Young and old win funding feud
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Eron Ben-Yehuda
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- While a compromise was reached last week in a funding
battle between young and old, there was no money left over to help an
organization housing people suffering from AIDS.
An advisory board made up of residents finalized its recommendations May
4 to the City Council on how to spend $287,400 in federal Community
Development Block Grant money. The funds pay for area social services for
low-income families. The board received requests totaling $483,373,
officials said.
A dispute over $10,000 of funding threatened to shut down programs that
provide a dance class and a trip to Yosemite for at-risk children from
Oak View, a low-income neighborhood.
City staff wanted the funding for Oak View youth, but the board had
initially decided to give the money to the Council on Aging for its
senior transportation service. The service leases vans to transport
individuals unable to move around without assistance.
The advisory board relented at its meeting last Thursday after Ron Hagan,
the city’s director of community services, guaranteed the senior program
will not be reduced and that city staff will work to increase its funding
to meet the needs of a growing elderly population.
“Now the kids are going to get what they want, and the seniors are
assured of what they want,” Chairman Jeff Lebow said.
But not everyone made out so well.
The board rejected a plea for $25,000 from Annie’s House, which provides
long-term, rent-subsidized lodging for individuals coping with the
devastating effects of AIDS.
The money would help the home hire a paid manager instead of relying on
volunteers, said spokeswoman Patricia Goodman, who came to the meeting to
ask the committee to reconsider.
There’s so much stigma associated with the incurable disease that the
organization prefers not to reveal the address of its Huntington Beach
shelter, which has served up to five residents at a time since 1994, she
said. There is another branch in Santa Ana.
“We’re an open door,” Goodman said.
Lebow sympathized with the group’s plight but pointed out that there were
more worthy causes than available money.
Some of the other groups that did not get a recommendation for funding
are the Salvation Army and the West County Family YMCA.
Goodman said she plans to make a final pitch to the council, which is
expected to make the ultimate decision on funding priorities June 19.
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