Winston-Salem - Haaes Group Corporate Affairs Director. Elynor Williams (far right). Joins with (left U right) Dr. Maprierllne Scales, president of the North Carolina chapter of National Council of Negro Women (NCNW). Dr. Dorothy Height, national president of NCNW and Hellena Tidwell, local president of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, following Dr. Height's address I at the Delta Fine Arts Center. During that time Ms. Williams presented a check to Dr. Height on behalf ef Hanes Group for NCNW programs. The Hanes Group Is composed of several companies, including Hanes Hosiery. Hanes Knitwear. Hanes Printables and .L'eggs Products. It is an operating unit of Sara Lee Corporation of Chicago. New Regulations Developed President Reagan Endorses Efforts • * _ * < ” —~ _————— Of Resident Management Groups Special To The PoM 2 President Reagan and Cm^rees tnan Jack Kemp endorsed the ef fort of successful resident man agement organizations and pledged their support for resident manage ment and homeownership for public housing residents at a 16-city tele • More than 1,000 public housing residents and local officials from across the country met with policy makers in Washington, D.C., with out ever leaving their hometowns during the live telecast sponsored by the National Center for Neighbor hood Enterprise (NCNE) and broad cast from the! Biznet studio in Washington, The conference, "We Made it Work: The Revolution in Public Housing,’’ brought leaders of reai Boston, JerseyQty, Loufc^ejSew ¥ Orleans, St. Louis, and Washington, D.C., together with a panel of policy experts: Congressman Kemp; NCNE president Robert L. Wood son; June Koch, assistant secre tary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development; Stuart Butler of the Heritage Foundation; and Paid Pryde of Pryde, Roberts and Company, a Washington based consulting firm specializing in small business development. . The resident managers and policy specialists answered questions from conference participants in each city Robert Woodson, in his keynote to the conference, said, “There’s a revolution going on in America to day, particularly in public housing, where throughout the nation, resi dents are coming together, or- • ganizing their communities into pu blic housing management corpora tions. And they are successfully re ducing crime, lowering mainte nance costs, and reducing the over . all operating coat of public hous ing.’’ Woodson said that resident man agement corporations were suc ceeding where others had (ailed in improving the quality of life in public housing communities. And the resident managers agreed. __ “From a jungle to a neighbor hood,” is how Bertha Gilkey of the Cochran Plata Tenant Management Corporation in St. Louis described the transition. President Reagan acknowledged this community revitalization in his taped address to the conference. “Let’s give families who live in public housing a chance to feel the pride of homeownership,” the Pre sident said. “As the leaders of the resident management movement can attest, not only can that pride transform individual homes, it can work magic on whole neighbor hoodMui well.” gjPfhen we give people a stake in their homes, we give them a stake in the future,” said President Reagan. “Resident management is clearly an idea whose time has come.” Congressman Kemp said that resi dent management groups represent “signs of hope in the inner cities.” Kemp discussed the provisions of his Urban Homesteading Bill, which would allow public housing resi dents to purchase their own homes once resident management has paved the way. Kemp said that homeowneship would not cut the stock of housing for low income Americana. “It is not a zero-sum game,” he said. “The renter be comes an owner and gets a stake in our participatory democracy.” Kemp urged continued support for resident management groups, say ing, “There should be no cutback in these programs that serve poor peo ple.” HUD Assistant Secretary June Koch described efforts under way at HUD to remove some of the ob stacles to resident management. She -I -v announced that HUD is developing new regulations to assist resident management groups and to encour age cooperation between public housing authorities and resident management organizations. “We have worked closely with Bob Wood son and the tenant management Breups*’’ she said, “and we have learned from them.” The participants chosen for HUD’s Public Housing HomeoWner ship Demonstration will be an nounced next week, Koch said. She added that HUD is also developing a demonstration project for small business development, an important element of neighborhood revitaliza tion. Woodson stressed the importance of grassroots involvement In solv ing the problems of poverty that plague America toddle said, “We sition that when people a*« allowed to have input into solving tfieir own ' problems, they are far more capable of finding solutions than those who are not living with the problem.” The best role for the go vernment, he said, is in facilitating the solutions designed by the resi dents themselves. The resident managers whose groups have become models of success and who appeared at the conference to share their knowledge and experience are: Kimi Gray, Kenilworth-Parksfde, Washington, D.C.; Mildred Hailey, Bromley Heath, Boston; Bertha Gilkey, Cochran Plaza, St. Louis; Rev. Robert Blount, A. Harry Moore, Jersey City; Bonnie Downs, Iroquois Homes, Louisville; and Viney Rey nolds, B. W. Cooper, New Orleans. If you have any questions about the teleconference or about resident management of public housing, please contact Pam Taylor at NCNE headquarters in Washington, D.C. (202) 331-1103. ^^^^^^ETTTrr^Ty.>ifir,,^^i*ftMif(t tt/rf fc. I16CU.1T. 2-DOOR NO FROST | FREEZER Features deluxe door shelves, large vegetr I butter compartments! Energy saver switch and ice maker!