Cleaning Up After The Foreclosure Tsunami: Tackling Bank Walk-Aways and Vulture Investors
Continued...
Changing The Economics Of Foreclosure And Vacant Property Ownership.
Following the age-old axiom that behavior doesn’t change until it hits the pocketbook, civic leaders have taken a number of steps to shift financial responsibility to the banks and REO investors.
- Threat of Demolition. The City of Cleveland has substantially ramped up its demolition effort. In the years leading up to 2006 the City inspected, condemned and demolished 200 homes per year. In 2007 and 2008 the City demolished 1,000 homes each year and is on track to take down 1,700 by the end of this year. The City is also imposing demolition liens and pursuing the collection of an average $10,000 per house demolition cost. The prospect of having a vacant lot with a $10,000 demolition lien can be a powerful motivator.
- Prosecuting Code Violations. The City of Cleveland and inner ring suburbs are also prosecuting banks and REO investors for violations of criminal housing codes. In addition, the Cleveland Municipal Housing Court [an innovation in its own right described a few years ago in the May/June 2005 issue of Shelterforce, Issue #141], has issued arrest warrants for bank presidents, and has levied stiff penalties against irresponsible investing in abandoned property. A $140,000 fine was levied in 2008 against an investor from Oklahoma, and, just weeks ago, an extraordinary $850,000 fine was imposed against an investor from California.
- _“Private” Code Enforcement_. In addition to government-led code enforcement, “private code enforcement” has been spearheaded by the Cleveland-based Neighborhood Progress, Inc. (NPI) in the form of Public Nuisance lawsuits brought against two of Cleveland’s largest REO owners—Wells Fargo and Deutsche Bank. NPI’s lawsuits allege that owning and dumping vacant REO property is a public nuisance that threatens the health and safety of neighbors and damages property values. In a major victory for NPI, the Cleveland Housing Court issued an injunction against Wells Fargo, ordering them to bring their entire inventory—about 150 houses—up to code. Wells, reeling from that ruling, appealed to the Ohio Court of Appeals. That decision, which could be handed down soon, will have a profound impact—either positive or negative—on the future of bank-owned REO property throughout the state.
- Combating Bank Walk-Aways. As efforts escalate to hold foreclosing banks accountable, lenders are beginning to adopt a new strategy litigating the foreclosure case to judgment, but not taking title at Sheriff Sale. This tactic, commonly referred to as a “Bank Walk-Away,” allows them to obtain whatever insurance or accounting benefit is available by documenting the loss, but leaves them immune from responsibility for the damage caused by a vacated property. To counter this latest development, Ohio Rep. Dennis Murray has introduced a bill in the Ohio House of Representatives (HB 323) that would make foreclosing lenders accountable for nuisance conditions in properties they are foreclosing on, even prior to taking title.
- Innovative New Jersey Statute. New Jersey actually paved the way for this by enacting Senate Bill 2777 in May 2009, which states that if a property goes vacant at any time after filing a foreclosure, the foreclosing lender shall be responsible for code violations to the same extent as if they were the owner.
Creating Tools And Programs For Responsible Management And Redevelopment Of Abandoned Foreclosed Property.
In its 40-year history with community development, Cleveland has consistently exhibited two major strengths. First, it’s a city steeped in community organizing traditions, and civic and community leaders have not been shy about holding banks and investors accountable as noted in the examples above. But this is also a city of innovation, as witnessed by the Cleveland Housing Court, the Cleveland Housing Network (one of the first scattered site lease-purchase programs in the country), and the publicly accessible “NEO CANDO” property data system at Case Western Reserve University. Civic leaders have been no less creative in addressing the current crisis of post-foreclosure vacant property.
- Integrating Rehab with Neighborhood Stabilization. More than a year before the Federal government announced Neighborhood Stabilization Programs 1 and 2, the NPI partnered with the Cleveland Housing Network (CHN) to develop “Opportunity Homes” which rehabs vacant foreclosed property in strategically targeted areas to leverage existing assets and investments. Rehabbed homes are supported by other neighborhood stabilization activities on the same streets—blight remediation, demolition (for homes beyond rehab), home repair and landscaping. In what may be the most innovative aspect of this program, the Case Western Reserve University “NEO CANDO” property data system identifies occupied homes near rehabbed homes that are at risk of foreclosure. Using both public and proprietary data sources, every occupied home with a subprime loan or an adjustable rate mortgage is targeted for door-to-door outreach and loan modification assistance.
