Posts Tagged ‘Chambers Court’

Woodstock Generation Goes Gray

Monday, September 13th, 2010

Aging mid-Hudson boomers face big challenges

Times Herald-Record 9/12/2010 By Chris Mckenna

Photo caption: Sherrie and Fred DeBergh of Warwick, active baby boomers who love to participate in outdoor sports, go for a paddle in Wawayanda State Park in New Jersey.

As a huge number of Americans born between 1946 and 1964 reach retirement age, local and national governments fear services will be stretched too thin.

Photo credit: JOHN DeSANTO/Times Herald-Record

Earlier this month, a graying Crosby, Stills and Nash strolled onto the stage at Sullivan County’s Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, site of the famous Woodstock festival they performed at 41 years earlier, and treated their equally graying audience to some old chestnuts.

“Teach,” they crooned, “your children well.”

Sound advice, indeed; but their fans have a different set of concerns these days.

America’s baby boomers, the large generation that began after World War II and came of age in the Woodstock era, are nearing retirement age.

A group whose ’60s soundtrack included rebellious lines like “Hope I die before I get old” will soon qualify for senior-citizen discounts at the movie theater.

The aging of 79 million Americans born between 1946 and 1964 poses a host of challenges, such as: How will Social Security and Medicare taxes keep pace with the swelling ranks of retirees? And if large numbers of 60-somethings decide to stay put in their jobs instead of retiring, will they limit employment prospects for younger people?

In the Hudson Valley and Catskills, the rising ranks of the almost-old could exacerbate local problems that already are percolating, including the need for more affordable housing and public transportation. It could also intensify resistance to New York’s high property taxes.

Beware of 2015

Consider the looming demographic bulge: In 1990, about 73,000 people, or less than 13 percent of the population, were in the 50-64 age range in Orange, Ulster and Sullivan counties in New York and Pike County, Pa., according to the Census Bureau.

By 2008, more than 130,000 people, or 19 percent of the population, were in that age group.

“2015 is the year that everything is going to explode,” says Ann Marie Maglione, director of Orange County’s Office for the Aging. “The senior population is going to be bursting at the seams.”

Already, Maglione said, home health aides are scarce. Will that shortage make it harder for tomorrow’s seniors to stay in their homes? Will there be enough nursing-home beds for those who need long-term care or rehabilitation? And what effect will ballooning Medicaid costs for such services have on state and county budgets?

For many boomers, the golden years may not be as restful as they used to be. Since the mid-1990s, more Americans have continued working past age 65 — a trend that today’s weak economy and the collapse of retirement accounts is certain to continue.

The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics predicts the percentage of people ages 65 to 74 in the labor force will leap by 83.4 percent from 2006 to 2016.

Need for affordable housing

Working or not, empty nesters who want to downsize and lighten their property-tax burden may have trouble finding cheaper, smaller homes in the Hudson Valley and Catskills.

A study released last year that analyzed housing prices and incomes in three neighboring counties calculated that nearly 10,000 affordable houses and apartments should be built in Orange County by 2015 to keep pace with demand. Ulster County will need 6,000 new units in that time, the study said.

The thirst for affordable senior housing is so great that when construction of The Birches at Chambers in the Town of Ulster began in 2009, its 66 future apartments were already claimed. And those openings barely made a dent in the 400-person waiting list next door at the Chambers Court complex.

For the full article, part of the Times Herald-Record’s coverage of the Boomer Boom series, click here


County Executive Mike Hein Meets with Senior Residents

Tuesday, August 31st, 2010

Town of Ulster, 8/30/2010: Mike Hein joined the Senior Residents of The Birches at Chambers in their Community Room for a lively and informative discussion on senior resources and programs that are available through Ulster County. “Too often these resources are untapped, and the people who need them the most don’t know how to tap into services,” said Hein. (Alice is shown to the right of Mike Hein in the lead photo.)

Organizer of today’s event is Alice Tipp, the Senior Advocate for Birchez Associates, who services their four affordable senior communities in Ulster County. Alice works to coordinate services with the over 325 seniors who live at The Birches at Chambers, The Birches at Esopus, The Birches at Saugerties, and Chambers Court. Alice Tipp served as a county legislator for thirty years and is not shy in getting the right resources to “her” residents. “I am delighted that the County Executive took the time to be with us today. His enthusiasm is contagious and I know we all learned a great deal today,” said Ms. Tipp. Also welcoming Mike Hein were Steve and Judy Aaron the principals of Birchez Associates who built and manage The Birches at Chambers.

