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Cleveland: Blight Nation

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  • Cleveland: Blight Nation


    One out of every 13 houses in Cleveland is vacant. Many of the properties are derelict, but speculators still buy them in bulk.
    Photo: Reuben Cox for The New York Times

    All Boarded Up

    By
    ALEX KOTLOWITZ

    TONY BRANCATELLI, A CLEVELAND CITY COUNCILMAN, yearns for signs that something like normal life still exists in his ward. Early one morning last fall, he called me from his cellphone. He sounded unusually excited. He had just visited two forlorn-looking vacant houses that had been foreclosed more than a year ago. They sat on the same lot, one in front of the other. Both had been frequented by squatters, and Brancatelli had passed by to see if they had been finally boarded up. They hadn’t. But while there he noticed with alarm what looked like a prone body in the yard next door. As he moved closer, he realized he was looking at an elderly woman who had just one leg, lying on the ground. She was leaning on one arm and, with the other, was whacking at weeds with a hatchet and stuffing the clippings into a cardboard box for garbage pickup. “Talk about fortitude,” he told me. In a place like Cleveland, hope comes in small morsels.

    The next day, I went with Brancatelli to visit Ada Flores, the woman who was whacking at the weeds. She is 81, and mostly gets around in a wheelchair. Flores is a native Spanish speaker, and her English was difficult to understand, especially above the incessant barking of her caged dog, Tuffy. But the story she told Brancatelli was familiar to him. Teenagers had been in and out of the two vacant houses next door, she said, and her son, who visits her regularly, at one point boarded up the windows himself. “Are they going to tear them down?” she asked. Brancatelli crossed himself. “I hope so,” he mumbled.

    Prayer and sheer persistence are pretty much all Brancatelli has to go on these days. Cleveland is reeling from the foreclosure crisis. There have been roughly 10,000 foreclosures in two years. For all of 2007, before it was overtaken by sky-high foreclosure rates in parts of California, Nevada and Florida, Cleveland’s rate was among the highest in the country. (It’s now 24th among metropolitan areas.) Vacant houses are not a new phenomenon to the city. Ravaged by the closing of American steel mills, Cleveland has long been in decline. With fewer manufacturing jobs to attract workers, it has lost half its population since 1960. Its poverty rate is one of the highest in the nation. But in all those years, nothing has approached the current scale of ruin.

    And in December, just when local officials thought things couldn’t get worse, Cuyahoga County, which includes Cleveland, posted a record number of foreclosure filings. The number of empty houses is so staggeringly high that no one has an accurate count. The city estimates that 10,000 houses, or 1 in 13, are vacant. The county treasurer says it’s more likely 15,000. Most of the vacant houses are owned by lenders who foreclosed on the properties and by the wholesalers who are now sweeping in to pick up houses in bulk, as if they were trading in baseball cards.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/08/ma...t.html?_r=1&hp






  • #2
    Re: Cleveland: Blight Nation

    A squatter's haven! At least that is one thing that I can look forward to during the economic collapse - free housing!

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Cleveland: Blight Nation

      I believe that's part of the Stimulus Plan

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Cleveland: Blight Nation

        Aaargh, my poor hometown. Fortunately, my best friends who still live there are teachers and firemen, they tell me they're safe for now.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Cleveland: Blight Nation

          Originally posted by don View Post
          I believe that's part of the Stimulus Plan
          Bless you, Obamassiah! :p

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Cleveland: Blight Nation

            Originally posted by don View Post
            Most of the vacant houses are owned by lenders who foreclosed on the properties and by the wholesalers who are now sweeping in to pick up houses in bulk, as if they were trading in baseball cards.

            http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/08/ma...t.html?_r=1&hp
            33 residential listings in Ohio on ebay for under $10,000

            50 in Michigan

            Beautiful 3 Bdrm Ranch in Good Condition! Detroit, MI
            Perfect Investment oppty! Zestimate is $87,000!
            9 Bids $560.00 5d 9h 9m

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Cleveland: Blight Nation

              My Cleveland favorite: Quicken Loans Arena. Wouldn't Quicken Loans be a bit stressed by now?


              is.jpg


              http://www.theqarena.com/

              Link for QUICKEN LOANS, if you need a QUICKIE:

              https://www.quickenloans.com/

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Cleveland: Blight Nation

                WOW. I read the entire article. Cleveland now, can California and Las Vegas be far behind.

