. This array, combined with other arrays around the city in their community solar pool, will generate up to $50,000 in energy credits that will reduce the electricity bills of Jubilee’s most rent-burdened households, many of them at the Maycroft. The solar array also will provide supplemental power to the battery storage.  Pepco will manage the interface between the battery storage and solar installation in a pilot environment, allowing the company to learn more about how these technologies can be used in future applications.

“Columbia Heights is one of the city’s most thriving areas. We see people getting priced out of this neighborhood every day, so being able to preserve 64 units of affordable housing in this area is something that we feel is important not only to the community, but to the entire city.

“D.C. has become one of the most gentrified areas in the country. In order for everyone to have access to the the District’s prosperity, more deeply affordable housing has to be created in thriving areas,” said Jim Knight, Jubilee Housing’s Executive Director.

Sixty-six percent of the units in the Maycroft will be set aside for families and individuals that make 30% or less of the area median income (AMI). All units will be reserved for families and individuals making 60% or less of the AMI.


Jubilee Housing builds diverse, compassionate communities that create opportunities for everyone to thrive.

TD Charitable Foundation Awards Jubilee Housing Grant to Fund Forthcoming Justice Housing Project

Washington DC – November 20, 2018 – Jubilee Housing was awarded $125,000 by the TD Charitable Foundation for the Housing for Everyone Grant. The grant will support the work of Jubilee Housing to build and preserve 50 units of deeply affordable housing, across two properties, in Washington, D.C. primarily targeting families making less than or equal to 30% of Area Median Income.

TD Charitable Foundation awards over $3 million a year to create, rehabilitate, and maintain safe, affordable housing. Terry Kenny, Market President presented the award to Jubilee Housing joined by TD Bank Vice Presidents – Hugh Franklin, JoAnna Mason, and Donna Grigsby at the Rouse Room to celebrate with cake and coffee. While presenting the award, TD Bank noted that Jubilee Housing ranked #1 in its application and they were proud to support such important work.

“Once families can afford their rent, there is more left over to handle other needs. Jubilee creates justice housing by developing deeply affordable homes, with on-site and nearby supportive services, in thriving neighborhoods. We are thankful for partners such as TD Bank that can help us create housing in a city as prosperous as D.C.,” said Jim Knight, Jubilee Housing’s executive director.

This contribution supports TD’s longstanding commitment to community enrichment through its newly launched Ready Commitment, a multi-year platform that actively promotes inclusivity, economic vitality, environmental wellbeing and health, enabling people of all backgrounds to succeed in a rapidly changing world. As part of The Ready Commitment, TD targets CDN $1 billion (US $775 million) in total by 2030 towards community giving in four critical areas: Financial Security, a more Vibrant Planet, Connected Communities and Better Health. Through this platform, TD aspires to create a more inclusive tomorrow — helping people of all backgrounds feel more confident, not just about their finances, but about their ability to achieve their goals. For information, visit td.com/thereadycommitment.


MEDIA CONTACT:
Candace Tyler
202-559-2342
ctyler@jubileehousing.org

Jubilee Housing builds diverse, compassionate communities that create opportunities for everyone to thrive.

About the TD Charitable Foundation
The TD Charitable Foundation is the charitable giving arm of TD Bank, America’s Most Convenient Bank®, one of the sixth largest commercial banking organizations in the United States. Since its inception in 2002, the Foundation has distributed more than $199 million and 19,400 grants through donations to local nonprofits from Maine to Florida. More information on the TD Charitable Foundation, including the online grant application, is available at TDBank.com

New Jubilee Housing Acquisition Will Maintain 25 Deeply Affordable Apartments in D.C.’s High-Rent Neighborhood of Columbia Heights

Washington, DC—October 31, 2018— Jubilee Housing, Inc. closed on the purchase of 1460 Euclid Street NW, preserving deeply affordable housing in Ward 1’s high-rent Columbia Heights neighborhood. The purchase was made possible after the 1460 Unidos Tenant Association, Inc. assigned its right to purchase under the District’s Tenant Opportunity to Purchase Act to Jubilee Housing, which will allow current building residents to pay the same rent they pay now or less after a full renovation of the property.

With this acquisition, Jubilee expands the availability of justice housing TM in one of the city’s most desirable communities.

Justice housing combines deeply affordable homes with onsite and nearby supportive programs, in thriving neighborhoods. Post-renovation rents at the Euclid Street property will be approximately one-third of market rents for the neighborhood, where the average two-bedroom apartment rents for $2,400. The building is near supportive family services offered by Jubilee Housing and other nonprofits as well as within walking distance of community health centers, grocery stores, and public transportation.

“We are excited to be able modernize the conditions of 1460 Euclid and extend affordable rents there another for generation, enabling current tenants to stay in the homes and neighborhood they know and love,” said Jim Knight, executive director of Jubilee Housing.

