POLITICSKSTP ABC MINNEAPOLIS
Residents want answers after $11M+ in tax money didn’t fix conditions at their Minneapolis apartment complex
Residents of Heritage Park apartments in Minneapolis are demanding answers after over $11 million in public funds failed to improve living conditions, with hundreds of units remaining vacant or unsafe. The Minneapolis Public Housing Authority (MPHA) and city invested $11.3 million and $875,000 respectively, but ownership changes and financial disputes have left transparency unclear. Residents accuse MPHA of not ensuring proper use of funds, while former owners cited operational challenges.
Mentioned
Related Signal
Adjacent reporting
- Millions invested, but 200+ apartments in Near North Minneapolis complex sit vacant, unsafe
- Lawmakers demand answers as turmoil over Reflecting Pool repair continues
- 57,000 rent-stabilized apartments sat empty in NYC, housing agency says
- More than 250 tax-funded LA apartments sit empty under key Mayor Bass homelessness strategy
- Lawmakers demand answers as turmoil over Reflecting Pool repair continues