- Re-imagining Cleveland. The City is looking forward 3 to 5 years and planning now for the productive, sustainable and responsible re-use of the thousands of vacant lots that are accumulating throughout the City and its suburbs. The “Reimagining Cleveland” Project is a partnership between NPI and the City of Cleveland, funded by the Surdna Foundation, which is proactively engaging block clubs, civic organizations and local institutions in short term utilization and long term planning for the redevelopment of vacant property.
- Land Banking. At the end of the day, faced with a growing flood of post-foreclosure vacant property, the most important objective is getting control of that property, keeping it out of the hands of irresponsible investors, and preventing it from doing more damage to neighborhoods. Cleveland needed a safe and responsible place to “park” these properties, and triage them for immediate demolition, rehab, or in the case of viable properties, mothball them responsibly until market conditions are conducive to redevelopment. None of the local non-profits have the capacity to acquire and hold a large inventory of vacant property. The City of Cleveland’s Land Bank owns thousands of vacant lots, but does not have the financial resources to manage and maintain vacant structures. Cleveland leaders found a model to follow in the Genesee County Land Bank, based in Flint, Michigan. Culminating in a legislative campaign led by Cuyahoga County Treasurer Jim Rokakis, the Cuyahoga County Land Reutilization Corporation was formed in April of 2009. The key to its anticipated success, and what differentiates it from the City Land Bank or local nonprofits, is that it will have an expected annual budget of $6 to $8 million dollars derived from spin-off revenue from fees and penalties collected on late property tax payments. This new County Land Bank is just getting off the ground, but has already begun negotiations with major REO property holders.
Cleveland was hit hard by the foreclosure crisis and hit earlier than many other cities. Because of this Cleveland has had time to develop a variety of innovative approaches that other cities could learn from. The Cleveland experience can be distilled down to several major lessons learned. First, ramp up code enforcement to control the ownership and irresponsible transfer of post-foreclosure vacant property. In other words, change the economics of owning vacant property. Second, while fighting the immediate battle, be forward-thinking and start planning ahead for the sustainable reuse of accumulating vacant property. Third, and critically important, establish an entity, such as a land bank, that can receive and responsibly hold vacant property. It should be noted that any land bank can only be useful if it has the proper financial resources to undertake this task. Linking land banks to excess spin-off property tax revenue, as first developed by the Genesee County Land Bank, may be the single most important innovation in urban redevelopment in recent years.
Cleaning Up After The Foreclosure Tsunami: Tackling Bank Walk-Aways and Vulture Investors
Continued...
What we now have taking place in Cleveland is an REO Race, i.e. can financial institutions unload or dump their liability before the local municipal code enforcement officials catch up with them? In their race to dump property, the banks are making no effort to screen the buyers.
So whos buying these properties and what are they doing with them? The buyers range from inexperienced individuals who watch late-night infomercials and are captivated by the promise of making millions from real estate, to a new niche industry that seems to have sprung up in the past decade: companies, most of which are out of state, that specialize in making bulk purchases of vacant foreclosed homes. Their business models vary: some merely act as wholesalers and flip the package of 10 to 20 homes to another investor for a small markup; some post them on eBay without making any repairs; some make a bulk purchase only to acquire one decent prospect, assuming they may abandon the other properties.
The best of the REO investors actually do some renovation, but all too often it amounts to only cosmetic work followed by putting the house back on the market without addressing more serious issues. This was made clear to me in summer 2008 when I had the opportunity to join with other colleagues to spend a day meeting with two out-of-state investors to discuss their business goals and objectives. One of the most striking admissions came when one of them said: If we had to bring these properties up to code, our business model wouldnt work. In other words, they were saying that they were going to come into the community and violate housing codes.
Evidence of intent to evade local housing laws is made abundantly clear by the docket of the Cleveland Municipal Housing Court. In the period beginning January 1, 2009 through October 23, 2009, the court levied $1.5 million in fines to 11 REO investors for failing to show up for court hearings.
Foreclosure litigation itself is not the true cause of damage to neighborhood markets. The real damage is being done when tens of thousands of homes are emptied out, and those doing the emptying take no responsibility for the physical condition of the vacant home.
