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 Dec. 3 - Dec. 9, 2021 Your Neighborhood — Your News® 
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 THE NEWSPAPER OF JAMAICA, HOLLIS & ST. ALBANS 
 Jamaica residents support rezoning proposal to  
 build affordable housing for low-income seniors 
 BY CARLOTTA MOHAMED 
 A proposal to build a senior  
 housing facility and healthcare  
 center  in  downtown  
 Jamaica that would provide  
 much-needed opportunities  
 for the community was introduced  
 during the Queens borough  
 president’s Public Land  
 Use Hearing held in November. 
   
 Breaking Ground, a nonprofit  
 developer of senior  
 housing and affordable housing  
 for families, is seeking to  
 construct a 15-story building  
 at 97-04 Sutphin Blvd. that  
 would include an on-site clinic  
 operated by the Community  
 Healthcare Network.  
 If  approved,  construction  
 will begin in July of 2022 and  
 is  slated  for  completion  and  
 start of occupancy in 2024.  
 The  proposed  rezoning  
 includes  an  extension  of  the  
 C6-3  zoning  district  that  is  
 currently adjacent across 97th  
 Avenue. Rezoning would increase  
 the number of units for  
 low-income seniors from from  
 96 to 173.  
 The residential component  
 of the project includes 173  
 units of senior housing with  
 60 bedrooms, 112 studios and  
 one unit for the super. All 172  
 rental units will be for low-income  
 seniors, and 52 units will  
 be supportive housing for formerly  
 homeless seniors aged  
 55 and up.  
 The remaining 120 units  
 will be for seniors aged 62 and  
 up with  an  income up  to  50%  
 of  the  Area  Median  Income  
 (AMI). 
 “Community Board 12 applicants  
 will  receive  a  preference  
 of 60 units. All units will  
 be  subsidized  by  Section  8,  
 enabling the project to serve  
 extremely low-income seniors,” 
 A rendering of the proposed senior housing development and health center at 97-04 Sutphin Blvd. in  
 Jamaica.  Photo courtesy of Bernheimer Architecture PLLC 
  David Beer of Breaking  
 Ground said. 
 Additionally,  social  services  
 will be provided on site and  
 seniors will  be  able  to  access  
 geriatric  care,  mental  health  
 and behavioral services, adult  
 medicine, pediatric and adolescent  
 medicine, HIV education  
 and dental care, among  
 other services.  
 The Community Healthcare  
 Network, a nonprofit of  
 14 Federally Qualified Health  
 Centers (FQHCs) in the four  
 boroughs, will operate its new  
 expanded  clinic  in  the  building  
 to provide those services  
 to residents and the surrounding  
 community.  
 For the proposed zoning,  
 on-site parking will not be  
 available, due to the healthcare  
 clinic’s space needs on  
 the ground floor, according to  
 Beer.  
 “Almost 30% of our units  
 are occupied by seniors and  
 very few own vehicles because  
 almost all of the seniors have  
 incomes below 30% AMI,”  
 Beer said. “Breaking Ground  
 will provide 12 subsidized  
 parking spaces in a local lot  
 or garage, where residents can  
 pay out-of-pocket no more than  
 $100 a month.” 
 The Neighborhood Housing  
 Services of Jamaica (NHSJ), a  
 47-year-old organization committed  
 to  preserving,  protecting  
 and revitalizing neighborhoods, 
  will perform outreach  
 and marketing for the project  
 and offer financial literacy  
 training to building residents.  
 According to Lori Miller, of  
 NHSJ, of 88% of seniors who  
 live in CB 12 and have requested  
 assistance  from  them, 59%  
 of those seniors are at or below  
 the 30% median income level  
 — which is $25,080.  
 “In a community where  
 the average rent for a onebedroom  
 apartment is going  
 for $1,700, you’re talking about  
 someone who has $5,000 left  
 over at the end of that,” Miller  
 said. 
 Several residents, who are  
 members of Queens Power and  
 the First Presbyterian Church  
 in  Jamaica,  testified  in  support  
 of the development.  
 Reverend Patrick O’Connor  
 said  that  it  is  critical  to  provide  
 more  access  for  seniors,  
 as Jamaica has expanded creating  
 more opportunities for  
 some parts of the community,  
 but not all.  
 “All of us who lead institutions  
 in Jamaica and southeast  
 Queens realize there is a desperate  
 need for quality housing  
 for seniors,” O’Connor  
 said. “If you provided 1,000  
 units tomorrow, they would be  
 accessed by local residents.”  
 According  to  Mercedes  
 Clark-Gray, there are over  
 67,000  seniors  in  Queens  living  
 in  poverty,  and many  are  
 in desperate need of housing.  
 “It’s  hard  to  find  housing  
 and then the rent goes up, and  
 what  happens?  You  have  to  
 keep  moving  and  that  brings  
 stress  and  anxiety  in  their  
 lives,” Clark-Gray said.  
 As a senior, Ollie Samuels  
 says she understands the need  
 for  affordable  housing  in  the  
 area.  
 “Whenever we see buildings  
 starting to go up, we ask,  
 ‘Is it for seniors? Is it affordable? 
  Will I be able to get an  
 apartment  there?’”  Samuels  
 said.  “I  know  what  it’s  like  
 to  be  out  there,  knowing  you  
 won’t get an increase in salary, 
  but an increase in rent.”  
 Read more on QNS.com. 
 Vol. 9 No. 49  32 total pages 
 
				
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