Baltimore Sun

City property market working again, but slowly

Office using manual workaround to avoid hacked computer networks

- By Ian Duncan

Baltimore’s property market sputtered back to life Monday as officials launched a manual system for processing sales, asking sellers to swear they’ll pay any outstandin­g bills discovered when the city’s ransomware-stricken computer networks come back online.

But progress was slow at an office in the Abel Wolman Municipal Building, where a niche group of real estate companies bring deeds to be processed and prepared for recording at the courthouse.

A supervisor in the office said her clerks usually process a deed in about 30 minutes. But without computers, the job was expected to take three times as long. And in the days since the system went down, a huge backlog of deeds has mounted.

Michael Shaw, who works for Record Courier Recording Service, sipped coffee as he tried to figure out the workaround system.

“We’ve been collecting deeds up for two weeks now,” Shaw said. “It’s just stacking

WORK ,

WORK , up and stacking up.”

Employees of the specialize­d deed recording firms began arriving at 8 a.m. Monday at the city office, toting dozens of files that have gone unprocesse­d since the ransomware hit May 7. Wads of paperwork, each one representi­ng a property to be sold and topped by the city’s all-important blue lien certificat­es, grew in stacks on the counter of the waiting area.

Since the computer problems began, city clerks have been unable to access a database of bills to generate new blue certificat­es or verify that debts tied to the properties were cleared. That led title insurance companies to prohibit their agents from issuing policies in the city because they couldn’t be sure all outstandin­g liens against a property had been resolved.

The halting of property sales has been the highest-profile effect of the ransomware attack and city officials moved quickly last week to come up with a way to get the market moving again. The mayor’s office announced Friday that a workaround plan had been finalized and extended office hours approved, steps it said would “jump start” sales.

But most of the files the recording company employees hauled in Monday were not for deals blocked after May7, but for sales settled before the system went down. And in the property transfer office, it wasn’t clear which of those would be accepted.

“There’s a lot of hearsay,” said Brandon Eastwood, who works for Record Time Recording Services, his father’s company. Eastwood had 50 or so deeds in black folders with him that he hoped to get processed.

Even on a normal day, the job involves a lot of waiting around. That gives the workers, who are employed by competing firms who work for title companies, time to sit and chat. Michael Shaw, who records deeds, thumbs through paperwork as he waits to be called in the property transfer section of the city municipal building. Baltimore City real estate transactio­ns are still being handled at a slower pace, even with the "workaround" installed to compensate for the ransomware attack on the city's computer systems.

Several described the crew of regulars as like a family. But on Monday, there was more waiting than usual. People sat looking at their phones, drinking coffee and trading intelligen­ce they had gleaned about how the new system worked, until their names were called from a sign-up sheet.

Getting their names on the sign-up sheet entitled them to have three deeds taken for processing by city clerks in an office sectioned off with a glass partition and net curtains. To get more turns on the sheet, Jackie Lewis, who works for Recordings R Us, brought two relatives.

Even that strategy yielded limited results. By 11 a.m., just 33 deeds had been taken back to be processed.

And Pam Beam, Lewis’ aunt, said she had two of her first three files rejected as unsuitable for the city’s workaround. So, as the morning wore on, Lewis and Beam tried to triage stacks of files — they had a backlog

of about 200 — figuring out which ones were most likely to pass muster.

Behind the curtains, nine clerks overseen by supervisor Claire Uroza checked final bills by hand and consulted state records on their phones to double-check the sellers of properties were, in fact, their owners.

“Our mission today and this week and until this is resolved is to do everything we can to help them,” Uroza said.

Uroza has worked for the city since 1997, when the job of processing deeds was done by hand. But for many of her staff, she said the workaround is an unfamiliar process. Uroza’s been holding 6 a.m. training sessions to get everyone up to speed.

The finalized papers were being dropped into a pair of boxes. The job of processing payments and entering records into an electronic system will be done later.

 ??  ?? A sign inside Room 1, the city's property transfer section, warns visitors of the slowdown due the ransomware attack.
A sign inside Room 1, the city's property transfer section, warns visitors of the slowdown due the ransomware attack.
 ?? AMY DAVIS/BALTIMORE SUN ??
AMY DAVIS/BALTIMORE SUN

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