Title: Stabilizing neighborhoods affected by the foreclosure crisis
1Stabilizing neighborhoods affected by the
foreclosure crisis
- Alan Mallach
- Nonresident Senior Fellow
- The Brookings Institution
2What is neighborhood stability?
- A stable neighborhood is one where residents and
potential buyers feel confident that their
investment psychological as well as financial
is secure - Key physical, social and economic variables
promote neighborhood stability by
preserving/enhancing residents and buyers
investment in their neighborhood.
3Key variables affecting stability
- Vacancy and abandonment
- Level of property investment
- Poverty concentration
- Home ownership rate
- Crime
4- Destabilization takes place when changes take
place that reduce resident and buyer confidence
in their neighborhood - Negative changes in any of these variables can
trigger neighborhood destabilization.
5- All of these variables are powerfully affected by
foreclosure particularly the link between
foreclosures and vacancy
6Foreclosures are sweeping the country
- Center for Responsible Lending projects nearly
2.2 million subprime foreclosures from mid-2008
through the end of 2009. - Credit Suisse projects 6.5 million total
foreclosures by the end of 2012. - No one yet has taken full account of the
potential impact of a deep, prolonged recession
on foreclosures.
7Foreclosures destabilize cities and neighborhoods
- Foreclosures significantly reduce the value of
neighboring properties - Increased foreclosures can lead to increases in
violent crime in the vicinity - Foreclosures impose significant costs on local
governments - These effects are less the product of foreclosure
as such, as the result of the link between
foreclosures and vacancy.
8Neighborhood effects of foreclosure are uneven
- Foreclosure effects are unevenly distributed
geographically - Foreclosure effects vary based on legal process
and market conditions
Northside
Phillips Central
91 of 8 properties in East Cleveland are REO
properties between 2005 and 2007 property
values dropped by 83
10Impacts are greatest in weaker markets
- Owners are most likely to leave before
foreclosure sale - Creditor is less concerned with preserving value
of property - Creditor may not even finalize foreclosure,
leaving property in limbo. - Vacant property is more likely to be stripped and
vandalized.
11Youngstown OH foreclosures 2007-2008
- Weakest market neighborhoods are not always those
most impacted by foreclosure
Areas with gt2 home mortgages per 100 1-4 family
structures in 2005 (HMDA)
12How to address destabilization
- Prevent foreclosures
- Reduce the link between foreclosures,
disinvestment and vacancy - Acquire and reuse vacant properties - Federal
Neighborhood Stabilization Program - Address other forces working to destabilize
neighborhood build confidence and market demand
13Acquisition and reuse
- Using the HUD Neighborhood Stabilization Program
- Be sensitive to market conditions
- Target to need, impact and capacity
- Leverage resources
- Integrate program with other neighborhood
stabilization and market building efforts
14Good data is essential
- Identifying target areas
- Understanding market dynamics of target areas
- Identifying level/type of market activity
- Identifying potential target markets
- Defining strategies and making critical decisions
around target properties - Acquisition
- Rehabilitation or demolition
- Reuse for owner-occupancy or rental
- Short-term reuse or land banking
- Identifying most valuable complementary
strategies - Monitoring progress and evaluating outcomes
15- Indicators can help establish neighborhood market
character
Areas with lt2 home mortgages per 100 1-4 family
structures in 2006 (HMDA)
16Market conditions should drive strategy
Little or not acquisition - allow the
market to correct itself
Acquisition to create opportunities for reuse
and neighborhood stabilization
Acquisition to land bank for future opportunities
17Market conditions should drive strategy
18Other factors are critically important
- Target limited resources in order to have
meaningful stabilizing impact - Focus on areas where conditions make impact
possible - Ensure that each targeted area receives enough
investment to make impact possible - Build on capacity to implement strategy
- Capitalize on neighborhood-based resources
community organizations, CDCs, anchor institutions
19- Leverage other activities to promote
stabilization and market demand - Crime prevention
- Build neighborhood amenities and quality of life
- Build stronger neighborhood social fabric
- Build market demand
20Focus on outcomes
- In the end, neighborhood stabilization is not
about the number of units acquired, rehabilitated
or demolished it is about restoring stability,
in terms of healthy market conditions and
resident/buyer confidence, to the citys
neighborhoods.
21-
- Alan Mallach
- PO Box 623
- Roosevelt NJ 08555
- 609.448.5614
- amallach_at_comcast.net