by blukatzen » Tue 19 Oct 2010, 00:50:18
If you live in a large city (I live in Chicago), you will see quite a few neighborhoods within the city go through mortgage "cleansings". Most of the folks who could not afford the mortgage arm reset cleared out. The value of those homes have gone down due to many homes being trashed due to too many people living in them.
There were no improvements made to those bungalows, who need an upgrade in wiring, plaster repair, etc. over the ages and just wear and tear of a family living in said homes.
Right now, there are quite a few handymen who have bought these homes, and are rehabbing them. These are NOT flippers, per se, but those who know good solid homes, and see an opportunity. I am not sure who they think will buy those homes, and we have seen some with hope.
It was a quiet summer, though, and there were no loud parties in the backyards, drunken people fighting, etc. We needed to get the riff-raff out of here. Even the section 8 homes were cleared out. (I have heard from one neighbor who goes to the monthly aldermanic/cop/neighborhood "Watch Program" that the FBI have been quietly doing raids, getting the drug cache houses shut down, along with those who may have been illegally here.
(And NO I don't live in a high crime area, but that is exactly WHERE you put drug cache storehouses, certainly NOT in a high crime area. You would have drug wars in no time, and that attracts the law(or those you have not paid off.)
Not having a lot of folks in the neighborhood is very stressful for the HOUSING STOCK. Just ask any realtor. Just ask any alderman. It is NOT good for neighborhoods to stand empty. That is when crime can happen, drugs move in, gangs, prostitutes plying their trade, etc. Housing needs to be kept up, repaired, lawns need to be cut, flowers planted, etc.
When you do NOT have this happening, it is punishing the lifeway of the ensuing neighbors that are left, to watch out for the homes that are to the left and right of them. It DOES affect MY LIFE if someone starts burning down the houses. I live here, and I feel what the bankers have done have affected MY neighborhood down the line.
It affects safety, social fabric, housing stock quality, small businesses, tax bases, a whole web of life that gets affected when neighborhoods are emptied. It's like dead-mall syndrome, but it starts affecting your block where you live. It's depressing.
I had to give a lecture in a suburb that has a high rate of immigrants. It was this August. I had lived there, a while back. I went down the street where my grandparents had a few apartment buildings, way back in the day. There were SO MANY homes knocked down, (whilst riding down a few streets to get there) that I felt that Cicero was beginning to resemble certain parts of Detroit. One building was still standing, my grandparents' old 3-flat. The 2-flat we used to own, and I once had to remodel, was knocked down.
I would hope that the other factors, more subtle, but yet just as prevalent, and "real-world" would be accounted for. These bankers, mortgage brokers have a lot to answer for, and it's not just money. It's the destruction of neighborhoods they have to answer for. They've just callously walked away from any responsibility for that. (along with the realtors, mortgage brokers, aldermen who had something to do with those now empty houses.)