SAVANNAH, Ga. 鈥 Blocks from where tourists stroll along the cobblestoned riverfront in this racially divided city, Detraya Gilliard made her way down the dark, ruptured sidewalks of Yamacraw Village, looking for her missing 15-year-old daughter.
Like most other people living in one of the nation鈥檚 oldest public housing projects, Gilliard endured the boarded-up buildings and mold-filled apartments because it was the only place she could afford.
Without working streetlights in parts of Yamacraw, Gilliard relied on the crescent moon鈥檚 glow to search for her daughter Desaray in May 2022. She passed yards dotted with clotheslines and power lines, and a broken-down playground littered with juice boxes and red Solo cups.
鈥淚 happened to look down, and I knew it was her by her feet, by the shoes she had on,鈥 Gilliard said. She was 鈥渂arely hanging on and she was covered in blood.鈥
The year before Desaray died, President Joe Biden called for the federal government to spend tens of billions of dollars to fix dilapidated public housing that he said posed 鈥渃ritical life-safety concerns.鈥 The repairs, Biden said, would mostly help people of color, single mothers like Gilliard who work in low-income jobs, and people with disabilities.
The federal Department of Housing and Urban Development estimates that is needed to fund a backlog of . But, two years ago, money to fund those repairs became a casualty of negotiations between the Biden administration and congressional lawmakers over the Inflation Reduction Act. Republicans also have blocked efforts to lift legislation that effectively prohibits the construction of additional public housing, despite the catastrophic public health consequences.

Tenants living in derelict housing face conditions that contribute to higher rates of heart disease, diabetes, asthma, violence, and other life-threatening risks.
The federal of discriminatory practices in public housing. In cities across the country after World War II, Black families were barred from many public housing complexes even as the government induced white people to leave them by offering single-family homes in the suburbs subsidized by the Federal Housing Administration. Starting with , lawmakers as more Black families and other people of color became tenants.
Today 鈥渞esidents are facing really terrible choices, or terrible options about their future,鈥 said Sarah Saadian, for the National Low Income Housing Coalition. 鈥淲e got here from Congress really failing to live up to its responsibilities of ensuring that people have access to an affordable, stable home.鈥
In 2022, an art deco luxury apartment building opened down the street. But little has changed in Yamacraw, which is filled with Black families.

Current and former tenants say the Housing Authority of Savannah, the agency that oversees Yamacraw, has ignored the mold, rats, and roaches that infest the units and sicken residents, and the bullet holes in windows and gunshots that ring through the night. Now they fear the city is using the poor state of Yamacraw as justification to push residents out.
In April, an inspection of Yamacraw apartments conducted by HUD, which oversees taxpayer-supported public housing nationwide, found 29 鈥渓ife-threatening鈥 deficiencies that pose a high risk of death to residents, according to a preliminary report.
The inspection cited 28 deficiencies it called 鈥渟evere,鈥 meaning they present a high risk of . An additional 195 deficiencies were cited as 鈥渕oderate鈥 because they could cause temporary harm or prompt a visit to a doctor.
Research links to chronic gun violence, which has taken a heavy toll on Black neighborhoods and kids such as Desaray. A study of gun injuries in four large cities at the height of the covid-19 pandemic found that Black children were as likely as white youths to suffer a firearm assault.

Study co-author Jonathan Jay, an assistant professor of community health sciences at Boston University, said most of the country鈥檚 gun violence stems from disputes in neighborhoods that lack investment in housing and other public services
鈥淭his is about white privilege,鈥 Jay said. 鈥淭he result is driven by racist policymaking.鈥
Desaray Gilliard was a high school freshman when she was killed. She loved clothes, music, dancing, and the color pink, her mother said. She planned to go to Italy with her art class. She was excited about learning to drive and getting a job. Desaray had her sights set on attending Ohio State University.
They鈥檇 lived in Yamacraw for seven years. The teen鈥檚 shooting death remains unsolved.
Gilliard has struggled with thoughts of self-harm, she said. She maintains a memorial with pictures, stuffed animals, and flowers near the spot where she found Desaray鈥檚 body.
鈥淚 have to remember this is for her,鈥 she said of her middle child鈥檚 death, 鈥渂ecause nobody else is doing these things for her to keep her memory alive.鈥
A Broken Promise?
Federally funded public housing must be kept in 鈥溾 condition, according to HUD. In 2013, the agency's then secretary, Shaun Donovan, visited Savannah to that could give the local housing authority millions of dollars to rehab four public housing complexes, including Yamacraw, which has been among the lowest-rated public housing complexes in Georgia.
The touted by Donovan did not provide new public money. Instead, it loosened rules to allow local officials to work with private lenders and developers to pay for repairs, transforming public housing complexes into mixed-income developments with Section 8 project-based rental assistance.
Last year, a consultants鈥 report found a host of problems in Yamacraw, including water leaks and faulty wiring. 鈥淭he Remaining Useful Life of the Property is estimated to be 0 years,鈥 the consultants wrote. The housing authority wants to demolish Yamacraw and replace it with homes that are 鈥渉ealthier, more energy efficient and accessible,鈥 the report said.

