Sunday, May 18, 2008

More On Lawsuits Accusing Some Foreclosing Lenders Of A Role In Ruining Neighborhoods

ABC News and USA Today report:
  • [H]awthorne [Area Community Council] and the city of Minneapolis are pioneers in an emerging civic strategy to sue lenders and banks to recoup lost revenue and reclaim neighborhoods devastated by the mortgage crisis. Around the country, the loss of tens of thousands of homes to foreclosure is shrinking cities' tax base, straining city services such as policing, and ruining neighborhoods. [...] Cleveland, Baltimore and Buffalo also have sued lenders and banks in recent months. St. Paul has written to its lenders threatening a lawsuit if they don't fix their foreclosed properties.

  • "Hundreds of cities across the United States are in the same position," says Greg Squires, a professor of sociology at George Washington University who studies urban redevelopment. "I think there will be more lawsuits. If we get an early decision in one of these cases, it will either encourage or discourage" other cities from filing suit. Alan Mallach, a senior fellow at the National Housing Institute, says the lawsuits are "a bit of a reach under the laws of most states, but & a creative court could reasonably make some law in that direction."

For more, see Cities sue home lenders (Communities Take Banks, Lenders to Court for Failing to Fix Up Foreclosed Homes) (Go here for entire story on one web page). neighborhood destruction from foreclosures zach