Source URL (contains video): http://cbs11tv.com/local/Dallas.Housing.Authority.2.770987.html
Low Income Development (a.k.a. Foul Nigger Hive) Set To Open In North Dallas
DALLAS (CBS 11 News) ―
For more than a decade the Dallas Housing Authority has been fighting a battle to build low-income housing in far North Dallas. After years of court wrangling, a new multi-family development will open Tuesday, near Hillcrest and Frankford Road.
The U.S. Court of Appeals, 5th Circuit cleared the way for the Villas at Hillcrest by upholding a ruling that race did not play a factor in selecting the building site.
In the 1980s DHA was sued by some low-income residents, claiming the housing authority promoted a racially segregated system by limiting low-income housing to west and south Dallas. Historically public housing for low-income Dallas residents had been regulated to the poorest parts of the city and was often substandard.
DHA was ordered to end the segregation practice and provide public housing in far North Dallas – a more affluent part of the city.
DHA first purchased the Hillcrest property in 1996, but building of the low-income townhomes was halted after homeowners in the area sued. Homeowners argued that race, and the ending of a segregated system, could not be the factor for building a federally funded development.
The case went back to U.S. District Judge Jerry Buchmeyer who ruled that income status, not race, was the determining factor for building.
Ten years ago there were virtually no low-income housing developments in far North Dallas. With the opening of the Villas at Hillcrest some [color="Red"]30-percent of Dallas public housing residents will now reside in the area. [color="Blue"](Poster's Note: This gigantic nigger infusion is more than large enough to trigger substantial "white flight" from the afflicted area.)
"I think the hardest part of the fight is over," said DHA CEO Ann Lott. "I do believe that there may still be some people who do not want public housing in the neighborhood, but I think the overwhelming majority accept that it's here and we're gonna make the best of it."
Tuesday DHA will begin moving families into the 40-unit townhome development. The Villas at Hillcrest is part of DHAs Family Self Sufficiency program (FSS).
With the opening of the development John Trick and Brenda Jackson are going to be neighbors. "The people that are coming out there is just like the people that are staying out there," Jackson explained. "No one is coming out there that's 'in the box' and don't want to get 'out of the box'." [color="Blue"](Poster's Note: What the fuck is this gibberish supposed to mean?)
Homeowners in the area had complained that the housing would be a neighborhood eyesore. But Trick is excited that that isn't the case. "You'd never guess from looking at it that it was low-cost public housing, subsidized housing," he said. "It's very attractive and blends in very well with the neighborhood."
Housing authority officials say the residents of the Villas at Hillcrest are, 'committed to upholding the highest standards of everyday living, working and participating in the community in which they reside'.
Currently DHA provides housing assistance to some 60,000 eligible citizens.
Let the fuxation begin! 