Open Thread - Saturday, October 29
I've used my Saturday morning Open Threads to recount how my family arrived in Cleveland in 2010 looking for one of the $1 houses that were advertised in places like Cleveland and Detroit in the immediate wake of the '08 Crash. After a year of looking and dealing with foreclosure sales and Community Development Corporations (CDCs), we ended up buying a lot with two abandoned houses on it that had not been lived in for years. We now find ourselves in a mostly rehabbed house in a neighborhood close to downtown but surrounded on nearly all sides by still-abandoned houses.
Does what we as a community do with abandoned houses matter? Why not hire some buildozers, knock these old houses down and let the Invisible Hand take over to build new, energy efficient housing?
That's been done in a lot of areas in Cleveland. Down around the hungry maw for land that is the Cleveland Clinic, entire old Hough neighborhoods have been replaced by gleaming medical towers and new townhouses for Clinic workers. The foreclosure crisis hastened the process for Fairfax, a poor neighborhood south of the Clinic. Put "Cleveland Clinic" in Google, flip to satellite view and look around the area south of Cedar Ave. These large empty areas will soon be filled with new medical buildings housing doctors' offices, health industry companies, nursing homes, etc.
All that demolition and new construction has a big impact on the environment:
According to new research by construction blog Bimhow, the construction sector contributes to 23% of air pollution, 50% of the climatic change, 40% of drinking water pollution, and 50% of landfill wastes. In separate research by the US Green Building Council (USGBC), the construction industry accounts for 40% of worldwide energy usage.
Old buildings can be made more energy efficient, and even if they end up being less efficient than new construction, it takes many years before new construction catches up to rehabbing because of the high impact of the construction process.
Last week, I pointed out with anecdotal evidence in our neighborhood how houses become vacant. There's usually a foreclosure and a slumlord involved. How do foreclosed, empty houses get new ownership and occupants? In our area, here are the possibilities:
1) They're purchased at a foreclosure sale.
Cuyahoga County runs weekly foreclosure sales. In the early days as the housing bubble was popping, this was a good place to pick up a house. The banks were acting as banks always have and were dumping houses that had been foreclosed. There were so many houses going through foreclosure sales that some attracted no bids. The banks, that had already taken title to these properties, offered them directly for sale, many for $1.
That all changed with TARP. The banks did two things: they quit taking title to foreclosed properties, leaving those homes in limbo indefinitely, and they always bid the amount owed at foreclosure sales, pricing out bidders because the houses were not worth nearly as much as what was owed on them.
The various federal guarantors like Fannie Mae did the same. We had found a house on the west side that we liked and bid a reasonable amount at a foreclosure sale in 2011, but Fannie Mae bid the debt which was 5 times what we bid and 2 times what the house was worth even after it was rehabbed.
Another thing changed in that time period. The banks and Fannie Mae couldn't sit on these foreclosed and abandoned houses forever. Sales were restructured to allow big investors to purchase thousands of houses at a time. While this process has slowed, it has put a large part of the housing stock in many Crash-impacted cities in the hands of a few investors who have been rehabbing but who have also been using their market power to raise rents as gjohnsit has been reporting to us.
2) They're purchased through a Land Bank.
To take advantage of funds available in the '09 stimulus package, states passed laws creating regional land banks that could centralize and oversee the process of dealing with foreclosed, abandoned houses.
The primary goal of our Cuyahoga Land Bank is not by any means to facilitate abandoned houses coming into the hands of new owner-occupiers who will rehab them and live in them. Instead, the Land Bank is there to enable re-development by assembling small residential parcels into larger tracts amenable to development. Secondarily, the Land Bank has taken over the demolition responsibility from the hard-pressed city government along with rehabbing a few houses themselves for re-sale.
The Land Bank does have a program for buyers who want to rehab the house themselves, but only a few houses are involved. and the requirements are so onerous that it would require a large construction loan to complete them and obtain the deed.
3) They're purchased from a CDC.
Our land bank distributes a few houses to local CDCs. Some of these are rehabbed and sold through the CDC. Others are offered for rehab in a way similar to the Land Bank's rehab program.
4) They're purchased from a private re-purchaser.
That's how we got our houses. A man and his son regularly bought tax foreclosure parties in bulk though not the massive numbers of the institutional investors. They thought they could resell our houses to the nearby technical institute, and when that didn't work out, they wanted to dump it quickly.
