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Pathways for
Parramore Leads Revitalization Efforts
for Parramore Heritage District

Overview
of the Pathways for Parramore
In June 2005, Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer and
District 5 City Commissioner Daisy W. Lynum launched Pathways for
Parramore, a complete effort to revitalize Orlando’s historic Parramore
Heritage community which had become Orlando’s most blighted community.
At the time, 73% of Parramore’s 2,000 children lived in poverty, 47% of
Parramore adults had neither a high school diploma nor GED and the
juvenile arrest rate was 2½ times that of Orlando’s citywide rate.
The
Pathways for Parramore initiative came to fruition after a task force
was commissioned by Mayor Dyer in 2003 to conduct research and obtain
stakeholder input. From those recommendations, the Pathways for
Parramore initiative focuses on five key areas: housing, public safety,
business development, children and education and quality of life. The
goal is to restore the Parramore Heritage community into a safe,
livable, sustainable and prosperous place for Orlando citizens,
businesses and institutions to thrive.
Since the launch of Pathways for
Parramore we have made dramatic strides in the revitalization of the
Parramore Heritage Community including:
- The construction of 35 new and
rehabilitated single family homes, the opening of 120 new housing
units in the past 14 months and 83 additional housing units are
planned through the Carver Park development.
- Opening of 11 new retail and
commercial businesses since July 2009.
- A 37% decline in violent crime and
increased community involvement in preventing crime by growing the
number of Neighborhood Watch Block Captains to 19.
- By engaging the nearly 2,000 youth
living in Parramore, there has been a 80% decline in juvenile
arrests and for the first time this year scholarships were provided
to youth attending college.
- To assist the most underserved
homeless population, men, the City has invested in the Coalition for
the Homeless to build the Men’s Service Center
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