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The rehousing of those from the slums was a difficult task.
By May 2005, the rehousing was almost complete, and a new housing development has since been completed in the place of the old properties.
Similarly, this programme could be broadened quickly to assist with the rehousing of families displaced by the tsunami.
This is creating a vital staging post between expensive hotels and permanent rehousing for the homeless.
These agencies can offer forms of help that usually cannot be provided by the therapist (e.g. obtaining rehousing, meeting other people with similar interests).
Mr. Raymond said there has been an upward trend in the use of the private stock for permanent rehousing of the homeless.
As Under Librarian, Planta organized the rehousing of the museum's coin collection.
The main objective of the corporation was to assist in the rehousing of displaced persons by the construction of new township.
Rehousing Project:
Post-war slum clearance and rehousing broke up the old Jewish communities, and these have been replaced by subsequent waves of immigrants.
The rehousing in 410 concrete homes built for earthquake victims in the 1970's completed the first long-term resettlement of Iraqi Kurds, the news agency said.
In the 1960s Liverpool underwent large-scale rehousing, with residents of inner city slums being moved to new housing estates on greenfield sites outside the city.
It had already earned Rex sufficient rehousing credits to get him overground and he actually possessed a surplus of food and medico rations.
With the gradual decline of established occupations and trades went massive rehousing and the breakdown of community and neighbourhood ties.
Learning about community building, as well as constructing a facility to initiate the rehousing of a community of scavenger families who currently live on a dumpside.
The purpose of the law, Hale said, with its explicit provisions for rehousing women facing domestic violence, is "providing a secure home for those who share their lives together".
In particular the CVP recommended an overspill policy for Glasgow and the rehousing of much of the population in new towns outside the city.
He could make out the Nemesis Bunker, which wasn't difficult as it covered about thirty acres, the subway terminal, the ranks of hardly-built rehousing, the rubble-strewn roads.
The rehousing of families from town centre slums to new council houses continued after World War II, though it slowed down to a virtual standstill after 1975.
The building style was common during years before Singapore's independence and the early years after its independence, but the country's later rehousing efforts saw most chophouses demolished, with few remaining in the country.
Second - when the plague has finally been contained, arrangements should be made over a ten-year period for the gradual rehousing of blacks in areas where their unsanitary personal habits do not threaten decent Americans.
In the event, therefore, the Act did not provide for large-scale planning and redevelopment, but stimulated further direction towards slum clearance by extending new forms of subsidy directed to the rehousing of overcrowded families.
In the 1970s, the Copenhagen City Council, led by a social democratic mayor, Egon Weidekamp, had begun a process of rehousing for people living in the poor areas of Copenhagen.
Indeed, Larkin (1979) cites cases of families in Dorset who have followed the pattern of moving out of winter-lets into summer caravans for over ten years without local authorities taking responsibility for their permanent rehousing.
An overspill estate is a housing estate planned and built for the rehousing of people from decaying inner city areas, as frequently occurred in most large British towns and cities for most of the 20th century.