- To: Cover To: Executive Director's Message To: Mission Statement Page 4 To: Multifamily developments To: Self-Help Housing To: Self-Help Housing (cont.) To: Teen Challenge, Homework Club To: Teen Challenge, Homework Club (cont.) To: Financial summary To: Preserving Affordable Housing To: Properties -


  Independence happy house   Independence for Paul

- text column - text column - text column
  Program
   Special-Needs Housing

Partners
  • Federal Home Loan Bank
  • Kitsap County Block Grant
  • Kitsap Tenant Support Services
  • Washington State Housing
    Trust Fund

"When I get letters from people
we help, it makes me feel we
actually do make a difference.
Some people - especially the
disabled - just need a chance
and then they'll take it from
there."

 - Paul Gaudette,
Federal Home Loan Bank

"Without options like these, sometimes people with special needs just end up on the streets."

 - Carolyn Russell, Kitsap
Tenant Support Services

Results
   94 safe, comfortable homes
   for people with special needs

Paul plays Paul plays his keyboard by ear, sings in talent shows, and his boss says that Paul is the most focused and meticulous worker he has. But none of these skills helped Paul when he was living in
-
Paul at keyboard

Paul demonstrates his keyboard skills in his home, which he shares
with two other developmentally disabled men. Before becoming part
of KCCHA's Special-Needs Housing Program, Paul lived in a tough
part of Kitsap County where people sometimes took advantage of
his trusting nature.
- a tough part of Kitsap County several years ago.

"Paul sometimes wanders and he's so trusting that people take advantage of him," says Kitsap Tenant Support Services' Carolyn Russell. " He loves his independence, but that sometimes puts him at risk in the community."

That's when the Kitsap County Consolidated
- - Housing Authority stepped in and put together the funding partnerships necessary to buy and rehabilitate a duplex in a safer neighborhood for Paul. He now lives there with two roommates, who are also developmentally disabled.

KCCHA's Housing Developer Julie Graves emphasizes that these projects don't happen without help. "There are a lot of organizations - both public and private - that are looking to partner on worthwhile projects like this."
       
Paul with bucket
Paul loves his grounds
 maintenance job, and at 61
 years old, doesn't want to even
think about retirement. "I want
 to work till I die. I don't think
 it's fun to be lazy."
 
Paul with record album
With a safe place to live, Paul can concentrate
on his job, learning to get along with his room-
mates, and hobbies like listening to his record
 collection. Federal Home Loan Bank's Gaudette
 says his organization supports this program
 because people with special needs "just need
 a chance and then they'll take it from there."
  Public organizations - like Kitsap County Block Grant and the Washington State Housing Trust Fund - are an important source of money for the housing authority, but nearly three-quarters of KCCHA's operating funds come from the private sector, including the Federal Home Loan Bank, a privately owned wholesale bank that provides low cost funding and community grants for housing.

Paul himself recommends the program to anyone who asks.
"I always like to be independent,"  he says.
         


1999 Annual Report:

[ 1 Cover ] [ 2 Message ] [ 3 Mission ] [ 4 Independence ] [ 5 Hope ] [ 6 Opportunities ] [ 7 Opportunities (cont.) ] [ 8 Futures ] [ 9 Futures (cont.) ] [ 10 Fiscal 1999 ] [ 11 New Programs ] [ 12 Properties ] [ Annual Reports Home ]



Site Links:

Home ] [ [ Home ] [ Housing ] [ Community Renewal ] [ What's New ] [ Trends ] [ Youth Services ] [ About Us ] [ Site Map ]