Welcoming Jilian Johnson and Bob Mannon

Last fall, Jubilee Housing was pleased to welcome Jilian Johnson, our new Vice President of Human Resources, and Robert Mannon, Jubilee’s first Director of Real Estate Development. These new hires represent our continued commitment to building a remarkable team with a strong, shared commitment to justice housing during this exciting period of Jubilee Housing’s meaningful growth.

Jilian will oversee all human resource functions and collaborate with leadership to strategize and facilitate staffing capacity and work plans for Jubilee’s expansion.

Jilian was selected for her expertise in human resources, demonstrated ability to build diverse and inclusive team cultures, and enthusiasm for our mission after an extensive national search led by Good Insight, a national executive search firm for nonprofits. She brings over 15 years of experience across various topics – from employee relations to performance management systems to compensation and payroll analysis. Her last position was at American Girl, Inc. She served as a key leadership member responsible for broadening organizational awareness about diversity and inclusion, increasing employee partnership, and fostering an inclusive, positive workplace.

Bob is Jubilee’s first Director of Real Estate Development and will provide primary leadership for developing new housing and services spaces for Jubilee. This new role will help the organization successfully manage four current projects under development and position us to create more justice housing opportunities as they may come in the future.

Bob is a senior real estate executive with extensive development and management experience throughout the United States with some of the country’s most prominent brands, including McDonald’s and Marriott International. He has completed projects encompassing all aspects of development, including market analysis, site selection, financial analysis, contract negotiations, land entitlements, and design coordination. 

Project examples include mixed-use, adaptive reuse, historic tax credits, urban infill site, and LEED certification. He has developed projects in Washington, D.C., including the NOMA area and the Nationals ballpark. Before joining Jubilee, the Archer boutique hotel, his latest project opened in September 2021 in Tysons, Virginia.

We are excited that Jilian and Bob offer the skills and resources needed to fulfill our mission of creating justice housing – defined as deeply affordable housing with wrap-around programs and services in thriving neighborhoods – even more fully.

Jorge Torres – Jubilee Housing Hero

As Washington, DC locked down in March 2020 and many rushed to set up home offices, Jubilee Housing’s Jorge Torres was masking up and reporting to work.

Our community comprises ten properties and serves over 550 residents. In addition to supporting the Property Management team by helping ensure those spaces were cleaned thoroughly multiple times daily and addressing maintenance issues, Jorge was busy checking on residents and assessing their needs, especially senior community members and those with mobility challenges.

For Jorge, sustaining community connection with residents during a fearful and isolating time was the most powerful and important part of his job.

Click & Pledge, an online fundraising platform for nonprofit organizations, interviewed Jorge for their video series Heroes Uncovered. Watch below:

An Interview with a Jubilee Monthly Donor: Genevieve Fugere Hulick

Header Photo left to right: Jeff Lesk, Genevieve Fugere Hulick and Herb Stevens.

Genevieve Fugere Hulick is currently the chief of staff for Ward 2 Councilmember Brooke Pinto. She was previously executive director at New Partners Community Solar, an organization that focuses on bringing the economic benefits of clean energy to low-income District residents. She and her husband, Stephen Hulick, are monthly donors to Jubilee Housing. They live in DC with their two children.

Tristan Dewar – We reached out because you’ve had a relationship with Jubilee Housing for a while now and we really appreciate the work you’ve done with New Partners Community Solar during the construction of the Maycroft Apartments. Could you talk about your work with New Partners and its connection to affordable housing? 

Genevieve Fugere Hulick – I first became familiar with Jubilee Housing through a family friend, Jubilee Housing’s Vice President of External Affairs Marty Mellett. I was familiar with the wonderful work Jubilee does through Marty, but hadn’t gotten a chance to work formally with Jubilee until I joined New Partners Community Solar in September of 2017. 

There, I got to work with New Partners’ founders, Herb Stevens and Jeff Lesk, and they were working with Jubilee as development was underway on the now completed Maycroft. New Partners had developed the first community solar project in DC that same year in 2017, when Herb and Jeff placed a solar array on the rooftop of the law offices of Nixon Peabody, where they were partners. The DC government then started its Solar for All program, which was modeled in significant part on New Partners’ demonstration project, and we were happy to connect with Jubilee regarding the Solar For All project and its implementation at the Maycroft. 

