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Default BANKS TEARING DOWN THE HOUSES THEY FORECLOSED ON! For Fun & Profit! But Not For YOU!

"The banks have even been footing the bill for the demolitions as
much as $7,500 a pop. Four years into the housing crisis, the ongoing
expense of upkeep and taxes, along with costly code violations and the
price of marketing the properties, has saddled banks with a heavy
burden. It often has become cheaper to knock down decaying homes no
one wants."

================

"Banks turn to demolition of foreclosed properties to ease housing-
market pressures"

By Brady Dennis
October 12, 2011



CLEVELAND The sight of excavators tearing down vacant buildings has
become common in this foreclosure-ravaged city, where the housing
crisis hit early and hard. But the story behind the recent wave of
demolitions is novel and cities around the country are taking
notice.

A handful of the nations largest banks have begun giving away scores
of properties that are abandoned or otherwise at risk of languishing
indefinitely and further dragging down already depressed
neighborhoods.

The banks have even been footing the bill for the demolitions as
much as $7,500 a pop. Four years into the housing crisis, the ongoing
expense of upkeep and taxes, along with costly code violations and the
price of marketing the properties, has saddled banks with a heavy
burden. It often has become cheaper to knock down decaying homes no
one wants.

The demolitions in some cases have paved the way for community
gardens, church additions and parking lots. Even when the result is an
empty lot, it can be one less pockmark. While some widespread
demolitions could risk hollowing out the urban core of struggling
cities such as Cleveland, advocates say that the homes being targeted
are already unsalvageable and that the bulldozers are merely burying
the dead.

T he task of plowing under the homes rests with the Cuyahoga County
Land Reutilization Corp., which grew out of a 2009 state law aimed at
creating land banks with the power and money to acquire unwanted
properties and put them to better use or at least put them out of
their misery.

The efforts have led other states to pursue similar laws to deal with
their own foreclosure epidemics. New York passed a comparable measure
this summer. Similar legislation is in the works in Georgia,
Philadelphia and elsewhere.

Cleveland has found progress in the sliver of common ground between
the land banks mission and the interest of financial firms, including
some that helped fuel the housing crisis through risky loans and later
botched paperwork in carrying out foreclosures across the country.

This collaboration was uncomfortable at first, said Gus Frangos, the
Cuyahoga land banks president and one of the people behind the state
law.

Two years ago, when we started ... it was difficult, he said.
Everybody was guarded.

After countless meetings, however, land bank officials and banking
representatives shed their initial wariness of one another. Frangos
made a simple pitch: Were not here to point fingers. Well take your
worst properties, the ones not worth keeping. Pony up for the
demolition, and youll still come out ahead. Just dont walk away from
them.

Bank of America and Wells Fargo announced plans this summer to donate
more than 100 properties to the land bank. J.P. Morgan Chase also has
made regular donations, and several other banks have given
sporadically. Fannie Mae, the massive mortgage finance company seized
by the federal government three years ago, began donating properties
early on and now hands over about 30 properties a month, Frangos said.

For those companies, the arrangement equals good public relations. But
it also makes economic sense.

It feels great that were able to help nonprofits, help
neighborhoods, help families, said Tyler Smith, an assistant vice
president at Wells Fargo, which donated 300 properties nationwide last
year and is on track for about 1,000 this year. But we certainly have
to have the piece that shows it makes business sense.

The bank, which often services mortgages on behalf of other investors,
knows what it costs daily to hold each foreclosure the upkeep, the
taxes, the brokers commission, the potential for costly code
violations.

We can make the financial case to the investor that, Its in your
best interest to donate this, Smith said.

Thanks in part to the steady stream of donations, Cuyahoga land bank
officials expect to complete roughly 700 demolitions by the end of the
year.

On a recent Tuesday, the excavators roared to life. On tap: Four empty
homes and one decaying apartment building, some on foreclosure-riddled
streets, others in leafy neighborhoods with tidy lawns.

Its been a long time comin, Ronice Dunn, 58, said as the rotting
home two doors down from her on Agnes Court and donated by Fannie
Mae finally surrendered to the heavy machinery. Im not sad to see
it go.

