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Elderly Tenants Sue Affordable Housing Provider Over "Unsafe" Living Conditions

A group of tenants living in a fixed-income apartment complex for elderly residents in Northeast Portland are suing their landlord for not keeping the complex in “habitable condition” in recent years. The five tenants, represented by pro bono attorneys, live at the Allen Fremont Plaza apartments at 221 NE Fremont, a 64-unit complex for tenants 55 and older run by Reach Community Development, a nonprofit affordable housing agency. The tenants claim that their recent requests.

Seattle DJC.com local business news and data - Business - Tenants sue over conditions at affordable housing complex

Seattle DJC.com local business news and data - Business - Tenants sue over conditions at affordable housing complex
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Tenants sue over conditions at affordable housing complex

Tenants sue over conditions at affordable housing complex
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New Member Spotlight: Jeana Woolley, president of JM Woolley & Associates • Daily Journal of Commerce

By: scott.huish in NAMC Oregon December 22, 2020 1:23 pm New Member Spotlight: Jeana Woolley For Jeana Woolley, the opportunity to empower the Black community in Northeast Portland and make it stronger and more economically viable is personal. The longtime community activist and business owner has worked for more than 45 years on a variety of economic development initiatives and projects intended to benefit Northeast Portland, its residents and its business owners. In 1997, Woolley developed Allen Fremont Plaza, the first affordable housing project ever sponsored by a Black organization in Oregon. She was a founding board member of community development organizations such as Portland Community Reinvestment Initiatives Inc. and Albina Community Bank (now Beneficial Bank) that continue to serve the Black and BIPOC communities today.

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