In their second winter without consistent heat, hot water and gas service, Stanley Holmes Village residents say it s difficult to stay warm and eat right. But what has really hurt, they say, is the lack of action and concern from the Atlantic City Housing Authority, which collects about $15 million in federal taxpayer dollars each year to take care of its nine complexes and is ruled by a local board of their neighbors in town.
Life in Stanley Holmes Village requires cooking sans stove pressofatlanticcity.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from pressofatlanticcity.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
In their second winter without consistent heat, hot water and gas service, Stanley Holmes Village residents say it s difficult to stay warm and eat right. But what has really hurt, they say, is the lack of action and concern from the Atlantic City Housing Authority, which collects about $15 million in federal taxpayer dollars each year to take care of its nine complexes and is ruled by a local board of their neighbors in town.
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development representatives will visit the city next week to talk to residents and conduct a physical inspection of the Atlantic City Housing Authority s nine complexes, a representative confirmed Monday.
Residents in the Atlantic City Housing Authority s Inlet Towers are trying to stay warm after almost a month of little to no heat and hot water, but some are doing it in a dangerous way: They are turning on their gas stoves and ovens.