Yamacraw never saw the windfall Donovan promised, current and former tenants said. Even with a of more than 3,000 families in Savannah, records show most of the 315 apartments in Yamacraw sit empty, many with boarded-up doors and windows. Some other public housing developments in the area have been repaired or rebuilt, but except for new roofing added in 2019, Yamacraw has not had a significant renovation in years, according to the consultants鈥 report.
Rather than repair the units, local officials started a process to tear down the complex, threatening to displace residents who have nowhere else to go in a city where the average two-bedroom apartment rents for more than $1,600 monthly.
Congress has provided less money than was needed over the past 20 years to fix Yamacraw and other public housing complexes nationwide, leaving local agencies in a tough spot, said Earline Davis, executive director of the Housing Authority of Savannah.
The housing authority still plans to demolish Yamacraw and redevelop the property with new affordable housing, she said. Residents fear that they will be pushed out, and that because of its prime location, the redevelopment plans would prioritize apartments that attract people who can afford higher rents.

鈥淎nytime you want to do something to make money 鈥 go destroy the historic Black community,鈥 said Georgia Benton, who grew up in Yamacraw. 鈥淏ut ain鈥檛 nobody hollerin鈥 鈥楽top.鈥欌
She and her son LaRay Benton have been fighting the housing authority鈥檚 redevelopment plans, which they say could also disrupt the two-century-old First Bryan Baptist Church. Rev. Andrew Bryan, a former enslaved person and ordained minister, founded the church in 1788. He later bought his freedom.
The Bentons and three City Council members went door to door observing the condition of residents鈥 units. They said plumbing issues caused sewage overflows and leaky faucets, mold tracked across the ceilings, and there were insect and rodent infestations.
Many families said they developed respiratory problems, such as bronchitis and asthma, after they moved in. 鈥淚t is an unhealthy situation,鈥 LaRay Benton said.

About seven years ago, after his previous Savannah landlord raised the rent, Paris Snead, his wife, and two children found themselves homeless. A nonprofit helped them get into Yamacraw, where rent was $750 a month.
It鈥檚 been years since they left. Snead said he still takes a daily allergy pill because he believes he was exposed to mold in his unit, which caused allergy-like symptoms.
鈥淭he walls sweat like working men,鈥 Snead said of his former apartment. 鈥淭he walls will, literally, from the top to the bottom, leak water.鈥
鈥淲hen you鈥檙e homeless, and you want to be able to have a place for your kids, I mean, you鈥檒l make a home wherever you can,鈥 he said.
Snead said he showed Yamacraw鈥檚 management the leaking walls, but they didn鈥檛 act.
鈥淭he management team there did more to evict people and cause problems than they did to help families and ensure they had a place to stay,鈥 Snead said.
HUD, which conducts periodic inspections at public housing complexes, declined an interview request. The agency referred questions to the Housing Authority of Savannah.
The housing authority鈥檚 redevelopment plans have been delayed by HUD鈥檚 lengthy approval process, said Savannah Mayor Van R. Johnson II, who appoints people to a five-member board of commissioners that helps oversee the city鈥檚 public housing.
He said he met with HUD acting Secretary Adrianne Todman and other HUD officials about housing issues in Savannah.
鈥淧eople don鈥檛 deserve to live like that,鈥 Johnson said.
If Yamacraw is demolished and rebuilt, he said, current tenants will have a chance to return because the homes will be affordable to people with low incomes.
Nobody else is doing these things for her to keep her memory alive.
Detraya Gilliard
鈥楾he Worst Experience of My Life鈥
Yamacraw鈥檚 struggles are rooted in century-old policies that have made it difficult for many Black neighborhoods to thrive.
In the 1930s, the federal government鈥檚 Home Owners鈥 Loan Corp. made for Savannah and 238 other cities and labeled redlined areas 鈥 usually places where Black people, Jews, immigrants, and Catholics lived 鈥 as undesirable for investment.
鈥淭he houses are occupied by the lowest class negro tenants,鈥 a government surveyor wrote.
Yamacraw was as segregated public housing for Black people. Today a health clinic occupies the original administrative building, designed to look like a plantation house.
Despite its problems, Johnson said, some of the city鈥檚 most prominent doctors, lawyers, and ministers grew up in Yamacraw.