The Q&A portion of the program hit some topics outside the scope of strictly senior resources. Mike Hein in response to questions about taxes spoke of the need to consolidate services that are now duplicated between towns and the county. Following the formal presentation, the County Executive had the opportunity to speak briefly with many residents. Included was Joe Vanacore, a World War II Vet, who is concerned about the level of veterans’ benefits especially as he is dependent on a wheelchair these days. (Joe was recently featured in the book The Liberators: America’s Witnesses to the Holocaust by Michael Hirsh for his work with General Patton’s Tank Corps in liberating death camps in Germany.)

Harold Schumann, another resident, spent eleven years bouncing from hospitals to nursing homes before finding the appropriate ADA compliant, fully handicapped accessible home at The Birches at Chambers. He spoke to the County Executive about how happy he is now that he’s settled in his own apartment.

The Birchez Associates website, www.Birchez.com, has links on their communities pages to the resources Mike Hein spoke of in the Ulster County Care program, in addition to a variety of senior related, local recreational, historic sites, and more. To visit one of the links pages, click here.

Editor’s Note: Michael P. Hein, Ulster County Executive, was one of the presenters at the dedication of The Birches at Chambers on July 8th. For a video of his remarks, click here.


Rosendale Invites Birchez Associates

Friday, August 6th, 2010

August 6, 2010: On Wednesday, August 11, at 7pm, at the Rosendale Community Center on Route 32, members of the Rosendale community will have the chance to offer input on Birchez Associates’ recent proposal for affordable senior and workforce housing and a new town hall in the Town of Rosendale.  Invited by the town to submit a request for proposal (RFP), Birchez looks to continue its track record of bringing top quality, affordable senior housing to Rosendale, while also providing a unique solution to the town’s need for a new base of municipal operations.

In an effort to maximize sustainability and provide the town with a long-lasting building, Birchez Associates hasproposed that the long-vacant Tillson School be rehabbed as the new Town Hall.  The Kingston School District had vacated the Tillson School over 10 years ago and today it sits, on 8.4 acres, just attracting the occasional vandal. Instead, Birchez proposes transforming the existing school plant to a flexible and expandable Town Hall that could accommodate not only current needs but unforeseen needs in years to come (preliminary artist’s rendering pictured). In the interim, the Town could use 14,000 to 20,000 square feet of the structure and dedicate an additional 7,000 to 10,000 square feet to related town offices, community use and/or office rental, creating a Town Hall campus or complex. The site will provide plenty of parking, which may be an issue if the Creek Locks Road site is used for the Town Hall. Plus the location may serve as a magnet for Tillson businesses in this hamlet of the town of Rosendale.

Birchez’ proposal for the rehab of Tillson School envisions a LEED/sustainable approach to this adaptive reuse. “There’s no better way to recycle and be green than to reuse a building for something new,” said Judy Calogero, CEO of the New York Housing Conference and President of Calogero Partners who has participated in Birchez’ proposal. Ms. Calogero is former Commissioner of the New York State Division of Housing and Community Renewal, a key player in affordable housing in the state.

The Residential component in the proposal consists of the construction of up to 72 rental units. Some of the units may be designated rent to buy in the work force housing component; the majority are slated to be affordable senior apartments. The final composition is subject to further input from town residents. Landscaping plans incorporate public access to the Creek which hugs the property. This intergenerational housing concept would be LEED Certified and would incorporate extensive green and sustainable features such as solar photovoltaic, solar thermal, “green/living roofing” and pervious parking.

Birchez Associates recently completed its fifth affordable housing community in Ulster County, The Birches at Chambers, a 67 apartment complex adjacent to both the Chambers Elementary School and Chambers Court, a 72 apartment complex and the first affordable housing community Birchez built just six years ago. The Birches at Chambers, already certified by the New York State Energy & Development Agency (NYSERDA) as an Energy $mart Building, is on track to be the second largest multifamily – anywhere – to be certified as LEED (Leader in Energy & Environmental Design) Platinum by the Green Building Council.