Millions of families who had been living in homes they owned lost their houses in the Crash. The government stepped into the housing market in a massive way, but putting these families back into houses they owned was not a priority in any way. Instead, federal, state and local policies have largely worked to turn the Crash to the advantage of big investors who saw the drop in home ownership rates as an opportunity to corner the rental market and pump up prices. Governments and their non-profit affiliates have also used the devastating impact of foreclosure on neighborhoods like Fairfax to reshape land ownership patterns to favor large institutions like Cleveland Clinic and big developers who want large parcels for their developments.
The few, small programs aimed at owner-occupiers are not much more than an afterthought, and their unrealistic rehab requirements and timetables price out everyone other than potential gentrifiers with access to bank loans and contractors.
Next week, I'll offer an alternative vision for these neighborhoods that could address those millions of families who lost their homes and revitalize these neighborhoods without gentrification.
Today's Saturday morning meditation music is "Embryonic Journey" first found on Jefferson Airplane's "Surrealistic Pillow" album. The Airplane's lead guitarist, Jorma Kaukonen, also of Hot Tuna with bassist Jack Cassady, plays it at JA's Rock Hall of Fame induction in 1996. Kaukonen lives in Ohio and still plays gigs up here in Cleveland on a regular basis.
[video:https://youtu.be/LbcMa3is-vw]
Comments
And here's a little house music:
[video:https://youtu.be/NZtJWJe_K_w]
“This is your brain on partisanship” — Michael Moore’s Trumpland
Michael Moore owes me $4.99
Also: decent people of all backgrounds can have their thinking tied in knots by identity politics.
Who’s racist?
(article about black-on-white attacks in Philadelphia, via OpEd News)
I see a big danger of a backlash, leading to a zeitgeist where reactionary white nationalism — like that promoted by the so-called Alt-Right — becomes the “in” thing with some people.
Edited to add this link from 2013, also about race relations in Philly:
Being white in Philly:
Whites, race, class, and the things that never get said
Moore's Next Movie: Hellery and Me, A Love Story
But the catch is, it really is a freakin love story.
WTF Moore of all people. I'm not surprised to see comedians and actors drinking the koolaid -- b/c they are just performers playing a role for money. But Moore who came to fame speaking for the little people of Flint. And now propping up the Warmonger, Wall St Whore Hellery. [facepalm]
Donnie The #ShitHole Douchebag. Fake Friend to the Working Class. Real Asshole.
He still regrets his vote for Nader.
"The object of persecution is persecution. The object of torture is torture. The object of power is power. Now do you begin to understand me?" ~Orwell, "1984"
Good morning Cleveland friend.
Really enjoy your series Goin South. Thanks for sharing your knowledge and stories.
Feel like we're taking a journey with you through not only your neighborhood, which you colorfully describe, but alongside a handy man/visionary navigating the waters of building one's own home in a part of town abandoned by society, and all the squalls of dealing with banks, local municipality, project accounting and building set backs. I don't know if I could manage, I know I couldn't with the essentials of actually building my house myself. I admire your perseverance and skills.
I think yours is the kind of investment, part of revitalizing a part of town, I would like if I were in position or a little more ambitious. But as for the "ownership" society, of which little Boy Bush was the advance person representing the banks evil schemes to defraud millions of folks all over the country as you mentioned, I guess I've come to think differently of it. The volatility of and fraudulent schemes swirling around the housing market usually make me hesitate. I'd like to own a house someday but the thought of it more and more seems like an an anchor or albatross in these times. The monthly maintenance of upkeep and repairs, for someone no so handy, is one of the bigger reasons. Something goes wrong in my apartment we call the landlord.
Love the late 60's/early 70's. Need to get more familiar with the JA stuff. I was a child when all that glorious stuff came out, so when I backtracked I usually came at it first from what I was hearing on the radio in the 70's and 80's growing up, so that led to CSN, Neil Young, etc but I kind of missed the earlier stuff and only know it tangentially.
This morning I noticed out of the pathetic flow of begging Dem emails this one from John Lewis. I couldn't resist replying:
"If I should ever die, God forbid, let this be my epitaph:
THE ONLY PROOF HE NEEDED
FOR THE EXISTENCE OF GOD
WAS MUSIC"
- Kurt Vonnegut
Thanks, Mark.