The vast majority of foreclosures are being initiated by out-of-state financial institutions. They want the privilege of using the states legal apparatus to bring foreclosure actions, but they dont want to be held accountable for state and local laws pertaining to health and safety codes. Moreover, foreclosing financial institutions want the privilege of offloading their liability for public nuisance property by dumping those defective assets to investors demonstrating similar disdain and contempt for Ohios laws.
Clevelands urban and suburban civic leadersfrom both the public and community development sectorsare fighting back in two ways. First, theyre changing the economics of foreclosure and vacant property ownership. Second, theyre creating tools and programs for responsible management and redevelopment of abandoned foreclosed property.
H6. Changing The Economics Of Foreclosure And Vacant Property Ownership.
Following the age-old axiom that behavior doesnt change until it hits the pocketbook, civic leaders have taken a number of steps to shift financial responsibility to the banks and REO investors.
- Threat of Demolition. The City of Cleveland has substantially ramped up its demolition effort. In the years leading up to 2006 the City inspected, condemned and demolished 200 homes per year. In 2007 and 2008 the City demolished 1,000 homes each year and is on track to take down 1,700 by the end of this year. The City is also imposing demolition liens and pursuing the collection of an average $10,000 per house demolition cost. The prospect of having a vacant lot with a $10,000 demolition lien can be a powerful motivator.
- Prosecuting Code Violations. The City of Cleveland and inner ring suburbs are also prosecuting banks and REO investors for violations of criminal housing codes. In addition, the Cleveland Municipal Housing Court [an innovation in its own right described a few years ago in the May/June 2005 issue of Shelterforce, Issue #141], has issued arrest warrants for bank presidents, and has levied stiff penalties against irresponsible investing in abandoned property. A $140,000 fine was levied in 2008 against an investor from Oklahoma, and, just weeks ago, an extraordinary $850,000 fine was imposed against an investor from California.
- Private Code Enforcement. In addition to government-led code enforcement, private code enforcement has been spearheaded by the Cleveland-based Neighborhood Progress, Inc. (NPI) in the form of Public Nuisance lawsuits brought against two of Clevelands largest REO ownersWells Fargo and Deutsche Bank. NPIs lawsuits allege that owning and dumping vacant REO property is a public nuisance which threatens the health and safety of neighbors and damages property values. In a major victory for NPI, the Cleveland Housing Court issued an injunction against Wells Fargo, ordering them to bring their entire inventoryabout 150 housesup to code. Wells, reeling from that ruling, appealed to the Ohio Court of Appeals. That decision, which could be handed down soon, will have a profound impacteither positive or negativeon the future of bank-owned REO property throughout the state.
- Combating Bank Walk-Aways. As efforts escalate to hold foreclosing banks accountable, lenders are beginning to adopt a new strategy litigating the foreclosure case to judgment, but not taking title at Sheriff Sale. This tactic, commonly referred to as a Bank Walk-Away, allows them to obtain whatever insurance or accounting benefit is available by documenting the loss, but leaves them immune from responsibility for the damage caused by a vacated property. To counter this latest development, Ohio Rep. Dennis Murray has introduced a bill in the Ohio House of Representatives (HB 323) that would make foreclosing lenders accountable for nuisance conditions in properties they are foreclosing on, even prior to taking title.
- Innovative New Jersey Statute. New Jersey actually paved the way for this by enacting Senate Bill 2777 in May 2009, which states that if a property goes vacant at any time after filing a foreclosure, the foreclosing lender shall be responsible for code violations to the same extent as if they were the owner.
H6. Creating Tools And Programs For Responsible Management And Redevelopment Of Abandoned Foreclosed Property.
In its 40-year history with community development, Cleveland has consistently exhibited two major strengths. First, its a city steeped in community organizing traditions, and civic and community leaders have not been shy about holding banks and investors accountable as noted in the examples above. But this is also a city of innovation, as witnessed by the Cleveland Housing Court, the Cleveland Housing Network (one of the first scattered site lease-purchase programs in the country), and the publicly accessible NEO CANDO property data system at Case Western Reserve University. Civic leaders have been no less creative in addressing the current crisis of post-foreclosure vacant property.
