Bibliography
Chicago Agent. (2007, October 8). Columbia Pointe, Woodlawn. Chicago Agent, 4(20).
Date Published or Accessed: 2007-10-08 October 8, 2007
Reference Summary
Reference Quotes
Reference Notes
Chicago Agent. (2007, October 8). Columbia Pointe, Woodlawn. Chicago Agent, 4(20).
Date Published or Accessed: 2007-10-08 October 8, 2007
Schuler, P. (2000, November 2). Residents of Woodlawn seeing improvements, as a 40-year rebuilding effort starts to pay off. The University of Chicago Chronicle.
Date Published or Accessed: 2000-11-02 November 2, 2000
Gainer, B. (2013, January 16). Cook County, IL Votes to Create Largest Land Bank in the Nation | Bridget Gainer.
Date Published or Accessed: 2013-01-16 January 16, 2013
Chicago Department of Housing and Economic Development. (2009). Neighborhood Stabilization Program 2 Application for Federal Funding (Application).
Date Published or Accessed: 2009-07-14 July 14, 2009
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Date Published or Accessed: 2010-12-09 December 9, 2010
Podmolik, M. E. (2012, October 3). $15,000 down payment grants will be offered in Chicago area. Chicago Tribune.
Date Published or Accessed: 2012-10-03 October 3, 2012
Wells Fargo & Co. will offer $8.2 million in down payment assistance grants this month to almost 550 homebuyers in Chicago and 28 suburbs, the bank said Wednesday.The bank’s CityLIFT program,…
Metropolitan Planning Council. (2013). Managing single-family rental homes (White Paper).
Date Published or Accessed: 2013-01-00 January 2013
American Society of Planning Officials. (1949). Conversions of Large Single-Family Dwellings to Multiple-Family Dwellings (No. 5).
Date Published or Accessed: 1949-08-00 August 1949
Greenline Development, Inc. (2011). An analysis of the for-sale housing market in woodlawn.
Date Published or Accessed: 2011-03-27 March 27, 2011
Pendall, R. (2000). Why voucher and certificate users live in distressed neighborhoods. Housing Policy Debate, 11(4), 881_910. doi:10.1080/10511482.2000.9521391
Date Published or Accessed: 2000-00-00 2000
Abstract The Section 8 voucher and certificate program potentially allows recipients to choose better neighborhoods than they might otherwise be able to afford. This article compares the location of households using Section 8 vouchers and certificates with the location of other renter households, both low_income renters and all renters. In 1998, Section 8 users were 75 percent as likely as other poor tenants to live in distressed neighborhoods but 150 percent more likely than all renters to live in such tracts. These national averages obscure substantial variation among metropolitan areas. Section 8 users concentrate in distressed neighborhoods when rental housing concentrates there, but they avoid distressed neighborhoods with very low rents. Concentration also hinges on race; when assisted households are mostly black and other residents are mostly white, assisted households are much more likely to live in distressed neighborhoods.