Knox declines sharing Section 8 administration with Guilderland

— Photo from Google Street View

Brandywine Apartments is one of the complexes in Guilderland that has a Project-Based Section 8 contract with the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development.

KNOX — Knox will not be allowing Guilderland to take over administration of its Section 8 housing slots, as Guilderland Town Board members had hoped

The proposal had such little support among the Knox Town Board members that it didn’t make it to a vote at their Oct. 10 meeting, Supervisor Russ Pokorny told The Enterprise this week. 

“It seemed to me like it was kind of a done deal,” Pokorny said, “although I actually felt a little bad about losing our identity to some extent.”

However, he added, those in Knox who need affordable housing would have been served “just as well” whether the low-income housing slots were administered by Knox or Guilderland.

If the board had made the transfer, “even if you’re from Knox, you’d still be on the top of the list. But the board didn’t like the feel of it and wouldn’t vote on it.” 

Pokorny told The Enterprise last month that Knox has 12 slots that it’s had trouble filling. Part of the reason is that Section 8 only covers rental properties, of which Knox has relatively few. 

Transferring the administration would have meant that Knox residents with qualifying incomes could get housing in Guilderland, said Nancie Williams, the Outreach and Home Program coordinator for the company that handles Section 8 for both towns, JEM Inc.

JEM had suggested the consolidation for fear of losing the Knox slots altogether, said Williams.

She noted, “HUD hasn’t increased allocations for vouchers for years.”

Williams told The Enterprise earlier, “HUD has asked us to look at programs and consolidate when it makes sense.”

She said it made sense to consolidate the administration of the programs in Guilderland and Knox — there are no other Hilltowns involved in the Section 8 program — because HUD could look at an underutilized program and could cut funding.

Guilderland has a Section 8 waiting list with 200 people on it, and it’s been almost five years since anyone has come off the list, according to JEM Inc. The Guilderland board unanimously passed a resolution on Sept. 19 to accept the transfer of Knox’s slots, should that town pass its own resolution making the offer. 

More Hilltowns News

  • First responders arrived at 1545 Thompsons Lake Road in Knox early Tuesday morning to find the home there completely engulfed in flames. Two bodies were recovered. 

  • The $830,000 entrusted to the town of Rensselaerville two years ago has been tied up in red tape ever since, but an attorney for the town recently announced that the town has been granted a cy prés to move the funds to another trustee, which he said was the “major hurdle” in the ordeal.  

  • Berne Supervisor Dennis Palow told The Enterprise that the town will pay $200,000 to Albany County for its emergency medical service, using a roughly-$320,000 revenue check he says will come in January. 

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