Last year Birchez completed The Birches at Esopus, an 80 unit affordable senior community in Ulster Park. This was the first low-rise multifamily complex to be certified as an Energy $mart Building by NYSERDA. The Birches at Esopus garnered the 2010 Project of the Year – Upstate award by the New York State Association for Affordable Housing (NYSAFAH) and is currently one of four national finalists for Senior Project of the Year in a competition sponsored by Affordable Housing Finance Magazine (the winner will be announced in the November issue). Details on the existing Birchez Associates communities can be found on its website: http://www.Birchez.com.

The full proposal from Birchez Associates can be found on the Town of Rosendale’s website here: http://www.townofrosendale.com/forms/Birchez.pdf.  The executive summary can be found at pages 18-19. The proposal includes summaries of the proposed Town Hall project at the Tillson School, the Residential project on Creek Locks Road, and the Sewer Upgrade & Backup Water Supply project to which Birchez has proposed contributing substantially to the cost of grant submissions. (Note: the file is large, and will take a few minutes to open or download.)

Contact: K.J. McIntyre, Director of Marketing, Birchez Associates, 843-532-7528 or kjmcintyre@birchez.com


Resident Profile: Aleta Elsworth

Wednesday, August 4th, 2010

For Aleta Elsworth, a nurse’s aide for 27 years who was born and raised in Kingston, there’s simply no place like home.

“My husband and I went to Florida for seven months,” she says.  “Only seven months — we came back to Kingston.  All our family was here.”

Aleta has a big family.  Between her and her husband, Clarence, there are 10 kids (three of her own, seven step-children), and she has two younger (twin) sisters who live in the same community as her at Chambers Court in the Town of Ulster.

“A lot of people think we’re triplets, but I’m the oldest,” says Aleta of her sisters.  “They’re twins.  They’re funny, and a lot of people here get the biggest kick out of them, because they bicker at each other,” she laughs.

Things weren’t always so easy for Aleta and her sisters, though.

“I lived on Franklin Street with my sisters and my mom,” she recalls.  “I took care of my mom, and she lived with me for quite awhile, and then she passed away.  Then we couldn’t afford it  anymore because the rent was too high, and we had to pay all the utilities…so we had to find another place.  I had had an application in here at Chambers Court, but Birches in Saugerties was opening up, so I lived there first.  And then when a cottage unit became available at Chambers Court, I moved here, because I really wanted to be here.  This is convenient to everything — you can go to ShopRite, you can go to the mall — it’s really, really nice.”

Since moving to Chambers Court, Aleta has enjoyed all of what it and its neighboring community, The Birches at Chambers, have to offer.  She and Clarence are frequent visitors to the fitness studio, and Aleta makes routine appearances at the regularly held community tea parties.

“And I know they have the computer lab — I really don’t know anything about computers, but I want to learn.  So I’m interested in that,” she adds.

But it’s not just the fun stuff that makes Aleta love her home: the convenience of having a handicapped accessible apartment has truly improved her quality of life, as she’s sometimes unable to get around without a wheelchair.

“I’ve had four different surgeries on my feet and I have two more to go, and it’s great that my apartment is handicapped accessible,” she says.  “It has a roll in shower, because when I have my surgery, I can’t walk.”

Aleta is also a strong supporter of Alice Tipp, the Birches Communities’ official Senior Advocate.  Without her, says Aleta, she would have been lost.

“I took my brother-in-law in because he had had a stroke, and my husband and I had power of attorney, and we were his healthcare proxy,” says Aleta.  “Alice helped me because I didn’t know what to do, because we were legally responsible for him.  She called and got me an appointment with an attorney at the Ulster County Office for the Aging. They helped us take care of that situation and resolve it.  She’s wonderful.”

And Alice Tipp isn’t the only member of the Birchez staff that Aleta appreciates.

“Steve Aaron — each place he builds is better than the last one.  I’ve never had a problem.  I’m very happy here.”

Brian Rubin for Birchez Associates, birchezassociates@gmail.com


The next phase for Birchez Associates

Thursday, July 15th, 2010

Aaron’s Birchez Associates opens fifth affordable housing facility in Ulster

Kingston Times, July 15, 2010  By Carrie Jones Ross   Pictured Below Right: Library/Game Room at The Birches at Chambers

The enigma stealing sleep from the burgeoning legion of baby boomers – “Where can I afford to live when I retire? Will it be safe? Will it be clean? Will I be lonely?” – just got a little easier to figure out.