“So many city residents are being priced out of neighborhoods they’ve lived in for decades and left out of the city’s growing prosperity. As a nonprofit developer, Jubilee Housing is working to create inclusive, equitable communities with abundant opportunity for all,” he said.

This purchase is the second investment for the Justice Housing Partners, LP, which Jubilee Housing established earlier this year. Justice Housing Partners, LP’s institutional investors include The Diane and Norman Bernstein Foundation, Share Fund, and United Bank. In addition, 11 individual investors and a substantial commitment from the A. James & Alice B. Clark Foundation were critical in making this acquisition.

Jubilee Housing wishes to express its thanks to the partners who helped make this purchase possible, especially United Bank, which is the first position lender on the project as well as an investor in Justice Housing Partners, LP.

“United Bank is committed to ensuring the vibrancy of communities throughout our footprint and helping residents achieve financial stability,” said Joseph LeMense, United’s managing director of Community Development and Nonprofit Banking. “This marks the eighth Jubilee property that United has financed in Adams Morgan/Columbia Heights, and we are proud that our partnership continues to help build a stronger foundation for local individuals and families.”

Jubilee will move current residents to temporary housing in the Columbia Heights area, at no charge, while the building undergoes rehabilitation.

The four-story property, which was built in 1926, sits adjacent to Meridian Hill Park. Construction will begin in 2019 and will include a new facade, elevator, and larger, family-sized units.


CONTACT:
Candace Tyler
202-559-2342
ctyler@jubileehousing.org

Jubilee Housing builds diverse, compassionate communities that create opportunities for everyone to thrive.

Adams Morgan project will convert vacant office to affordable housing, arts center. Here’s a look at the plans.

This article first appeared in the Washington Business Journal on September 20, 2018.

By Michael Neibauer Associate Editor, Washington Business Journal

D.C. nonprofit Jubilee Housing Inc. has filed its plans to convert an Adams Morgan office building into affordable apartments — with a ground-floor space set aside for a neighborhood arts center.

Jubilee acquired 1724 Kalorama Road NW, known as the Transcentury Building, last month for $8.25 million, financing the deal in part with money raised through its Justice Housing Partners Fund. The property is two blocks from 18th Street NW.

Under the plan filed with the Board of Zoning Adjustment, the 35,000-square-foot vacant commercial building will get a one-story addition and penthouse — to be used as office space for Jubilee — as it is converted to residential. The building will include roughly 25 units — nine three-bedroom, eight two-bedroom and nine one-bedroom — and no parking.

The ground floor will provide new space for Sitar, which currently operates nearby at full capacity. Sitar is a community arts education and youth development center. Per the site plan, the Sitar space would include a digital art, art and music classrooms, teen lounge, conference space, performance space and a bike room.

PGN Architects is behind the design.

Jubilee’s second acquisition through the Justice Housing Fund, a 30-unit apartment building at 1460 Euclid St. NW in Columbia Heights, is expected to close next month.

Read more from the original article here.

Jubilee Housing Launches Renovation of Maycroft Apartments

New Development Adds More “Justice Housing” in the District

Washington, D.C.—July 31, 2017—While they differed on whether the celebration was six or seven years in the making, all those assembled to launch the renovation of Jubilee Housing’s Maycroft Apartments agreed that creating more justice housing in D.C. was well worth the wait.

Jim Knight, Jubilee executive director and president, told an audience of city officials, community residents, financing partners, nonprofit leaders, and members of the Jubilee team that getting to the groundbreaking ceremony had “tested our collective resolve in remarkable ways” but the need for more justice housing in the city had kept them going.

He said justice housing is “affordable to those who need it most. It comes with opportunities that enable us all to thrive. And, it’s in a resource-rich neighborhood. Shouldn’t everybody live in resource-rich neighborhoods,” he asked the standing-room-only audience of more than 100 people—to hearty applause.

“This is my home. I’m coming back here after it’s remodeled,” said an excited Phillip Brooks, vice president of the Tenant Association, who helped M.C. the event and thank the multitude of organizations and individuals behind preserving the Maycroft.

As head of one of those organizations, Todd Lee, executive director of the D.C. Housing Finance Agency, commended “Jubilee Housing for sticking to it and bringing together all the resources and partners required to pull off a project like this.”

The revitalized Maycroft will provide justice housing for 64 vulnerable D.C. families. Forty-one of those families will be earning at or below 30 percent of the area median income, including 15 families leaving chronic homelessness. Importantly, the preserved building also will contribute to a more equitable and vibrant city for all District residents.

Polly Donaldson, director of the D.C. Department of Housing and Community Development, said justice housing is vital to achieving Mayor Muriel Bowser’s goal of “inclusive prosperity” for District residents. “I speak on behalf of Mayor Bowser, who knows how critical this project is for Ward 1,” Donaldson said.