In East Cleveland, not far from the mansion where John D. Rockefeller
once lived, workers were turning an abandoned apartment building on
Hartshorn Road into rubble.

Its about ... time, said George Jester, 73, who has lived on the
block for more than two decades. What had become a magnet for rodents,
vandals and vagrants was now an empty lot, full of potential. Itll
be for the better.

The discarded litter


Land banks have existed for decades, but only in recent years have
their numbers surged. Their objective, said Emory University professor
and land bank expert Frank S. Alexander, is to deal with the
discarded litter of a consumption society the homes nobody wants.
Traditionally, they have been small and passive organizations,
acquiring properties through tax foreclosures and able to handle only
a few at a time.

The aim of land banks has been to take these properties which would
otherwise be a drain on public services, magnets for crime and a drag
on housing prices and renovate them or clear the land for potential
redevelopment.

With the foreclosure crisis ravaging Cleveland neighborhoods,
officials there envisioned a more nimble and autonomous version. The
Ohio law allowed Cuyahogas land bank, a nonprofit corporation, to
receive millions of dollars a year from interest and penalties on
collected delinquent real estate taxes and to spend that money as it
sees fit, within its mandated mission.

Working with other nonprofits and benefiting from Clevelands
assertive housing court, which has a reputation for smacking huge
fines on banks and servicers responsible for crumbling properties, the
land bank started gobbling up dozens of vacant and abandoned
properties. Today, it has an inventory of about 1,000, with more than
100 flowing in every month from various sources.

They have quickly gone from zero to being one of the most productive
land banks in the country, Alexander said.

The challenge remains to put those parcels to good use as quickly as
possible. Some have been sold for pennies to churches or hospitals,
such as the renowned Cleveland Clinic, that want to expand. Others are
being redeveloped into rental properties or rehabbed for future sales
or turned into community gardens. Even when theres no immediate
productive use, the razed lots are one less eyesore on the landscape.
Frangos said eliminating run-down and abandoned buildings helps
improve the value of neighboring properties.

Land banks and other local authorities aim to be strategic about where
the demolitions take place, often trying to cluster them in target
areas as part of larger efforts to stabilize neighborhoods.

In the Washington region, only Maryland has passed a law authorizing
the creation of land banks. The measure was designed partly to help
Baltimore deal with its glut of vacant and abandoned homes, but the
land bank has yet to become reality.

A balance of interests


The donations keep coming, and not just in Cleveland.

At the end of August, the nations banks, along with Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac, had an inventory of more than 816,000 foreclosed
properties on their books waiting for a buyer, according to
RealtyTrac. An additional 800,000 are working their way through the
foreclosure process.

At Wells Fargo, Smith said, about a dozen asset managers scrub these
portfolios weekly in cities such as Chicago and Milwaukee, looking
for possible donations.

Rebecca Mairone, national mortgage outreach executive for Bank of
America, said the company is expanding its donation programs to nearly
a dozen cities, including Detroit and Chicago.

It does balance the banks best interest with the communitys best
interest, she said.

In previous decades, Detroit, perhaps more than any other American
city, saw such a vast swath of buildings torn down as the result of
blight that some activists now urge that this land be returned to
agriculture.

In Cleveland, much has changed since the first awkward meetings with
the banks.

My conversations [with banks] now are totally different than two
years ago, Frangos said. Were very comfortable with them, though
there are still a lot of hard feelings in the community with big
banks.

Streets throughout Cleveland remain scarred by the crisis. Once-*
elegant homes sit empty and rotting, like ghosts of better times. A
map in Frangoss office marks the location of each foreclosure filing
in recent years. No neighborhood has escaped untouched. With as many
as 15,000 vacant and abandoned structures remaining and more on the
way, the job at the current pace could take longer than a decade and
cost $250 million for demolition and other expenses.

Frangos said he expects progress, not miracles.

It is the root canal of community development that were doing, he
said, and its not a quick fix.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/busine...IgL_story.html
 
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