About Us
We’re a highly collaborative and supportive team, coming together on every end to provide you with the best services.
About Summit Housing Authority
In Summit, the Housing Authority owns and manages 195 low-rent family, elderly, and handicapped housing units. The Summit Housing Authority is responsible for tenant selection for this portfolio of units.
The City appoints an Affordable Housing Administrative Agent responsible for the administrative aspects of tenant selection for units available in the City’s affordable plan. These units are different from to the 195 units managed by the Summit Housing Authority.
Our Mission
Is to provide and maintain high quality affordable public housing in a safe and sanitary environment for senior citizens, disabled persons, and families who meet the low income guidelines published by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD).
We are fervently committed to consistently meeting or exceeding HUD performance standards and reporting requirements while operating within a budget allocated each year by HUD.
Our Values
A Brief History of Summit Housing Authority
In 1937, the U.S. Congress passed legislation which set aside federal funding to provide temporary shelter to those who had been displaced by the effects of the Great Depression. That legislation set up Public Housing administered by city and county governments and Indian Housing administered by tribal governments.
In 1938, the Common Council of the City of Summit passed an ordinance establishing the Housing Authority of the City of Summit. The Summit Housing Authority was an outgrowth of the city’s Substandard Housing Board and its efforts to address local Depression era housing problems.
These problems included sections of the Summit downtown which were becoming increasingly rundown and unsafe as well as growing slum problems in other areas of the city.
1948 Advisory Committee
In 1948, an advisory committee on low-rent housing surprised a meeting of the City’s Planning Board with a recommendation to spend upwards of 2 million dollars on an ambitious slum clearance project. The plan was submitted following a survey of substandard housing which determined that the worst of the City’s housing stock was located in the Weaver Street, Glenwood Place, Chestnut Street, Morris Avenue, Cedar Street, and Railroad Avenue sections of town. The report described the housing in these areas as “abominable”, “unhealthy”, and a “blight” on Summit itself.
1968 Urban Redevelopment
It was not until 20 years later, in 1967, following highly destructive riots in the cities of Newark and Plainfield, that the Summit Housing Authority was reestablished by the Summit Common Council. In 1968, a resolution was passed authorizing a Cooperation Agreement between the City of Summit and the Summit Housing Authority for the development of approximately 90 units of low-rent housing. By 1969, Edward (Ted) Olcott, as chairman, and a dedicated Board of Commissioners had acquired Federal approval of Summit’s “Workable Program for Community Improvement”, the first step in securing federal assistance for the development of low income housing in Summit.
Due to the unique demographics of Summit, there was, initially, little optimism regarding the City’s ability to garner Federal support for it’s redevelopment efforts. At that time, an urban redevelopment project was financed by an arrangement between the local public agency and the federal government which called for local contributions, Federal advances and loans, and ultimately, federal capital grants.
Though Federal assistance was ultimately secured, a group of enlightened Summit residents, through private fundraising efforts, pledged an initial sum of $600,000 toward the construction of the Glenwood Place housing project. Glenwood was projected to cost $900,000 at the time.
Hardworking, committed Housing Authority Boards of Commissioners and staff members and progressive City of Summit Common Council members worked together throughout the years to complete three low-income properties in Summit for a total of 195 low-income housing units:
Glenwood Place – Completed in 1972
- 40 units: 1-4 bedroom family housing
Weaver Street – Completed in 1979
- 30 units: 1-4 bedroom family housing
Vito A. Gallo Building – Completed in 1986
- 125 units: 1-2 bedroom senior/disabled housing
Meet the SHA Team and the Board of Commisioners
ExecutiveDirectorMichelle White
Assistant Director/Property ManagerJackie Roundtree
Certification ManagerLisa Zelasko
Administrative SpecialistRashan Womack
Maintenance Field CoordinatorStanley Champagne
Maintenance Worker Jeffrey Latimore
Part-time MaintenanceKatie Ladner
Part-time Social Worker
ChairpersonRobert E LeeVice
ChairpersonGeargette Barnes
CommissionerWanda Fortune
CommissionerNancy Galietti
CommissionerPeter Cane
CommissionerKelly Montgomery
CommissionerJamel Boyer & Jaclyn Lasaracina
Common Council Liaison
SHA Board meeting dates are published in local newspapers at the
beginning of every calendar year. Board meetings are usually held
the fourth Wednesday of every month at 6:30pm.
Vito A. Gallo Building – Community Room 12 Chestnut Avenue, Summit NJFebruary 25, 2026
Vito A. Gallo Building – Community Room 12 Chestnut Avenue, Summit NJMarch 25, 2026
Vito A. Gallo Building – Community Room 12 Chestnut Avenue, Summit NJApril 22, 2026
Vito A. Gallo Building – Community Room 12 Chestnut Avenue, Summit NJMay 27, 2026
COMMUNITY ROOM – 1-6 GLENWOOD PLACE SUMMIT,NJJune 24, 2026
Vito A. Gallo Building – Community Room 12 Chestnut Avenue, Summit NJJuly 22, 2026
Vito A. Gallo Building – Community Room 12 Chestnut Avenue, Summit NJAugust 2026- No MeetingSeptember 23, 2026
Community Room of 2 Weaver St Summit, NJOctober 28, 2026
Vito A. Gallo Building – Community Room 12 Chestnut Avenue, Summit NJNovember 2026 – No meetingDecember 16, 2026
Vito A. Gallo Building – Community Room 12 Chestnut Avenue, Summit NJ