Newark launches initiatives to stop corporations from buying private homes

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Newark Mayor Ras Baraka on Wednesday announced wide-ranging initiatives to combat large corporations from purchases of private homes. Darla Miles has the story.

NEWARK, New Jersey (WABC) --
Newark Mayor Ras Baraka on Wednesday announced wide-ranging initiatives to combat large corporations from purchases of private homes.

The proposed initiatives are in addition to the mayor's numerous programs to increase homeownership, prevent evictions, avoid gentrification and make housing in Newark more equitable.
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Baraka said the COVID-19 pandemic accelerated a dangerous decade-long national trend in residential real estate, and in cities and suburbs, corporations are buying up millions of owner-occupied homes and turning them into rentals.

He said the result is rapidly rising rents, decreased homeownership, reduced availability of affordable housing, renter displacement, and less stable communities.
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The package of proposed measures are designed to reduce large-scale investor buying of private homes and bolster homeownership in Newark.

Baraka praised "Who Owns Newark," a research report authored by law professor David Troutt, who serves as director of the Rutgers Center on Law, Inequality and Metropolitan Equity (CLiME) and is a member of the city's Equitable Growth Advisory Commission for providing data and recommendations to inform the city's response.

The city will work with the Equitable Growth Advisory Commission to address issues raised by "Who Owns Newark."

"In cities and even suburbs across America, institutional investors are eroding the American dream of homeownership as they convert owner-occupied homes into corporately owned rental units," Baraka said. "In Newark, where we have worked hard for years to expand homeownership, we will do everything possible to combat this dangerous trend. The CLiME report signals that Newark must create stronger and more equitable laws, regulations, and policies to ensure that residents share in the growth of our city."

Baraka announced the city will:
--Urge the governor, state legislators, and the Municipal Council to create a coordinated state and local policy to address the effects of large-scale corporate ownership of private homes
--Submit legislation to the Municipal Council to make it unlawful to solicit offers without residents' permission (e.g., through mail, knocking on doors, phone calls).
--Submit legislation to the Municipal Council to bring more transparency to limited liability companies that are purchasing private properties to keep them accountable.
--Submit legislation to the Municipal Council covering properties not under rent control to impose fees on renting and landlord registrations for property owners and landlords that increase rents above five percent year over year. These fees will be directed to the Affordable Housing Trust Fund and used to fund the creation of new affordable rental and homeownership opportunities for Newark residents.
--Add a deed restriction to all City-owned and Land Bank properties, which will require the properties to be affordable.
--Convene a meeting in the coming month with investors, developers of color, and community development corporations to develop further strategies on how Newark can work to invest in under-invested and disinvested communities.
--Review all recommendations proposed in the CLiME report and develop an action plan to ensure community development takes place in all five of Newark's wards.

Among the work the city has done to provide affordable housing and home ownership are:
--Doubling the Live Newark Program to help residents become first-time homebuyers.
--Implemented the Neighborhood Development Program, which turns city-owned land into residential and affordable housing.
--Allocated a $20 million investment to create housing affordable to residents at a $34,000 income level.
--Using Land Bank properties to create Section 8 homeownership opportunities.
--Created the NJ Forty Acres and a Mule Fund (NJ FAM Fund) that will invest $100 million into real estate development and small business development for Black and Latinx partners.



Newark announces measures to stop corporations from buying private homes - ABC7 New York (abc7ny.com)
 
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I get at least 15 or more calls a week to buy my 6 family in Irvington, right next to Newark....... all cash offers


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My wife and I get about the same number of calls here in Atlanta. Last week, they called me about a house I never owned in a city I never lived in. When I told them that, they said, "Do you wanna sell the house you do live in now?"
 
I get at least 15 or more calls a week to buy my 6 family in Irvington, right next to Newark....... all cash offers


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grew up in irvington, my mom still lives there and owns 2 homes (between the 2, 5 rental units)
she gets calls everyday

i tell her to hold on to the properties cause even though they can be a hassle its the only way we can build generational wealth (i own my home with my wife) Too many ppl live in the moment vs thinking big picture
 
grew up in irvington, my mom still lives there and owns 2 homes (between the 2 - 5 rentals)
she gets calls everyday

i tell her to hold on to the properties cause even though they can be a hassle its the only way we can build generational wealth (i own my home with my wife) Too many ppl live in the moment vs thinking picture
They be like "Are you willing to sell? We buy cash, as is".... annoying fucks.... I had only my home telephone listed with the city and never answered any calls, landline is just for that purpose....... had to put my cell as a contact number for some shit with the city..... regrettably.... never ending onslaught of calls


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It won't last. The corps will run to court to challenge it, and they'll win. Don't forget corps are people too. :rolleyes:
If the house and market crash again these corporations are going to lose their shit. Even though the wages are beginning to go up house in prices are getting too expensive because of these corporations.
 
If the house and market crash again these corporations are going to lose their shit. Even though the wages are beginning to go up house in prices are getting too expensive because of these corporations.
You are correct, but they'll just get bailed out again. Quiet as its kept a lot of these re corps have lines again at the too big to fail institutions that ran to uncle sam last time and got rescued.
 
Citizens United
Corporations are people
This won’t stand if it’s challenged in a court of law
Black rock probably has more money than the whole of Jersey
Citizens United was the worst thing the Supreme Court ever did In my lifetime.
 
You are correct, but they'll just get bailed out again. Quiet as its kept a lot of these re corps have lines again at the too big to fail institutions that ran to uncle sam last time and got rescued.
Those mofos won't need any bailouts.... they're the owners in full.... they aren't small time homeowners stuck with a mortgage that they can't pay..... they're full owners that can hang in there for years.... I'm getting all cash, as is offers for my property


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Those mofos won't need any bailouts.... they're the owners in full.... they aren't small time homeowners stuck with a mortgage that they can't pay..... they're full owners that can hang in there for years.... I'm getting all cash, as is offers for my property
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But many of those cash offers are facilitated by lines of credit from big institutions secured by the value of the borrowers portfolio. When RE values crash the big boys will have to write down their assets and if it goes too far like '08, then even the fat cats could be upside down. But hey, no worries, its not their money either. They got it from stock and bond holders many of which are also to large to fail. It could be another house of cards.
 
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NJ News12 anchor Brittany Miller....... RAW

Newark mayor announces plans to limit corporations from buying up homes


Newark mayor announces plans to limit corporations from buying up homes (news12.com)


Yo Light my dumb ass didn't read the full post all I saw was RAW and MAYOR, so I did a search and found this

11817544_050422-wabc-ras-baraka-newark-homes-img.jpg


I was like




Light slippin. then I said, naw nikka YOU slippin. Read the whole post ole ass nikka. :roflmao:



R.0587792be34fc2e2d65081bdd1ed293e
 
These calls are getting ridiculous man. How the fuck are they getting my contact?
Somewhere in the city where you own the property it's listed in their public records.... I hedged against that by always using my landline as a contact number.... which I never answer, using it only for my mortgage and other billing uses...... I slipped up when the city needed to contact me about something important.... like doing an apartment inspection when a tenant would move out..... gave them my cell phone...... it then became a public record connected to my property.... and the party began... :smh: :hmm:


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