vs Help for housing B-CS offers programs to aid low-income homehuyers THE BATTALION WEDNESDAY, MARCH 14, 1979 Page 3 By KAREN CORNELISON | Special to The Battalion iven-yeai|The ,roof leaks, the toilet doesn’t i the R, lush, and the rats are getting more ^nationallumerous than the cockroaches, is A&M'JThere may be help for the occu- lants of this house, if they qualify. Inflation, combined with a low iterest rate ceiling in Texas, has lade buying a house more difficult , ( >r the middle-income homebuyer, HlCll next to impossible for young eople and lower-income people. |] ^ t ] nt there are a variety of programs i-Collei i n the Bryan-College Sta- | ^ U( i on area designed to help low- x [S ^ icome groups obtain safe and sanit- 'ohi) 1 m™ ^ as ^ urt t ^ ,e ^ ous i n g i n ' i|- ustry because of the increased r ’ a rice of building materials and con- a luctipn costs, causing the price of ew homes and home improvement i rise significantly. Locally, the average price of a ew home was $42,843 in the third uarter of 1978 — an 8.9 percent Hrase from a year ago. ANOTHER FACTOR which inders home buying is the diffi- iflfh ^ * n obtaining loans due to the b IW interest rate ceiling in Texas (10 ercent). Bills in various stages of rill celf igislation propose to raise that rate A buffet 112 percent, but none have been Legion (proVed. spouses (Savings and loan associations are merican fiking fewer home loans locally veterans W more loans in out-of-state mar- to Phil Its, where they can charge a igher interest rate and get a better Hrafor their investors. “The home loans that are made re harder to get, especially for the aung and the old,” one local real statejagent said. Lenders will usu- lly only approve a loan that is twice le borrower’s annual gross income, he said. When money was not so ght, lenders would approve a loan >rtwo-and-a-half times the income, defense j We don’t like to lend more than lentifieiliPlyour income,” agreed Elaine shooting|°yak a loan officer at Bryan Build- med the|g & jLoan. “However, we also look dhavea|h° w long you’ve had your job, ise ital §FP rev i° us j°bs, and how stable a ct Judgepy°u have.” e took it ge. Bur- Texas, is d, Okie, rom the nd visit the Four Texas A&M University stu- lents have been chosen to com- nand major units in the Texas A&M 1979-80 Corps of Cadets. Michael Snow from San Antonio dll be commander of the Army 10TC brigade, Brian Hill from Aus- inwill be commander of the Naval 10TC regiment, Robert Ingram om: Elmendorf Air Force Base, laska, will be commander of the ir Force ROTC wing and Gregory tew from Freeport will be com- lander of the Texas Aggie Band. As cadet colonels, the quartet will e at the second level of the com- land structure by which the Cadet iorps operates. Next year’s corps ammander, at the top of the com ma chain, will be Bill Dugat of Veslaco. Each will be seniors next fall, as re all cadet commissioned officers i the Corps. Cadet non- ammissioned officers come from He junior class. Snow, Hill, Ingram and Dew hold he rank of sergeant major of the re- iective units this year. They have .1 or better grade point ratios on exas A&M’s 4.0 system and are members of the Ross Volunteers, exas A&M’s honor guard. al There are some housing assis tance programs in Bryan-College Station for low-income people, al though the College Station City Council recently decided against supporting a proposed low-income housing complex in the city. CITY ATTORNEY Neeley Lewis recommended that College Station not enter into a contract for this housing development because of proposed changes in Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) regulations that would greatly expand the role of the city in such associations. “We (the city) sponsor the is suance of bonds right now,” he said, “but we re really a third, incidental party. It’s a contract between HUD and the developers.” The new HUD rule would make the city responsi ble for making sure residents are el igible and checking to see that buil ders are doing everything right, he said. Callaway also mentioned a rental assistance program, which allows qualified people for government rent subsidies, and a proposed project for the elderly of a 50-unit low-density housing project at a rea sonable price. But the most recent program to be enacted is a housing rehabilita tion program, headed by Callaway, which began two weeks ago. “The government will issue fed eral funds allocated in maximum grants of $5,000 to rehabilitate low- income housing,” Callaway said. The purpose of the program is to correct health and safety violations and to improve individual structures in order to bring each one up to the city’s housing code. A TOTAL OF $50,000 has been al located to operate the program. This figures to roughly 8-10 houses, said Jane Key, College Station housing programs coordinator. If the pro gram is successful, more money will be allotted in June. The process of qualifying and actually receiving the benefits of this program is compli cated. Initial contact with homeowners )se atomic ystems jntialiy an im- i seven !S . The rt, Pa.; Scriba, i/ Arav v for a Islamic Amin uproot nself a iple of tedby iaid by m said id that andan Now you know p United Press International p rocket is not a modem inven- ion; it was invented by the Chinese s far back as A. D. 1200, a century iefore the cannon. Dew, a safety engineering major, is an Air Force cadet on a pilot con tract. Due to be commissioned in the U.S. Army on graduation. Snow majors in agricultural engineering. Hill and Ingram, majoring in building construction and manage ment, are drills and ceremonies cadets, which means they are not in commissioning programs. They chose corps membership for the leadership and experience it provides. Hill is a junior yell leader. Most fire deaths in isolated blazes, new study says United Press International MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. — Cata strophic fires that cause numerous deaths get the biggest headlines, but 65 percent of fire fatalities occur by ones and twos in home fires, ac cording to Ed Roach of Honeywell. A university study has estimated that 80 percent of these deaths would have been prevented by smoke detectors. Phe Belgians, not the French, in- I'ented french-fried potatoes. owers I )W tO' Imanas don’t grow on trees; they up tO ?ow on a stalk that has no woody trunk. If you have money to invest . . . Optional Retirement Plan Tax Sheltered Annuity Deferred Compensation Financial Planning Call Hays Glover GUGGENHEIM GLOVER, ASSOCIATES 779-5555 ,gress ..w "■• Liz S David^ ott Pef .. .Ste' 1 bbie . Roger* Petty, Stone, ■vett, >oug ^ LeschF LynnJ .Gary" G 9 pm - 1 am R Sat - c 8 pm -12 pm I G Mon.