Thursday, July 26, 1973 Tenants run own building BOSTON (- Crime and gar- bage heaps that made the Brom- ley-Heath public housing project barely fit to live in have been cleaned up by the project's new managers: the t e na n t s them- selves. For the first time, according to federal officials, low-income tenauts are running the housing project w h e r e they live. And residents say it is cleaner and safer. B E F 0 R E TENANTS, organ- ized as the Tenants Manage- ment Corp. (TMC), were given control of the project six months ago Bromley-Heath was among the. worst places in the city to live. Trash, junked cars and broken bottles littered the asphalt that separated its stark brick apart- ment houses. Old people feared F to venture from their rooms be- C cause crime was everywhere.- The complex stands in a de- teriorated neighborhood on Bos- ton's southwest side, a slum within a slum-4,540 people, 90 per cent of them black, living in 1,230 apartments in 38 run- down buildings. ON JAN. 1, the Boston Hous- ing Authority (BHA) turned over Bromley-Heath to the tenant group, authorized under an Office of EOonomic Opportunity experi- mental program. Since then, the new managers have hauled away tons of gar- bage from the halls, yards and basements, improved o u t s i d e lighting, set up a security force to patrol the project and estab- lished a closed-circuit radio sta- tion to broadcast local news. "The thinking was that these are the tenants, and they have a feeling for the development," said Leo Donovan, a BHA official who is overseeing the project's transfer. THE TENANTS get $1.5 million a year to run the project, the same as the BHA had. But the tenants say they are able to get more for their money because they know where to spend it. "After living with these prob- lems for 18 years, I had a pretty good idea what needed to be done," said Mildred Haley, di- rector of the tenant group. "We're professional tenants." That has meant replacing most of the BHA maintenance workers with people from the project and making sure that they're on the job fulltime. LELA WILLIAMS, 40, tends the newly installed flower bed in front of her building. She thinks that's one of the greatest improvements t h e organization has made. She also says service is better. "We know it's going to take some time, because the place was so run down when TMC got it," she said. "But when you call now with a maintenance prob- lem, you get it fixed promptly. Now you call the exterminator, and he comes when he says he will. Before, he might not come at all." For James Hall, 84, the tenants' organization meant a new re- frigerator. "THEY'VE MADE it better here," he said. "I was waiting for a new refrigerator for over a year before the tenants' corpora- tion. After they took over, I got it in a couple of months. Lots of othej people got refrigerators, too." Another popular innovation has been a security force, 10 un- armed men, dressed in police- like uniforms, who walk through the project's buildings and patrol its streets in a truck. Tenant officials say crime in the project in the first three months this year dropped 77 per cent from the same period last year. THE SUMMER Shook by explosion Firemen examine damage from a blast that rocked the 15th floor of the Martin Luther King Labor Center in New York. A pro-Castro uban exposition was being planned at the time.