TD –That’s awesome how it worked out. Could you tell us more about Solar for All

GFH – Solar For All is a DC program that focuses on bringing the financial benefits of solar renewable energy to residents who could most use the savings. The mission of New Partners is to use that program as a catalyst to bring solar energy and its benefits to folks across the city who would otherwise not be able to participate due to financial constraints, and especially those who live in affordable housing. New Partners now produces and distributes 100% of the economic benefits of clean, renewable energy from solar arrays throughout the District of Columbia to more than 200 low-income families, offsetting over 450 tons of carbon emissions.

A solar panel array atop the Maycroft Apartments.

We were excited when we heard about the Maycroft project that was pretty much shovel-ready. It was an opportunity where New Partners could do something really creative. 

That meant not only installing solar panels on the roof, but having them be a resource in times of crisis. If the electricity goes out in a storm or as we saw in California with rolling blackouts, storing energy from the solar panels in high-capacity batteries provides a back-up support system for residents. That back-up support could be for the refrigeration of medication, or as a power source to charge cell phones, or used to operate medical equipment such as ventilators.

The Resiliency Center at the Maycroft Apartments, powered by Pepco.

We were so thrilled to be able to partner with Jubilee on that project, bringing this incredible resource to residents at the Maycroft. We were able to bring on Pepco to help with coordinating and financing the first battery-powered resiliency center in the District at the Maycroft. We were really thrilled to do that with an organization like Jubilee that has such an incredible mission centered on justice housing and supporting low-income residents. It really resonated with New Partners and our mission to pass the energy savings on to DC families who need them most.

TD – What an incredible way to promote equity! 

GFH – Yes! We felt like the work sits at the intersection of affordable housing, economic justice and environmental justice. We understand with urgency these days how, increasingly, these systemic issues must be tackled in tandem. They’re not individualized issues, right? They’re problems that have broad impacts across all parts of our society. The people who stand to be impacted the most because of climate change and the resulting economic deprivation must be included in this push for equity. 

TD – Absolutely. That’s an amazing, tangible benefit for our community members, and an exciting feature at the Maycroft Apartments. Thanks for all your work on that! It really helped draw greater attention to what we’re doing with justice housing, which you mentioned earlier is in large part why you’ve continued to support us. 

Is there anyone in your life who helped inspire you to become an advocate for climate justice and affordable housing? 

GFH – There are two groups of people – I’ll first mention Herb Stevens and Jeff Lesk again, the founders of New Partners Community Solar. They are now retired partners at Nixon Peabody, and their decision to use their gifts, resources and talent to launch New Partners Community Solar is so inspiring. They brought together various groups, from lenders and commercial bankers to lawyers doing pro bono work, and really wanted to be sure what they were doing was meaningful and impactful for the community. 

It’s not often you see law partners start a nonprofit organization with such an incredible mission, and so I think I’ve always been inspired by them and their drive to, like I said, use their talents and their treasure to affect positive social change.  

Also, of course, my mom, Patty Fugere – she is one of the founders of the Washington Legal Clinic for the Homeless, so she of course has had a tremendous impact on my life. And again, she uses her talents and resources to make sure that everyone has a safe and affordable place to live. 

That ties in perfectly with Jubilee’s mission in justice housing. It’s not just enough to get somebody into an apartment, but to also have those wrap-around services and supports, whether that’s job training, access to a grocery store or tutoring for your kids. It’s important that there’s community built around that housing, and that’s something that my mom certainly instilled in me. 

I think that’s incredibly important and special, and that’s why our family collectively chooses to support Jubilee each month in a small way.  

TD – It’s bigger than you know, definitely. I think I may have shared over email how monthly donors are incredibly important to Jubilee and other organizations like ours because we’re so dependent upon contributed revenue. Gifts like yours help us project a more accurate budget, which is really useful in gauging capacity for long-term projects. 

We’re deeply grateful for your monthly support, especially in light of everything that has happened over the last year. Thank you for stepping up and being there for our community during an incredibly difficult time. 

You have these wonderful people in your life you mentioned – your mom, your former colleagues at New Partners. You said before that this tradition of service and the idea behind justice housing were instilled in you from early on – how has that informed your work with Councilmember Pinto and your work with the DC Council? 

GFH – Councilmember Pinto has some top priorities, and one of her top priorities is affordable housing and moving our neighbors who are experiencing homelessness into housing and providing them with support. When I decided to join her team, that was an important part of our conversation on how I would spend my time working in her office and how I could best support her constituents in Ward 2 who are experiencing homelessness.  

