HomeMy WebLinkAboutMN-IURANI-2019-11-08
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108 E. Green St.
Ithaca, NY 14850
(607) 274-6565
MINUTES
ITHACA URBAN RENEWAL AGENCY (IURA)
NEIGHBORHOOD INVESTMENT COMMITTEE (NIC)
8:30 A.M., Friday, November 8, 2019
Third Floor Conference Room, City Hall, Ithaca, NY
In attendance: Karl Graham, Chair; Tracy Farrell, Teresa Halpert.
Excused: Fernando de Aragón; Paulette Manos.
Staff: Anisa Mendizabal; Nels Bohn.
Guest(s): Sue Chaffee, Immigrant Services Program and Renee Spear, Executive Director, Catholic
Charities of Tompkins/Tioga.
I. Call to Order
The Chair called the meeting to order at 8:36 a.m.
II. Changes/Additions to Agenda
The Chair indicated Agenda items would be reordered if needed to accommodate the
presenter.
III. Public Comment
None.
IV. Review of Minutes – October 2019
Moved by Farrell, seconded by Halpert. Approved 3-0.
V. New Business
A. Update and Discussion – 2019 Project #16 –Immigrant Services Program (ISP) with Sue
Chaffee, Program Director, and Renee Spear, Executive Director of Catholic Charities of
Tompkins/Tioga (CCTT)
The Committee was particularly interested in learning more about the NYS Office for New
Americans (ONA) grant that ISP received in 2019. Chaffee reported that ISP has just
finished the second quarter of that grant. The ONA Grant requires that ISP provide
services which involve a legal component. ISP has so far completed 50 citizenship
applications for adults and for children of naturalized parents. ISP has monthly legal
consultations with two immigration attorneys.
In addition to these services, Ms. Chaffee gave a sense of the myriad and varied needs of
those she serves, along with the complex learning and steps involved for ISP in trying to
meet those needs. Examples include: Special immigrant juvenile status court
proceedings; aiding three people with family ties in Ithaca who were detained at the
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southern border; financial literacy; domestic violence; forms and documentation of all
kinds; connection to translation needed for complex cases; working with other area
service providers to adapt presentations to the language needs of immigrant groups, and
more.
Requirements for citizenship have changed rapidly in the past few years. For example, a
common form required of those applying for citizenship has grown from two pages to
twenty-five pages. In addition, there is now a much heavier burden on LMI immigrants
who wish to sponsor family members. New requirements (one currently under court-
ordered injuction) include mandatory insurance coverage of the immigrating family
member from Day 1 in the U.S.; transcripts from all schools attended; and an extreme
increase in fees (for example, citizenship certificates for children of green-card holding
parents have increased from $600 to $1170. ISP used to be able to pay $300, or half, of
the fee, but new total cost puts this certificate out of reach for most everyone served).
The greater the burden on those immigrating, the greater the burden on agencies helping
them, and the harder it is to maintain a grant like ONA which requires service providers to
serve large numbers of people.
Ms. Chaffee stated that ISP has helped almost all of Ithaca’s Keren and Burmese
population.
Graham asked if Cornell’s Law School provides any services to the local immigrant
population. Answer: Cornell Law takes a few cases per year.
The Committee wondered about the working relationship with Cornell, and Chaffee
acknowledged that at times ISP and Cornell are at cross-purposes in terms of ISP meeting
the requirements of the ONA grant. This has been difficult and frustrating, especially
considering ISP’s continuing services to Cornell’s immigrant population for services that
fall outside of what Cornell provides. Chaffee would like the two organizations to work
more collaboratively. Asked about Ithaca College, Chaffee indicated that IC does not have
the same level of need as Cornell.
The ONA grant is a one year grant with an opportunity to review for one more year. In
order to maximize ISP’s ability to meet the numbers required, they have been doing
intensive outreach (radio and bus advertisement campaigns) and hired a member of the
Keren community (and former recipient of ISP services) to do outreach, which has been
invaluable.
ISP works with sponsors of numerous other IURA-funded programs to extend the services
provided through their program and to help immigrants get settled and working in Ithaca.
