The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

An effort to diversify homebuying

- By Tiffany Camhi

‘I was skeptical the whole time up until the day we closed. I was like, “This is going to fall through. This isn’t going to happen. This is too good to be true.”’ Randall Wyatt single father homebuyer

When Annie Moss decided to sell their second home in 2020, making the most money possible from the sale was not a top priority. It wasn’t even a priority at all.

“I wanted to sell it to a Black family,” said Moss, who is white. “And I didn’t care if I wasn’t maximizing my profit in doing that.”

And that’s exactly what they did. The buyer was Randal Wyatt, a single father of two who grew up in a nearby neighborho­od.

“I was skeptical the whole time up until the day we closed,” Wyatt said of the sale. “I was like, ‘This is going to fall through. This isn’t going to happen. This is too good to be true.’”

Wyatt bought the house for what was left on Moss’ mortgage: $230,000. At the time, real estate company Zillow estimated the fair market value of the home to be about $644,000.

That means Wyatt walked away with more than $400,000 in home equity. It was the most financial wealth he had ever accumulate­d in his life.

“I have assets now,” he said. “I have the ability to buy another home in the future.”

Moss, who originally bought the house to live in 2013 for $406,000, lost out on what could have been more than $200,000 in profit. But the sale was never about making money. For Moss, this unique real estate transactio­n was about redistribu­ting generation­al wealth via home ownership.

“Owning a home was part of my privilege and has really been a big factor in my life,” said Moss. “I wanted to do something that was based in that value and in all of the beauty that homeowners­hip had brought into my life.”

The transactio­n between Moss and Wyatt inspired a more organized wealth redistribu­tion effort in Portland. A group of volunteers who call themselves PDX Housing Solidarity Project helps connect people with ample resources to Black and Indigenous homebuyers in Portland. Amid a statewide housing crisis, the group sees their work as both mutual aid and as a form of reparation­s.

PDX Housing Solidarity Project has three goals: educate people about racial disparitie­s in homeowners­hip, build the practice of wealth redistribu­tion and support Black and Indigenous homeowners­hip in Portland. The group launched in 2022 with a listserv and began to grow its community.

Including the original sale between Moss and Wyatt, the project has helped seven Black or Indigenous families buy homes in Portland. Two more home sales are nearing completion.

Not all the transactio­ns the group helped facilitate mirror that of Moss

Wyatt’s direct home sale. Some homebuyers needed assistance navigating meetings with real estate agents

mortgage brokers. Others received cash gifts or a no-interest loan to cover things like a down payment.

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