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Showing posts with label Georgia legislators. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Georgia legislators. Show all posts

Sunday, January 11, 2009

Lawmaker proposes giving cops foreclosed homes

The typical mortgage is 30 years. But walk a beat in Atlanta, and that house could be yours in half that time — and for just a little money down.

As a solution to metro Atlanta’s foreclosure crisis, a lawmaker plans to propose giving foreclosed, abandoned homes to county police officers, who usually can’t afford to live in the neighborhoods they’re sworn to protect.

Of course, the deal would come with a catch: officers must agree to serve 15 years on the force before they get the property deed. And the board of commissioners would have to persuade lenders holding the liens to give several shuttered homes to the county in exchange for tax breaks.

“I thought somebody should be in these homes,” said Fulton County Commissioner Robb Pitts, who plans to introduce the idea to the board. “Here’s a way to help a group of people who put their lives on the line for us on a daily basis at a relatively minor cost.”
Cities across the country are trying to find solutions to filling up houses abandoned by people who couldn’t afford their mortgages. Several are using federal money to buy foreclosed properties and sell them at cut-rate prices or interest rates. Georgia has consistently been in the top 10 in foreclosed properties, with the nation’s sixth highest foreclosure rate in November, according to RealtyTrac, a Web site that tracks foreclosures.

Pitts said he thought of the plan after looking at all the empty homes in his southwest Atlanta neighborhood. The national foreclosure epidemic presents a bittersweet opportunity, he said.
“I think we have a short window because this probably won’t be the situation four or five years from now. If we can take advantage of it now, I think we’ll have a receptive audience,” he said.
For their part, officers would have to come up with $2,500 down payment and be responsible for all taxes, insurance, utilities and maintenance. Pitts said he plans to meet as soon as next week with several “major lenders,” whom he declined to name, to discuss his plan.
“Here’s an opportunity for them to have some goodwill coming from the community in which they do business by helping with public safety,” Pitts said. “If we could get 200 (homes), that would be a good start.”
Some say the idea is a creative and original solution to a crisis.
“I’d think lenders would be very interested in stabilizing neighborhoods in which they have mortgages on other properties,” said Bruce Seaman, an economics professor at the Andrew Young School of Policy Studies at Georgia State University.
Programs that subsidize housing for public servants are being tried in other places. Grand Prairie, Texas, is offering foreclosed properties the city acquired with federal bailout money to government or district school employees, with the city helping with the down payment and closing costs.

The “Ohio Heroes” program offers a 30-year fixed mortgage at a reduced interest rate to first-time homebuyers in that state to military, firefighters, paramedics, police and teachers.

But free homes in exchange for years of public service seems to be a new idea.

And while it sounds like it would require financial institutions to be philanthropic, that is hardly the case, Seaman said.
“How many properties can it be?” Seaman said. “The departments aren’t huge. Lending agencies being asked to participate will find this, upon reflection, a very wise move on their part.”
The Fulton County Police Department has 130 officers, 18 fewer than its target number of 148. The starting salary is $32,646 for high school graduates, and $38,000 for officers with a bachelor’s degree, so finding houses they can afford in the city is tough.

Department spokesman Lt. Darryl Halbert said the agency is excited about the proposal.
“The officers are able to obtain a home for very little down, the community gets a police officer and the department can use this as a recruiting tool,” he said.
If it’s successful, firefighters or others could later be added.
“We can’t be everything to everybody in the beginning,” Pitts said.
Moving police into the neighborhood could help reduce crime and attract buyers to other abandoned homes, Seaman said.

Pitts also still must get the idea past the commission. Chairman John Eaves declined to comment on the issue through his spokesman, Darryl Hicks, who said there is not yet a proposal to consider.

Samuel F. Daniel said he would feel much safer in his northwest Atlanta home with an officer in the neighborhood, where many homes sit dark and are havens for drugs, prostitution, burglary and other crimes.
“I would like for one to move next door to me,” said the 85-year-old veteran. “That way, he’d see a lot of things I see and can’t do nothing about. The crime would probably go further down the street somewhere.”
(AP)

Monday, January 14, 2008

2008 General Assembly opens today

The 2008 session of the General Assembly begins today where lawmakers will wrangle for 40 days over the state budget and tackle various issues.

Polls show that water and drought planning is on the top of the agenda for Georgians. Lawmakers will be able to respond as they get a chance to vote on the first-ever statewide water plan. It will cost over 30-million dollars and take three years to implement.

Governor Sonny Perdue is expected to push some of the same proposals he did not accomplish last year, including a tax break for retirees. And his idea to boost fines for speeders could become part of financing for a statewide trauma care network.

Education and transportation funding will be hot topics during the Session. Side items on the legislative menu include revision of Georgia's sex offender law struck down by the courts this year, tougher anti-dogfighting measures, and lifting restrictions on where guns can be carried.

Last night in the shadow of the State Capitol, an annual tradition continued for lawmakers, lobbyists and state officials. The Wild Hog Supper has been held every year since 1960 on the eve of the Session.

Be sure to tune into GPB Radio for daily reports on the General Assembly, during newscasts within Morning Edition and All Things Considered. You can get updates from the Capitol anytime by logging onto gpb.org.

Friday, August 24, 2007

Lawmakers study, study, study

State lawmakers have formed more than 40 special committees to study everything from health care reform to reproductive technology rights. Some of the committees are meeting about pressing problems, like the future of Grady, Georgia's largest public hospital.

Then there are the more offbeat topics. Senate Speaker Pro Tem Eric Johnson (R-Savannah) is chairing a committee about property rights in the era of artificial insemination.

"What happens if you put your whole future procreation efforts into a freezer and the power goes out and it melts?" Johnson asks. "We want to find out how this works and whether or not there is a need for government."

Georgia currently does not regulate the market.

Many other committees are looking at complicated issues, including the state public defender system's finances and childhood obesity.

Most committees have to publish recommendations for new laws, but there is no guarantee of results.

Legislative staffers aren't positive, but they say this could be a record year. Participating lawmakers receive $173 each day they meet at the Capitol or across Georgia.

Friday, August 10, 2007

State parley on planes, trains, trucks and cars

A state legislative committee will meet in Columbus next week to talk about planes, trains and automobiles.

Senators and representatives on the joint transportation funding committee will hear local and state officials, transportation executives, and academics discuss Georgia's infrastructure problems.

David Spear of Georgia's Department of Transportation says the committee will focus on finding funding for improving air, rail and overland transportation systems:

"Roughly, about 60-percent of our department's funding comes from the federal government. They have the same issues as we have in terms of their budget. The kinds of needs we have for infrastructure simply mean that we can't address them by ourselves... We're going to have to do everything we can do, and still rely on Washington for significant federal assistance, as well."
Monday and Tuesday's meetings are the third in a series of six information-gathering meetings the group has held across the state this summer.

Click here to read more on state bridges and infrastructure funding issues.

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