Imágenes de páginas
PDF
EPUB
[blocks in formation]

BANKING, HOUSING AND URBAN AFFAIRS
UNITED STATES SENATE

NINETY-FOURTH CONGRESS

FIRST SESSION

ON

S. 1988

TO PROVIDE, ON A DEMONSTRATION BASIS, EMERGENCY
RELIEF FOR THE GENERAL WELFARE AND SECURITY OF THE
UNITED STATES BY PREVENTING THE LOSS OF EXISTING
HOUSING UNITS THROUGH THE PHENOMENON OF HOUSING
ABANDONMENT, TO PROTECT THE HEALTH AND LIVING
STANDARDS IN COMMUNITIES AND NEIGHBORHOODS
THREATENED BY ABANDONMENT, TO PROTECT THE INTER-
ESTS OF THE UNITED STATES IN CONNECTION WITH CERTAIN
MORTGAGE TRANSACTIONS, TO ASSIST LOCAL PUBLIC BODIES
IN THE DEVELOPMENT AND REDEVELOPMENT OF WELL-
PLANNED, INTEGRATED, RESIDENTIAL NEIGHBORHOODS AND
IN THE DEVELOPMENT AND REDEVELOPMENT OF COM-
MUNITIES, AND FOR OTHER PURPOSES

[merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small]
[blocks in formation]
[blocks in formation]
[ocr errors][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][merged small][subsumed][subsumed][merged small]
[blocks in formation]

ADDITIONAL STATEMENTS AND DATA

Page

From the East Oakland Housing, November 6, 1974

37

Article from the McGraw-Hill News, Chicago, Ill

City of Oakland, letter from Cecil S. Riley, city manager, to the city council...

45

45

Housing advisory and appeals board, Resolution No. 2850--
Evaluation Report: The as-is property disposition sales program_
HM mortgage letter 74–14 from H. R. Crawford.

46

47

95

Bank of America News, "Unique Bank Programs To Aid Blighted Areas of Three Cities".

104

Preliminary report by Michael L. Grigoni, housing foreclosure and abandonment. - .

114

HUD, Housing Management, H. R. Crawford..

127

Veterans Administration, letter to Senator Cranston regarding abandonment...

140

TABLES

Critical path of defaulted home_

HUD aquisitions by FHA program..

57

116

Cities with over 25 HUD-acquired properties as of March 12, 1975.
Number of HUD owned properties, Los Angeles area office, by city, by

118

118

[blocks in formation]

122

Calculations to determine greatest net dollar return for programming consideration..

[blocks in formation]

ABANDONMENT DISASTER DEMONSTRATION

RELIEF ACT OF 1975

THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1975

U.S. SENATE,

COMMITTEE ON BANKING, HOUSING AND URBAN AFFAIRS, SUBCOMMITTEE ON HOUSING AND URBAN AFFAIRS, Oakland, Calif.

The subcommittee met at 10 a.m. at Melrose School, 1325 53d Ave., Oakland, Calif., Senator Alan Cranston, a member of the subcommittee, presiding.

Present: Senator Cranston and Congressman Pete Stark.

Also present: Carolyn Jordan, assistant counsel, Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee, and Jerry Buckley, minority counsel, Housing Subcommittee, Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee.

Senator CRANSTON. The hearing will please come to order.

Congressman Stark will join us shortly but in order to assure we have plenty of time, we are going to start now.

I will make an opening statement and then we will have three panels that will appear before the committee.

OPENING STATEMENT OF SENATOR CRANSTON

Senator CRANSTON. Last year Senators Hart, Mondale, and I introduced S. 3115, the Housing Abandonment Disaster Demonstration Relief Act, a bill to test a new mechanism for acquiring and disposing of abandoned property and to develop new financial resources for localities afflicted by the disaster of large scale housing abandonment. Because of the urgency of this problem we have introduced this bill again this year as S. 1988.

Housing abandonment is still a major menacing housing problem in our urban cities. Housing abandonment is a problem of poor people concentrated in overcrowded, unsafe, and unsanitary housing units, of streets scarred by vandalism and fire, of neighborhoods shunned by businesses and investors, of cities with dying central cores.

Housing abandonment is creating housing, crime, health, and tax crises in many of the Nation's cities.

The last national survey in 1971 completed by the Library of Congress on national levels of housing abandonment indicated the growing magnitude of this problem.

Conservative estimates on the number of nongovernment-owned abandoned units for example, run around 100.000 in New York, 12,000 in Baltimore, 10,000 in St. Louis, and 5,738 in Oakland.

(1)

« AnteriorContinuar »