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New Money Source For Demolition

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VietVet View Drop Down
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    Posted: Feb 10 2012 at 6:21am
Today's journal....

Ohio to dedicate $75M for demolishing abandoned homes

COLUMBUS — Ohio cities and nonprofits will soon have a $75 million pot of money to knock down blighted and abandoned properties that often drag down housing values and become neighborhood nuisances.

As part of the $25 billion state and federal government settlement with the nation’s five largest mortgage servicers, Ohio will receive $97 million that it may apply to any housing problem.

“I believe that Ohio is going to lead the nation by example. By tearing down abandoned and vacant properties, we are actually building a future for this state. We are creating the opportunity for economic growth and development,” DeWine said on Thursday.

A conservative estimate pegs Ohio’s abandoned property problem at 100,000 houses, he said. Dayton alone reported 14,000 vacant structures with 1,600 in the condemnation process, DeWine said

In 2010, Ohio enacted a new law that allows for an expedited tax foreclosure process and land banking of properties.

The law allows counties to quickly take control of abandoned properties that have been tax delinquent for at least a year, deal with nuisances or demolish structures, clear the titles and get the land ready to be resold for development.

DeWine said he wants the state money to be matched dollar for dollar with local funds. On average, it costs $7,000 to knock down an abandoned house, he said. If the state money is matched, it should provide enough money to demolish 21,000 structures across the state.

DeWine said he hopes to have the program running by summer.

WHEN SUMMER COMES, DO YOU THINK GILLELAND, ADKINS AND THE MERRY MUNCHKINS OF DESTRUCTION WILL BE IN COLUMBUS CAMPED OUT ON THE STATEHOUSE SIDEWALK WAITING FOR DEWINE TO SHOW UP TO ASK FOR MORE DEMOLITION MONEY.
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Stanky View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Stanky Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Feb 10 2012 at 7:19am
Vet, wishful thinking. This town couldn't provide matching $$ -- not even a dime to the state's dollar!
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Vivian Moon View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Vivian Moon Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Feb 14 2012 at 9:21am

Lack of land bank may impact funding for Butler County

By Chelsey Levingston, Staff Writer 8:56 PM Monday, February 13, 2012

    Butler County is at a disadvantage to receive demolition money from the newly reached multi-state $25 billion foreclosure fraud settlement because it doesn’t have a land bank in place, said Ohio Attorney General Mike Dewine.
   
Ohio’s $335 million share of the settlement with five of the largest U.S. mortgage lenders sets aside $75 million for abandoned and vacant property demolition. DeWine said Monday in Cincinnati
he hopes to award demolition money to local communities in grants with one-to-one matches.
    DeWine said the $75 million still won’t be enough to take down all the properties in
Ohio
that need it.
   
Cincinnati has 2,342 condemned or ordered vacant structures and Dayton has 14,000 vacant structures, according to the attorney general’s office. Butler County
had 12,313 vacant housing units in 2010, according to Census data, but the county does not keep track of condemned homes.
    “I made it a priority to do this to designate the money and really it was my decision how that part of the money was spent because I felt it was really important for these neighborhoods to survive. It’s kind of hard for neighborhoods to survive when they have houses that look like this, it depresses the value of the land, remaining homes, creates an environment that’s not good for law enforcement,” DeWine said.
    The potential match requirement puts counties with land banks already in place in a better position to receive funds because the land bank system has a ready revenue stream to provide the local dollars needed for the match, DeWine said.
    A county land bank, or County Land Reutilization Corp., is a quasi-public, nonprofit organization that can acquire vacant, abandoned, tax-foreclosed or other real property for rehabilitation and reuse. A land bank can acquire properties cleared of all liens, including delinquent property taxes. Land banks often are funded by penalties paid on delinquent property taxes.
   
Cuyahoga County was the first in Ohio
to establish a land bank in 2009. More than 10 counties have since formed land banks, are in the process or shown interest, including Butler, Hamilton and Montgomery counties, according to Thriving Communities Institute, a land bank advocacy group.
    It’s not to say communities without land banks won’t be able to apply for demolition grants, said Lisa Hackley, a spokeswoman for DeWine’s office. Hackley said the criteria to apply for demolition funds is still to be determined. The money is estimated to be available by springtime.
    “In
Cincinnati
we have the infrastructure to receive this money and to do something with it. Some communities have not put the land banks together and they really haven’t done this yet,”
    DeWine said. “I would encourage that to be speeded up because we have money and we need somebody who can take it and do something with it.”
    DeWine came to Cincinnati and Dayton Monday to talk about the demolition grant program, visiting condemned houses in Cincinnati’s Price Hill neighborhood on McPherson Avenue. He made similar visits Friday to blighted properties in
Cleveland, Youngstown and Mansfield
.
   
