From Deseret News archives:
Refugee housing crisis spurs action
Community leaders look at ways to help tenants
Because of escalating rents and lost federal aid, tenants from up to 175 units of an apartment complex known to most as the Hartland, at 1700 South and Redwood Road, face moving elsewhere or to the streets and away from services on which they rely. Due to expiring leases and other problems, at least six dozen families many of them Bantu have already moved, and many more at the complex are facing imminent deadlines.
Wednesday's session at the United Way offices was called to mull alternatives.
A possible answer? Purchasing the complex from its current owners.
"This crisis has touched all walks of life," said Rosemarie Hunter, director of the University Neighborhood Partnership, which has worked closely with residents of the apartment complex. "The fact that so many people came to the table shows the scope of this issue," Hunter said.
Bankers, educators, social workers, community leaders, refugee resettlement experts, University of Utah officials and representatives from the Catholic Diocese and LDS Church all gathered to see what could be done.
About 50 concerned people who attended the meeting agreed someone must try to buy back the property, now renamed the Seasons at Pebble Creek, from a San Francisco-based group that recently bought it, raised rents $50 to $200 and is now renewing leases.
The meeting signaled formal efforts to do so, said Bill Crim, director of strategic initiatives and public policy for United Way, which organized the meeting. "This needs urgent attention."
For years, the collection of 300 apartments has been much more than a living space for its residents.
The complex is home to more than 1,000 adults and children from all over the world, including Africa, South America, central and eastern Europe and Mexico, as well as the United States.
More than 75 percent of the residents are non-native English speakers.
Hartland had been a resettlement site for the two primary refugee agencies in Salt Lake City. As a result, some of the units were subsidized for low-income residents.
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