Baltimore Sun

‘Block by block’

Baltimore councilwom­an works to establish land bank in effort to help solve vacant housing crisis

- By Giacomo Bologna

Bree Jones walked into a three-story rowhouse in Harlem Park, stepping on bare wooden boards and past exposed joists — the bones of a rebuilt house — and felt proud.

It doesn’t look like much now. But a year ago, it was rubble and trash inside a vacant shell. In two months, a couple plans to move into the finished house, helping to repopulate this West Baltimore neighborho­od.

“It’s a labor of love,” Jones said. “It’s taken everything. Every ounce of my brainpower, my willpower over the last two years.”

That’s partly because Jones, who runs the nonprofit developmen­t firm Parity, had to do something many municipali­ties across the country already do for developers: acquiring and bundling vacant properties, a process Jones calls “land banking.”

Land banks are typically quasi-government­al agencies that acquire property, clear title issues, consolidat­e parcels into larger properties, then put these properties into the hands of qualified developers like Jones, sometimes for as little as $1.

Former Democratic Mayor Sheila Dixon wanted to create a Baltimore land bank in 2009, but she was rebuffed by City Council members concerned about transparen­cy and its financial feasibilit­y. Now, Democratic Councilwom­an Odette Ramos is preparing to revive the debate by filing legislatio­n that would create a land bank.

Jones said she tried to landbank on her own, but it’s been a long and costly struggle. It meant tracking down property owners, investigat­ing LLCs, hiring attorneys, outbidding other investors at auction and filing a deluge of paperwork. After two years, Parity only owns or controls about half the block — and has been bleeding money on its properties there.

“If the question is, ‘Do we need a land bank?’ The answer is, unequivoca­lly, ‘Yes,’ ” Jones said.

There are about 250 land banks across the country, mostly in cities with lots of blight and relatively weak real estate markets, according to Brett Theodos, a senior fellow at the Urban Institute in Washington, D.C.

“This is not new. This is not highly innovative and experiment­al. This is pretty well trodden,” Theodos said. “There’s [a] lot of cities that have figured out how to do this.”

It’s essentiall­y a way that local government­s can intervene in the housing market and turn their most blighted blocks into opportunit­ies, he said.

“The logic is really just specializa­tion,” Theodos said. “You can give that entity some unique legal powers and help them get properties back in productive use.”

There are tens of thousands of vacant homes and empty lots in Baltimore, and the city owns only a fraction of them. But in the coming years, Baltimore is expected to take possession of thousands of these properties — including dozens or even hundreds of entire blocks — through a new judicial tool called “in rem foreclosur­e.”

This means the city will have to figure out what to do with all that land.

“One of the big things people ask me all the time is, ‘This is great. What happens when we amass all these properties?’ ” Ramos said. “I think we’re all in agreement around the block-by-block strategy. … The issue is: How do we make sure that property dispositio­n is done in a community-driven way, but also efficient and effective?”

For Ramos, the answer is a land bank. So far, the city’s housing department has taken on the role of acquiring property. Lawyers from the Department of Housing

and Community Developmen­t were in court Wednesday for foreclosur­e suits that will put a block of empty lots in East Baltimore under city control.

While Ramos considers herself a “huge cheerleade­r” of that agency and lauded the work of Housing Commission­er Alice Kennedy, she believes a separate land bank would be much more effective at acquiring, assembling and disposing of such land.

Under Ramos’ plan, Kennedy would have a seat on the land bank’s board, but Ramos said it makes more sense for the housing department to focus on its other roles, such as reforming the permitting office, assisting residents with home repairs and ramping up code enforcemen­t.

How to fund the land bank and whether it eventually could divert resources from the housing department is up in the air.

Kennedy did not respond to multiple requests for comment.

“I fully admit that we will need a bunch of

money for this entity,” Ramos said. “So we’re trying to figure out the best way to make sure that happens.”

Kim Graziani, a land bank expert who advises the Center for Community Progress, a Washington-based nonprofit working to address vacant housing, said she has assisted and consulted on most of the land banks operating in the U.S. She’s also a former Baltimore resident.

One of the biggest benefits of a separate land bank is it can operate with much less bureaucrac­y and more flexibilit­y, potentiall­y creating huge savings for developers, Graziani said.

“If I get my property from a land bank, and use their legal powers to assemble properties and make a transfer to me for let’s say, $1 or $1,000, I can save so much money and actually apply that to the developmen­t of the property versus site assembly,” she said.

Graziani called the land bank a “tool that can help address the massive scale of vacancy and disinvestm­ent in Baltimore,” but only if it operates transparen­tly and in coordinati­on with city leadership as well as residents.

“It can’t be the only tool,” she said. “It’s got to be one more tool in the toolbox that Baltimore uses.”

For some advocates, there are historical concerns about letting the city and its housing department acquire and dispose of thousands of city properties.

“We don’t trust DHCD,” Nneka N’Namdi said of the housing department. “Especially when it comes to racial justice.”

N’Namdi, the founder of Fight Blight Bmore, spoke to The Baltimore Sun alongside John Kern, who works at Stop Oppressive Seizures. Both N’Namdi’s and Kern’s work focuses on keeping legacy residents in their homes, especially longtime Black residents. They were part of a group of advocates consulted by Ramos on her forthcomin­g land bank legislatio­n.

Like Ramos, they lauded Kennedy, but said she runs the housing department of a city that for decades has pushed vulnerable residents out of Baltimore through eminent domain, urban renewal projects and its annual tax sale.

“You can’t divorce yourself from that [history] with one commission­er who’s focused on equity,” N’Namdi said. “That’s not how that works.”

To N’Namdi and Kern, Kennedy is helming a massive ship on the ocean. She is steering that ship in the right direction, but it will take years to turn it around. In the meantime, they would like to dispatch a much smaller, nimbler boat — a land bank.

Kern said this is an opportunit­y to create an entity that works with communitie­s to rebuild neighborho­ods and repair historical damages.

“Morally — and really symbolical­ly — what the land [bank] is, is a community-led and resident-initiated redevelopm­ent process,” Kern said.

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 ?? KIM HAIRSTON/BALTIMORE SUN PHOTOS ?? Bree Jones, founder of Parity, believes there is a need for a land bank, a quasi-government­al organizati­on that would acquire and sell vacant and abandoned homes and land to ease the vacancy crisis.
KIM HAIRSTON/BALTIMORE SUN PHOTOS Bree Jones, founder of Parity, believes there is a need for a land bank, a quasi-government­al organizati­on that would acquire and sell vacant and abandoned homes and land to ease the vacancy crisis.
 ?? ?? ABOVE: View of a Harlem Park street from the window of a once-vacant rowhouse that is being rebuilt. Baltimore City Council member Odette Ramos is filing legislatio­n to start a land bank in the city.
ABOVE: View of a Harlem Park street from the window of a once-vacant rowhouse that is being rebuilt. Baltimore City Council member Odette Ramos is filing legislatio­n to start a land bank in the city.
 ?? ?? A detail of some of the well wishes for the eventual residents of a house Parity is building in Harlem Park.
A detail of some of the well wishes for the eventual residents of a house Parity is building in Harlem Park.
 ?? KIM HAIRSTON/BALTIMORE SUN PHOTOS ?? A rowhouse Parity is rebuilding in Harlem Park is scheduled to be completed in two months.
KIM HAIRSTON/BALTIMORE SUN PHOTOS A rowhouse Parity is rebuilding in Harlem Park is scheduled to be completed in two months.

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