Plan for Transformation (2000) In 2000, the CHA began its "Plan For Transformation", which called for the demolition of all of its gallery
high-rise buildings and proposed a renovated housing portfolio totaling 25,000 units. While demolition began almost immediately, CHA was slow to develop
mixed-income housing or provide
Section 8 vouchers as planned.
Plan Forward (2013) In April 2013, CHA created "Plan Forward"the next phase of redeveloping public housing in Chicago. The plan includes the rehabilitation of other scattered-site, senior, and lower-density properties; construction of
mixed-income housing; increasing economic sales around CHA developments; and providing educational and job training to residents with Section 8 vouchers. In 2015, the
Secretary of Housing and Urban Development criticized the Chicago Housing Authority for accumulating a cash reserve of $440 million at a time when more than a quarter million people were on the agency's waiting list for
affordable housing, and a large number of units (16%) remained vacant. By March 2017, only 8% of the 17,000 demolished households had been replaced with mixed-income units. Many lots remain vacant decades after demolition, and the CHA has been selling, leasing, or trading land in gentrifying neighborhoods to other government agencies and the private sector for less than market value. Land owned by the CHA has been used to build two
Target stores, a private tennis complex, and government facilities at a time when over 30,000 people are awaiting mixed-income housing assistance from the CHA. One notable resident, Chicago alderwoman
Jeanette Taylor, revealed that she applied for assistance as a single mother in 1993 and received an approval letter almost thirty years later in May 2022. More than 20 years after the initial plan was announced, then-
Chicago mayor Lori Lightfoot announced in June 2021 that finishing the redevelopment of
Cabrini-Green alone will take at least another 12 years and could total upwards of $1 billion. As of late 2024, the agency is still struggling to keep up with its pledges to rehab vacant homes and maintain their units. Reports of rodents, mold, water leaks, and broken equipment go unresolved for months or years, even after privatization of property management. Only a few dozen homes have been refurbished. The CHA has acknowledged they need to do better and has said their 2025 budget includes money for "investments in occupied public housing units, including updates to fixtures, flooring, appliances, hot water tanks, furnaces and appliances where replacements are required.” ==Demographics==