Donaldson described D.C. as a prosperous community, one that must insist on resources remaining available for all. “Vulnerable families, families on the verge of making it, and families making it. That’s what we want this community to be about,” she said.

Unfortunately, said Nathan Bovelle, interim executive director of the D.C. Housing Authority, “many people who grew up in D.C. can no longer afford to live here…whether they’re homeowners or renters—but especially if they’re renters.”

To help address that problem, forty units at the new Maycroft will be available next fall at rents between $600 and $700, which is affordable on an hourly wage of $11, according to Knight. In addition, when the Maycroft reopens, residents as well as their Northwest D.C. neighbors with low incomes will be able to take advantage of new opportunities on the building’s ground floor.

There Jubilee will host its Teen Renaissance Program, which helps enhance academic achievement, develop character, and build leadership skills. Jubilee also will open at the Maycroft a Family Resource Center, where parents and youth can find support for life goals that span the continuum from childrearing to career accomplishment. Plus, residents leaving chronic homelessness will find services to help them achieve stable, productive lives.

Meanwhile, Martha’s Table will offer three of its community services on the Maycroft’s ground level: Healthy Start, an early childhood education program that prepares young children for kindergarten; McKenna’s Wagon, a mobile food truck that feeds homeless and hungry individuals at three downtown D.C. locations; and a Lobby Market where families can shop for healthy food at no cost.

“We are thrilled to be able to co-locate in this beautiful space with Jubilee, whose mission so closely aligns with ours—starting with that word ‘justice,’” said Patty Stonesifer. “This will be a place where children and parents can thrive.”

Referencing a verse on childbearing from the Bible, Jim Dickerson, president and CEO of Manna, Inc., likened the effort to launch the Maycroft renovations to “a long pregnancy and difficult birth. But we’re overjoyed today,” he said. “This is the beginning of a new stage in the journey to help make the Maycroft dream come true.”

“Shame on the people who tried to hold up this project,” said Ward 1 Council Member Brianne Nadeau. “I hope those people are taking note that we will not accept that in our community.”

Joseph LeMense, managing director of community development and nonprofit banking at United Bank, a funding partner in the project, attributed Jubilee’s ultimate success with the Maycroft to “patience, persistence, passion, professionalism, and prayer. We knew Jubilee had always found a way to get things done, and we were confident in that,” he said.

Even then, as Steve Glaude, president and CEO of the Coalition for Nonprofit Housing and Economic Development, reminded the audience, “local community organizations and local government cannot do this alone.” He called on everyone to advocate on behalf of justice housing at the federal level, as well.

Jubilee Board Chair Myra Peabody Gossens closed the event by inviting all the “justice housing warriors” in the audience to gather around for the turning of the ground.

Jubilee wishes to thank the following partners who played pivotal roles in helping Jubilee reach the groundbreaking stage on the Maycroft: Hamel Builders, Inc., Bonstra Haresign Architects, EquityPlus, LLC, ISG, Bend the Arc Fund, Change All Souls Housing Corporation, Community Development Financial Institutions Fund, Corporation for Supportive Housing, DC Department of Behavioral Health, DC Department of Health – HASTA, DC Department of Housing and Community Development, DC Housing Finance Agency, DC Housing Authority, Enterprise Community Partners, Local Initiatives Support Corporation, National Housing Trust Community Development Loan Fund, R4 Capital, United Bank, US Bank, Arnold & Porter, DLA Piper, Eisen & Rome, PC, Goulston & Storrs, Holland & Knight, Klein Hornig, LP, Jones Walker, Pepper Hamilton, Joseph’s House, Martha’s Table, Latino Economic Development Center, William S. Abell Foundation, Bank of America Charitable Foundation, Diane & Norman Bernstein Foundation, Caldwell Chapel Community, Christ House, A. James and Alice B. Clark Foundation, Naomi and Nehemiah Cohen Foundation, Gepetto Catering, Philip L. Graham Fund, Eugene and Agnes E. Meyer Foundation, Open Road Alliance, Porter Family Foundation, TD Bank, United Way, World Bank

DCHFA Partners with Jubilee Housing to Preserve and Expand Affordable Housing in Columbia Heights

“The Maycroft will help reduce the inequity that scores of District families experience, by offering them easy access to opportunities we all need for stable, successful lives,” said Jim Knight, president and CEO of Jubilee Housing.

“The D.C. government’s investment in the Maycroft is an investment in building a more just, inclusive, and vibrant city for all District residents. Jubilee looks forward to working with the city and other development partners to create more justice housing that is affordable to all, located in thriving neighborhoods, and close to resources that support growth.”

Read the full story here.

