CMHA: Six Decades of
Affordable Housing
by Dawn Starry
During a
time when children had to drop out of school to sell apples on the street in
order to support their families and when the future only showed bleak
predictions of economic collapse, there were a few strong advocates that set out
to help the indigent populations. Advocates
such as Franklin Roosevelt, with his "New Deal" in the White House,
and Ernest Bohn, with the idea of the Cleveland Metropolitan Housing Authority
here in Cleveland. In 1933, four
years prior to the U.S. Housing Act, and four years after the market crash came
"Public Housing." Public
Housing was a way to deal with the "slums" as
Robert Navin put it in his 1934 book, An Analysis of a Slum Area in
Cleveland.
In 1922,
twenty-one percent of all murders in Cleveland where committed in what was
called the "slum" area, between Central and Woodland avenues from
E.22nd to E.55th streets. Also, seven percent of all boys that went to juvenile court
resided in this area. Not to
mention the twelve and a half cases of tuberculosis reported here prior to the
housing project years. The people
of these areas were in serious need of assistance and public housing seemed to
be the answer.
Ernest Bohn,
born in Germany in 1901, was the major influence in housing reform.
At age eleven he came to the United States with his father. He served in the Ohio House of Representatives for one term
and later was elected to city council. While
in the council he became very involved with the idea of public housing and in
1933 he wrote the first state housing legislative act to be passed by the Ohio
State legislature.
He served as
director of the Cleveland Metropolitan Housing Authority, now known as the
Cuyahoga Metropolitan Housing Authority, from its establishment in 1933 until
1968. He passed away the fifteenth
of December 1975. CMHA was a well accepted idea and became a model for housing
reform programs set up in other states.
"To
help the [slum] problem, four housing projects have been completed in Cleveland
and three others are under construction. Each
is literally a bright spot in the blighted area, said F. Leslie Speir,
in Cleveland: Our Community and Its
Government. The project was
sponsored by the government and no private builders were involved.
CMHA had all
powers of a municipality excluding that of taxation and had complete control
over subsidized housing in Cuyahoga County, excluding the city of Chagrin Falls.
The first three projects were Cedar-Central Apartments between Cedar and
Central avenues housing 654 families. Outhwaite
Homes located between Woodland and Scovill avenues housing 579 families.
Finally, Lakeview Terrace at the end of West 29th street.
The cost of the three buildings in 1933 was 10 million dollars.
In 1968,
Earnest Bohn retired from the CMHA projects.
Terrible times followed the retirement of the founder.
CMHA did not run out of money, because the Federal government was
supplying the housing project with plenty of money.
However, corruption and mismanagement of funds surrounded the CMHA
projects in the 1970s. For more
than 15 years CMHA became increasingly corrupt with allegations of payoffs to
political friends and some connections to organized crime.
During the
1980's the corruption was made public. Headlines
revealed a misuse of money. CMHA
was chosen for a U.S. study/investigation in 1983.
The Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) ordered CMHA to fix
up their estates and tenants feared eviction after the HUD review was completed.
Money was not going toward fixing up the units.
"The projects were not seen as a safe areas to even travel in,"
according to tenants. It was not
until the 1990's that things with
CMHA actually began to get better. Money
was beginning to be handled correctly once again and CMHA attempted to clean up
its image.
Who exactly
is CMHA for? From the beginning of
the project the units were intended for low-income families and later in the mid
1950's came the Golden Age Centers for the elderly.
However, for a long time single people could not get into a CMHA unit.
Today, CMHA is still not centered around housing the homeless.
A public housing project is generally seen as most likely a project
intended to house all economically disadvantaged.
The homeless population is one of the impoverished populations that CMHA
attempts to serve.