Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

News

Celebrating Secretary Alphonso R. Jackson’s contributions to affordable housing in Dallas and across the great nation

Secretary Jackson with Comm. Price and John Proctor of the Black Contractors.

At the dedication of the new Dallas Housing Authority building named for Secretary Alphonso Jackson. “His work with the agency and in housing is legendary in Dallas and across the country,” said Dallas County Commissioner John Wiley Price.

In 1989, Jackson became the president and CEO of the Housing Authority of the City of Dallas, Texas. He was the first African American to head the agency. In his seven years on the job, he worked to improve the dilapidated buildings and unsafe conditions that had become standard in the city’s neglected public-housing units. The Dallas Housing Authority was named the best-managed city housing authority in the country during Jackson’s tenure.

In 1996, he left the public sector and joined American Electric Power as president of Texas operations. In 2001, he was appointed as the U.S. Housing and Urban Development deputy secretary and COO under the George W. Bush administration. In 2004, he became the nation’s 13th U.S. Secretary of Housing and Urban Development.

Written By
Click to comment

You must be logged in to post a comment Login

Leave a Reply

ADVERTISEMENT

IMM MASK Promos

ADVERTISEMENT

You May Also Like

Editorial

By James B. Ewers Jr. Ed.D. This is a question that is so ridiculous for even asking. We know the answer is a resounding...

Editorial

By Norma Adams-Wade “… as an African American, we first must struggle with…being victims of the pain……listen to our elder generation who picked cotton, …And…begin to...

News

By Jamala Rogers, St Louis American The decision to end the Jefferson Bank Commemorative Protest was an agonizing one for me. I respect the...

Lifestyle

By J. Pharoah DossMichigan Chronicle When California’s Democratic Attorney General Kamala Harris was elected to the US Senate in 2016, an Associated Press headline...

Advertisement