Next week, I'm going to discuss some alternative approaches that don't involve deeded ownership. Think coops.
I don't think anyone has fallen further in my estimation during this abysmal election cycle than John Lewis.
I agree about Lewis. Atlanta OWS turned him away at the
height of the movement. He seemed disappointed but said he understood. I felt bad for him at the time. Now I see that ATL OWS was right. He's too deeply entrenched in the status quo. I wonder what Hosea Williams would say were he alive today.
"The object of persecution is persecution. The object of torture is torture. The object of power is power. Now do you begin to understand me?" ~Orwell, "1984"
Vote fraud in Florida - Mail-In Ballots And Dead People Edition
This lady who processes mail-in ballots was "accused of marking ballot choices that were originally left blank".
http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/crime/2-miami-women-arrested-for-violating...
I think we need UN inspectors on election day. Hahahha.
Donnie The #ShitHole Douchebag. Fake Friend to the Working Class. Real Asshole.
I've been saying that since 2000.
"The object of persecution is persecution. The object of torture is torture. The object of power is power. Now do you begin to understand me?" ~Orwell, "1984"
At this point I think it takes a PhD or luck to even find a path
to rescue some of those old abandoned homes in Rust Belt cities. I have nearby (meaning in 2400 sq ft) my husband's essay on Pocket Parks in Manhattan and close outer areas of the Island. Maybe now it was during LaGuiardia years that an abandoned brownstone would be dozed and "parked". Coupla trees, some grass seed early made the neighbors happy. No doubt brown earth for community gardens, but civics and all. He had pictures he made of some. I (we) live on 20A in the middle. I can see why neighbors get unhappy about curtain lack, lawn trimming and screaming.
Hey! my dear friends or soon-to-be's, JtC could use the donations to keep this site functioning for those of us who can still see the life preserver or flotsam in the water.
Pocket parks can be a big minus.
We have a pocket park directly across the street from us that was created out of two lots that were emptied when the houses on them burned.
It's a gathering spot for drug deals more than for kids or neighborhood folks. On top of that, the city has recently contracted out the maintenance which means that it isn't being done. Trash blowing around, people getting drunk in the park at all hours, cars parked in front of the park making drug deals.
The city and the Land Bank have wisely moved to a policy that tries to give vacant lots to the adjacent land owners.
Goin South, really interesting analysis of foreclosure market
Not surprised to see that big investors were the ones who got all the money in the fed govt programs to "help foreclosed families". And I'm sure the few families that actually met the demands to purchase a foreclosed home, were only allowed so the program directors could have a photo op for the local paper. Gotta keep up appearances and spin. Ugh.
Donnie The #ShitHole Douchebag. Fake Friend to the Working Class. Real Asshole.
My daughter leapt in to the housing market
into a flipped house, shoddy fixers if you ask me. Neighbors love the couple, both employed. Many neighbors are retirees. Cul-de-sac setting. End of sac. They managed to get into the market because she has more financial wits than I at that age. Financed with a USDA mortgage (who knew??) that has been bundled and sold. But they did not have a large downpayment. And I could not assist, and bank records are now scrutinized for assistance gifts.
Hey! my dear friends or soon-to-be's, JtC could use the donations to keep this site functioning for those of us who can still see the life preserver or flotsam in the water.
Seems income is key
No great surprise...from wiki
If we would develop a jobs program to rehab and build energy efficient structures, people might be able to afford to buy them. Anyone farming in your neighborhood? Urban farms are becoming more common.
Have a good weekend!
“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”
A farm is just down the block.
They tore down the old elementary school in the middle of the neighborhood and started a farm that folks that need job training. They also have several nice greenhouses and hoop houses.
“FaceBook lets advertisers exclude users by race”
https://www.propublica.org/article/facebook-lets-advertisers-exclude-use...
Also:
When the world is the ad
And: yet another important reason to vote for Jill Stein
http://www.jill2016.com/on_911
(via Kevin Ryan / Dig Within blog)
Thank you, Goin South, a good, concise look at a real problem
and a major missed opportunity for the Obama administration to have done some real good for the people instead of the banksters.
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
Doing the most good for the most people is never a policy goal..
these days.
Didn't somebody try to justify Capitalism using Utilitarianism once?
redacted - who cares /nt
m not whining. I am furious. So. Basta.
https://www.euronews.com/live