Community Corner

Readers Offer Solutions for Vacant Houses

Patch asked our readers for suggestions on how to deal with vacant homes in North Baltimore and here is what they said.

I'd like to see organizations get together to rehab these places by training people to do construction and the places either used to home the homeless or be put on the market as" starter" homes. There should be a limit as to how many may be owned at one time, so that no one thinks of becoming an area " slum lord".Too, first chance at ownership should go to teachers, police, fire crews and military families, and there should be no renting / ownership allowed to anyone who can not prove they are legal citizens of the US.

Sell them to anyone who wants to buy one, with caveats of course. Many government programs require a buyer to the house for a certain period of time before renting and to provide a plan for rehabbing the home and show that they have the income, time, or skill to do the work. A low selling price, $1000-2500, will offset the cost of selling the property and the city then gets property taxes sooner rather than never

Community Law Center is supporting amendments to the Community Bill of Rights law in this year’s Legislative Session that will make it easier for neighbors to take action against nuisance properties in their communities. The changes will make it easier for people to seek remedies in Court from the owner of a property that poses a danger to the health, welfare or safety of houses around it. You can help support Senate Bill 130 and House Bill 365 by writing to your State Senator and Representative in support of these bills (find their information here: http://www.msa.md.gov/msa/mdmanual/05sen/html/sendist.html ). We are also having a community meeting at the Conference Room of the Episcopal Diocese of Maryland (4 East University Parkway, 21218) on Wednesday, February 15, 2012 from 6 – 8 PM. For more information about the bill, please contact Community Law Center at www.communitylaw.org

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Selling them to members of the community at very low prices with stipulations attached could be a solution for some locations. For larger blocks of vacant homes I think demolition with substitution of community gardens with chicken coops is another. There are not nearly enough community parks in the city but a garden would be more useful.

This city is already ruled by developers, it's time that residents needs were given priority over those that leech off the system. There not enough jobs in this city to lure people to fill newly developed homes.

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Via North Baltimore Patch's Facebook page

Raine Spencer sell them to city employees for $1, then give them low to no interest loans to rehab them and live in them. Think police, teachers, firefighters living where they work

Justin Nether I know! Beautify them with vibrant street art. Here's a example: http://www.youtube.com/embed/hFIjMOGrQH4

Bernard Feinsod yes - populating them is key. and keeping blocks and large volume vacant areas away from large-scale developers at the same time...

Via Twitter North Baltimore Patch Twitter account.

james_schaffer 

@NorthBmorePatch: Regarding vacants: tax the hell out of them. Seize homes of tax deliquents, sell to people for $1, must guarantee rehab.

dennisthecynic 

@NorthBmorePatch Commit to doing this within five years. Work with small businesses/trade schools to rehab the houses.

Offer rehabbed houses to city employees, officers, first time buyers. More jobs, more tax revenue. Winning!


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