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Hammond redevelopment commissioners approve housing amendment, trucking‑site compliance and multiple property actions

Hammond Redevelopment Commission · April 22, 2026

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Summary

The Hammond Redevelopment Commission on April 21 approved a housing subsidy amendment tied to HUD limits, determined compliance for a trucking repair facility, amended a Claude Avenue purchase agreement, and approved several other staff motions and scheduling items.

The Hammond Redevelopment Commission approved a string of development and housing actions at its April 21 meeting, including a HUD‑related reduction to a subsidy for a new single‑family home, a staff compliance determination for a semi‑truck repair facility, and amendments to local purchase agreements.

Commissioners voted unanimously to approve a first amendment to an agreement for a United Neighborhoods Inc. (UNI) project at 1008 Bauer Street after HUD informed staff it would not adopt updated 2025 subsidy limits and the city reverted to 2024 limits. Staff said the three‑bedroom subsidy limit dropped from $338,419 to $327,292 — a reduction of $11,001.27 — and UNI’s executive director, Andrea Lewis, told the commission the team reduced contingency accordingly and expected roughly $9,000 would remain in contingency after the change. Lewis said the house would likely market near the lower end of comparable prices and that a final appraisal after construction will better define listing price.

The commission also approved a staff recommendation determining that the proposed light industrial trucking facility and semi‑truck repair garage at 1325 Summer Street (in the Gibson Yards sub‑area) is consistent with the Hammond Central Redevelopment Area Plan amendment, subject to final technical approvals, signage approval and any required Board of Zoning Appeals variances. Applicant Chris of TC Transport and assistant city planner Tom Novak described site cleanup work, stormwater and contamination controls, and an estimated investment of about $1.5 million and 15–20 new jobs. Staff emphasized required final department approvals before building permits proceed.

Other actions during the meeting included: approval of a first amendment to the purchase agreement for 5608–5610 Claude Avenue (the purchaser will proceed with the Claude parcel and drop optional Alice parcels), authorization to advertise an RFP for a downtown Gateway Station development site, and the approval of a $10,000 conditional forgivable home‑purchase loan for Leah Patterson (817 Merrill). The commission approved the register of claims and moved the May meeting date to Thursday, May 7. Public comment was brief and included recognition of a 1st District resident.