Atlanta City Council Approves $1.4M to Redevelop Foreclosed Properties with Affordable Housing
One Community Update
October 11, 2024
Source: www.roughdraftatlanta.com
The Atlanta City Council voted this week to pay the Metro Atlanta Land Bank (MALB) $1.4 million to prepare foreclosed properties for redevelopment with an emphasis on preserving and constructing affordable housing.
The council approved the ordinance at its Oct. 7 meeting. The initiative is part of a broader effort to support Mayor Andre Dickens’ goal of creating or preserving 20,000 units of affordable housing by 2030.
The land bank was created for the purpose of “facilitating the return of dilapidated, abandoned, and tax delinquent properties to productive use,” according to the legislation.
Land banks also have the power to hold and dispose of real property and collaborate with municipalities and other public and private entities for the development of real property.
“The [Metro Atlanta] land bank is an organization that helps take blighted properties that are eyesores in our communities, that may pose safety issues for our neighbors … and clears the title and cleans them up and then gets those pieces of properties ready to rejoin the community,” said Councilmember Matt Westmoreland.
The city will pay MALB the $1.4 million from the new $8.5 million Gulch Housing Trust Fund approved by the council at the Oct. 7 meeting.
The Gulch Housing Trust Fund is a result of the agreement the city made with CIM Group years ago to transform the undeveloped Gulch into a 50-acre mixed-use development and entertainment district.
In exchange for CIM Group promising to fund and meet affordable housing goals as part of the estimated $5 billion project, the city pledged about $1.9 billion in public tax incentives.
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