When It’s Moving Day In Public Housing

“We out of here, we out of here. Hopefully it will be today. Gone today.”

Grant Blankenship
Vantage
3 min readApr 12, 2016

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Kenny Howell Jr. looks back into the back of the moving truck that will carry everything he and his girlfriend own from the Tindall Heights Public Housing Projects in Macon to their new rental house. Grant Blankenship/GPB

The tick tick tick with the turn of the key only meant one thing: this moving truck wasn’t starting.

Battery? Dead.

Not too long before on this sunny Wednesday afternoon, Kenny Howell Jr. had pulled up behind the apartment he, his girlfriend and their three kids shared in the Tindall Heights public housing project ready to load up and go.

“Really we supposed to been moved. Cause you see ain’t really anybody left on this little section,” Howell said of his block on the north end of Tindall Heights. By the summer it will be demolished in the first step of a plan to replace the 75 year old apartments with an affordable, mixed use development.

“Forty dollar truck. And they ain’t even got it running way it supposed to be,” he said.

Still with some help, Howell decided to go ahead and load up. First, back into the apartment, the slapping of the screen door behind him.

“Everything out of here. Everything must go,” he said from the kitchen.

He and a friend went to the biggest stuff first.

“See how light this sofa is? This sofa light,” he said as he and his friend struggled to find the right combination of twist and turn to get out the door. Then some laughing as they realized just how steep the ramp to the back of the truck is. Howell had meant to back the truck closer to the back door, but again, dead battery.

Load it up anyway.

Kenny Howell Jr., right, lifts his sofa into place in the back of a moving truck with the help of a friend on the Wednesday he picked to move himself, his girlfriend and their three kids from Tindall Heights Homes to a new rental house. Grant Blankenship/GPB

Like every other resident here, Howell got help from the Macon Housing Authority in finding his new place. The Section 8 Tenant Protection Voucher paving the way was kind of like a golden ticket, and Howell was satisfied he spent it well.

“It’s a pretty nice neighborhood. Better than this. It’s like a suburb, the part of Bloomfield we’re moving at anyway,” Kenny said of his new place.

Talk to a lot of mothers here and they will tell you they want to go to a better school district. In Kenny’s case that isn’t happening. Only 2% of third graders at Barden Elementary, Kenny’s new school district, were reading at grade level there in 2015 compared to 7.5% at the old school district, Ingram-Pye Elementary. The state average was 31%.

Still, Kenny’s kids aren’t school age yet. He isn’t worried about it that right now. He’s just excited to be going to a house.

“Big house. Three bedrooms, two baths, two full baths at that,” he said. “Carport. And we can have dogs there. Can’t have no dogs out here.”

Altogether, Kenny says he feels good.

Kenny Howell Jr. slides his sofa into place in the back of a moving truck on the Wednesday he picked to move himself, his girlfriend and their three kids from the Tindall Heights Housing Project to a new rental house. Grant Blankenship/GPB

“Real good at that. Cause like I say we ain’t but 20,” he said. “By us being young a lot of folks look at us like we crazy thinking we ain’t knowing what we doing but we got to learn some kind of way.”

But he says the risk is worth it. He wants no more apartments.

“We out of here, we out of here,” he said. “Hopefully it will be today. Gone today.”

Kenny Howell Jr. wants to make the best of it.

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Grant Blankenship
Vantage

Multimedia reporter (A/V Nerd) with Georgia Public Broadcasting. Heard on NPR. Photos (have been) seen in the New York Times, etc. Really a local kinda guy.