By 1993, HUD implemented HOPE VI as a national program "to eradicate severely
distressed public housing." The DC Housing Authority has since received seven HOPE VI grants totally $6 billion, which dismantled public housing projects (including Arthur Capper Dwellings, Capitol View Plaza, East Capitol Dwellings, Eastgate Gardens, Ellen Wilson, Frederick Douglass, Sheridan Terrace, Stanton Dwellings, Valley Green) and created mixed-income projects with the majority of the former public housing residents displaced. Interestingly,
in 1994, the first permanent bonds issued by the National Capital
Housing Authority (NCHA) were due, meaning that $48 million dollars plus
interest had to be paid to investors.
The table below lists the long-term bonds sold by the NCHA to investors from 1954 to 1968. The sub-total shows the amount of long-term debt that would be due by 1994. By 2009, the NCHA would need to pay back the more than $124 million in long-term debt from the pre-1969 period. The information in the table comes from the DC Archives (DC Archives, National Capital Housing Authority, Legal Division, Minutes 1954-68 (Duplicate), 91-012 NCHP).
According to the official agreements with bondholders (Declaration of Trust), the NCHA could not sell this property during the 35-40 life of the bond. Did the NCHA bonds actually help protect public housing, at least for the 35-40 year period? In the 1990s, did the DCHA (the new NCHA) sell off parts of public housing to help pay for the over $48 million due to investors? Did the DCHA assume that, by paying off the bonds, the DCHA could then dismantle public housing, which displaced very low-income residents?
As a side point, by 1969, years before DC Home Rule, the NCHA had accumulated not only $124 million in debt but also debt in short-term bonds, and threatened to go into bankruptcy. In 1975, the new DC government inherited both this debt of over $124 million and public housing that had not been maintained, within the context of the fiscal crisis of the 1970s and 1980s experienced by urban areas worldwide.
DC Archives, National Capital Housing Authority, Legal Division, Minutes 1954-68 (Duplicate), 91-012 NCHP.
P.S. If I correctly understand the CPI Inflation Calculator, $124 million in 1968 would have the same buying power as $828 million today.
The table below lists the long-term bonds sold by the NCHA to investors from 1954 to 1968. The sub-total shows the amount of long-term debt that would be due by 1994. By 2009, the NCHA would need to pay back the more than $124 million in long-term debt from the pre-1969 period. The information in the table comes from the DC Archives (DC Archives, National Capital Housing Authority, Legal Division, Minutes 1954-68 (Duplicate), 91-012 NCHP).
According to the official agreements with bondholders (Declaration of Trust), the NCHA could not sell this property during the 35-40 life of the bond. Did the NCHA bonds actually help protect public housing, at least for the 35-40 year period? In the 1990s, did the DCHA (the new NCHA) sell off parts of public housing to help pay for the over $48 million due to investors? Did the DCHA assume that, by paying off the bonds, the DCHA could then dismantle public housing, which displaced very low-income residents?
As a side point, by 1969, years before DC Home Rule, the NCHA had accumulated not only $124 million in debt but also debt in short-term bonds, and threatened to go into bankruptcy. In 1975, the new DC government inherited both this debt of over $124 million and public housing that had not been maintained, within the context of the fiscal crisis of the 1970s and 1980s experienced by urban areas worldwide.
Bond Issue
|
Year Issued
|
Maturity Date
|
Amount
|
Interest Rt
|
1st Issue
|
1954
|
1994
|
$11,420,000
|
|
2nd Issue
|
1955
|
1994
|
$7,020,000
|
2.500%
|
3rd Issue
|
1955
|
1994
|
$6,010,000
|
|
4th Issue
|
1958
|
1994
|
$10,505,000
|
|
5th Issue
|
1959
|
1994
|
$7,505,000
|
3.375%
|
6th Issue
|
1959
|
1994
|
$5,670,000
|
3.750%
|
Sub-Total
|
$48,130,000
|
|||
7th Issue
|
1960
|
2000
|
$15,650,000
|
3.731%
|
8th Issue
|
1961
|
2001
|
$2,765,000
|
3.375%
|
9th Issue
|
1964
|
2004
|
$7,990,000
|
3.375%
|
10th Issue
|
1965
|
2005
|
$4,790,000
|
3.250%
|
11th Issue
|
1965
|
2005
|
$7,740,000
|
3.250%
|
12th Issue
|
1967
|
2007
|
$5,015,000
|
|
13th Issue
|
1967
|
2007
|
$5,250,000
|
|
14th Issue
|
2007
|
$10,075,000
|
||
15th Issue
|
1967
|
2008
|
$2,265,000
|
4.375%
|
16th Issue
|
1968
|
2008
|
$6,690,000
|
|
17th Issue
|
2008
|
$1,400,000
|
||
18th Issue
|
2008
|
$4,000,000
|
||
19th Issue
|
2009
|
$2,485,000
|
||
Grand Total
|
$124,245,000
|
P.S. If I correctly understand the CPI Inflation Calculator, $124 million in 1968 would have the same buying power as $828 million today.
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