Quick Links

Blog Categories



Mortgage Sites

Chicago Info/News

Real Estate Blogs

Real Estate Sites

Helpful Tools

Developers

Foreclosures Don’t Only Impact Homeowners

When you think of residential foreclosures, it’s natural to think of families thrown out of their homes. It’s not a pleasant picture.

But you might be surprised to learn that the foreclosure crisis has actually impacted renters in Chicago more than it has city homeowners. The Chicago Sun-Times recently wrote a story about this surprising situation, quoting a report from the Lawyers’ Committee for Better Housing that more than 125 multi-family buildings in Chicago fell into foreclosure each week in 2009.

The Lawyers’ Committee report said that 20,691 rental units were impacted by foreclosure in 2009. For the year, Chicago saw 6,560 multi-family building foreclosures. That’s more than the 4,000 single-family homes and condominiums that fell into foreclosure during the same year.

Foreclosure can be a nightmare for renters, too. We’ve all read news stories highlighting landlords who fail to tell their renters that they’ve fallen behind in their mortgage payments. When the building falls into foreclosure, these renters suddenly have no place to live. Imagine that shock: One morning you wake up with a roof over your head. The next, your home is yanked away through no fault of your own.

And that is just part of the problem that renters often face when their landlords lose their buildings to foreclosure. The Sun-Times story says that some landlords begin to neglect their buildings once they fear that they are in danger of foreclosure. The tenants of these buildings, of course, are the ones who suffer when landlords avoid fixing the lights in common areas, keeping the lawns trimmed or fixing broken windows. Many lenders won’t take responsibility for the upkeep of these buildings, either.

The Sun-Times story is an interesting one. We’ve all become accustomed to thinking of foreclosures as a problem for homeowners. But the story shows that in Chicago, as in the rest of the nation, foreclosure really is everyone’s problem. And until the housing foreclosure rate in the country drops, you can’t expect housing prices to fully rebound from the residential slump.

PLEASE CLICK HERE TO VIEW PROPERTIES NOT YET ON THE MARKET.

Leave a Reply



Directory of Real Estate Blogs Add to Technorati Favorites

Copyright © 2007 Mario Greco     Agent Login     Design by Real Estate Tomato     Powered by Tomato Blogs