Dignitaries from the county and state joined other people of influence and three full tents of perspiring seniors during last Thursday’s oppressive heat wave to cut the ribbon commemorating some 75 seniors  (62 and older) moving into the fully sustainable and LEED-certified 66 newly-constructed, 600+ square-foot apartments at Birches at Chambers on Maple Lane in the Town of Ulster. Chambers is fifth in a line of desperately-needed affordable housing projects in Ulster County built by developer Steve Aaron; his previous projects include Chambers Court, Birches at Esopus, Birches at Saugerties and Birchwood Village. The $16 million complex will be the first platinum-rated LEED-certified project of its kind in Ulster County.

Imagine paying a fixed monthly rent between $596 and $721 for a one-bedroom apartment. What would you get? Well-lit, freshly-carpeted halls with security cameras? Laundry rooms furnished with handicapped-accessible, brand-new machines for the long-gone bargain price of $1 a wash on every floor? A secure computer room with four flat-screen panel monitors? A free gym filled with new machines and classes just an elevator ride away? A beautifully furnished library with games and a community room with a kitchen and French doors leading to a patio? Media room with kitchenette? Would you expect beautifully kept grounds with a full-time groundskeeper and state-of-the-art security? In all likelihood, no, but Aaron’s new project promises all those amenities.

The community was designed for those who earn less than 60 percent of the area median income (currently $29,480 for a single person). The shift to friendlier colloquialisms reflects our slowly evolving views on affordable housing. Aaron emphatically concurred with the opening ceremonies speech given by County Executive Mike Hein when he stated, “It’s not about bricks and mortar, it’s about people – dignified housing for people.”

Aaron explained that his company has been dedicated to answering seniors’ and working families’ mounting housing crisis and has “gotten a little smarter” with each project. “We didn’t start off wondering what to do to be LEED-compliant,” Aaron explained. “But we found that we were already doing all that anyway.”

Birches at Esopus and Saugerties got the ball rolling forward with Energy Star appliances and energy-efficient radiant floor heat. Aaron took the Birches at Chambers project all the way, by including even more things like 97 percent-efficient Swiss-made boilers to accommodate the smart-design European heating system and solar hot water heaters. There are also energy recovery units recycling air through HEPA filters also pouring into a series of cooling condensers for air conditioning, eliminating the potentially harmful bacteria that collect in vents and ducts and saving big money for residents on extra-tight incomes.

Birchez is also referred to as “phase two”, conjoining the 2005-built Chambers Court community, oriented for 55 and older active lifestyle seniors. Aaron broke ground for Birches at Chambers in February 2009 to build the facility for residents with mobility issues. A community dining hall is in the works, at which point Birches at Chambers may likely go in the direction of assisted living, he said. Each apartment does have a kitchen (equipped with Energy Star appliances), however, those residents who do not cook rely upon the Meals on Wheels program.

Elant Home Health Care has an office in Birches and holds twice-weekly wellness clinics. ”We meet with the families, and if they opt for services we link with their primary practioner and devise care plans,” Elant health coordinator Kelly Ketcham explained. The goal, Ketcham stressed, is, “to keep people in their home setting, prevent hospitalizations and nursing home placements.” She added, “I do this for my head and heart, because that’s what I would want done for me.”

Aaron, who sits in good company on the executive committee of the Ulster County Housing Consortium, has his eyes on the horizon line of several locations including Fishkill, New Paltz and Ellenville. Aaron recently also submitted a building proposal in the Town of Rosendale in response to their request for affordable senior housing.

A myriad of agencies came together to make the building possible, including Enterprise Community Investments who notably found investors to actually finance portions of the project during this tight-fisted economy. One such financier was the “Oracle of Omaha” – Warren Buffett, who according to Aaron, has been financing affordable housing for years.

It did not come together without some issues, though. Aaron, who supported and employed former Town of Ulster supervisor Nick Woerner, got into a dispute earlier this year over alleged safety issues at Chambers Phase II with the town board led by the man who beat Woerner, Supervisor James Quigley. The spat held up the project’s temporary certificate of occupancy, which held up some of the first residents’ moving-in dates. Charges and counter-charges flew between Aaron and Quigley, but the dispute was resolved on March 31, allowing residents to claim their apartments.

