Corruption in Hud and abuse of the disabled tenants
Elderly and disabled tenants in Hud funded properties are at
risk of neglect and abuse under the new Hud tax-credit financing
program. A prime example is The HUD Transaction Of The Year For
2005 called by its new name Victory Tower located in Takoma
Park,MD. For more than two years prior to settlement the tenants
were severely abused by the management company Shelter
Properties as they prepared for the upcoming purchase and
partial renovation by ensuring that all tenants who exercise
their rights or complain about code violations are forced out or
verbally and physically abused into submission. The new owner
Victory Housing did not want any tenant to interfer with what
they already knew would be an award winning deal. Everything was
all arranged by Hud in its varios programs to spend $12.1
million financing the purchase of this property from Montgomery
County and a partial remodeling of this 12 story senior and
disabled building. No one bothered to plan for the safety of the
tenants during the remodeling for they all thought that so many
of them would die off before the work began that is wasn't worth
bothering about.
Prior to settlement in December of 2003 the county tried to do
an illegal asbestos removal using hispanic teenagers who did not
know any english and whose only protections were plastic wrap
taped to their sleeves and a 50 cent mask. Tenants were all
upset for many were coughing and taking mysteriosly ill
especially when they went into the work areas which at that time
was mainly the 12th floor. Asbestos removal work was being done
in apartments that were occupied and no precautions were being
taken except to ask the tenant to leave and to stay out for
atleast two hours after the work was done. All of the tenants
furniture, clothing, food etc. were exposed and no clean up was
ever done. The asbestos materials were removed from the building
by the main elevator without any precautions and this is also
the elevator that is used to distribute food trays to the
bedridden. Management would not stop even when many tenants
complained so I called the Washington Post and spoke to a
reporter who never wrote about it but did atleast call the
manager, Michael Coles to inquire as to what was going on. That
phone call caused all such operations to cease immediately and
the whole crew ran out of here like rats leaving a sinking ship.
I was already targeted by management for abuse because I had
helped the tenant council years before get information that
would help them win a racial discrimination complaint with the
Montgomery County Human Rights Commission. I had right after the
hurricane here in Maryland in 2003 gotten channel 9 news to come
out and do a story on how we were surffering without electicity
and how some seniors had fallen and been hurt. During their
visit the back-up generator stopped working and chaos began.
Management hated me for this and tore into me something awful. I
was afraid to leave my apartment and more afraid to stay in it
alone.
During the actual renovation of 2004 the whole building had to
be moved about so that the work could be done 1/2 floor at a
time starting again with the 12th. The noise, fumes and
vibrations were unbearable off and on for more than a year and
it was mostly on, even working on weekends and starting at 6am.
Much of the work had to be redone over and over again because
they just simply did not know what they were doing and the
remodeler had hired the cheapest labor he could get and then if
any training was given it was just task training with no
supervision nor followup inspections. Many times hallways were
blocked and debris was in the hallway that could hurt your feet.
Fumes would suddenly without notice just come from the floor
above making the tenants have to flee their home instantly. Men
would be hanging off scaffolding by your window without notice.
Hammering and drilling in many places all at once gave the
tenants no where to hide from the irritating noises and this
would be for the whole day. Some of the work was on a large
scale and caused vibrations through large parts of the building
again without notice. To a heart patient these vibrations could
be potentially deadly. They terrified me and it was because my
heart could not beat properly at these times.
All tenants were supposed to get all the help they needed to
pack and move but no help was given. If you were not ready on
moving day your stuff was just tossed in a bin like trash and
then dumped out on your bed or floor. The first moving company
broke and stole alot of things and no tenant was compensated.
They were eventually fired for sexual harrassment. The second
moving company was even worse. They were criminals who freely
threatened violence against the disabled for by this time
management was stomping on not only everyone's rights but
literally on everyone to shut up and bow down or else which
meant unlawful eviction or violence or both. It was a disaster
and many tenants were ill with high blood pressure by now
because of all the unnecessary trouble instead of professional
service.