- Integrating Rehab with Neighborhood Stabilization. More than a year before the Federal government announced Neighborhood Stabilization Programs 1 and 2, the NPI partnered with the Cleveland Housing Network (CHN) to develop Opportunity Homes which rehabs vacant foreclosed property in strategically targeted areas to leverage existing assets and investments. Rehabbed homes are supported by other neighborhood stabilization activities on the same streetsblight remediation, demolition (for homes beyond rehab), home repair and landscaping. In what may be the most innovative aspect of this program, the Case Western Reserve University NEO CANDO property data system identifies occupied homes near rehabbed homes that are at risk of foreclosure. Using both public and proprietary data sources, every occupied home with a subprime loan or an adjustable rate mortgage is targeted for door-to-door outreach and loan modification assistance.
- Re-imagining Cleveland. The City is looking forward 3 to 5 years and planning now for the productive, sustainable and responsible re-use of the thousands of vacant lots that are accumulating throughout the City and its suburbs. The Reimagining Cleveland Project is a partnership between NPI and the City of Cleveland, funded by the Surdna Foundation, which is proactively engaging block clubs, civic organizations and local institutions in short term utilization and long term planning for the redevelopment of vacant property.
- Land Banking. At the end of the day, faced with a growing flood of post-foreclosure vacant property, the most important objective is getting control of that property, keeping it out of the hands of irresponsible investors, and preventing it from doing more damage to neighborhoods. Cleveland needed a safe and responsible place to park these properties, and triage them for immediate demolition, rehab, or in the case of viable properties, mothball them responsibly until market conditions are conducive to redevelopment. None of the local non-profits have the capacity to acquire and hold a large inventory of vacant property. The City of Clevelands Land Bank owns thousands of vacant lots, but does not have the financial resources to manage and maintain vacant structures. Cleveland leaders found a model to follow in the Genesee County Land Bank, based in Flint, Michigan. Culminating in a legislative campaign led by Cuyahoga County Treasurer Jim Rokakis, the Cuyahoga County Land Reutilization Corporation was formed in April of 2009. The key to its anticipated success, and what differentiates it from the City Land Bank or local nonprofits, is that it will have an expected annual budget of $6 to $8 million dollars derived from spin-off revenue from fees and penalties collected on late property tax payments. This new County Land Bank is just getting off the ground, but has already begun negotiations with major REO property holders.
Cleveland was hit hard by the foreclosure crisis and hit earlier than many other cities. Because of this Cleveland has had time to develop a variety of innovative approaches that other cities could learn from. The Cleveland experience can be distilled down to several major lessons learned. First, ramp up code enforcement to control the ownership and irresponsible transfer of post-foreclosure vacant property. In other words, change the economics of owning vacant property. Second, while fighting the immediate battle, be forward-thinking and start planning ahead for the sustainable reuse of accumulating vacant property. Third, and critically important, establish an entity, such as a land bank, that can receive and responsibly hold vacant property. It should be noted that any land bank can only be useful if it has the proper financial resources to undertake this task. Linking land banks to excess spin-off property tax revenue, as first developed by the Genesee County Land Bank, may be the single most important innovation in urban redevelopment in recent years.
Cleaning Up After The Foreclosure Tsunami: Tackling Bank Walk-Aways and Vulture Investors
Continued...
What we now have taking place in Cleveland is an REO Race, i.e. can financial institutions unload or dump their liability before the local municipal code enforcement officials catch up with them? In their race to dump property, the banks are making no effort to screen the buyers.
So whos buying these properties and what are they doing with them? The buyers range from inexperienced individuals who watch late-night infomercials and are captivated by the promise of making millions from real estate, to a new niche industry that seems to have sprung up in the past decade: companies, most of which are out of state, that specialize in making bulk purchases of vacant foreclosed homes. Their business models vary: some merely act as wholesalers and flip the package of 10 to 20 homes to another investor for a small markup; some post them on eBay without making any repairs; some make a bulk purchase only to acquire one decent prospect, assuming they may abandon the other properties.
The best of the REO investors actually do some renovation, but all too often it amounts to only cosmetic work followed by putting the house back on the market without addressing more serious issues. This was made clear to me in summer 2008 when I had the opportunity to join with other colleagues to spend a day meeting with two out-of-state investors to discuss their business goals and objectives. One of the most striking admissions came when one of them said: If we had to bring these properties up to code, our business model wouldnt work. In other words, they were saying that they were going to come into the community and violate housing codes.