Sometimes we have the tendency to view people through a singular lens, and it’s really important to realize that even if somebody is experiencing homelessness, that’s not their sole identity – it’s a temporary condition that we can change. DC’s government has resources that can be directed through the budget process to support those neighbors. That’s incredibly important, and that’s why Councilmember Pinto has made significant asks of the mayor and her budget for permanent supportive housing vouchers and the Housing Production Trust Fund, which I know Jubilee leverages in part to create their housing continuum. 

So knowing that this was an important policy objective of Councilmember Pinto was one of the motivating factors for me in joining her team and being able to use the mantle of the DC Council office to help support her agenda around affordable housing and our neighbors experiencing homelessness. 

TD – We’re really glad that we have representation on the council that is prioritizing the needs of long-time community members and not simply new residents who can bolster the tax base, so that’s really heartening to hear.  

How can organizations like Jubilee Housing support you and Councilmember Pinto’s constituents in Ward 2? Is there any advice you would give to DC residents who are interested in advocating for the expansion and preservation of affordable housing?  

GFH – Absolutely! This is something that Councilmember Pinto stresses in her interactions with residents, but also imparts to her staff: it’s so important to have community input present in the decisions that are being made by the council or by the mayor. We can’t move forward without that input, so we need that meaningful input from the community. It’s not something where we just check a box and say we met with constituents. 

These decisions will be made one way or the other, so it’s important for the community, residents and organizations like Jubilee to reach out to the council. Also, please remember that you have at-large councilmembers. You have Jubilee’s Ward 1 representative, Councilmember Nadeau, but you have at-large councilmembers that also represent you, so it’s important that your voice is heard by all of those representatives and their offices as well. Make your policy priorities known!

I think building coalitions can also be particularly important. The Way Home DC is an organization that is very helpful in identifying different budget items that are important to alleviating homelessness and ensuring that there’s funding for affordable housing. It’s an outgrowth of Miriam’s Kitchen’s advocacy and policy work, and so building coalitions of organizations is also really important. 

But of course, reach out to your councilmember, whether through social media, email or call us and leave a message if we miss you. Hopefully we’ll all be back in the office one day and we look forward to having visitors down at the Wilson Building again soon. 

TD – Jubilee has always been very engaged with The Coalition for Nonprofit Housing & Economic Development’s Advocacy Day. Many of our community members always look forward to participating because they really value speaking to their representatives. So yes, definitely, every single voice counts, every single voice matters, and I’m happy to hear that the councilmembers feel the same. 

GFH – We take all of that input into consideration, so it’s important that we hear from you no matter how you choose to engage with the DC Council’s offices. Always leave that voicemail message because we check all of them! 

Meet Anthony Avery

Meet Jubilee Housing Board member and resident, Anthony Avery. Anthony has been a resident for nine years and has been on the Board for two years. In this video, he talks about his connection to the Jubilee community and how life has been since the pandemic.


 

Rosa Hatfield: Community Champion

When Rosa Hatfield moved to Washington DC from North Carolina, Adams Morgan was a very different place than it is now. It was the early 70’s and DC was recovering from the uprisings that followed the assassination of Martin Luther King. Tension was high between Blacks and whites and many parts of the city, including Adams Morgan, were distressed.

Rosa, the daughter of a sharecropper, moved when she was 17 years old to make a better life for her and her son who was back at home with her mother. They moved into the Ritz apartment building which, at the time, was under slumlord ownership. She soon became an important part of Jubilee Housing and we are proud to feature her for Black History and Women’s History Month.

When Jubilee Housing purchased the Ritz, Rosa and many other residents were cautious and distrustful of the new landlords, three white women in their early 30’s, who were members of the Church of the Saviour; Barbara Moore, Carolyn Banker Cresswell, and Terry Flood.

Rosa Hatfield and President Jimmy Carter at the Ontario Court groundbreaking

In addition to remodeling the building, Barbara started a youth program on the first floor of the Ritz. Barbara knocked on Rosa’s door every day to ask if her children could come downstairs to the program. Everyday Rosa told her no. One day Rosa was coming back from the market and saw her children playing outside with children from the building at the youth program. Recognizing the fun they were having, she let them attend the program which then changed Jubilee’s history and their lives.

Following an invitation from Barbara, Rosa began volunteering with the youth program and the two eventually became friends. Shortly after, a job opportunity became available and Rosa took Terry Flood’s place as property manager. Even though Rosa didn’t have much work experience she was eager to work and was a fast learner. More importantly, she was greatly respected by residents and the community at large.