Former and current tenants said the apartments slowly descended into disrepair.
Each year more than across the U.S. become uninhabitable.
Some lawmakers have used the poor state of public housing as justification to refuse lifting a that prohibits the construction of additional units, even as the nation鈥檚 rental prices 鈥 and evictions 鈥 soar.
The argument that public housing 鈥渄oesn鈥檛 work鈥 is disingenuous, said Saadian, with the National Low Income Housing Coalition.
鈥淭he federal government really failed to invest in public housing, to keep it in good condition, and to keep those communities thriving,鈥 Saadian said, 鈥渁nd in many cases, actively contributed to those communities declining.鈥
Instead of repairing public housing and building more high-quality units, federal lawmakers promised to provide housing vouchers, commonly known as Section 8, which helps people with low incomes rent privately owned homes. But most people who qualify for vouchers never receive them. Those who do often struggle to find landlords who will accept them, rendering them sometimes worthless.

Three years ago, LaTonya Atterbury was living in hotels north of Atlanta when she was offered a unit in Yamacraw for $511 a month. In August 2021, she moved in with her niece, now 29, and her niece鈥檚 son, now 8, relieved to have more stable housing.
But within the first week, she said, a neighbor鈥檚 son broke her window and the housing authority charged her $60 to fix it. She said her bathroom is covered in mold and mildew. One day, months after she moved in, Atterbury noticed a hole in her second-story window and saw a bullet on the floor, and realized there had been a shooting overnight. No one was injured, she said, but the bullet hole was only recently fixed 鈥 about 2陆 years after the incident.
鈥淚t鈥檚 been the worst experience of my life,鈥 Atterbury said. 鈥淪itting here will make you very depressed.鈥
Atterbury said she and other residents remain in Yamacraw at least in part because the housing authority has promised vouchers to move elsewhere. Three years later, she is still waiting.
Demolishing and rebuilding Yamacraw could take years.
Davis, the housing authority鈥檚 executive director, said her agency has repeatedly told tenants they would be relocated to other public housing complexes or given a Section 8 voucher during construction if they have no lease violations. But residents say they routinely receive lease violations for harmless acts such as broken blinds. LaRay Benton said one resident was cited and fined $75 for leaving a stroller on her front porch while she took her baby inside.

A Mother鈥檚 Search
Researchers said that the presence of abandoned buildings can contribute to violent crime by making people feel unsafe and creating a sense of disorder. Studies suggest that and improving can reduce it.
鈥淣o gun policy is going to work if we don鈥檛 fix social infrastructure,鈥 said , director of the Department of Medicine, Health, and Society at Vanderbilt University. 鈥淲e need investments to make sure communities feel safe. This is not just a public health problem. This is a race problem. This is a democracy problem.鈥
In recent years, shooting victims or their relatives, including Desaray鈥檚 mother, have filed at least three lawsuits against the Housing Authority of Savannah. Those ongoing lawsuits allege the agency failed to take added security measures in its public housing complexes 鈥 some of which had fallen into disrepair 鈥 despite gun violence and other crimes.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 know how we can prevent shootings,鈥 Davis said.
Davis declined to comment on the lawsuits. She would say only that her agency has installed cameras in Yamacraw, worked with police, and asked residents to report crime. The actions came after Desaray鈥檚 death.
Johnson, Savannah鈥檚 mayor, said police have investigated the Desaray Gilliard case, but there are people 鈥渨ho know what happened鈥 and will not talk to officers.

Around 9 p.m. on a Friday night two years ago, Gilliard went looking for her daughter for the second time that night. Desaray missed an 8 p.m. curfew and wasn鈥檛 answering her phone.
Gilliard waited for about 30 minutes at a bench near a park in the middle of the complex, hoping Desaray would find her. Then she started to retrace her steps.
Gilliard called 911 after she saw her daughter鈥檚 body.
When the police arrived, they made their way through the darkened complex with flashlights, Gilliard said. An officer pulled up Desaray鈥檚 shirt and saw a bullet hole in her chest. Gilliard said she later learned from a funeral director that her daughter had been shot three times. She has yet to receive an autopsy report from the police.
Gilliard said 鈥渘othing has changed before, since, or after鈥 her daughter鈥檚 death.
鈥淚t鈥檚 been very difficult,鈥 she said. 鈥淪ometimes I wanted to give up. I even thought about committing suicide.鈥
About a month after Desaray died, Gilliard said someone tried to break into her apartment. A couple of weeks later, her request to move to a new complex was finally granted and Gilliard left Yamacraw.
麻豆女优 Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at 麻豆女优鈥攁n independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about .