Evidence of intent to evade local housing laws is made abundantly clear by the docket of the Cleveland Municipal Housing Court. In the period beginning January 1, 2009 through October 23, 2009, the court levied $1.5 million in fines to 11 REO investors for failing to show up for court hearings.
Foreclosure litigation itself is not the true cause of damage to neighborhood markets. The real damage is being done when tens of thousands of homes are emptied out, and those doing the emptying take no responsibility for the physical condition of the vacant home.
The vast majority of foreclosures are being initiated by out-of-state financial institutions. They want the privilege of using the states legal apparatus to bring foreclosure actions, but they dont want to be held accountable for state and local laws pertaining to health and safety codes. Moreover, foreclosing financial institutions want the privilege of offloading their liability for public nuisance property by dumping those defective assets to investors demonstrating similar disdain and contempt for Ohios laws.
Clevelands urban and suburban civic leadersfrom both the public and community development sectorsare fighting back in two ways. First, theyre changing the economics of foreclosure and vacant property ownership. Second, theyre creating tools and programs for responsible management and redevelopment of abandoned foreclosed property.
H6. Changing The Economics Of Foreclosure And Vacant Property Ownership.
Following the age-old axiom that behavior doesnt change until it hits the pocketbook, civic leaders have taken a number of steps to shift financial responsibility to the banks and REO investors.
- Threat of Demolition. The City of Cleveland has substantially ramped up its demolition effort. In the years leading up to 2006 the City inspected, condemned and demolished 200 homes per year. In 2007 and 2008 the City demolished 1,000 homes each year and is on track to take down 1,700 by the end of this year. The City is also imposing demolition liens and pursuing the collection of an average $10,000 per house demolition cost. The prospect of having a vacant lot with a $10,000 demolition lien can be a powerful motivator.
- Prosecuting Code Violations. The City of Cleveland and inner ring suburbs are also prosecuting banks and REO investors for violations of criminal housing codes. In addition, the Cleveland Municipal Housing Court [an innovation in its own right described a few years ago in the May/June 2005 issue of Shelterforce, Issue #141], has issued arrest warrants for bank presidents, and has levied stiff penalties against irresponsible investing in abandoned property. A $140,000 fine was levied in 2008 against an investor from Oklahoma, and, just weeks ago, an extraordinary $850,000 fine was imposed against an investor from California.
- Private Code Enforcement. In addition to government-led code enforcement, private code enforcement has been spearheaded by the Cleveland-based Neighborhood Progress, Inc. (NPI) in the form of Public Nuisance lawsuits brought against two of Clevelands largest REO ownersWells Fargo and Deutsche Bank. NPIs lawsuits allege that owning and dumping vacant REO property is a public nuisance which threatens the health and safety of neighbors and damages property values. In a major victory for NPI, the Cleveland Housing Court issued an injunction against Wells Fargo, ordering them to bring their entire inventoryabout 150 housesup to code. Wells, reeling from that ruling, appealed to the Ohio Court of Appeals. That decision, which could be handed down soon, will have a profound impacteither positive or negativeon the future of bank-owned REO property throughout the state.
- Combating Bank Walk-Aways. As efforts escalate to hold foreclosing banks accountable, lenders are beginning to adopt a new strategy litigating the foreclosure case to judgment, but not taking title at Sheriff Sale. This tactic, commonly referred to as a Bank Walk-Away, allows them to obtain whatever insurance or accounting benefit is available by documenting the loss, but leaves them immune from responsibility for the damage caused by a vacated property. To counter this latest development, Ohio Rep. Dennis Murray has introduced a bill in the Ohio House of Representatives (HB 323) that would make foreclosing lenders accountable for nuisance conditions in properties they are foreclosing on, even prior to taking title.
- Innovative New Jersey Statute. New Jersey actually paved the way for this by enacting Senate Bill 2777 in May 2009, which states that if a property goes vacant at any time after filing a foreclosure, the foreclosing lender shall be responsible for code violations to the same extent as if they were the owner.
H6. Creating Tools And Programs For Responsible Management And Redevelopment Of Abandoned Foreclosed Property.