-Fri. . , ■ AGGIELAND INN L I B I R A R Y L 0 U N G JL Was made through a newspaper ad vertisement, letters distributed to city councilmen and some people who had shown some interest in such a program. Then came interviewing the ap plicants, which was last week. To be eligible for the program, a person must fill out an application concern ing the people living in the house, the income of those people, and their present housing and other ex penses. From this, a committee de termined whether the net income is within the limits set by HUD. For example, a four-member family cannot be netting more than $11,450 yearly to qualify. The house must be located in an area designated in College Station’s approved Housing Assistance Plan, and it must be in a condition that could be brought up to the required standards of the City Housing Code within the $5,000 limit. “There’s not a whole lot you can do with $5,000,” Key added. THE CITY HOUSING Code, which is more strict than the HUD guidelines, outlines acceptable con ditions for sanitary housing facilities, food preparation and re fuse disposal, space and security, and actual structure of the building. For example, the code says that “ceilings, walls, and floors shall not have any serious defects such as se vere bulging or leaning, large holes, loose surface materials, severe buck ling or noticeable movement under walking stress...” Once an applicant is determined eligible, and the information on his application is verified, an inspection is made of the house and an estimate of the cost of the needed repairs is made. If the structure is determined eligible, the grant is approved and all proposed changes are explained to the owner. Bids will be taken on the con struction work, contracts signed, and the work begun. The work will be monitored by the city. The com pleted work will be inspected and certified, and complaints about it will be handled for one year. “A direct grant program is easier than working with savings and loans,” Key said. “If this program is successful, though, we may start a loan program.” A GRANT PROGRAM for housing improvement, similar to the one in College Station, has been in effect in Bryan since October 1977. “We have up to $4,000 (per house rehabilitated) to make health and safety repairs,” said Elisa Eubank, Bryan Community Development Planner. She outlined the eligibility requirements, which are very much like College Station’s. “We look at the house and decide what’s needed,” she said, “but it’s usually not what they (the occupants) want. We usually do plumbing, electric ity, and paint the outside so it will look like we did something. “It’s gone fairly well,” she con tinued. ‘We’ve done 40 or 50 houses so far, but some people are dissatis fied.” The program was designed by Eubank and Bob Wimbish, com munity development coordinator, as a result of the HUD Community Development Act of 1974. One drawback to housing re habilitation programs is the time in volved from application to actual re pairs done. “There is a long waiting list,” Eubank said. “If we were caught up, it would take one to three months, depending on the contractors and the weather. But with us behind, it could take eight months.” The grants in both cities are not meant to be paid back. Seminar to help industries grow Basic training in industrial development will begin here Sunday for 50 members of industrial development boards, chambers of com merce, banks, utility companies and state and federal agencies. The course is the 13th conducted at Texas A&M University and will combine background theory and actual case studies of industrial development techniques, said Harold Chilton, course director. Robert B. Seal, a senior vice president of the Republic National Bank of Dallas, will serve as dean of the course. Among the 18 speakers are five from Brazos County. The men and subjects are: Bookman Peters, chairman of the board. City National Bank, Bryan, “The Economy and Its Effect on Industrial Develop ment"; Chilton, Texas A&M’s Industrial Economics Research Divi sion, “Selling Your Community"; and Dr. J.P. Abbott, professor emeritus of English, “The Theory of Communication Spoken, Written, Printed and Group.” % DELIVERY FRI.-SAT.-SUNDAY 6 till closing 4&M Corps names | it commanders Lm continues Rock and Roll Month Thurs. March 15 — With the Lowdown BOYS TOWN BLUES BAND M2 S. Texas 693-0205 ! PIZZA INN PIZZA INN iff o o 0 4! U1 o 0 3 any medium or large pizza any giant pizza with f with this coupon this coupon ) Valid thru 3-21-79 | Valid thru 3-21-79 846-8749 Minimum Order $ 3 00 AMERICA’S FAVORITE PIZZA No other coupons valid with this delivery. Before we interview you, we’d like you to interview yourself. Take a good look at yourself. That way you won’t make a mistake. Would you be happy working and living in a small or medium-size com munity, with a good starting salary and the promise of steady advancement? Are you ready to reach out to other people because you know their every day lives depend a great deal on total communications as provided by General Telephone? Are you the kind of person who isn’t afraid of individual responsibility? We’ll be on campus March 27 and 28. If you’re interested in an interview, see your Placement Officer. Or send resumes or call collect to: Armando Anaya Personnel Recruiter P.O. Box 1001 San Angelo, Texas 76902 915 944-5143 Do you think you can jump right in and help us in important areas — areas like engineering, business ad ministration, accounting, and a few others? If so, we’re anxious to meet you. Better still, we’d like you to meet us. Your grades are important. But what’s more important is how you use your head. Just be honest with yourself. Would you want you working for General Telephone? Gin GENERAL TELEPHONE COMPANY OF THE SOUTHWEST A Part of the GTE System An Equal Opportunity Employer