B. Action Item – Resolution - 2018 Acon Plan Authorize Assignment to Cayuga Fl ats,
LLC from INHS of Loan Funding to the Cayuga Flats Project (2018 Project #7 & CD-RLF
#45)
Bohn discussed details relating to the proposed resolution. Committee members wanted
to know about the LLC. Did INHS do this with the Breckenridge development? Bohn: Yes,
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and also, with Stone Quarry. They’ve done this different ways. Nonprofits can’t take
advantage of Low Income Housing Tax Credits, so there has to be a for-profit entity
created. INHS creates an LLC, which will own the project, then there is Cayuga Flats INC
(to De Aragón’s point).
Bohn further explained that when INHS comes to IURA during the Action Plan application
phase, they don’t know whether they will get the LIHTC funding, so therefore they don’t
have an LLC set up, or have a name for the LLC, and so on. Those pieces are put into place
after the LIHTC application has been approved.
A Committee member asked: Are there tax abatements? Answer: Not automatically.
The project will be taxable because INHS (a nonprofit) will convey ownership to the LLC (a
for-profit entity).
In sum, IURA provided the funding to INHS. As the project sponsor, INHS may assign it to
the LLC, however, this resolution documents the process explicitly, which will be helpful as
time goes by— staff often refer to past resolutions for detail about past projects, and they
can also be helpful during monitoring.
Bohn departed at 9:52 a.m.
2018 Acon Plan Authorie Assignment to Cayuga Fl ats, LLC from INHS
Of Loan Funding to the Cayuga Flats Project
(2018 Project #7 & CD-RLF #45)
WHEREAS, the IURA approved a total of $228,662 in CDBG and HOME loan assistance
to Ithaca Neighborhood Housing Services, Inc. (INHS) for the Cayuga Flats project (formerly
known as INHS Scattered Site Preservation Phase 2) to reconstruct or rehabilitate 29
rental housing units at the following locations:
• 203-209 Elm Street
• 111 W. Clinton Street
• 406 S. Plain Street
• 227 S. Geneva Street502 W. State Street, (Project) and
WHEREAS, $128,662 in CDBG loan funding issued to INHS in 2017 has been expended to
support predevelopment expenses for the project and $100,000 in HOME CHDO set-aside
funding is earmarked for the project in the 2018 Action Plan, and
WHEREAS, INHS has been allocated Low-Income Housing Tax Credits (LIHTC) to financially
assist the project that requires establishment of a for-profit ownership entity to take
advantage of tax credits, and
WHEREAS, INHS proposes to create Cayuga Flats, LLC, a for-profit entity to own the Cayuga Flats
project, and
WHEREAS, the sole managing member of Cayuga Flats, LLC will be a wholly owned subsidiary of
INHS, thereby satisfying HOME CHDO set-aside requirements that the rental housing project is
“sponsored” and effectively controlled by the CHDO, and
WHEREAS, INHS requests assignment of the CDBG loan and HOME funding award from INHS to
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Cayuga Flats, LLC, and
WHEREAS, at their October 11, 2019 meeting the Neighborhood Investment Committee reviewed
this matter and recommended the following action; now, therefore be it
RESOLVED, that the IURA hereby approves assignment of the CDBG loan and HOME funding award
for the Cayuga Flats project (formerly known as INHS Scattered Site Preservation Phase 2) from
INHS to Cayuga Flats, LLC, and be it further
RESOLVED, that the IURA Chair is hereby authorized, subject to review by IURA legal counsel, to
execute an amended CDBG loan agreement and a new HOME loan agreement to implement this
resolution.
Graham motioned to approve; Farrell seconded. Carried 3-0.
VI. Other Business
A. IURA Grant Summary
Neighbor to Neighbor is expected to need an extension due to ongoing organizational
transition to the fiscal umbrella of Cornell’s Center for Transformative Action. FLIC seems to
be doing well identifying in-City beneficiaries.
B. Staff Report
Mendizabal updated Committee on outreach efforts.
VII. Motion to Adjourn
Meeting adjourned by consensus at 10:03 am.