Neighborhoods


Strategic Neighborhood Transformation

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Youngstown Neighborhood Development Corp.’s board of directors today announced that it has named Ian Beniston as executive director.

Beniston, previously YNDC’s interim director, succeeds the organization’s founding executive director, Presley Gillespie, who left YNDC last month to accept a position in Pittsburgh. Before joining the YNDC staff, Beniston served as a consultant to its board of directors in the organization’s initial development stages.

“We are fortunate that Ian has been an integral part of YNDC since its inception and that he possesses not only the knowledge and experience, but the passion and the vision to foster growth and success for the organization,” said Lisa Metzinger, YNDC board president. “We are confident that, under his leadership, YNDC will continue to transform our neighborhoods and make a positive impact in our city.”

Beniston, who lives in Youngstown, brings nine years of urban planning and neighborhood development experience in the private, nonprofit, and public sectors. He was selected earlier this year as a Next City Vanguard ,which recognizes the work of “40 under 40” making an impact in cities across America.

He holds a master’s degree in city and regional planning from The Ohio State University, a bachelor of arts in Sociology from Youngstown State University, and has studied at the Technical University of Dresden in Dresden, Germany. He is also a member of the American Institute of Certified Planners.

“I’m very excited for the opportunity to lead YNDC and look forward to continuing the development of a highly collaborative model with many partners focused on stabilization and revitalization of neighborhoods across the city of Youngstown,” Beniston said.

To read the full story from The Business Journal, click here.

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Ian J. Beniston has been named executive director of the Youngstown Neighborhood Development Corp., succeeding the agency’s founding executive director, Presley L. Gillespie, who resigned in May.

Gillespie, who left to become president of Neighborhood Allies, a Pittsburgh community-development organization, said he fully endorsed Beniston to become YNDC’s executive director.

Beniston, of Youngstown, had spent five years as deputy director of the Youngstown Neighborhood Development Corp.

Founded in 2009, the organization focuses on revitalizing targeted urban neighborhoods and provides planning services for the city.

A member of the American Institute of Certified Planners, Beniston has a master’s degree in city and regional planning from Ohio State University and a bachelor’s degree in sociology from Youngstown State University and has studied at the Technical University of Dresden, Germany.

“I’m very excited for the opportunity to lead YNDC and look forward to continuing the development of a highly collaborative model with many partners focused on stabilization and revitalization of neighborhoods across the city,” Beniston said.

“He possesses not only the knowledge and experience, but the passion and the vision to foster growth and success for the organization,” said Lisa Metzinger, YNDC board president.

YNDC is based at the Iron Roots Urban Farm, 820 Canfield Road.

Beniston is being paid $75,000 a year as director, compared with $106,090 for Gillespie when he left.

To read the full story at Vindy.com, click here.

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Monday, June 16, 2014

On Saturday, June 14th, volunteers from the Lincoln Knolls Community Watch, Alpha and Omega First Baptist Church, and YNDC, alongside youth from the neighborhood and residents from across the east side, participated in a workday in the Lincoln Knolls neighborhood on Youngstown's east side in partnership with Councilman TJ Rodgers, Sly's Landscaping, and Green Youngstown (RUBY).

Volunteers cleaned up a new basketball court in preparation for contractor improvements and seeded grass on a formerly muddy and weedy park area adjacent to the court. Participants tilled the ground, removed rocks, spread 13 yards of topsoil over the site, and spread grass seed and straw. Contractor work will be completed by the end of the month and the court will be striped to significantly improve the well-used neighborhood court. Thank you to all of our volunteers for another great workday!

The next neighborhood workday is schedule for Saturday, June 21st from 9:00 am to 1:00 pm at Iron Roots Urban Farm in the Idora Neighborhood. Volunteers should meet at 820 Canfield Road.

For more information about the next workday or to get involved in other neighborhood revitalization efforts, please contact Jack Daugherty via email at jdaugherty@yndc.org or via phone at 330.480.0423.

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Monday, June 16, 2014

The Board of Directors of the Youngstown Neighborhood Development Corporation (YNDC) has selected Ian J. Beniston as Executive Director.

Ian has spent the past five years as YNDC’s Deputy Director and previously served as a consultant to YNDC’s Board of Directors in the organization’s initial development phase.

Ian brings nine years of urban planning and neighborhood development experience in the private, non-profit, and public sectors. He was selected earlier this year as a Next City Vanguard which recognizes the work of “40 under 40” making an impact in cities across America. Ian holds a Master of City and Regional Planning from The Ohio State University, a Bachelor of Arts in Sociology from Youngstown State University, and has studied at the Technical University of Dresden in Dresden, Germany. He is also a member of the American Institute of Certified Planners. Ian resides in Youngstown with his wife, Krista and Irish Wolfhound, Keira.

“I’m very excited for the opportunity to lead YNDC and look forward to continuing the development of a highly collaborative model with many partners focused on stabilization and revitalization of neighborhoods across the City of Youngstown,” said Ian J. Beniston, YNDC Executive Director.