People who knew her say Rosa was a fierce spirit who demanded truth. She often accompanied Jim Rouse on speaking engagements. Audiences were captivated by her opening talks and speeches and led so many to join the work of Jubilee Housing.

During her tenure with Jubilee, Rosa became a member of the Jubilee church, made good friends with people from The Potter’s House and Columbia Road Health Clinic. She was loved by the community and returned that same love through acts of service.

Rosa’s daughter, Sheila Bias said that whether her mother was having a good or bad day she was always available to help others. She could often be found volunteering in the community with Jubilee and other organizations.

Rosa died on May 5, 2002. She is survived by her four children and the Jubilee Community. Today we honor Rosa’s dedication to the Adams Morgan Community and Jubilee Housing.

Celebrating Jubilee’s Black Leaders of the Past, Present, and Future

Countless Black people — board members and staff, residents, community leaders, supporters and friends — have shaped Jubilee Housing into what it is today.  We realize this is a story not often told, and 2021’s Black History Month seems like the perfect time for us to focus on doing just that.

Lonnie Bunch, Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution and founding Director of the National Museum of African American History and Culture, said recently that “the great diversity within the Black community needs the glue of the African American past to remind us of not just how far we have traveled but how far there is to go.”

We agree and intend to lift up our African American past and have it inform our diversity, equity and inclusion journey moving forward.

Adams Morgan in 1973 was a neighborhood in flux and, for many, in distress. The city was rebuilding after years of riots and racial uprisings brought on by the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, and white flight had opened the door for Black residents. Many building owners and landlords — some quite wealthy and well-known — let buildings deteriorate into slums, creating living conditions that were harmful to thousands of Black families. Jubilee Housing’s founders, Terry Flood and Barbara Moore, both part of the Church of the Savior, managed to purchase two  apartment buildings — The Ritz and the Mozart, and began building relationships with residents in the buildings to create safe, healthy housing for these families.

Jubilee Housing’s Black history begins with those building purchases; It was also the beginning of a journey of intentional community building. Like today, that journey was not always easy.

Jubilee’s history is full of stories of Black leadership. Shortly after the organization’s founding, resident leader Rosa Hatfield was hired as Jubilee’s Property Manager and became a vocal, courageous champion of Jubilee. Residents like Margaret Wanjui, Donald Cooper, Queen Esther Miller, and Brian Adams joined Jubilee’s Board of Directors, leading through jubilant times and times fraught with challenge. Black business and community leaders like Loretta Argrett and Harold Nelson, David Bowers and Maria Payne, led outreach and fundraising.

We’ll also highlight leaders such as Alieu Kargbo, a member of Jubilee Housing’s Property Management team. Alieu began his connection to Jubilee as an unpaid volunteer. He’s gone to serve in many other capacities for Jubilee, and is the longest tenured employee ever to work for Jubilee. The names and their stories abound, and we will tell them.

In these rich conversations, we hope to weave together our past and present and look to the future through the voices of young Black leaders.

We hope you will enjoy this new initiative, as we are excited to continue to celebrate and uplift the stories of Jubilee’s Black History this month and for years to come.

A Tribute to a Special Friend

Beverly Lynn Barnes, a longtime friend and contributor of Jubilee Housing, died on Jan. 16, 2021, at her sister’s house in Maryland of complications from ovarian cancer.

Beverly came “from a family of strivers whose distinguished accomplishments are all the more remarkable when considered in the contexts of time and race.” She herself led an accomplished career in communications spanning decades. In 2012, Beverly started Beverly Barnes Communications. Having served in the Clinton administration, and held high-level positions at the Podesta Group, GMMB, and Fannie Mae, Beverly had tremendous experience and passion to share.

Beverly made outstanding contributions to the Jubilee mission in the years she worked with us. From helping us incorporate justice housingTM into our everyday messaging, to creating the Justice Housing Partners Fund marketing deck, she helped us elevate our culture and our impact. The marketing deck helped the organization to raise the $5+ million needed to acquire four new properties that will become deeply affordable homes for 120 DC families.

In Beverly’s last few weeks, she donated a “Prelude to a New Columbia” by Sam Gilliam, a world-renowned African American artist who resides in Washington, D.C to Jubilee Housing. Her gift will hang in our next new development and will be an enduring symbol for Jubilee Housing residents, reminding them of the power they have in creating a city that works for everyone.

Jim Knight, President & CEO, stated that “Beverly’s deep spirit and fierce will for justice made a mark on us. We are a better organization because of her contributions, which will live on for generations to come.”