They love it here

A group of residents rested in the bright, crisp entrance room from the day’s oppressive heat during the ribbon-cutting and subsequent luncheon, talking excitedly in a group about their appreciation of the new facility. Resident Clara McGill said that she always enjoyed visiting Kingston as a place to shop and dine, but never before considered living there until Birches at Chambers was built. “I have rented most of my life, and I have never seen anything like this place. It’s incredible here. Sometimes I even feel guilty for having this place,” McGill said. Lifelong Kingston resident “Mary” agreed. “We have fallen into a gold mine here. It was a little rough in the beginning, but I don’t think we could ask for a better place to live. The amenities are incredible.”

The residents commented on how often they see Aaron and his wife Judy, and how easily they can communicate with the couple. They love the decor (for which Judy is responsible), the fitness studio, their apartments (“It’s beautiful!” they crooned), and asked the Kingston Times to put out a message of sincere thanks to everyone on their behalf; to the Aarons, groundskeepers, maintenance and security.

To discuss the article in Ulster Publishing’s forum, click here and scroll to the bottom of the article.

Funding for senior housing a concern, officials say

Tuesday, February 10th, 2009

By WILLIAM J. KEMBLE
Correspondent

TOWN OF ULSTER — Speaking at a ceremonial groundbreaking Monday for the 66-unit Birches at Chambers housing complex, U.S. Rep. Maurice Hinchey expressed concerns that construction of more affordable senior citizen housing may become harder to fund given the economic climate.

Hinchey, D-Hurley, spoke before about 70 people were gathered at Chambers Court on the 4-acre site that is expected to be ready for occupancy by July.

“A lot of it will depend upon what happens with this stimulus package,” Hinchey said.

“We don’t know how much money is going to be put into infrastructure,” Hinchey said. “In the Senate bill there’s $40 billion that is being taken out so far that would go into the state. That money for the state would be flown into housing and things like this.”

Developer Steve Aaron said the 52 one-bedroom and 14 two-bedroom units will cost $15 million to build. This will be the fifth set of units built by his firm Birchez Associates, which has an adjacent development as well as completed projects in Kingston, the town of Saugerties, and Esopus.

Marian Zucker, executive vice president of the state Housing Finance Agency, said funding for Birches at Chambers became difficult last year due to changes in the economy.

“Financing affordable housing as you might imagine in the current environment, where banks are cutting back so severely on their lending, is not the easiest of things,” she said.

“These factors came close I would say to derailing this project last year,” Zucker said. “If it weren’t for the work of a lot of people … most importantly Mr. Aaron, who stepped forward to put his money where his mouth is, this project could have come unglued.”

Town Board members in December approved a 30-year payment-in-lieu-of-taxes agreement for the Birches at Chambers senior housing complex, allowing the developer to secure $10.3 million in low-interest state loans.

The agreement drew strong objections from residents, though the terms for annual payments of $100 per unit plus 2 percent of gross rent increases were the same as the terms approved for the neighboring Chambers Court complex.

Aaron said efforts to build more affordable housing should be considered an economic stimulus.

“During construction, the Birches at Chambers will have employed up to 100 construction workers, with the vast majority being local,” he said.

“When completed in July it will create full- and part-time employment for staff needed to maintain and operate the facility,” Aaron said. “For every dollar spent on a project like this, the Birches at Chambers, it can generate as much as seven dollars back into the local economy.”


Developer Grows in Response to Critical Need

Thursday, December 22nd, 2005
December 22, 2005

BIRCHEZ ASSOCIATES: Kingston-Based
Developer Grows in Response to Critical Need

by Chester J. Straub, Jr.

BIRCHEZ ASSOCIATES: Kingston-Based
Developer Grows in Response to Critical Need….

BIRCHEZ ASSOCIATES: Kingston-Based Developer Grows in Response to Critical Need….

Birchez Associates was founded by Kingston developer Steve Aaron, in response to the critical need for affordable housing in Ulster County. After building two highly successful communities in Ulster County, with several more in various stages of development, Birchez has earned a reputation for creating original strategies and partnerships to build innovative communities designed specifically for workforce families, senior citizens, single parents and veterans. (more…)