Page 8-Tuesday, August 1, 1978-The Michigan Daily Poor becoming 'urban nomads,' WASHINGTON (AP) Affluent families who fled from the inner cities in the 1960s are moving back into renovated housing, forcing out poor residents who are becoming "urban nomads," the National Urban Coalition said yesterday. Some cities are being revitlized by the return from the suburbs of middle class homeowners, the report said. BUT "NEITHER government nor the private sector is coping promptly and effectively with the needs, the frustration and anger of this group of urban nomads who are being pushed or priced out of their neighborhoods," said M. Carl Holman, president of the coalition. "If you are an elderly, poor, working class renter or homeowner who lives in an area undergoing rehabilitation or in a suddenly fashionable neighborhood, you are a prime candidate for displacement," Holman said. The study recommended more in- formation for affected poor families along with a variety of low cost housing rehabilitation loans and grants to help families already in the neighborhood fix up their own homes. HOLMAN ALSO CALLED for tax breaks for poor or elderly residents of such neighborhoods to keep them from being taxed out of their homes by rising property values. Once individual middle class families or private developers move into such neighborhoods and begin restoring old houses to their former grandeur, prices, rents and taxes tend to soar as property values improve, the study says. "Private market housing rehabilitation is occurring in neigh- borhoods across the country and, where it occurs, displacement of low to moderate income residents is a com- mon, if little understood, problem," the study concludes. "IN SOME OF these neighborhoods, there is rising hostility and tension bet- study says ween the old settlers and the vanguard of middle class 'urban pioneers'," the coalition said. Patricia Harris, secretary of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), said displacement caused by this kind of development is similar to that which occurred when Urban Renewal programs raised large areas of decaying inner cities without providing for the residents. "Both the coalition and HUD have the same goal - the revitalization of our central cities, but not to the detriment of the current low and moderate income residents," Harris said. Back then nobody had hear At one time, when they built a house, one of its best features was a big front porch. And the most popular thing a porch could have was a wide, wooden swing. Nowadays, the most impor- tant feature a house can have is energy efficiency because people are very concerned about keeping heating and cooling costs down. That's why Detroit Edison presents its Energy Efficiency Excellence (EEE) Award to builders whose omes meet maximum standards in energy efficiency. EEE Award are properly insulated heated and cooled wit energy-saving heat pu could save you more I a year in energy costs to homes using oil, pr electric resistance heat Major appliances li erators and freezers in Award homes, if provi builder, are also energ Of course, it's import and maintain all majo ances properly so the waste energy.