Lisa Metzinger, President of the Board of Directors of YNDC, says, “We are fortunate that Ian has been an integral part of YNDC since its inception and that he possesses not only the knowledge and experience, but the passion and the vision to foster growth and success for the organization. We are confident that, under his leadership, YNDC will continue to transform our neighborhoods and make a positive impact in our City.”

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Thursday, June 19, 2014

On Wednesday, June 18th, the Ohio Housing Finance Agency (OHFA) presented YNDC with the Spirit of Homeownership Excellence Award for the organization’s Community Loan Fund (CLF) program.

The award, created to honor innovation and quality in the affordable housing industry during National Homeownership Month, is presented to one organization each year, recognizing its contributions in promoting homeownership opportunities and accessibility.

In 2012, YNDC partnered with the City of Youngstown, OHFA, the Home Savings and Loan Company and the Raymond John Wean Foundation to develop the $1 million fund for the purpose of increasing homeownership in strategic neighborhoods by extending first mortgage financing to prospective homebuyers who fall short of standard industry requirements. The first program of its kind operated by a CDC in the State of Ohio, the CLF has financed 18 first mortgages for new homeowners to date, while providing the education and accountability necessary to ensure their long-term success, including post-purchase homeownership counseling, home maintenance education, and wealth building through monitored homeownership reserve accounts.

OHFA facilitates the development, rehabilitation and financing of low- to moderate-income housing. OHFA’s programs help first-time homebuyers, renters, senior citizens, and others find quality affordable housing that meets their needs. For more information on the Ohio Housing Finance Agency please visit www.ohiohome.org.

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Thursday, June 19, 2014

YNDC is hiring an apprentice farmer to start by the end of June. The position is open until filled.

Currently, this is a seasonal position that will run June - October, 25-35 hours per week. The apprentice farmer will participate in all aspects of the day to day operations of Iron Roots Urban Farm. These duties will include bed preparation, planting, watering, harvesting, sales, and other farm tasks. Hiring priority will be given to those who wish to start farms in the city of Youngstown, and apprentices will be given one-on-one mentorship as they develop their plans. Please see the position description below for details.

To apply, please submit resume and cover letter to YNDC, in person at 820 Canfield Road or via email to info@yndc.org (please note which position you are applying for). Alternatively, an application can be filled out in the YNDC office.

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Say to someone, “If you build it,” and millions worldwide will answer, “They will come.”

It’s from Kevin Costner’s fictional “Field of Dreams” — a film testament to faith in tradition and value in relationships past and present.

Bru (officially Brunilda) Turner has a sports passion also built around tradition and relationships, but it’s golf.

And she’s building her field of dreams.

And they have come — 75 kids age 5-18 from some of Youngstown’s toughest conditions.

There is no fiction about them.

Her dream fills about 10 abandoned city lots on Youngstown’s far northeast corner — Sharon Line some call it.

It’s a patch of land off Jacobs Road that time forgot, and apparently so did city street-maintenance people. When former Mayor Jay Williams envisioned turning parts of the city back to rural status, this area of Northwood Avenue was no doubt on his list.

But it’s not forgotten for Bru and her devoted family and friends.

Northwood is such a part of the Turner family, it could be named after them. Bru points to five homes where family members currently live and homes where other Turners potentially will live. When people would move from the street, they’d approach her dad, and he would often buy. The few neighbors who are not family might as well be. Bru knows as much about them.

Typical of many city neighborhoods — the remaining homes are separated by three or so lots where homes used to be. It’s returned to wild growth.

And it’s in that wild that Bru has created Northwood Golf Academy.

Seriously. “Northwood Golf Academy.”

Just hearing the name invokes thoughts of lush gardens, brick walls, wrought-iron railings and more.

“Well .... I do plan on putting up fences at some point,” Bru says with a twinkle.

You can dismiss Northwood Golf Academy as Costner-like foolishness, but only until you see the photos showing the kids who call the place home Tuesdays and Thursdays in the summer. The 2014 class starts June 18. She expects to turn away 30 or so kids.

Further proof is in the money and where it’s come from. She’s wisely spent about $90,000 to repurpose the area. The money’s come from local foundations such as Wean, Youngstown and Community; Youngstown Neighborhood Development Corp., PNC Bank charitable trusts and Youngstown CIRV.

Most impressive — the United States Golf Association gave her $20,000.

To read the full story at Vindy.com, click here.

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In recognition of National Homeownership Month, the Ohio Housing Finance Agency (OHFA) Board presented the Youngstown Neighborhood Development Corporation with the 2014 Spirit of Homeownership Excellence Award (SHEA) yesterday.

Additionally, the Board received a proclamation from Governor John Kasich in honor of the celebratory month.

The SHEAs were created by OHFA to highlight quality initiatives that promote homeownership opportunities and accessibility across the state. Entries are judged on a number of factors including innovation, length of program, geographical reach, coordination with local, state and/or national partners and the project's ability to be replicated.

