New board forms to aid in building elderly housing

CORNWALL — A Cornwall Elderly Housing Corporation (CEHC) has been established and a 14-member board of directors seated as the next step in building a senior housing complex in Cornwall Bridge.

The new board is part of a process dictated by HUD (U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development), the federal agency that will subsidize construction — and help control rents — on 10 apartments proposed to be built here.

The Cornwall Housing Corporation (CHC) has purchased a 5.56-acre piece of property along Route 7 in the center of the village, between Baird’s Store and the firehouse. It will include two lots on the hillside above it as part of its planned parcel program.

With the more-than-$1.5 million HUD grant finally approved, the Cornwall Housing Corporation board held an informational meeting in September.

The design phase is next. Several different approaches have been discussed. The board has considered conjoined apartments; it has also thought of putting all the residences under one roof. Where those apartments will be placed on the property is also up for debate.

CHC President Margaret Cooley told The Journal a request at that meeting to hear from those interested in serving on the new volunteer board brought 12 responses within a week.

Following the dictates of HUD, the Elderly Housing board must have at least seven and no more than 15 members. It incorporated, as required, with a start-up board of eight directors who came over from the Cornwall Housing Corporation board.

The Elderly Housing Corproation will operate independently, except that appointees need to be approved by the CHC board.

Six Elderly Housing directors have been approved: Gerry Blakey, Hanna Grossman, Tracy Hewat, Patrick Mulberry, Jim Terrall and Amy Worthington-Cady.  

They join the eight Cornwall Housing Corporation directors who now serve on both boards: Will Calhoun (vice president), Ella Clark, Margaret Cooley  (secretary), Cheryl Evans (president), John Frost, Wynne Kavanagh (treasurer), Marie Prentice and Wayde Wolfe.  

“That makes 14, and according to the bylaws we can have 15, but we wanted to leave room for expansion,â€� Cooley stated in an e-mail to The Journal.  “The membership could change in any case, should some of the CHC members eventually decide that one board is enough.

“But it starts us off at almost full strength, and with a good balance of those experienced in affordable housing and those [who are] new and enthusiastic.

“We have had one meeting of the new board, and it was very invigorating for the present CHC members to have all that fresh energy in the room.�

The project, which will provide independent living for those 62 and up who meet financial eligibility requirements, is expected to be ready for occupancy in spring 2012.

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