Butler County
is in discussions to form a land bank, which has received support of the county’s largest two cities, but has yet to go before commissioners.
    “There’s probably a lot more sites that need the demolition than we have money and time to take care of,” said Butler County Development Director David Fehr. “If we got half a million dollars that would go pretty far.”
    Stacey Dietrich Dudas,
Hamilton
economic development specialist, said, “That might be the push the county needs to fast track it.”
    Hamilton and Montgomery counties already established land banks, but it took
Hamilton County close to a year and a half to formally pass legislation last October to create one, said Todd Kinskey, Hamilton County
director of regional planning. It will probably be six months before the first property is acquired, he said.
    “I think you can make it move faster, but I would say optimistically, I would say getting a land bank in place in less than nine months is unrealistic,” he said.
    Demolition can stabilize communities by removing blight and increasing property values, said Jim Rokakis, the former
Cuyahoga County treasurer who formed Ohio
’s first land bank and is now a land bank consultant, in a Washington Post editorial published Friday. Vacant properties can raise costs for communities for maintenance, become crime hot spots and take away the value of nearby properties, Rokakis told the Journal Monday.
     Leveraging $75 million to raise $150 million for demolition can have a significant impact, he said. Local governments don’t have dedicated revenues to go to demolition and face limited budget revenues overall from less state and federal support and declining property tax collections, he said.
    “I think the Attorney General is putting together a program that will benefit everybody because he’s making the program available statewide,” he said. “He is the only attorney general in the country that has stepped up to do this.”
    Contact this reporter at (513) 705-2551 or clevingston@coxohio.com.
 

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Vivian Moon Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Feb 17 2012 at 4:24am

County commissioner criticizes funding for land banks

By Lauren Pack, Staff Writer 10:00 PM Thursday, February 16, 2012

    A Butler Cc**ty politician is critical of the state government giving portions of a multi-million dollar foreclosure fraud settlement to only counties with land banks in place.
   
County Commission President Don Dixon said he was concerned about statements made by Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine this week that Butler County is at a disadvantage to receive demolition money from Ohio
’s $335 million share of the settlement.
    More than $75 million has been set aside for abandoned and vacant property demolition in cities that can match the funds.
    The potential match requirement puts counties with land banks already in place in a better position to receive funds because the land bank system has a ready revenue stream to provide the local dollars needed for the match, DeWine said.
   
Butler County
had 12,313 vacant housing units in 2010, according to census data.
    A county land bank, or County Land Reutilization Corp., is a quasi-public, nonprofit organization that can acquire vacant, abandoned, tax-foreclosed or other real property for rehabilitation and reuse. Land banks often are funded by penalties paid on delinquent property taxes.
   
Dixon
said that tax money is traditionally given to school districts that are also struggling financially.
    “To match the money dollar for dollar they are going to give us, it is proposed to come out of the (property tax fund),”
Dixon
said. “They are proposing to take money away from schools to create a new government program to tear down buildings somewhere ... it is just switching bait,” Dixon said.
    He added the county is reviewing the proposal and will bring city leaders and school officials in on the discussions.
    “As I see it, taking out of one pocket and putting it in another to make taxpayers feel better about something happening is wrong,”
Dixon
said, noting a land bank would also add to government and create jobs that may only be around as long as the grant money holds out.
     “What we need are jobs, so that people can pay their property tax and mortgage. Not another government program,”
Dixon
said.
    Commissioner Cindy Carpenter said at first glance, the proposal seems to grow government and could spread the county personnel and money resources even thinner than they already are.
     “My concern is we are stretched thin. We are bare bones in all departments,” she said, noting the county does not have an economic development department or a county administrator.
     Carpenter said the county is exploring the proposal, but must proceed cautiously and talk with city leaders about their concerns.
     Contact this reporter at (513) 820-2168 or lauren.pack@coxinc.com.

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Jack Black View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Jack Black Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Feb 17 2012 at 8:25am
The folks at City Hall just don't get it.  WE NEED GOOD JOBS........Not more bloated bureuacracy that gives us federally-funded bike paths, parks on S. Main Street, alley paving, purchase of downtown buildings, etc.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Mike_Presta Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Feb 17 2012 at 4:51pm

Plain talk … but true, Jack.  They just don’t get it.

They complain that we are going broke because we don’t have enough money to pay the salaries of our government employees.  Their answer???  Hire more government employees!!!

“Mulligan said he ... doesn’t believe they necessarily make the return on investment necessary to keep funding them.” …The Middletown Journal, January 30, 2012
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