By Cecil Angel

Detroit Free Press Staff Writer


In the Davison Freeway and East McNichols area on Detroit's east side, Rosetta Newby knows the cost of living in a neighborhood marked by abandonment.

Her homeowners insurance is escalating, and no other company will insure her at an affordable rate, she said. Her bank turned her down for a loan for new windows and other improvements to her home of 44 years on Charest.

There's no grocery store near her, and few streetlights work. All that's left is a sprinkle of residents, shells of houses and vacant lots framed by crumbling sidewalks.

Living on Social Security, and at 75, Newby has few options.

"If I had the money, I'd move," Newby said.

That's exactly what the city is banking on.

Amid dwindling population and revenue, the city is trying to encourage -- or push -- people out of rundown neighborhoods that are largely vacant, yet drain the city of its resources. That means many of the services that once were available to residents such as Newby are no longer an option in her neighborhood and others.

One of the biggest changes involves the citywide drawing for the Senior Emergency Home Repair program funded by Community Development Block Grants.

Previously, an average of 5,000 people would stand in line for hours at Cobo Center hoping to be one of the 500 or so seniors chosen in a lottery to receive home repair grants of up to $12,000. Now, those living in neighborhoods deemed distressed, like Newby, are not eligible to receive the grants.
http://www.freep.com/article/2012052...text|FRONTPAGE