The Town Board, working collaboratively with the Greenburgh Housing Authority, previously approved legislation creating a new multi-family senior housing district which was placed at the site. The project will include housing with numerous amenities designed for seniors and will include a temporary relocation plan for the duration of construction.
The Greenburgh Housing Authority was created in 1952. The Housing Authority opened its first public housing development in 1961. This development funded by New York State Division of Housing and Community Renewal (DHCR) was located in the Fairview section of town. In 1973, a second public housing development funded by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) was undertaken in six separate locations. There were three sites located in the incorporated areas(villages) of the town (Elmsford, Ardsley, Tarrytown) and three sites located in the unincorporated areas(Hartsdale-2, Fairview).
In 1009 a Fair Housing lawsuit was filed against Westchester County and resulted in a county settlement requiring almost every community in Westchester to build affordable housing within their borders. Because Greenburgh has been proactive for many decades our town was exempt from the lawsuit and was not required to do what other villages, towns and cities were required to build.
Conventional Public Housing(Location and Sites)
Maple Ave, Oak Street and Beech Street/State Site - 131 apartments
Manhattan Avenue/Federal Site/Senior Housing - 30 apartments--these units will be demolished and replaced with 70 modern apartments
Greenvale Circle/Federal Site - 15 apartments
North Washington Avenue/Federal Site - 15 apartments
Old White Plains Road/Federal Site - 15 apartments
Saw Mill River Road/Federal Site - 25 apartments
Secor Road/Federal Site - 15 apartments
Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher Program
Families in the conventional and Section 8 programs pay no more than 30% of their family’s income for rent. The rent difference is subsidized by HUD. The maximum allowable income for a family of four in conventional public housing is $$75,050 and for Section 8 it is $52,650 for a family of four.
Paul Feiner