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         |  | Kim Janey. (By Chutze Chou) |   BOSTON - Tuesday,
      August 17, 2021 - Mayor Kim Janey joined the Jamaica Plain Neighborhood Development Corporation, MassHousing and the residents of multiple affordable
      housing sites, collectively called the Pitts Portfolio, to celebrate the
      acquisition, preservation and renovation of 201 units in Roxbury and
      Dorchester. The Jamaica Plain Neighborhood Development Corporation
      (JPNDC) utilized $1.5 million in City of Boston Acquisition Opportunity
      Program (AOP) funding and $26 million in permanent MassHousing financing
      to purchase and renovate the units. This funding allowed for extensive
      capital improvements across the 201 unit portfolio, as well as finance
      the long-term affordability of the properties. As part of the work, 11
      units were made accessible to people with disabilities and 14 units have
      been set aside to house formerly homeless individuals and
      families.   
      “This is a great
      example of how community partners can work together to ensure Boston
      residents have a place to call home,” Mayor Kim Janey said. “ The ability
      of the City to keep these units affordable into the future is a huge win
      for Boston. I look forward to continuing to work with our nonprofit
      organizations, MassHousing and other partners to protect and preserve
      Boston’s affordable housing options.”   
      The housing is
      located in 21 buildings in Fort Hill, Nubian Square and Grove Hall,
      purchased from the estate of Lorenzo Pitts. Mr. Pitts was a successful,
      Roxbury-based owner and housing developer. Most of the units were
      affordable to low-income families. When JPNDC acquired the Pitts
      Portfolio in 2018, only 64 of the 201 units had long-term affordability
      restrictions, and without a long-term preservation transaction, the
      remainder were at risk of being converted to market-rate housing. The
      City’s $1.5M in AOP funding helped to ensure that all 201 units will have
      long-term affordability.   
      “Welcome home to
      all the residents of the Lorenzo Pitts properties who now have renovated,
      modern homes where they can live affordably and prosper well into the
      future,” said MassHousing Executive Director Chrystal Kornegay.
      “MassHousing commends the Jamaica Plain Neighborhood Development
      Corporation and the estate of Lorenzo Pitts – as well as the city, state
      and private partners involved in this project - for their commitment to
      preserving this important affordable housing portfolio in Dorchester and
      Roxbury.” 
      Overall, there are
      38 one-bedroom apartments, 87 two-bedroom apartments, 53 three-bedroom
      apartments, 18 four-bedroom apartments, two five-bedroom apartments and
      three six-bedroom apartments. Renovations on the buildings and units
      included masonry repairs of building facades, roof and window replacement
      at selected buildings, accessibility upgrades, kitchen and bathroom
      upgrades, and mechanical, electrical and plumbing system upgrades.  
      Of the 201 units
      in the Pitts portfolio, 14 units are restricted to households earning 30
      percent of Area Median Income (AMI) or less, 161 units are restricted at
      or below 60 percent of the Area Median Income (AMI) and 26 units are
      restricted at or below 80 percent of AMI. A total of 165 units are
      supported by project-based Section 8 or MRVP rental subsidy.  
      “We are
      tremendously grateful to the City of Boston and to all the other partners
      who made it possible to keep these 201 families in our city,” said JPNDC
      CEO Teronda Ellis. “MassHousing played an essential role, and DHCD, HUD,
      the Boston Housing Authority and the Massachusetts Historic Commission
      all contributed. And I especially want to thank the residents for their
      tremendous patience throughout the renovation process, especially since
      most of it took place during one of our nation’s most serious pandemics.” 
      Launched in 2017,
      the goal of the AOP program is to allow affordable housing developers and
      nonprofits to fight displacement by acquiring units off of the private
      market and securing affordable rents for current and future residents for
      the long term. AOP allows these buyers to compete with speculative buyers
      and preserve rental units at below-market rates for low-income
      Bostonians. To date, funding from this initiative has created 597 new
      units of affordable housing, of which 310 have been restricted at or
      below 60 percent of area median income (AMI) and 287 units at or below
      100 percent AMI.  
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