[Congressional Record Volume 146, Number 105 (Monday, September 11, 2000)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Page E1437]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO FATHER LLOYD SPRINGER
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HON. JOSE E. SERRANO
of new york
in the house of representatives
Monday, September 11, 2000
Mr. SERRANO. Mr. Speaker, today I pay tribute to Father Lloyd
Springer, who has retired after 27 years of ministry to the South
Bronx. He was honored on August 25, 2000, by members of the community.
Father Springer came as priest in charge to St. Edmunds Episcopal
Church, located at 177th Street and Morris Avenue, in 1973, with a
vision and commitment. As a hands-on clergy, he at once began to
enhance services to the congregation and to build coalitions with and
feelings of empowerment in neighborhood residents. However, as soon as
the church began to grow in membership, a devastating fire consumed the
parish hall. While this could have been an excuse to flee the South
Bronx, instead Fr. Springer worked with the Episcopal Diocese to secure
a loan for renovation. Further, he looked to the needs of the
neighborhood beginning with Trabajamos Head Start.
Blueprints for the renovation of four abandoned buildings across from
the church were gathering dust when Brien O'Toole, a community
organizer from the North West Bronx Community and Clergy Coalition,
came to the Mt. Hope neighborhood. Fr. Springer agreed to provide space
in the church office and the Mt. Hope Organization was born. A
coalition of tenants, churchgoers, homeowners and community leaders met
regularly in St. Edmunds' undercroft to address and plan how they would
solve the growing problems of abandoned housing stock, drugs, and poor
services. The priority for St. Edmunds was the four abandoned buildings
across from the church, because drug dealing there posed a danger to
all the community, and especially to the community's children. On the
site, St. Edmund's Court, with 110 housing units for both community
residents and the City's homeless, was opened in 1989 with the
Honorable Edward I. Koch presiding.
Mr. Speaker, after this success, the Mt. Hope Organization formed a
management company and began working with the City to reclaim other
abandoned buildings. Father Springer led marches and meetings with
elected officials, and the result was 1,200 more units of housing
renovated for low- and moderate-income families.
Father Springer became the first president of the Board of the Mt.
Hope Housing Company, a new Community Development Corporation providing
housing, social services, jobs, and job training for residents of the
community. During the six years under Fr. Springer's leadership, the
Mt. Hope Housing Company did as much work as many larger and longer
established Community Development Corporations.
Under Fr. Springer's leadership, and in partnership with the
Episcopal Diocese and, later, with Episcopal Charities, an After School
and Food Bank Program was established. Leaders of the Mt. Hope/St.
Edmunds community petitioned the Bronx Borough President for a decent
playground, and in 1993 a major capital improvement grant of $870,000
for construction of the St. Edmunds/Mt. Hope Playground was announced
at the corner of 177th and Walton Avenue. Parishioners also began to
serve an Annual Thanksgiving Dinner for the homeless.
These accomplishments energized the community, and Fr. Springer and
members launched a search for an organization that would address the
inadequate health services available at that time. The Institute for
Urban Family Health and the Primary Care Development Corporation became
partners with St. Edmunds and Walton Family Health Center opened its
doors. This health facility now serves about 900 families yearly. St.
Edmunds is also a partner in a new Reach 2010 project, which is looking
at the disparities in health care in urban settings, and in
particularly the high incidence of diabetes and hypertension among
Blacks and Hispanics in the South Bronx.
Father Springer's commitment not only to his parish, St. Edmunds, but
also to the Mt. Hope Community as a whole, including the homeless, has
not gone unrecognized. As Mt. Hope Housing Company rightly stated
during its 1993 award, ``Father Springer's presence and wisdom, broad
vision and imperturbable temperament, through trials and successes has
held the neighborhood to its mission. These qualities and a passion for
justice and opportunity, and an ethic of stewardship and duty have
contributed mightily to making the Mt. Hope area a community equal to
the dignity of its residents.''
Mr. Speaker, I ask my colleagues to join me in recognizing Father
Lloyd Springer for his remarkable career of serving the community and
bringing hope to the many individuals he has touched.
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