Changing the Black East Side team will announce pilot neighborhood at public meeting
UB and community members will introduce the project team and describe the project’s goals toward improving housing, health and neighborhood redevelopment
BUFFALO, N.Y. — The announcement of the pilot neighborhood project, originally scheduled for Feb. 17 and postponed because of weather, will now take place from 6-8 p.m. on Monday, March 10, at the King Urban Life Center.
Last winter, more than 400 people, including Buffalo and East Side residents, members of the University at Buffalo community and local leaders, gathered at UB to discuss and launch a grassroots movement creating a bold, new vision for the Black East Side.
Now, the group led and inspired by Henry-Louis Taylor Jr., PhD, professor of urban and regional planning in the School of Architecture and Planning at UB and director of the Center for Urban Studies, is ready to announce the first neighborhood that will undergo this transformation as a pilot project. The goal is to make the neighborhood a great place to live, work, play and raise a family.
Free and open to the public, registration is limited and available at this link.
When and where: 6-8 p.m. on Monday, March 10, at the King Urban Life Center, 938 Genesee St., Buffalo.
What: Taylor will formally announce the site of the pilot East Side Transformation Project: U.S. Census tract 166, the northern area of Broadway-Fillmore. He will explain why the site was selected and give a brief overview of the project. Team members will be introduced.
Who: In addition to Taylor, other speakers include:
Essence Sweat, director of the East Buffalo Development Corporation, and Christopher Kennedy, of Habitat for Humanity, who will discuss the housing strategy, including a program that provides grants to rehabilitate vacant homes into rental units.
Rick Folger, director of strategic initiatives for Habitat for Humanity, who will discuss the organization’s role in the housing initiative headed by Sweat.
Tim Murphy, MD, SUNY Distinguished Professor in the Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences and director of UB’s Community Health Equity Research Institute, who will discuss the health impacts of the project.
Pastor James Giles of Back to Basics Outreach Ministries, and Digna Saad, PhD, executive director of the King Urban Life Center, who will discuss a mini-grant program to involve residents in neighborhood redevelopment strategy.
Rev. George F. Nicholas, convener of the Buffalo Center for Health Equity and pastor of Lincoln Memorial United Methodist Church, will moderate.