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Sandy Tabor cuddles Logan Thompson, reflecting on her years living in the Plattsburgh Housing System. Tabor loves living in the housing and likes the fact that a lot of the children refer to her as, Grandma.
Staff Photo/Rob Fountain /



Published April 13, 2008 09:30 pm - This the second installment in a six-part series on Plattsburgh Housing Authority, about how people who live there refuse to be stereotyped.
Click the link below to see Robin Caudell's video: "No Place Like Home: An Overview of the Plattsburgh Housing Authority."


Residents fight 'The Projects' stigma
Housing Authority real life doesn't match stereotypes

By ROBIN CAUDELL
Staff Writer

PLATTSBURGH -- "The Projects."

Americans are conditioned to visualize graffitized surfaces, trashy grounds and lawlessness when thinking of public housing.

The national picture fragments with the Plattsburgh Housing Authority. It doesn't fit the stereotype.

"I think it's important news to get out about housing," said Sandy Tabor, a resident of the Housing Authority. "People think people who live in (public) housing are dirty and poor. You can still live decently, and your kids can be raised decently."

Tabor, a former nursing assistant at Albany Medical Center, relocated north to help her daughter, who became too ill to raise her children.

"My kids are in sports and are A and B students," Tabor said of her grandchildren. "They have a lot of friends who don't live here. It's important. People are stigmatizing people who live here as low-class, dirty people. That's wrong. It's people who can't afford to live outside."

PLACE TO START

Donna Bushey agrees. Plattsburgh Housing Authority is not the graffiti slum that people picture.

"It's not a bad place for people to live starting out," said Bushey, who lives on McGaulley Avenue. "If you lose your job, they adjust it (the rent) based on your income. It's not low-income anymore. When I was growing up, people had a job."

In Plattsburgh Housing Authority, as elsewhere, children will be children.

"It depends on the parent," Bushey said. "People get the impression if kids get in trouble, they come from the projects. Kids in the North End of the city get into trouble, too.

"The kids here are pretty decent. If a child breaks a window here, you (the parents) have to pay for it."

FELT STIGMA

Plattsburgh Police Chief Desmond Racicot spent his childhood on Plattsburgh Housing Authority property. He said there was a definite stigma growing up in the projects, but most of it came from a lack of understanding from the rest of the community.

"All I know is that I grew up in a very loving home, and we had good neighbors, and there were many great programs here," Racicot said.



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