AK

Amelia Joyce K.

District Manager at Cambridge Housing Authority

Amelia Joyce K. is an experienced professional in the hospitality and housing management sectors, currently serving as District Manager at Cambridge Housing Authority since June 2019, with prior roles including Housing Manager and Assistant Housing Manager. Amelia's extensive background includes serving as Director of Front Office Operations and Acting Food & Beverage Manager at DoubleTree by Hilton, General Manager at Island Hospitality Management, and Director of Operations at Urgo Hotels, demonstrating a strong focus on operational efficiency and customer satisfaction. Previous positions also include Director of Guest Services at Lodgeworks and Front Desk Manager at Hotel Commonwealth, where Amelia honed skills in team leadership, guest services, and maintaining high-quality standards. The career began at The Ritz-Carlton, Boston Common, as Front of House Supervisor, ensuring adherence to AAA 4 Diamond standards.

Location

Stoughton, United States

Links

Previous companies


Org chart

This person is not in the org chart


Teams

This person is not in any teams


Offices


Cambridge Housing Authority

CHA is a national leader in the development, management and administration of subsidized affordable housing for low-income elderly, family and disabled households. Our mission is to develop and manage safe, good-quality, affordable housing for low-income individuals and families in a manner which promotes citizenship, community, and self-reliance. In 2013, CHA will provide housing assistance to more than 5,000 low-income households. CHA is one of 34 housing authorities chosen to participate in the Department of Housing and Urban Development’s Moving to Work (MTW) deregulation demonstration program. Since 1996, the demonstration program has granted regulatory flexibility to a select group of agencies, allowing them to develop and implement innovative, market-based solutions. CHA has used the fungibility of capital, voucher, and operating funds to accomplish development and programming goals that would have otherwise been impossible due to federal disinvestment from subsidized housing programs.