The Detroit News reported that Homeowners are buing back their foreclosed properties from the County via the County Property Tax Auction.

http://www.detnews.com/article/20110...reclosed-homes

Local Poltiicans want a state law that bans the former homeowners from buying back his property from the County Tax Sale.

This is crazy.

The real problem is that the Taxes in Detroit are TOO HIGH!


Detroit —Landlord Jeffrey Cusimano didn't pay property taxes on
seven of his east-side rentals for three years, owing the city of Detroit more
than $131,800.


Typically, that would mean losing the properties. But Cusimano not only got
to keep them — his debt, including interest, fees and unpaid water bills, was
virtually wiped free....

It's legal. But that doesn't mean it's fair, said homeowner Marilynn
Alexander, who lives on Fairmount next door to one of Cusimano's rentals. The
landlord owed $26,200 in taxes and other fees on the bungalow, but bought it
back in October for $1,051.


Critics described it as a growing problem as the foreclosure crisis deepens.
A record number of properties — nearly 14,300 — are expected to be auctioned
this fall, and officials predict more owners will try to buy back their
properties.


The News identified about 200 of nearly 3,700 Detroit properties sold at
auction last year that appeared to be bought back by owners, some under the
names of relatives or different companies and many for $500. The total in taxes
and other debts wiped away was about $1.8 million.


"I don't think it's OK; it's just how things are," said Cusimano, who argues
Detroit taxes are so unfairly high he was forced to buy back the foreclosed
properties.


At the September auction, the properties' prices are the debt that's owed.
But in October, the county treasurer sells off whatever is left at a $500
opening bid. That's where most of the sales happen, including owners buying back
their properties.


There's an effort in Lansing to ban the practice, but others defend it.


Many of those defenders are struggling homeowners, said Ted Phillips, who
runs a legal advocacy nonprofit agency. He helped about 140 families buy their
houses back last year and expects to "easily" double that in October.


"It's absolutely better to have folks in their homes," said Phillips, executive director of the United Community Housing Coalition.



"The system is just so broken. This is a little bit of a way to correct the broken system. Not a great way, but a way."


But he agreed that others who can afford to pay the taxes are exploiting the
loophole and should be stopped.


Besides Cusimano, well-known land speculator Michael Kelly bought back three
properties last fall through a company he is affiliated with to erase a $37,595
debt. The News profiled the Grosse Pointe Woods investor who, through the tax
sale, gained control of more Detroit properties than any other private landowner
as of earlier this year.


Cusimano, who owns about 80 rentals, makes no apologies and blamed Detroit
for failing to reduce his assessments on homes whose values have crashed. He
said he's got small bungalows with $4,000-a-year tax bills, which he argues
sometimes is more than the house is worth.


"The taxes are ridiculous," Cusimano said. "I don't even pay that for my
house in Clinton Township."


Huge debts wiped clean

...


One owner bought back her storefront on West Seven Mile last year for
$15,000, eliminating nearly $37,000 in debt. Another owed $23,100 on two
buildings and a parking lot on Conant, but bought each back for the minimum
$500.


And Cusimano got his seven rentals back for $4,051, erasing nearly $128,000
in property taxes and other government liens.


Cusimano, a landlord in the city for two decades, said the method wasn't his
first choice. He said he tried to appeal his high taxes without success. He
admits he's taking advantage of the loophole, but said he must to survive the
tough economic times.


"You just have to go with how the system goes," said Cusimano. "I have been
learning that in the last few years."


Owners often buy back their properties using the same name under which they
lost them. And there's generally a low risk of getting outbid because of the glut of vacant land. Last fall, at least 6,847 parcels in Detroit went into the city's inventory after they didn't sell at
auction.

....

"The taxes are more than it's worth. The houses don't have any value at all.
If the properties were worth the value of the houses, people would pay the
taxes."


Detroit's tax rates — 65 mills for homeowners and 83 mills on other property
owners — are the highest in the state, according to a recent Citizens Research Council of Michigan report. The average statewide rate is 31 mills for homeowners and 48 mills for other property owners.


Dan Lijana, a spokesman for Mayor Dave Bing, said the city has been reducing
residential assessments "in the double-digit range" over the last four years,
but that "distressed sales," such as the sales from the county auction, can't be
a factor.


Cusimano's neighbors on Fairmount, a street in northeast Detroit with mostly
maintained aluminum-sided bungalows, argued they are paying taxes and were
angered when told of the loophole.


"OK, he gets to buy his back and my mother has to struggle?" said Tekena
Crutcher, who lives with her mom. "The city is the way it is because of people
like him not paying his taxes."


Lijana said City Hall is looking at the city's tax structure and the auction
loophole.

"We are working to make the City of Detroit run more like a business," Lijana
said in an email. "This is an example of a challenge that we are looking to
address both from a fiscal perspective and as a land use policy."


Legislation aimed to stop it

Wayne County Chief Deputy Treasurer David Szymanski, whose office runs the
auction, said it's frustrating to see people ditch tax obligations, but the law
allows for it.

"There is no restriction in the law about who can or cannot bid at auction,"
Szymanski said. "It's such a tough issue."

"It's clearly in the best interest to keep people in their homes. But it's a
very bitter pill for the people next door."


Mah-Lon Grant, 62, and Gloria Grant, 57, said they would be homeless and
their house likely gutted if Phillips' nonprofit group hadn't helped them buy it
back.


Their debt only was about $5,500, but it was overwhelming.


The couple got behind on their taxes after losing their landscaping business
when Mah-Lon Grant went to prison in 2005 for five years on felony firearm and
assault charges, according to state records. He said the situation got out of
control while he was defending himself as he collected a debt from an associate.



"If we had to do it ourselves, I don't think we would have been able to do
it," Mah-Lon Grant said. "There's no way we could catch up."


"We are barely surviving."


The couple was able to buy the house, where they've lived for 34 years, back
at auction for $500. They live there with their 22-year-old son and 15-month-old
great-granddaughter.


He said his family is different from other property owners using the
loophole.


State Sen. Tupac Hunter, D-Detroit, has introduced legislation to ban buyers
who owe back taxes.


He said he's looking to retool it to make sure nonprofits can buy properties
on behalf of families, such as the Grants.


But Hunter said he wants to stop "land speculation and the scavenging
currently going on in Wayne County's tax foreclosure auctions."


"My intent is to make it more difficult for land speculators to game the
system," Hunter wrote in an email.


Szymanski said his office opposes Hunter's bill because it's too restrictive,
but is brainstorming ways to prevent owners who can pay their taxes from buying
back properties.


"We want to help people in need, not make people rich," Szymanski said.


But Shifman and others who oppose limits on who can buy at auction said it
will only hurt taxpayers further.


All the revenue raised at the auction goes back to the city, schools and
library.
From The Detroit News: http://detnews.com/article/20110907/...#ixzz1XHeU8ED1