Jubilee Housing and Martha’s Table Partner to Provide Affordable Homes and Critical Services in Columbia Heights for D.C.’s Lowest-income Families

Washington, D.C.—February 16, 2017—Today Jubilee Housing and Martha’s Table, two of D.C.’s most storied nonprofits, announced a partnership to provide, at the historic Maycroft Apartments in Washington’s Columbia Heights neighborhood, 64 affordable homes coupled with critical services that will be available to building residents as well as to other vulnerable families across Northwest D.C.

Jubilee Housing will renovate and preserve at the Maycroft 41 units that are affordable to families earning at or below 30 percent of the area median income, including 15 units that are designated as Permanent Supportive Housing for people leaving chronic homelessness. The new Maycroft also will house a teen afterschool program, a family resource center that helps parents prepare their children for college, and vital programs offered by Martha’s Table.

Martha’s Table will operate its Healthy Start early childhood programming, McKenna’s Wagon mobile food delivery service, and a lobby market from 7,000 square feet on the ground floor of the Maycroft, at 1474 Columbia Road N.W.—in the heart of the neighborhood of which Martha’s Table has been a part since opening its doors in 1980.

“A partnership with Jubilee at the Maycroft, which is located within walking distance of our current location, is a natural one due to the strong alignment of our organizations’ missions and values,” said Patty Stonesifer, president and CEO of Martha’s Table. “We are thrilled that the Columbia Heights location will allow us to continue to stand with the many families in Northwest D.C. who access our services.”

Said Jubilee Housing President Jim Knight, “Jubilee’s collaboration with Martha’s Table—creating deeply affordable housing coupled with program opportunities at the Maycroft—will enable scores of D.C. families to stabilize, develop, and thrive in a resource-rich neighborhood. Vulnerable families will have easy access to educational, financial, and family life programming to support them from birth to college and beyond.”

The new Maycroft will bring “justice housing” to northwest D.C. residents, Knight said, enabling many to remain in a community they could afford before the expansion of market-rate housing across the city.

Homes that incorporate the three pillars of justice housing— deep affordability in combination with program opportunities and proximity to essential resources—can change lives, creating brighter futures for marginalized families as well as a more diverse, compassionate, and equitable community for their neighbors.

The combined presence of these two nonprofits at the Maycroft strengthens their ability to offer vital housing, education, and food programming to vulnerable Ward 1 families, Stonesifer said.

In recent years, Martha’s Table has been expanding its reach across the city, deepening the quality of its programming, and increasing the number of children and families it serves by more than threefold. Over the next three years, the organization will expand its pop-up grocery markets to all 49 elementary schools east of the Anacostia River, open two new locations, and increase enrollment in its programs by 40 percent.

Jubilee breaks ground at the Maycroft this spring and expects the building to be ready for residents by summer 2018. Martha’s Table will open its facilities at the Maycroft shortly after that.

View PDF Version of Press Release Here: Jubilee Housing Maycroft-Martha’s Table News Release 2017_02_16

DHCD Invests $7.5 Million to Preserve Jubilee Housing Maycroft Apartments

Investment Keeps 64 Apartment Units Affordable in Ward 1

Washington, DC – August 1, 2016 – Jubilee Housing, a 43-year-old organization that provides service-enriched affordable housing to nearly 800 low-income residents in Ward One of the District of Columbia, recently closed on a $7.5 million acquisition loan from the DC Department of Housing and Community Development (DHCD). The loan will preserve 64 affordable housing units in Maycroft Apartments, located at 1640 Columbia Road NWin the heart of Columbia Heights.

“As individuals and families are being squeezed out of the District due to high housing costs, we are grateful that our partners at DHCD chose to invest in the Maycroft at this time. Soon scores of families who are at risk of displacement will be able to benefit from the progress of the city with access to affordable housing and supportive services,” said Myra Peabody Gossens, chair of the Jubilee Housing Board of Directors.

The majority of the units will be affordable to families earning at or below 30 percent of Area Median Income, approximately $29,000 per year for a family of three, with 15 units designated as permanent supportive housing for the chronically homeless. The renovation will also create space for three critical family support services: an early childhood education center, an after school program for teens, and a family resource center for low-income residents.

At a time when there is a shortage of 20,000 affordable housing units in the District and one in three children still live below the poverty line, the DHCD investment advances the redevelopment of a project that not only adds to the City’s stock of deeply affordable rental housing but also provides support families that help them overcome the effects of poverty.

“We are excited to advance this important development effort that builds new affordable housing and ensures that our youngest children are ready for school and our high school students graduate ready for college and career success. In addition to these critical benefits for families, the project protects valuable diversity in our city, helping promote inclusivity and justice.”

For more information, read DHCD’s press release about the investment here.

MEDIA CONTACT:
Fritz Gutwein
Vice President of Institutional Advancement
202-299-1240 x 20111
fgutwein@jubileehousing.org