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            "We are still working out some final 
            contracts, but work will begin any week now," said Kitty Campbell, 
            vice president of development for Pedcor. 
            
            Les Last, Lincoln city code enforcement 
            officer, said his office had received a $20,100 check to cover the 
            cost of building permits and sewer tap fees from Pedcor, and as far 
            as the city is concerned work can start any time. 
            
            Phase I of the affordable housing 
            development, a $4.7 million project, will consist of 56 apartment 
            units and a 2,943-square-foot clubhouse, Campbell said. The 
            apartments will include one-, two- and three-bedroom units and will 
            house one- to six-member families. 
            
            To qualify for an apartment in Brainard 
            Landings, a tenant will have to have a job, earn a certain amount of 
            money and have good credit, she said, and will not be able to earn 
            more than a set amount. For example, an individual can earn up to 
            $23,760, a family of three may earn up to $30,540, and a family of 
            six may earn up to $39,400 to qualify. 
            
              
            
          
            
            Rent for a one-bedroom apartment will 
            run from $350 to $395; for a two-bedroom, $445 to $450; and for a 
            three-bedroom, $500 to $505, she said. 
            
            Each apartment unit will have a 
            washer-dryer hookup, private storage, balcony-patio, vertical and 
            mini blinds, central air conditioning, central heating, wall-to-wall 
            carpet, a stove with a self-cleaning oven, a dishwasher, a disposal, 
            and a refrigerator. 
            
            The clubhouse will have a large 
            clubroom with kitchen, fitness facilities, a computer-business 
            center, a playground and an on-site laundry facility. It will also 
            have offices for a manager and a leasing agent. 
            
            The Brainard Landings development is 
            not a federal Housing and Urban Development project, Campbell said, 
            but investors will obtain federal tax credits under the Internal 
            Revenue Service Section 42 tax credit code as part of the overall 
            project financing. 
              
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            "Pedcor's plan is to develop a 
            community geared toward the working middle-class renters who would 
            benefit from a market-rate quality apartment community offered at a 
            price currently unavailable in this area," Campbell said. "Another 
            asset to our development is our partnership with Jane Poertner and 
            the Central Illinois Economic Development Corporation to provide 
            access to non-tangible amenities through services and programs 
            facilitated by CIEDC." 
            
            Although the Pedcor development is in 
            an enterprise zone and will not pay state sales taxes on materials 
            purchased in the city, the company will pay local property taxes. 
            
            Pedcor owns and operates over 7,000 
            rental units throughout the Midwest, Campbell said. The company 
            approached the city of Lincoln about three years ago to get approval 
            for building the apartment complex. Campbell said Lincoln officials 
            visited a Pedcor property in Crawfordsville, Ind., and were 
            favorably impressed with the development. 
            
            Pedcor not only builds the units but 
            also manages them, and the company does not turn the management over 
            to an outside firm. "It is Pedcor's belief that management of an 
            apartment community is one of the most important factors in its 
            ongoing success," Campbell said. 
            She said 
            Pedcor chose Lincoln as a site for a housing development after 
            studying the community and its demographics. In spite of the present 
            high unemployment rate in Logan County, she believes the firm will 
            have no trouble leasing the 56 apartment units to be built in Phase 
            I. No date has been set for construction of Phase II, which will 
            consist of 48 units. 
            
              
            
            [Joan Crabb] 
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