                This may be the modern version of the 1930's dust bowl.

                Abandoned, empty, looted neighborhoods, where thousands of houses have to be razed.

                And this sad, frustrating part is - Think of what all that wasted investment that we as taxpayers are now paying for, could have been invested in, instead.

                Productive factories that provide jobs, bigger subsidies for education and health care, high speed trains connecting high density metropolitan areas on the east and west coasts, upgrading and updating the U.S. electric infrastructure, etc., etc.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Cleveland: Blight Nation

                  This letter is in response to the article "All Boarded Up" written by ALEX KOTLOWITZ.

                  During my time (1993 to 1999) as President of {the now defunct} South East Clevelanders Together I worked to promote community organizing in Ward 12 {Slavic Village} to address quality of life issues {such as crime watch} in an aggressive and systematic manner. During that time, Ward 12 was represented by current City of Cleveland Director of Building and Housing Edward W. Rybka and the former Broadway Area Housing Coalition nka Slavic Village Development headed then by current Ward 12 Councilman Anthony Brancatelli. Needless to say, it did not take long for our organization to clash with the former Councilman's housing group. Their primary objective was to build and rehabilitate housing without any real regard for the other issues affecting the residents and business owners. They too took the worst houses and put people in them who had no ability {or desire} to pay. In fact, once they completed their first rehabilitation on any given street that house soon became a haven for various social malcontents. Once the "single apple spoiled the barrel" the remaining law-abiding residents moved thus adding further to the catastrophe. Now the Cleveland City Council wants to extend the boundaries of Ward 12 beyond the current boundaries of Ward 15 which {as luck would have it} would include my residence. Councilman Brian Cummins has been a fine representative for Ward 15 but as for Ward 12 Councilman Anthony Brancatelli; he will do for Ward 15 {Old Brooklyn} what he has and will continue to do for Ward 12 {Slavic Village}.


                  Joe Bialek
                  Cleveland, OH

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Cleveland: Blight Nation

                    Originally posted by JOEBIALEK View Post
                    This letter is in response to the article "All Boarded Up" written by ALEX KOTLOWITZ.

                    During my time (1993 to 1999) as President of {the now defunct} South East Clevelanders Together I worked to promote community organizing in Ward 12 {Slavic Village} to address quality of life issues {such as crime watch} in an aggressive and systematic manner. During that time, Ward 12 was represented by current City of Cleveland Director of Building and Housing Edward W. Rybka and the former Broadway Area Housing Coalition nka Slavic Village Development headed then by current Ward 12 Councilman Anthony Brancatelli. Needless to say, it did not take long for our organization to clash with the former Councilman's housing group. Their primary objective was to build and rehabilitate housing without any real regard for the other issues affecting the residents and business owners. They too took the worst houses and put people in them who had no ability {or desire} to pay. In fact, once they completed their first rehabilitation on any given street that house soon became a haven for various social malcontents. Once the "single apple spoiled the barrel" the remaining law-abiding residents moved thus adding further to the catastrophe. Now the Cleveland City Council wants to extend the boundaries of Ward 12 beyond the current boundaries of Ward 15 which {as luck would have it} would include my residence. Councilman Brian Cummins has been a fine representative for Ward 15 but as for Ward 12 Councilman Anthony Brancatelli; he will do for Ward 15 {Old Brooklyn} what he has and will continue to do for Ward 12 {Slavic Village}.


                    Joe Bialek
                    Cleveland, OH
                    Joe,
                    Thank you for sharing this letter. It confirms what we have been hearing elsewhere.
                    Ed.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Cleveland: Blight Nation

                      Originally posted by World Traveler View Post
                      WOW. I read the entire article. Cleveland now, can California and Las Vegas be far behind.

                      This may be the modern version of the 1930's dust bowl.

                      Abandoned, empty, looted neighborhoods, where thousands of houses have to be razed.
                      .
                      Sounds a lot like war... destroy and rebuild. It is just good business.

                      Comment

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