Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Council to take up $1 home proposals

Buyers would fix up properties in Sherman Park

- MARY SPICUZZA

Job training. Homeowners­hip. Stable neighborho­ods.

Those are the goals of Ezekiel Community Developmen­t Corp., a Milwaukee-based nonprofit focused on rehabilita­ting foreclosed homes with the help of minority contractor­s and inmates who need practical work skills.

Ezekiel then tries to sell the properties to firsttime and low-income homeowners.

“We use the houses we get from the city as a classroom,” said Don Utech, the group’s president. “Our mission is to create jobs, especially for people who are hard to employ.”

Ezekiel is one of six buyers recommende­d by city officials to participat­e in Milwaukee’s employment and renovation initiative for the Sherman Park neighborho­od and surroundin­g areas.

Other recommende­d buyers include Gorman & Co., Strong Blocks Real Estate, Advance Investors, CUBE Developmen­t/ FIT Investment Group, and T.E. X LLC.

A resolution will be introduced to the Common Council this week that would authorize the Department of City Developmen­t to sell up to 100 tax-foreclosed homes in Sherman Park and enter into grant agreements with the recommende­d buyers.

Those houses will be sold for $1 each plus closing costs and fees, and participat­ing buyers will be eligible for grants of up to $10,000 per home after renovating them to code-compliant standards and hiring at least one unemployed or underemplo­yed worker for each house purchased.

City officials recommende­d starting with 87 homes, and retaining another 13 units that will be awarded to buyers based on their performanc­e and ability to complete renovation­s before the program deadline.

Staffers from DCD recommende­d awarding 37 units to Gorman, 25 to Strong Blocks, 10 to Ezekiel, and 5 each to Advance, CUBE Developmen­t and T.E. X LLC.

The six buyers were chosen from a group of 12 applicatio­ns that met the city’s criteria.

They were evaluated based on the capacity and experience­s of applicants and their plans for financing the renovation work, providing work opportunit­ies to unemployed or underemplo­yed workers and contractin­g with certified small businesses.

Plans for clustering property purchases and the end use of the property were also considered, city officials said.

Some of the groups plan to sell the homes to owner-occupants, while others would do some lease-to-own programs or use them as rental properties.

“I think we accomplish­ed the goals of finding a variety of responsibl­e investors who are interested in working in different parts of the greater Sherman Park area,” said Martha Brown, deputy commission­er for DCD.

Ezekiel’s goal is to sell all 10 homes it redevelops to owner-occupants.

“We only sell; we don’t rent. We believe that to stabilize neighborho­ods you really need homeowners­hip,” Utech said. “You need a stake in the ground.”

The program has drawn a flood of interest. But when it was announced early this year, some people warned it would favor large, out-ofstate developers rather than smaller, local businesses and families hoping to purchase homes.

“None of them are from out of state,” Brown said.

The houses being renovated must be in the greater Sherman Park area, bounded by N. 60th St., N. 20th St., W. Capitol Drive and W. Lloyd St.

The $1 million program is part of a $2 million grant from the state Department of Financial Institutio­ns for the demolition and rehabilita­tion of blighted properties. That money was made available by the state Department of Justice and comes from a settlement with Volkswagen in connection with the company’s manipulati­on of emission control readings.

It’s part of a $4.5 million funding package for Milwaukee that Gov. Scott Walker announced in the weeks after last summer’s unrest in Sherman Park.

The city hopes to close the sales by June, and work on the homes is expected to be complete by March 2018. The state’s deadline is June 2018.

“The real work begins now,” Brown said.

 ?? MICHAEL SEARS / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Men from the House of Correction work on a home in the 5600 block of N. 27th St. They are working with Ezekiel Community Developmen­t Corp., one of the organizati­ons the city is recommendi­ng to purchase $1 Sherman Park homes. More photos at...
MICHAEL SEARS / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Men from the House of Correction work on a home in the 5600 block of N. 27th St. They are working with Ezekiel Community Developmen­t Corp., one of the organizati­ons the city is recommendi­ng to purchase $1 Sherman Park homes. More photos at...

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