Dublin Core
Title
Box 18, Folder 11, Document 8
Text Item Type Metadata
Text
Jerthote pig
flap bia ie os
=, | tenants.
14 he Atlanta Journal and CONSTITUTION SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1967
ie
By D. J. R. BRUCKNER
Los Angeles Times News Service
ST. LOUIS, Feb. 4—Almost
2,000 tenant families of the
largest public housing develop-
ment here are preparing for a
rent strike March 1 against the
Public Housing Authority in an
effort to force major improve-
ments in living conditions.
Tenant spokesmen who set
the strike deadline said the al-
ternative to over-all upgrading
of the huge development is
widespread rioting. Tenants re-
ferred to “another Watts” and
some teen-agers told a reporter,
“Tt’s coming, man, it’s coming
big!”
Involved in the dispute are the
Pruitt homes and the Igoe
apartments which form a single
housing complex about two
‘miles from downtown St. Louis.
They are operated by the hous-
ing authority for low-income
Representing the tenants is
Corp., a community group or-
ganized last summer by the
Urban League and the War on
Poverty to upgrade the com-
munity.
Housing authority officials
and members of the citys |
board of aldermen agree that
have deteriorated rapidly in re-
cent years. But the housing au-
thority is required to operate
entirely from rent receipts, and
the officials say they do not
have the money to make needed
repairs.
RECENTLY, they promised
spring, but tenant spokesmen
said work must begin immedi-
ately if the strike is to be
avoided.
When it was built 13. years
ago, Pruitt - Igoe was widely
praised as one of the best pub-
lie housing facilities in the na-
| the Pruitt - Igoe Neighborhood} i
conditions at the development
to begin major repairs in the}
each with 11
ing buildings,
floors, set in a tract of 30 square
blocks. pone land_¢ e
only at the first, fourth, seventh
and 10th floors. ‘A reporter went
into four buildings before he
found an elevator that worked.
The hallway walls are gray
cement stone blocks. They
never have been painted. Most
of the floors also are gray. he
an eLipige hia bie i
The stench in some buildings
is overwhelming; many venti-
lating fans do not work. Broken
windows are common, and
many refrigerators and drain
pipes do not work. A number
ms i ock out hallway lights.
utside. ‘Pruitt-Igoe, and all but one of
ee eva or which stops
\centage are on public relief.
“ANOTHER WATTS, SOME SAY:
Tenants Pledge Rent Strike |
of kitchen stoves no longer work
because tenants oyer-used them
to heat their cold apartments.
BANDS OF roving youths
am the elevators, break laun-
ry machines and windows and
About 10,000 people live 4
the 2,000 families is Negro.
More than 60 per cent of the
families have no male head of
household and an equal per-
The tenant corporation’s de.
mands include adequate heat
and hot water immediately, im-
.,mediate repair of broken stiven! ,
refrigerators, windows and ele-
yators, and regular police pro-
‘tection to replace the two
: “guards assigned by the housing
authority to the entire project. —
Tt also wants a janitor as-
signed to each building, ae
tending that the present assign;
ment of one for two buildings is
insufficient. It wants immediate
+) even
lel of Nee. 2s IP bb. LM Ghia eicvoen,
of le, aaet prick ge prnerFe
attention given to work orders
placed by tenants which the cor-
poration says have been ignored
for months.
All these things, the corpora-
tion says, must be done on a
crash program.
Eugene Porter, corporation’
president, claims his corpora:
tion represents 1, 900 of the 2,000
tenant families ‘and could en-,
force its rent strike easily. The
housing authority says a rent
strike would, in fact, cut off
the meager operating
funds it now has for the project.
at serve alcoholic beverages
even at state dinners.
flap bia ie os
=, | tenants.
14 he Atlanta Journal and CONSTITUTION SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1967
ie
By D. J. R. BRUCKNER
Los Angeles Times News Service
ST. LOUIS, Feb. 4—Almost
2,000 tenant families of the
largest public housing develop-
ment here are preparing for a
rent strike March 1 against the
Public Housing Authority in an
effort to force major improve-
ments in living conditions.
Tenant spokesmen who set
the strike deadline said the al-
ternative to over-all upgrading
of the huge development is
widespread rioting. Tenants re-
ferred to “another Watts” and
some teen-agers told a reporter,
“Tt’s coming, man, it’s coming
big!”
Involved in the dispute are the
Pruitt homes and the Igoe
apartments which form a single
housing complex about two
‘miles from downtown St. Louis.
They are operated by the hous-
ing authority for low-income
Representing the tenants is
Corp., a community group or-
ganized last summer by the
Urban League and the War on
Poverty to upgrade the com-
munity.
Housing authority officials
and members of the citys |
board of aldermen agree that
have deteriorated rapidly in re-
cent years. But the housing au-
thority is required to operate
entirely from rent receipts, and
the officials say they do not
have the money to make needed
repairs.
RECENTLY, they promised
spring, but tenant spokesmen
said work must begin immedi-
ately if the strike is to be
avoided.
When it was built 13. years
ago, Pruitt - Igoe was widely
praised as one of the best pub-
lie housing facilities in the na-
| the Pruitt - Igoe Neighborhood} i
conditions at the development
to begin major repairs in the}
each with 11
ing buildings,
floors, set in a tract of 30 square
blocks. pone land_¢ e
only at the first, fourth, seventh
and 10th floors. ‘A reporter went
into four buildings before he
found an elevator that worked.
The hallway walls are gray
cement stone blocks. They
never have been painted. Most
of the floors also are gray. he
an eLipige hia bie i
The stench in some buildings
is overwhelming; many venti-
lating fans do not work. Broken
windows are common, and
many refrigerators and drain
pipes do not work. A number
ms i ock out hallway lights.
utside. ‘Pruitt-Igoe, and all but one of
ee eva or which stops
\centage are on public relief.
“ANOTHER WATTS, SOME SAY:
Tenants Pledge Rent Strike |
of kitchen stoves no longer work
because tenants oyer-used them
to heat their cold apartments.
BANDS OF roving youths
am the elevators, break laun-
ry machines and windows and
About 10,000 people live 4
the 2,000 families is Negro.
More than 60 per cent of the
families have no male head of
household and an equal per-
The tenant corporation’s de.
mands include adequate heat
and hot water immediately, im-
.,mediate repair of broken stiven! ,
refrigerators, windows and ele-
yators, and regular police pro-
‘tection to replace the two
: “guards assigned by the housing
authority to the entire project. —
Tt also wants a janitor as-
signed to each building, ae
tending that the present assign;
ment of one for two buildings is
insufficient. It wants immediate
+) even
lel of Nee. 2s IP bb. LM Ghia eicvoen,
of le, aaet prick ge prnerFe
attention given to work orders
placed by tenants which the cor-
poration says have been ignored
for months.
All these things, the corpora-
tion says, must be done on a
crash program.
Eugene Porter, corporation’
president, claims his corpora:
tion represents 1, 900 of the 2,000
tenant families ‘and could en-,
force its rent strike easily. The
housing authority says a rent
strike would, in fact, cut off
the meager operating
funds it now has for the project.
at serve alcoholic beverages
even at state dinners.
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