From 2008:
Cuyahoga County Proposes Land Bank Program To Tackle Rising Number of Abandoned Properties
Jim Rokakis , former Cuyahoga County treasurer, created the land bank with a proposal to "make a noticeable dent in the number of structures needing demolition in Cuyahoga", and to minimize the immediate negative impact foreclosures have on the community.
"Rokakis' proposal is expected to make a noticeable dent in the number of structures needing demolition in Cuyahoga, minimize the immediate negative impact they have on the community, and hinder proliferating speculation and flipping of these properties."
Six years and millions of dollars later, where's the dent in the number of structures needing demolition?
Now Jim Rokakis wants Cuyahoga County to borrow 50 million dollars for demolition. The 50 million does not account for the millions already spent on demolition.
"The former Cuyahoga County Treasurer has been singularly focused on bringing as much money from the settlements of the sub-prime lending lawsuits to bear on demolishing as many of Northeast Ohio’s vacant homes as possible. In his zeal for demolition, Rokakis has been branded by critics for taking too aggressive a stance; rather than a chainsaw, they’d like to see him use a scalpel and salvage what may be operable."
Jim Rokakis told the budget director she was incompetent and recommended the employee retire early after she reported the land bank would cost millions.
And Jim Rokakis is now asking the county to borrow millions.
Is this a dent or a gaping hole?
Cuyahoga County Treasurer Jim Rokakis attacks Budget Director Sandy Turk over cost analysis of land bank
Cuyahoga County Treasurer Jim Rokakis wants the county's budget director fired for producing an analysis that shows Rokakis' land bank initiative could cost county taxpayers millions of dollars.
Rokakis, who has billed the land bank program as a money maker, said Tuesday that he considers the analysis by Budget Director Sandy Turk to be flawed and that he intends to ask county commissioners for her removal.
"She deliberately misstated numbers to create the illusion that the land bank would cost the county money," he said.
Turk, who has served as budget director for 19 years, said Tuesday that she stands by the analysis. "All I'm doing is my job," she said.
The dispute arises just as the nonprofit corporation has begun its work after about two years of lobbying by Rokakis to create a county land bank, the first of its kind in Ohio. Formed by a vote of county commissioners earlier this year, the bank plans to accept or buy foreclosed and abandoned properties throughout the county for future demolition or rehabilitation.
As envisioned by Rokakis, the land bank will collect millions of dollars in penalties and interest on unpaid real estate taxes and millions more from the sale of banked properties to qualified buyers.
But Turk's report, which her office prepared in April before the vote by commissioners, states that the bank will need as much as $30 million in start-up money from the county to acquire property.
The report warns that a loan to the land bank would earn a smaller return for the county than leaving the money in other investments. The report concludes that the county could lose $2 million a year.
But the report says that the land bank could eventually help county finances by returning land to the tax rolls.
A copy of the report circulated last month at the first meeting of the land bank's governing board. Later that day, Rokakis, who serves on the board, made an angry call to Turk.
Exactly what was said in the exchange is a matter of dispute.
According to Turk, Rokakis asked if she was going to take a buyout being offered to county employees. Then, Turk said, the treasurer added: "Maybe you will when I become the next commissioner next year."
Rokakis denied making any reference to becoming a commissioner, but he acknowledged advising Turk to retire early: "I said, 'You know Sandy, you should take the buyout because you're an incompetent.' "
http://blog.cleveland.com/metro/2009/06/cuyahoga_county_treasurer_jim.ht...
Cuyahoga County Proposes Land Bank Program To Tackle Rising Number of Abandoned Properties
Safeguard Properties was mentioned in an article from DSnews.com which can be viewed
here.
Cuyahoga County Proposes Land Bank Program To Tackle Rising Number of Abandoned Properties
Carrie Bay | 07.16.08
Treasurer Jim Rokakis of Cuyahoga County, Ohio has developed a long-term redevelopment strategy to address the county's growing number of abandoned properties. If approved by the state legislature, this initiative will enable the institution of Community Improvement Corporations with decentralized county governance, and it will allow counties to design individual plans that are tailored to meet the needs of their communities.
Land reclamation of vacant and abandoned properties has long posed a problem in urban areas, and the burgeoning foreclosure crisis has only amplified the problem. According to Cleveland-based Safeguard Properties, the city of Cleveland, within Cuyahoga County, will likely spend about $9,000,000 demolishing condemned properties and another $4,000,000 on the upkeep of vacant lots this year alone. Both costs are regressive expenses, meaning that demolished properties will then become additional vacant lots, all of which will require upkeep and maintenance year after year.
Under Rokakis' plan for Cuyahoga County, a county-sponsored “land bank” will actively address the abandoned properties problem by opening up much needed resources. Modeled on the success of the Genesee County, Michigan Land Bank, the proposed Cuyahoga land bank will have the power to acquire abandoned properties from banks, receive tax-foreclosed properties, maintain properties pending rehabilitation, prepare land for development, and demolish those properties with no residual equity. The land bank will have the authority to buy, sell and hold properties throughout Cuyahoga County.
Rokakis asserts that the land bank must be self-sufficient since other government funding cannot be assured. According to Safeguard, he has outlined three essential sources of funding for the Cuyahoga County land bank:
-Tax anticipation: The treasurer proposes to pay outstanding real estate taxes by borrowing the money from its daily balance, and allowing the land bank instead of the individual taxing districts to recapture the statutory 10 percent penalty and interest on delinquincies.
-Tax collection cost fund: A change in the Ohio Revised Code regarding treasurers' fees on delinquent taxes would allow an additional 5 percent to be collected and slated for counties' land banks.
-Bundling: Pending changes to the Ohio Revised Code, tax foreclosed properties will be auctioned in “bundles”, to prevent speculators from picking up only higher equity properties and leaving behind the negative equity properties to escheat to the state. These bundles will then be used to help fund land bank operations.
Safeguard says Rokakis' proposal is expected to make a noticeable dent in the number of structures needing demolition in Cuyahoga, minimize the immediate negative impact they have on the community, and hinder proliferating speculation and flipping of these properties.