In its 40-year history with community development, Cleveland has consistently exhibited two major strengths. First, its a city steeped in community organizing traditions, and civic and community leaders have not been shy about holding banks and investors accountable as noted in the examples above. But this is also a city of innovation, as witnessed by the Cleveland Housing Court, the Cleveland Housing Network (one of the first scattered site lease-purchase programs in the country), and the publicly accessible NEO CANDO property data system at Case Western Reserve University. Civic leaders have been no less creative in addressing the current crisis of post-foreclosure vacant property.
- Integrating Rehab with Neighborhood Stabilization. More than a year before the Federal government announced Neighborhood Stabilization Programs 1 and 2, the NPI partnered with the Cleveland Housing Network (CHN) to develop Opportunity Homes which rehabs vacant foreclosed property in strategically targeted areas to leverage existing assets and investments. Rehabbed homes are supported by other neighborhood stabilization activities on the same streetsblight remediation, demolition (for homes beyond rehab), home repair and landscaping. In what may be the most innovative aspect of this program, the Case Western Reserve University NEO CANDO property data system identifies occupied homes near rehabbed homes that are at risk of foreclosure. Using both public and proprietary data sources, every occupied home with a subprime loan or an adjustable rate mortgage is targeted for door-to-door outreach and loan modification assistance.
- Re-imagining Cleveland. The City is looking forward 3 to 5 years and planning now for the productive, sustainable and responsible re-use of the thousands of vacant lots that are accumulating throughout the City and its suburbs. The Reimagining Cleveland Project is a partnership between NPI and the City of Cleveland, funded by the Surdna Foundation, which is proactively engaging block clubs, civic organizations and local institutions in short term utilization and long term planning for the redevelopment of vacant property.
- Land Banking. At the end of the day, faced with a growing flood of post-foreclosure vacant property, the most important objective is getting control of that property, keeping it out of the hands of irresponsible investors, and preventing it from doing more damage to neighborhoods. Cleveland needed a safe and responsible place to park these properties, and triage them for immediate demolition, rehab, or in the case of viable properties, mothball them responsibly until market conditions are conducive to redevelopment. None of the local non-profits have the capacity to acquire and hold a large inventory of vacant property. The City of Clevelands Land Bank owns thousands of vacant lots, but does not have the financial resources to manage and maintain vacant structures. Cleveland leaders found a model to follow in the Genesee County Land Bank, based in Flint, Michigan. Culminating in a legislative campaign led by Cuyahoga County Treasurer Jim Rokakis, the Cuyahoga County Land Reutilization Corporation was formed in April of 2009. The key to its anticipated success, and what differentiates it from the City Land Bank or local nonprofits, is that it will have an expected annual budget of $6 to $8 million dollars derived from spin-off revenue from fees and penalties collected on late property tax payments. This new County Land Bank is just getting off the ground, but has already begun negotiations with major REO property holders.
Cleveland was hit hard by the foreclosure crisis and hit earlier than many other cities. Because of this Cleveland has had time to develop a variety of innovative approaches that other cities could learn from. The Cleveland experience can be distilled down to several major lessons learned. First, ramp up code enforcement to control the ownership and irresponsible transfer of post-foreclosure vacant property. In other words, change the economics of owning vacant property. Second, while fighting the immediate battle, be forward-thinking and start planning ahead for the sustainable reuse of accumulating vacant property. Third, and critically important, establish an entity, such as a land bank, that can receive and responsibly hold vacant property. It should be noted that any land bank can only be useful if it has the proper financial resources to undertake this task. Linking land banks to excess spin-off property tax revenue, as first developed by the Genesee County Land Bank, may be the single most important innovation in urban redevelopment in recent years.
Cleaning Up After The Foreclosure Tsunami: Tackling Bank Walk-Aways and Vulture Investors
Continued...
What we now have taking place in Cleveland is an REO Race, i.e. can financial institutions unload or dump their liability before the local municipal code enforcement officials catch up with them? In their race to dump property, the banks are making no effort to screen the buyers.
So whos buying these properties and what are they doing with them? The buyers range from inexperienced individuals who watch late-night infomercials and are captivated by the promise of making millions from real estate, to a new niche industry that seems to have sprung up in the past decade: companies, most of which are out of state, that specialize in making bulk purchases of vacant foreclosed homes. Their business models vary: some merely act as wholesalers and flip the package of 10 to 20 homes to another investor for a small markup; some post them on eBay without making any repairs; some make a bulk purchase only to acquire one decent prospect, assuming they may abandon the other properties.
