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Land bank study |
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Vivian Moon
MUSA Council Joined: May 16 2008 Location: Middletown, Ohi Status: Offline Points: 4187 |
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Posted: Oct 07 2015 at 10:50am |
Posted: 6:58 p.m.
Tuesday, Oct. 6, 2015 Land bank and
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VietVet
MUSA Council Joined: May 15 2008 Status: Offline Points: 7008 |
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"Conversely, findings suggest that little real estate equity return is available from demolition activity in weak real estate markets.”"
So, knowing Middletown has torn down it's fair share of blighted buildings. and knowing that Middletown is the poster child for a weak real estate market, and now we know that little real estate equity return is to be realized after demolition, other than to rid the city of decaying buildings, what is the advantage in spending so much money with this program and was it worth the money outlay in Middletown's case? If all you have is a vacant lot with no hope on the horizon of being able to sell it due to a lack of development interest, did we really gain anything for the effort? We are seeing that now when we consider the buildings torn down versus any interest generated in developing any replacement. Almost all, if not all, are still vacant lots. Advantage? Benefit? |
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I'm so proud of my hometown and what it has become. Recall 'em all. Let's start over.
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Cooper
MUSA Resident Joined: Apr 25 2014 Status: Offline Points: 62 |
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I read yesterday Mr. VanArdsdale, the public safety director, said if one life was saved from all the city's work on their heroin clinics and work, it made the city expenditures worth it.
In that case, how many lives could have positively been impacted had some of the torn down houses and buildings, been given to shelter the homeless, or a safe place for battered woman? If the city has 1000 excess houses, for need, is there value in tearing down 50. Butler Cty doesn't have any extremely high demand areas, even in West Chester. It may be more stable than Middletown, but the land bank did not have a significant impact, and did not make house values rise. Next May the five students at Miami will put their nice little Powerpoint presentation together, and they'll have data how much crime was reduced in an area by tearing down a house, and some correlation between rising values that may have gone up 2-3 %, and how much additional green-space was opened for recreation and sporting activities. They'll say for that spare lot bought by a neighbor that had a house destroyed, and put up a volley ball net, 10 lives were saved from heart attacks for each neighbor that lived by a house torn down, and a volley ball put up, and the extra exercise saved millions in hospital care and rehabilitation. A proper cost/analysis would be did the return on the six million spent produce a net sum gain, on tearing down capacity, or would the results have been better, of the county took the six million dollars and used it to provide new business incentives, build parks, save a golf course, or build abuse/ battered shelters, and homeless pantries. After all, what is one life worth? The land bank had no impact, but what will be reported next May will be a great return with lots of impact, and get lots of Miami students voting for a county treasurer. |
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Richard Saunders
MUSA Resident Joined: Jun 30 2010 Status: Offline Points: 232 |
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MMF will be backing her again this cycle to have another elected official "in their back pocket".
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Dean
MUSA Resident Joined: Apr 15 2014 Status: Offline Points: 162 |
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TESTIMONY BEFORE NEW JERSEY LEGISLATURE ASSEMBLY HOUSING AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT COMMITTEE Trenton, NJ March 16, 2015 Lavea Brachman, Executive Director, Greater Ohio Policy Center, Columbus, OH
Chair Green, Vice Chair Jasey, and members of the Housing and Community Development Committee. IntroductionMy name is Lavea Brachman, and I am the Executive Director of the Greater Ohio Policy Center, a nonpartisan nonprofit organization located in Columbus, Ohio that operates statewide and champions revitalization and sustainable growth to create economically competitive cities and communities. I am pleased to be here in Trenton today to offer testimony on the status of land banks in Ohio to help inform this body and the governor’s consideration of proposed land bank legislation for New Jersey. I am here at the invitation of the Housing and Community Development Network of New Jersey. Similar to New Jersey, Ohio’s cities have been hit hard by urban blight and decline, experiencing some of the highest foreclosure and vacancy rates in the country. At its height in 2009, Ohio’s foreclosure filings was almost 90,000 per year, and the vacancy rates have climbed to devastating levels of over 15% in such cities as, Cleveland, Youngstown and Cincinnati, and over 20% in Dayton and many other cities and towns around the state. These vacancies have also cost municipalities exponential amounts in collateral damage, represented in the form of public safety hazards and decreased property values. In 2008, in response to this unparalleled foreclosure and vacant and abandoned property crisis, the Ohio General Assembly, with bipartisan support, passed legislation creating Ohio’s first county land bank, piloted in Cuyahoga County (where Cleveland is located). In 2010, GOPC and a coalition of partners from around the state successfully advocated for passage of legislation that extended land bank authority to an additional 42 out of Ohio’s 88 counties (based on a population threshold), permitting these specified counties to create a hybrid organization that combines the private sector efficiency of a non-profit corporation with the public purposes, powers and funding of a governmental organization. Basic Ohio Land Bank Mission, Powers, Composition and FundingThese Ohio land banks were created to: 1. facilitate reutilization of vacant, abandoned, tax‐foreclosed real property; 2. hold and manage these types of properties to leverage their reutilization; 3. clear the title of property and coordinate property assembly; and 4. promote economic and housing development in the county or region. In order to achieve these goals, Ohio’s county land banks have a number of unusual, critical powers, including the ability to: · take title to a property more than two years delinquent on property taxes, local government fines or fees, or has serious and chronic unabated