Beverly’s sister Karla plans to organize a celebration of Beverly’s life when the pandemic no longer restricts travel and gatherings. In recognition and memory of Beverly, contributions may be made to the John L. Dart Library in Charleston, S.C. Those wishing to make a donation can follow this link.

A Story About the Power of Giving

Matthew Lesko (Lesko) who is affectionately known as the “question mark guy,” can often be found around Adams Morgan in his brightly colored suits and car covered in question marks. When we learned that Lesko coordinated a fundraiser for Jubilee Housing we asked to sit down with him over Zoom to talk about what giving means to him.

Lesko’s wife purchased a condo in the Adams Morgan area 30 years ago because of the diversity and multicultural atmosphere. After living in the suburbs, they recently decided to move back to the city. During this time he became interested in giving back to the community. Lesko started to think not only about people who were experiencing hardships, but started to wonder about the organizations that supported them.

When a staff member from Christ House came to speak to the residents of his building about how to be kind to people experiencing homelessness, they mentioned Jubilee Housing. Lesko was moved by Jubilee’s mission and organized a fundraising drive for residents of Jubilee.

Lesko and his neighbors at The Woodley contributed $740 in gift cards to local grocery stores and a cart full of non-perishable foods for Jubilee residents this holiday season. Their gifts were especially meaningful during a time where so many local organizations and DC residents are experiencing hardship.

When asked why he gives back to community organizations, Lesko said, “Giving feeds our souls. It helps the person who is giving and it helps the receiver.” We are thankful to Matthew Lesko and the residents of The Woodley for their contributions.

What Jubilee Housing Means to Gilma

This article is from a resident named Gilma Merino. She has lived in Jubilee Housing for over 20 years, raising four kids, ages 4 – 28, with a degenerative eye condition that has left her blind. Despite that, Ms. Merino is a leader, having served on the Jubilee Board of Directors and acting as a long-time advocate for affordable housing and disability rights before the Mayor and City Council. She is also a kind and supportive neighbor, cooking meals for seniors and always giving back when she can.

Ms. Merino reached out to Jubilee staff to let us know how much she appreciates the support she’s received since the coronavirus started. She asked us to share this with our donors so they too understand what their presence in her life means to her.

It has been so hard these last few months. When the schools closed and my kids came home, I couldn’t help them with their homework or access their classes because everything is virtual. And with the daycares closed, I also have to be a full-time mom as well. It’s been so hard to see my children struggling – one has ADHD, which makes learning at home even more difficult. Another couldn’t go to his class graduation, or take the class field trip he had been looking forward to all year. All of this makes me feel guilty, because my disability gets in the way.

On top of that, I lost my mentor of over 13 years to coronavirus. She was the one who taught me how to be a parent, and was always there to support me. I was so depressed when I heard she had passed and would no longer be in my life.

I say all this to emphasize how thankful I am to Jubilee and all the supporters from the community. The outpouring of support from everyone has been incredible, and I want everyone to know that it is noticed and appreciated by Jubilee residents. It makes me feel less alone, that there’s a team out there that cares for me and that they’re never going to leave, even when things get hard.

The meals from Geppetto Catering are so wonderful. I remember making a meal for and eating with the owner of Geppetto in my home three years ago. Now things are coming back around and he’s making meals for me.

The virus can kill lots of things but there’s one thing it can’t kill: that’s the natural human instinct to help one another in times of need. When I see my neighbors, we help each other. I cook lunch for the seniors around me, and save some of the food from Geppetto to share with others outside Jubilee. This kindness, this compassion, I learned from being a part of Jubilee all these years.

This is the legacy that Jubilee and its funders are giving us, and I needed to let everyone know this. I felt like I had a cup so full that it would spill over if I didn’t share.

I miss you all so much. Thank you, funders of Jubilee Housing, that you have not left us alone.

Interview with Emmanuel Gbajobi

As the Teen Services Manager, Emmanuel Gbajobi works with teenagers and young adults between the ages of 12-24 on their academic success and college and career readiness.

In the video below, Gbajobi discusses how he’s seen teens impacted by having to stay at home, how Jubilee is helping teens go to college even during a pandemic, and how community members can support the Teen Center during this time.

The COVID-19 pandemic has affected us all in unprecedented ways, but the work of Jubilee Housing has never been more important. This crisis has reaffirmed the importance of our mission. 

If you are interested in learning more about Jubilee’s Teen Center and the Jubilee to College scholarship  program, contact Gbajobi at egbajobi@jubileehousing.org.