The best of the REO investors actually do some renovation, but all too often it amounts to only cosmetic work followed by putting the house back on the market without addressing more serious issues. This was made clear to me in summer 2008 when I had the opportunity to join with other colleagues to spend a day meeting with two out-of-state investors to discuss their business goals and objectives. One of the most striking admissions came when one of them said: If we had to bring these properties up to code, our business model wouldnt work. In other words, they were saying that they were going to come into the community and violate housing codes.
Evidence of intent to evade local housing laws is made abundantly clear by the docket of the Cleveland Municipal Housing Court. In the period beginning January 1, 2009 through October 23, 2009, the court levied $1.5 million in fines to 11 REO investors for failing to show up for court hearings.
Foreclosure litigation itself is not the true cause of damage to neighborhood markets. The real damage is being done when tens of thousands of homes are emptied out, and those doing the emptying take no responsibility for the physical condition of the vacant home.
The vast majority of foreclosures are being initiated by out-of-state financial institutions. They want the privilege of using the states legal apparatus to bring foreclosure actions, but they dont want to be held accountable for state and local laws pertaining to health and safety codes. Moreover, foreclosing financial institutions want the privilege of offloading their liability for public nuisance property by dumping those defective assets to investors demonstrating similar disdain and contempt for Ohios laws.
Clevelands urban and suburban civic leadersfrom both the public and community development sectorsare fighting back in two ways. First, theyre changing the economics of foreclosure and vacant property ownership. Second, theyre creating tools and programs for responsible management and redevelopment of abandoned foreclosed property.
H6. Changing The Economics Of Foreclosure And Vacant Property Ownership.
Following the age-old axiom that behavior doesnt change until it hits the pocketbook, civic leaders have taken a number of steps to shift financial responsibility to the banks and REO investors.
- Threat of Demolition. The City of Cleveland has substantially ramped up its demolition effort. In the years leading up to 2006 the City inspected, condemned and demolished 200 homes per year. In 2007 and 2008 the City demolished 1,000 homes each year and is on track to take down 1,700 by the end of this year. The City is also imposing demolition liens and pursuing the collection of an average $10,000 per house demolition cost. The prospect of having a vacant lot with a $10,000 demolition lien can be a powerful motivator.
- Prosecuting Code Violations. The City of Cleveland and inner ring suburbs are also prosecuting banks and REO investors for violations of criminal housing codes. In addition, the Cleveland Municipal Housing Court [an innovation in its own right described a few years ago in the May/June 2005 issue of Shelterforce, Issue #141], has issued arrest warrants for bank presidents, and has levied stiff penalties against irresponsible investing in abandoned property. A $140,000 fine was levied in 2008 against an investor from Oklahoma, and, just weeks ago, an extraordinary $850,000 fine was imposed against an investor from California.
- Private Code Enforcement. In addition to government-led code enforcement, private code enforcement has been spearheaded by the Cleveland-based Neighborhood Progress, Inc. (NPI) in the form of Public Nuisance lawsuits brought against two of Clevelands largest REO ownersWells Fargo and Deutsche Bank. NPIs lawsuits allege that owning and dumping vacant REO property is a public nuisance which threatens the health and safety of neighbors and damages property values. In a major victory for NPI, the Cleveland Housing Court issued an injunction against Wells Fargo, ordering them to bring their entire inventoryabout 150 housesup to code. Wells, reeling from that ruling, appealed to the Ohio Court of Appeals. That decision, which could be handed down soon, will have a profound impacteither positive or negativeon the future of bank-owned REO property throughout the state.
- Combating Bank Walk-Aways. As efforts escalate to hold foreclosing banks accountable, lenders are beginning to adopt a new strategy litigating the foreclosure case to judgment, but not taking title at Sheriff Sale. This tactic, commonly referred to as a Bank Walk-Away, allows them to obtain whatever insurance or accounting benefit is available by documenting the loss, but leaves them immune from responsibility for the damage caused by a vacated property. To counter this latest development, Ohio Rep. Dennis Murray has introduced a bill in the Ohio House of Representatives (HB 323) that would make foreclosing lenders accountable for nuisance conditions in properties they are foreclosing on, even prior to taking title.
