by FreeWire Investigative Team | FreeWire Magazine — Your News, Your Voice
As Cleveland-based mega-landlord Millennia Housing Management collapses under federal bans and foreclosures, a local maintenance worker claims he paid for repairs out of pocket while disabled Bucyrus residents live in fear of losing their water.

BUCYRUS, OH — For the elderly and disabled residents of Lincoln Meadows—known locally as Bucyrus Plaza—the security of a home is slowly being eroded by corporate dysfunction.
An investigation by FreeWire has revealed that the complex, located at 77 Bucyrus Plaza, has fallen more than $14,000 in arrears to the Bucyrus Water Department. While municipal sources confirm that the property’s management company has scrambled to negotiate a monthly “catch-up” payment plan to prevent a catastrophic shutoff, the five-figure debt is only the tip of an iceberg of systemic neglect.
Behind closed doors, residents describe a housing complex in disrepair, underfunded operations, and a climate of fear. Because Lincoln Meadows represents one of the only low-income, handicap-accessible housing options in Crawford County, residents who spoke to FreeWire did so under strict conditions of anonymity, terrified of facing retaliatory eviction.
“If they shut off the water, where do we go?” asked one resident, who uses a wheelchair. “Most of us are disabled, on fixed incomes. We have no other choice in housing. We are trapped here, and we feel like we are being forgotten.”
“Out-of-Pocket” Maintenance
The financial chokehold on the property has grown so severe that local staff have allegedly been forced to choose between leaving critical repairs broken or paying for them themselves.
A former maintenance worker at Lincoln Meadows, who spoke to FreeWire on the condition of anonymity, revealed that his tenure at the complex lasted only a few weeks due to a total lack of corporate funding for operations. During that brief time, he claims he was forced to purchase essential maintenance supplies out of his own pocket just to keep the property livable.
“The funding simply wasn’t there,” the former worker said. “You have people with severe physical disabilities living in these units, and when things broke, corporate wouldn’t authorize the money to fix them. I couldn’t just sit there and watch people suffer, so I paid for repairs out of my own pocket. But you can’t run a commercial apartment complex on a single maintenance guy’s personal wallet.”
The worker ultimately departed the position after it became clear that Millennia Housing Management was failing to provide the basic operational budget required to run the 76-unit complex.
A National Blueprint of Neglect
To understand why a local apartment complex in Bucyrus is failing to pay its water bill, one must look 100 miles northeast to Cleveland—the headquarters of The Millennia Companies.
Millennia, led by founder Frank Sinito, is one of the nation’s largest affordable housing developers, managing tens of thousands of federally subsidized Section 8 units across the United States. However, the company is currently in a historic financial tailspin.
In March 2024, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) took the extraordinary step of debarring Millennia Housing Management and CEO Frank Sinito from doing any new business with the federal government for five years. The debarment followed federal findings of severe financial mismanagement, including the unauthorized diversion of millions of dollars in taxpayer funds and security deposits.
Across the country, Millennia properties have faced condemnation, horrific maintenance backlogs, and utility crises:
- In Atlanta, Georgia, Millennia’s Forest Cove property was condemned after years of neglect, forcing a mass relocation of residents.
- In Mississippi and Arkansas, properties managed by the company suffered fatal incidents—including carbon monoxide leaks and fires—which federal regulators linked to poor maintenance and skipped inspections.
- In Cleveland, Millennia’s flagship commercial properties have entered foreclosure as lenders attempt to recover tens of millions of dollars.
While HUD continues to pay existing rental subsidies to ensure low-income tenants at places like Lincoln Meadows are not immediately displaced, the federal ban prevents Millennia from securing new funding or contracts. The result is a slow-motion corporate collapse—and properties like Bucyrus Plaza are being starved of cash as the company spirals.
The Threat of Condemnation
In Ohio, a prolonged utility shutoff at a multifamily housing complex automatically triggers a health hazard. If the Bucyrus Water Department were to shut off the main water line due to non-payment, Crawford County health authorities would be legally required to condemn the property, forcing an immediate, emergency evacuation of all 76 units.
For the disabled and elderly residents of Lincoln Meadows, an evacuation would mean homelessness.
While the city’s “catch-up” agreement with Millennia has temporarily staved off a shutdown, residents are left wondering how long a company facing federal penalties and nationwide foreclosures can keep its promises to a small-town utility department.
“We pay our rent on time every single month,” said another anonymous resident. “Our portion of the rent is subsidized by the government, and Millennia gets that money guaranteed. Where is that money going if they can’t even keep the water bill paid?”
FreeWire has reached out to Millennia Housing Management’s corporate office and the Lincoln Meadows local property management for comment. No response was received by the time of publication.