Moreno Finally Frees $1.6 Million Lifeline For Long-Stalled Desire Square

On Monday, Mayor Helena Moreno said her administration has finally found a way to unlock $1.6 million in general‑obligation bond funding for Desire Community Housing Corporation, a move aimed at jump‑starting long‑stalled work on Desire Square in the Desire neighborhood. The cash is intended to help deliver a long‑promised multipurpose center that community leaders have pitched for years, with plans for a clinic, pharmacy, grocery options, nonprofit space and the headquarters for Desire Community Housing. City Council signed off on a cooperative endeavor agreement for the project in 2025, but the money had not actually been appropriated until now.

The mayor’s office says the money will come from the city’s general‑obligation bonds and will complete a commitment the council approved last year, according to a press release from the City of New Orleans. Council records show the ordinance authorizing the Cooperative Endeavor Agreement (Calendar No. 35,170) passed in 2025, and the official minutes include the vote and related materials in the City Council minutes. The administration said the move should push the long‑planned project closer to actual construction.

“For years, the people of Desire have heard promises about what this development would bring to their community,” Moreno said in a statement from the City of New Orleans. “My administration was determined to find a way to deliver on that commitment,” she added. Chief Administrative Officer Joseph Giarrusso III noted that city leaders had prioritized the project when they served together on the council, underscoring that this has been on the local to‑do list for a while.

What’s planned for Desire Square

The cooperative agreement describes Desire Square as a single‑story, multi‑tenant center expected to host a health clinic, pharmacy, grocery store, space for nonprofit organizations and educational programming, and the headquarters for Desire Community Housing Corporation. The council file also includes a provision for a 30‑year city lease for a police substation on the site as part of the public‑service package, and officials have pitched the development as a neighborhood hub rather than a one‑off building…

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