
Latoya Evans smiled as she walked through the two-bedroom apartment decorated with modern furniture on the city’s West Side and quickly claimed which room would be her bedroom.
“This is more than enough for me,” Evans said.
The apartment Evans, 38, will live in with her roommate, Mary Jenkins, is one of three units in a Lawndale greystone in the 1500 block of South Millard Avenue where they will live rent free for at least a year. The effort to provide free apartments for those on the cusp of homelessness was led by Candice Payne, who teamed up with A Safe Haven. Evans met her roommate through the organization.
Payne started to work with the homeless community in 2019 during the polar vortex when she rented hotel rooms for those who were living outdoors as temperatures dropped to dangerous levels. She remembers sitting in a hotel room, thinking she needed to find a more permanent solution than hotel rooms. Her efforts went viral, landing her on “The Ellen DeGeneres Show.”
“From that good deed, basically we are here today,” Payne said.
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In June 2019, Payne purchased the Lawndale property. She used money raised after her story went viral to fix up the building and carved out three of the six units for people who wouldn’t have to pay rent. All tenants will have to pay for their own utilities during the year.
Payne sees the apartments as a stepping stone for people struggling to gain financial stability. She worked with A Safe Haven to find tenants, because the organization already had existing programs helping those with housing instability.
Cintamani Carter, 35, started participating in A Safe Haven programs about seven months ago. After struggling for years to find permanent housing, she’ll live in one of the apartments with her 6-year-old son, Cintano Carter.
“My son was super excited. He was like ‘is this our apartment?’” said Carter, who hopes to save up to buy her own car to drive to work. “We both (were) truly happy when we first got here.”
Payne met one of the now-residents, Montrea Jackson, when she went to her South Loop office building to pick up things during the stay-at-home order. She came across Jackson, 18, sleeping in the conference room.
Jackson said she was bouncing around friends’ homes, paying for hotel rooms when she could and, for about a week, lived out of the conference room with the permission of her boss. Her 1-year-old son sometimes stayed with his father while she tried to find a place to stay.
“Being a mother and homeless is so hard,” Jackson said, as she teared up. “Trying to fend for your child, trying to put food in one refrigerator so it’s all there. It took me so much strength. And I pray to God every day, and God sent this angel down to me to help me.”
She recently went grocery shopping to stock up the refrigerator in her new apartment, which is the first apartment she’s ever had on her own. She’s working on getting her GED and is trying to find a better-paying job. Her goal is to become a cosmetologist and open her own business.
“I have to live for my own,” Jackson said.
Elvia Malagón’s reporting on social justice and income inequality is made possible by a grant from the Chicago Community Trust.