code violations; · extinguish all private mortgages, liens, and state and local taxes/fees, in order to “clear” the property’s title for future use; · prevent a foreclosed property from going to sheriff sale and thus help to interfere with purchase by an unscrupulous real estate speculator; and · address blight mitigation, including demolition, property stabilization, and property rehabilitation, in order to revitalize neighborhoods and communities. Additionally, Ohio land banks are governed by a board of directors that comprise at least 5 “community stewards,” which includes both public and private sector representatives (that is, county commissioners, the county treasurer, representatives from a township and the county’s largest city, and a private real estate developer) to ensure land banks perform appropriate functions and do not overextend their powers or undertake extensive property ownership where it is unwarranted. Perhaps most importantly, the Ohio statute names a source of operational funding that counties could chose to provide to land bank: 5% of the biannual delinquent property tax receipts, more commonly known as “DTAC” (Delinquent Tax and Assessment Collection). Ohio is the only state that statutorily provides a consistent funding source for county land banks. Lessons Learned and SuccessesIn the five plus years of operations, as more land banks have come on-line, Ohio’s land banks have learned some important lessons and experienced significant success. Let me give you a quick sense of some of those lessons and successes, large and small. · First, since the statute does not dictate how county land banks should programmatically operate, leaving it up to the local boards, county land banks have the flexibility to form in ways that are responsive to local needs. They are all tailored to their local circumstances, so that each of the 22 currently existing county land banks is somewhat unique in terms of operations and programming. However, there are similarities in terms of structure and activity that have demonstrated successful outcomes. · Second, piloting one land bank first, in Cuyahoga County, was very effective in demonstrating its operations and use for legislators. · Third, in addition to property-by-property blight elimination, land banks in Ohio are achieving the broader goals of: 1) stabilizing and strengthening markets—particularly residential neighborhoods—to prevent further decline, and 2) clearing a path for private sector re-engagement by lowering barriers through incentives, support, and resources. For instance, Franklin County land bank combined demolition of parts of a dilapidated apartment complex in Columbus, allowing for reinvestment and renovation of the remaining apartments and townhouses. The complex is now under new ownership and features a new public park. This “targeted area” strategy involves a more holistic approach to neighborhood revitalization, particularly where some market still actively remains, to coordinate and concentrate interventions and resources to stabilize and revive a functional market. · Fourth, Ohio land banks have become vehicles for use by state agencies (such as the Ohio Attorney General’s office and the Ohio Housing Finance Agency) to funnel much-needed demolition funding. Ohio had estimated 100,000 blighted properties in 2010; close to 20,000 have been torn down by 2015. These lots are now the sites of brand new real estate developments through parcel assemblage, new sideyards for neighbors, community gardens, and parks. This blight removal activity has resulted in collateral improvements, including crime reduction, improving property and neighborhood values, residential redevelopment, and green space creation. · Fifth, land banks are versatile. They can operate as the “lead entity” in projects, driving stabilization and revitalization efforts, but they also act as excellent partners and work closely with other local entities that share similar goals of neighborhood stabilization and/or market re-invigoration. For instance, a Mahoning County (Youngstown) land bank took over a blighted property on an otherwise well-kept street and sold it to Habitat for Humanity which built an ADA-accessible house for a retired Marine staff sergeant and his family. · Sixth, land banks have helped to save money by eliminating properties that received disproportionate number of emergency services calls, e.g. police calls to abandoned houses used as drug dens, properties targeted for arson, properties that attract wildlife and vermin. · Seventh, land bank operations are helping to stabilize existing buildings, which prevents future extraordinary costs. For instance, Hamilton County (Cincinnati) has the “High-Impact Property Program” that improves commercial buildings to a level that attracts private sector, saving one of the oldest skyscrapers in Cincinnati and a historic theater this way by doing the roof repairs and title clearing needed by the private sector. · Finally, their work has prevented bank walkaways and performed property assembly to aggregate properties to improve their reuse potential. For instance, the Lucas County (Toledo) land bank gained site control of a multiple, adjacent commercial properties (an old strip mall with a former grocery store, a Kroger, and multiple smaller units) with complicated title history with mortgage foreclosure, several major lien holders and an high delinquent tax bill, and worked with receiver to find a purchaser who is restoring the property with new commercial users that are already generating tax revenues. ConclusionOhio land banks are a welcome example of a state policy implemented with appropriate local control intervening effectively to jumpstart local market operations. While Ohio communities have a long way to go to return to economic and physical health -- and while there is room for land banks to maximize further use of their tools to help individuals thrive and achieve community revitalization -- many cities and counties are actively leveraging their land banks’ capabilities demonstrating that well-intentioned state policy interventions in combination with local capacity and oversight can work in tandem with market operations. They are working so well that a recent proposal floated by the county treasurers’ association to expand land banks to the rest of the counties in the state. |
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Dean
MUSA Resident Joined: Apr 15 2014 Status: Offline Points: 162 |
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The above should work Miami University team. And, analytics models future expectations, not an analysis of what has been the resultant of previous efforts. Nice payback though by Nancy, maybe she'll become a member of the alum Hall of Fame through this effort. McNamara worked for her and now is making sure the right picture will be painted. Business as usual.
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