The YNDC was selected for its Community Loan Fund (CLF) program, which provides first-mortgage financing in underserved communities to encourage revitalization and economic recovery in transitional Youngstown neighborhoods. In addition to the financing, the CLF program provides buyers with services including financial training, resource coordination and property repair. To date, 54 Ohioans, comprising 18 families have purchased homes through the CLF program. The fund helps families become homeowners and makes a positive impact on the city by reducing crime and blight. For example, in Youngstown's Idora neighborhood where 12 homes were financed by the loan, vacancy was reduced from 26 percent in 2007 to 7 percent in 2013. The 2014 SHEA was accepted by YNDC Program Coordinator Tiffany Sokol.

To read the full story from OHFA, click here.

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Kevin Bachhuber unzips the vinyl panel of a large square tent and peels back the insulated fabric that reveals a Mylar-laced chamber.

Inside are some really noisy inhabitants.

These inhabitants are in plastic storage bins – the same ones you buy at any discount store – whose lids have been partially cut open and screened. As you look inside the bins, their contents wiggle, jump, crawl and, yes, chirp.

Welcome to Big Cricket Farms, the first indoor farm in the country designed to breed crickets specifically for human consumption. The company, working with the Youngstown Business Incubator, has garnered press coverage in New Scientist magazine.

“This is not a company we’d typically work with,” says Jim Cossler, CEO of the incubator. “But these are extremely bright young kids and that’s what we need in this area.”

Cossler says Bachhuber and his partners were in town last year, reached out to the incubator and the team just “fell in love with Youngstown,” he says. “Plus, it’s a unique, novel business that’s received some national press.”

It’s young people such as Bachhuber who provide the lifeblood of the city’s future, Cossler says. “It’s exactly the thing that will make Youngstown prosper. Folks all across the country realize it’s a cool place to start a business.”

Big Cricket is leasing office space in the incubator building. Just seven weeks into operations, it also occupies an old warehouse that’s chirping with activity.

“These have the capacity for 200,000 to 250,000 full-grown crickets,” Bachhuber says as he points to one of the four tents housed in a once-abandoned warehouse along Marshall Street in Youngstown. “Crickets like it between 80 degrees and 88 degrees,” he says, “and humidity about 90%.”

Big Cricket Farms breeds and nurtures the insects until they’re between six and eight weeks old, the age when crickets are “at their maximum tastiness,” Bachhuber says. Then the crickets are frozen and shipped to a processor where they are ground into flour and baked into products such as chips, health bars and cookies.

Why? Because crickets are rich in protein and present a healthful alternative to the traditional ingredients you find at the grocery store, Bachhuber says.

“In 2006, I went to Thailand, and it’s a staple part of the diet there,” Bachhuber says. “When I came back, I was disappointed you couldn’t get this kind of food here.”

Big Cricket Farms leaped into business after the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations issued a 206-page report late last year that touted the benefits of edible insect cultivation. The objective of the study was to “raise awareness of the many valuable roles that insects play in sustaining nature and human life and will also serve to document the contribution insects already make to diversifying diets and improving food security,” the paper says.

Bacchuber took that study to heart. “The report basically said, ‘Hey, Western World, everybody else is doing this. Maybe you should, too,” he says. “That’s been the mobilization point.”

Less than two months ago, Bacchuber and his partner, Jaci Ampulski, director of operations, relocated from California to set up shop in the Mahoning Valley. “I’m from Green Bay originally,” he says. “We were in California most recently, but we came here – we liked it here better.”

Bachhuber was looking for a “Rust Belt” town with a declining population to start the business, he says, and fell in love with Youngstown. “It’s one of those Rust Belt cities that’s clearly coming back, if it hasn’t already.”

Organizations such as the Youngstown Neighborhood Development Corp. and the Youngstown Business Incubator are the type of groups that Bachhuber says is pointing the city in the right direction. He’s s since moved to the Wick Park neighborhood.

To read the full story from the Business Journal, click here.

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In recognition of National Homeownership Month, the Ohio Housing Finance Agency (OHFA) Board presented the Youngstown Neighborhood Development Corporation with the 2014 Spirit of Homeownership Excellence Award (SHEA) yesterday.

Additionally, the Board received a proclamation from Governor John Kasich in honor of the celebratory month.

The SHEAs were created by OHFA to highlight quality initiatives that promote homeownership opportunities and accessibility across the state. Entries are judged on a number of factors including innovation, length of program, geographical reach, coordination with local, state and/or national partners and the project’s ability to be replicated.

The YNDC was selected for its Community Loan Fund (CLF) program, which provides first-mortgage financing in underserved communities to encourage revitalization and economic recovery in transitional Youngstown neighborhoods. In addition to the financing, the CLF program provides buyers with services including financial training, resource coordination and property repair. To date, 54 Ohioans, comprising 18 families have purchased homes through the CLF program. The fund helps families become homeowners and makes a positive impact on the city by reducing crime and blight. For example, in Youngstown’s Idora neighborhood where 12 homes were financed by the loan, vacancy was reduced from 26 percent in 2007 to 7 percent in 2013. The 2014 SHEA was accepted by YNDC Program Coordinator Tiffany Sokol.

To read the full story from RealEstateRama, click here.