- Innovative New Jersey Statute. New Jersey actually paved the way for this by enacting Senate Bill 2777 in May 2009, which states that if a property goes vacant at any time after filing a foreclosure, the foreclosing lender shall be responsible for code violations to the same extent as if they were the owner.
H6. Creating Tools And Programs For Responsible Management And Redevelopment Of Abandoned Foreclosed Property.
In its 40-year history with community development, Cleveland has consistently exhibited two major strengths. First, its a city steeped in community organizing traditions, and civic and community leaders have not been shy about holding banks and investors accountable as noted in the examples above. But this is also a city of innovation, as witnessed by the Cleveland Housing Court, the Cleveland Housing Network (one of the first scattered site lease-purchase programs in the country), and the publicly accessible NEO CANDO property data system at Case Western Reserve University. Civic leaders have been no less creative in addressing the current crisis of post-foreclosure vacant property.
- Integrating Rehab with Neighborhood Stabilization. More than a year before the Federal government announced Neighborhood Stabilization Programs 1 and 2, the NPI partnered with the Cleveland Housing Network (CHN) to develop Opportunity Homes which rehabs vacant foreclosed property in strategically targeted areas to leverage existing assets and investments. Rehabbed homes are supported by other neighborhood stabilization activities on the same streetsblight remediation, demolition (for homes beyond rehab), home repair and landscaping. In what may be the most innovative aspect of this program, the Case Western Reserve University NEO CANDO property data system identifies occupied homes near rehabbed homes that are at risk of foreclosure. Using both public and proprietary data sources, every occupied home with a subprime loan or an adjustable rate mortgage is targeted for door-to-door outreach and loan modification assistance.
- Re-imagining Cleveland. The City is looking forward 3 to 5 years and planning now for the productive, sustainable and responsible re-use of the thousands of vacant lots that are accumulating throughout the City and its suburbs. The Reimagining Cleveland Project is a partnership between NPI and the City of Cleveland, funded by the Surdna Foundation, which is proactively engaging block clubs, civic organizations and local institutions in short term utilization and long term planning for the redevelopment of vacant property.
- Land Banking. At the end of the day, faced with a growing flood of post-foreclosure vacant property, the most important objective is getting control of that property, keeping it out of the hands of irresponsible investors, and preventing it from doing more damage to neighborhoods. Cleveland needed a safe and responsible place to park these properties, and triage them for immediate demolition, rehab, or in the case of viable properties, mothball them responsibly until market conditions are conducive to redevelopment. None of the local non-profits have the capacity to acquire and hold a large inventory of vacant property. The City of Clevelands Land Bank owns thousands of vacant lots, but does not have the financial resources to manage and maintain vacant structures. Cleveland leaders found a model to follow in the Genesee County Land Bank, based in Flint, Michigan. Culminating in a legislative campaign led by Cuyahoga County Treasurer Jim Rokakis, the Cuyahoga County Land Reutilization Corporation was formed in April of 2009. The key to its anticipated success, and what differentiates it from the City Land Bank or local nonprofits, is that it will have an expected annual budget of $6 to $8 million dollars derived from spin-off revenue from fees and penalties collected on late property tax payments. This new County Land Bank is just getting off the ground, but has already begun negotiations with major REO property holders.
Cleveland was hit hard by the foreclosure crisis and hit earlier than many other cities. Because of this Cleveland has had time to develop a variety of innovative approaches that other cities could learn from. The Cleveland experience can be distilled down to several major lessons learned. First, ramp up code enforcement to control the ownership and irresponsible transfer of post-foreclosure vacant property. In other words, change the economics of owning vacant property. Second, while fighting the immediate battle, be forward-thinking and start planning ahead for the sustainable reuse of accumulating vacant property. Third, and critically important, establish an entity, such as a land bank, that can receive and responsibly hold vacant property. It should be noted that any land bank can only be useful if it has the proper financial resources to undertake this task. Linking land banks to excess spin-off property tax revenue, as first developed by the Genesee County Land Bank, may be the single most important innovation in urban redevelopment in recent years.
Frank Ford is senior vice president for research and development at Neighborhood Progress, Inc.

National Housing Institute
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