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The
Jersey
Journal
March 14, 2003
by Earl Morgan
Jersey City
Housing Authority Director Robert Rigby, 55, died yesterday of cancer, just weeks
before he was to officially retire.
Just last week,
Rigby attended a tribute the JCHA commissioners and staff held for him in the Curries
Woods Public Housing site, which has been transformed from six high-rise buildings
to a development of 207 townhouses during Rigby's 30-year tenure as the authority's
director.
Rigby died at
home shortly before 12:30 p.m., surrounded by his wife Elizabeth, his daughter Erica
and his son, Colin. "It ended quickly, the way I think he would have wanted
it," Erica Rigby said.
When Rigby took
office, a number of JCHA sites were plagued with structural problems and the agency
was battling accusations of improprieties in its administration. There was
also a lawsuit brought by
Marion Gardens
tenants battling an authority decision to demolish that housing site.
Several years
after Rigby took the helm, the suit was settled. Not only was the decision
to vacate
Marion Gardens
reversed, Rigby managed to bring millions of dollars into the city to undertake
a massive modernization and rehabilitation of the city's twelve public housing sites.
The Rev. Alex
Santora, who is a former pastor of St. Aloysius Church, which the Rigby family attended,
said: "I think he's one of the few public servants who managed to survive administration
after administration. He was respected for his integrity and character, and
managed to rise above petty politics."
Santora also
praised Rigby for his commitment to improving the quality of life and empowering
public housing tenants. "There's no question that he empowered the people
in public housing and made it possible for them to do things they never thought
they could," Santora said. "In fact,
Jersey City
's housing authority became a model of what public housing can be."
"Santora said
Rigby was not one to talk much about his religious faith. He did not wear
his religion on his sleeve, Santora said, instead exhibiting it in his effort to
make a difference in people's lives."
Rigby, Santora
noted, earned a national reputation as a trendsetter and innovator in public housing.
"Bob could have gone off and become a bigshot in the U.S. Department of Housing
and Urban Development. Instead, he chose to stay here," Santora said.
Rigby always
found time for his family, according to his wife. "He always managed to be
home for dinner and he coached Colin's Little League team and Erica's CYO basketball
team," Mrs. Rigby said.
She also noted
her husband's skill in finding good people to work with. Mrs. Rigby said her
husband made sure that if his staffers were capable, "they would advance in their
jobs."
Diane Johnson,
a HUD official who is also a former
Jersey City
resident and who worked with Rigby for several years, said: "He was a great professional,
certainly dedicated to the mission of HUD to provide safe and sanitary dwellings
for people living in public housing. He really understood the transformation
in philosophy that is occurring in HUD and the way it can be used to improve the
quality of life for public housing tenants."
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