Baltimore City Selling Properties for $1 to Address Vacant Home Crisis
One Community Update
March 22, 2024
Source: wmar2news.com
Buying a house for a buck – sounds too good to be true. Well, that’s because it is.
“The reality is you probably need closer to $150-200,000 to renovate one of these structures,” Dr. Dwanda Farmer, community economic development expert and CEO of the CED Doctor in Baltimore, said.
That’s why the Department of Housing and Community Development (DHCD) is requiring applicants to its newly approved “Fixed Pricing Program” to provide proof they can spend at least $90,000 to renovate a home after purchasing it for just a dollar.
The goal is to rehab some of the city’s thousands of vacant homes. The application link is now live; the department will begin reviewing applications on April 1.
Developers can purchase for $3,000, and nonprofits for $1,000. Individual buyers can purchase for $1, but they must live in the home for five years.
Affordable housing advocates Dr. Dwanda Farmer and Nneka Nnamdi, Executive Director of the SOS Fund, say the program doesn’t serve the people who need it most.
“Baltimore City has provided developer incentives over the last three decades that developers have responded to the needs of this community 80% [AMI or Area Median Income] and above. What I’m asking the mayor to do is to restrict any future public investment to where we most need those – which is 50% and 30% [AMI]. Right now, Baltimore City has 38 units for every 100 needed for 30% and below and 58 units for every 100 units needed for 50% and below. But we are saturated at 80%,” Dr. Farmer said.
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