DAYTONA BEACH -- September 2, 2012 -- The dream came easily.Find 100 homeless veterans squatting in vacant buildings and sleeping in hidden thickets of woods, and put them in a new complex where they can have their own apartments upstairs and an array of services that will help put their lives back together downstairs.
The reality -- turning vacant property on the city's west side into the place where hope can be rekindled for the veterans -- is proving tougher.
State Rep. Dwayne Taylor, Daytona Beach Housing Authority Executive Director Anthony Woods and other key players in the project still need to find $30 million for construction, convince the federal government to waive a rule barring felons from receiving housing assistance, get a zoning change for the site they have in mind and win over city government leaders who could make or break the plan.
Some top city officials are already cool on the idea, but Taylor is undaunted. read more>>>
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