Abandoned Homes Plague Cities: It Takes Money to Level Them

Published: Friday,  15 Jun 2012
 Some local governments hardest hit  by population losses are struggling with what has been left behind: large  numbers of abandoned housing units.

 

Photo by: Erik  Twight
Abondoned house in Detroit.

 

Sponsored LinksCensus figures  released Thursday underscore the problem: In places racked by foreclosure, job  loss, and a weak economy, housing units haven’t fallen as fast as population.

A handful of cities such as  Detroit have demolished thousands of housing units over the past few years. Many  others — such as Baltimore, where city officials said as many as 10,000 empty  buildings need to come down — have seen levels remain flat.

Although an eighth of the nation’s  800 largest counties have lost population since 2005, fewer than half of those  have seen declines in housing stock.

“The principal impediment is the  cost,” said Michael Braverman, deputy commissioner of code enforcement for  Baltimore Housing, which tears down 200 to 300 buildings a year.

That city plans to use $20 million  from a national mortgage settlement to take down 1,000 buildings that won’t  displace many residents or cause much structural damage to nearby homes. After  that, Braverman said, costs rise “into the stratosphere” quickly.
On tours of Cleveland,  Representative Steven LaTourette, R-Ohio, has seen how Cuyahoga County’s  plummeting population has left streets dotted with vacant housing.

“These houses, they’re eyesores,  and drug traps, and crime traps,” LaTourette said.

He and Rep. Marcia Fudge, D-Ohio,  in March co-sponsored the Restore our Neighborhoods Act, asking Congress to  appropriate $4 billion to help communities demolish vacant buildings. The bill  is tied up in a House committee.

“If we’re talking billions rather  than millions, we can get a lot more done,” LaTourette said.

Many states are just passing laws  to help cities. New York last July made it easier for cities to demolish  buildings and re-use the land. Georgia this year expanded its land-banking law,  and Pennsylvania is considering a similar measure.

Frank Alexander, co-founder of the  Center for Community Progress, said the laws would help municipalities follow  Michigan’s Genesee County, which has shed more than 6,000 housing units in five  years.

“It’s not a silver bullet,” he  said. “It doesn’t create redevelopment. But it does take the properties that are  liabilities and at least eliminate the liabilities.”

Braverman said that was important.  Although many neighborhoods in Baltimore are thriving, he said, some distressed  areas need more help than the city or state can afford.

“It’s an issue of national  consequence,” Braverman said. “You can’t afford not to care what’s happening in  cities like Baltimore, because really it’s cities that are going to be the  engine driving the economy.”

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