Laserfiche WebLink
greater Boston area. LexHAB is governed by a seven-member board appointed by the <br /> Selectmen. <br /> Lexington Housing Partnership (LHP) <br /> In 2003 the Lexington Housing Partnership was formed to promote and support affordable <br /> housing activities and to recommend appropriate actions to the Board of Selectmen and the <br /> Planning Board to further these goals. The LHP Board, appointed by the Selectmen, consists of <br /> 15 voting members and six liaisons representing the many committees, groups and individuals <br /> who share a goal of providing affordable housing in Lexington. <br /> CURRENT RESOURCES <br /> The LHA administers 240 affordable units of low/moderate income housing including apartment <br /> complexes at Greeley Village, Vynebrooke Village and Countryside Village. In addition, the <br /> authority owns a two-family house and seven condominium units. The majority of the units are <br /> State-subsidized (153 units)while most of the remainder are subsidized by the Federal <br /> Department of Housing and Urban Development(HUD) (77 units). The units are mostly <br /> occupied by seniors and by disabled and handicapped individuals and families. The LHA also <br /> administers Federal Section 8 choice vouchers and Massachusetts Rental Voucher Program <br /> project-based vouchers, which combined, serve up to an additional 74 units. While none of the <br /> Lexington Housing Authority units was purchased with CPA funds, there have been several <br /> CPA-funded projects that have benefitted the Housing Authority in the last several years. These <br /> include window, roof and siding replacement at Greeley Village, window replacement at <br /> Vynebrooke Village, and the funding of a design study for Vynebrooke Village to identify <br /> methods to control on-site drainage. <br /> LexHAB presently owns 64 units, all of which are rented to qualifying individuals or families. <br /> There is no line item in the Town budget supporting LexHAB. It does not receive State or <br /> Federal funds. The seed money for LexHAB was provided by the developers of Potter Pond and <br /> Brookhaven, who donated funds for affordable housing in order to comply with the Planning <br /> Board's inclusionary housing policy. LexHAB purchased units at the former Muzzey High <br /> School, Emerson Gardens and Parker Manor. Ten units —three at Parker Manor, a duplex on <br /> Massachusetts Avenue, two units at Emerson Gardens, a single family home on Marrett Road <br /> and a single family home on Wilson Road have been purchased with CPA funds in the last four <br /> fiscal years. A number of units have been donated to LexHAB as a result of rezoning plans <br /> negotiated by the Planning Board and approved by Town Meeting. Two homes were donated to <br /> LexHAB by their owners and were subsequently moved to Town-owned lots. Using donations <br /> and rental income from its housing units, LexHAB has built 12 single and two-family homes on <br /> scattered sites throughout the Town with the help of Minuteman Career& Technical High <br /> School students and the Rotary Club. Of the remaining 52 units, two were moved and the rest <br /> were purchased or turned over to LexHAB. <br /> 7 <br />