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  1. #1

    Default The Suburban Movement

    So Im a leasing consultant for several apartment complexes in the cities of Southfield And Oakpark. Our occupancy is stuck at 78% due to an ever changing demographic of low income section 8 residents who have fled Detroit for free heat and easy assess to super guetto k mart. The only new businesses that have opened in the area are family dollar and plazma doner centers.

    Domestic violence, Break-ins, destruction of property and lack of efficient rent payments have brought us to our knees.The owner has little desire to upgrade the sites, tired of throwing good money at bad situations, so as Detroit continues to empty out, the suburbs find new challanges. any comments?

  2. #2

    Default

    oh, this is gonna be fun.

  3. #3

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by detroitxpert View Post
    any comments?
    No.........

  4. #4

    Default

    If you continue to let the quality of your property slide, you will continue to get poorer and poorer results. You have to spend money to make money. Get to it!

  5. #5

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by detroitxpert View Post
    So Im a leasing consultant for several apartment complexes in the cities of Southfield And Oakpark. Our occupancy is stuck at 78% due to an ever changing demographic of low income section 8 residents who have fled Detroit for free heat and easy assess to super guetto k mart. The only new businesses that have opened in the area are family dollar and plazma doner centers.

    Domestic violence, Break-ins, destruction of property and lack of efficient rent payments have brought us to our knees.The owner has little desire to upgrade the sites, tired of throwing good money at bad situations, so as Detroit continues to empty out, the suburbs find new challanges. any comments?
    By order of the Housing and Urban Development/Section 8. Your company have to let low-income folks or any income they have into your complex. HUD will have to inspect your complex to find any flaws. Your company have to keep up with the housing and maintenance conditions are face fines and shut downs. So you're stuck.

    WORD FROM THE STREET PROPHET

    Isn't government housing great.

    Neda, I miss you so.

  6. #6

    Default

    Indeed. If you allow your buildings to slide into a ghetto condition by not maintaining them, guess what you're going to have: a ghetto. What the hell makes you think that anyone but the poorest people would WANT to live in ill-maintained buildings?

    Otherwise, the usual silly race-baiting thread.

  7. #7

    Default

    As long as our regional solution to local problems is for those who can afford to moving away ...

    As long as our investors' solution to low property values is to milk them for all they're worth until they're not viable anymore ...

    As long as we continue to blame the least fortunate for ... being unfortunate ...

    ... Detroit and increasingly metro Detroit will look like a slum.

  8. #8

    Default

    Whatever happened to occupant boards that controlled who lived in the apt. complexes? Section 8 housing should be set up like student housing coops.

  9. #9

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by detroitxpert View Post
    So Im a leasing consultant for several apartment complexes in the cities of Southfield And Oakpark. Our occupancy is stuck at 78% due to an ever changing demographic of low income section 8 residents who have fled Detroit for free heat and easy assess to super guetto k mart. The only new businesses that have opened in the area are family dollar and plazma doner centers.

    Domestic violence, Break-ins, destruction of property and lack of efficient rent payments have brought us to our knees.The owner has little desire to upgrade the sites, tired of throwing good money at bad situations, so as Detroit continues to empty out, the suburbs find new challanges. any comments?

    What's the quality/education of the staff? I find they make all the difference in these situations.

  10. #10
    DetroitPole Guest

    Default

    This person has some legitimate concerns and these are legitimate social issues we are facing and will increasingly face, whether it is pretty or not.
    "as Detroit continues to empty out, the suburbs find new challanges"
    Does anyone disagree with this statement???

    To put it more politically correctly, people who live in the "ghettos" of America face challenges and come from different lifestyles than "mainstream" America. It is naive and frankly stupid to think that if you put someone from an American urban "ghetto" in a house in Grosse Pointe that they're going to act like Biff and Buffy.

    As Detroit continues to deteriorate, and housing of all kinds in the suburbs become cheaper, people from broken homes, with addiction problems, very little education, little or no income, single parent homes, are going to look for a better life elsewhere, like everyone else, except with a lot more baggage.

    Guess what? The chickens are coming home to roost. So we can either deal with it as a society [[where to begin?) or move out to, God knows where now, Mount Pleasant? Traverse City?

    Fleeing has been our strategy for the past five decades. Nice to see how well that's worked out.

  11. #11

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Detroitnerd View Post
    As long as our investors' solution to low property values is to milk them for all they're worth until they're not viable anymore ...
    An economic phenomena known as "capital rescue"

    When the railroads [[pre-Staggers Act) were not allowed to raise rates to cover costs, many of them went into the "capital rescue" mode where they took their "earned depreciation" charges and invested it by diversifying into non-railroad activities. An example was the Chicago & Northwestern Railway. It formed holding company called Northwest Industries. Every penny of cash flow from rail operations was reinvested into other industries by the holding company. When the railroad became pretty much derelict, Northwest Industries gave the railroad with worn out track, clapped out locomotives, and a shortage of serviceable freight cars to the employees of the railroad.

  12. #12

    Default

    Seems as though the section 8 reps are advising their clients to move out the the suburbs instead of renting a house in Detroit that will require them to pay their own heat, which could be several hundred dollars in winter months. Section 8 will only approve a file that has rent under a certain amount and with mostly free utilities,,

  13. #13

    Default

    Wherever you own rental property, you have to rent it to the kind of people who want to live where your property is and can afford to. If the owner doesn't want to deal with those people, he either has to make it attractive to different people or sell the property to someone who is willing to. If he doesn't like Section 8 tenants, maybe he should consider not including the utilities in the rent, but he'd still have to find some other tenants who probably aren't wildly different demographically.

  14. #14

    Default

    It's a game of musical chairs, instead of taking away chairs, people leave the state. Same number of dwellings, fewer people, everyone shifts to slightly better housing at the same cost, resulting in abandonment of the worst of the worst. It's no coincidence that Detroit has hollowed out even more the past three years at the same time the inner ring burbs like Harper Woods, Eastpointe, S. Warren, Oak Park, S. Ferndale, Southfield etc. see an influx of Detroiters and an increase in Section 8 rentals.

    Landlord's just gotta deal with it. Either accept that the demographics of your area have slipped and adjust accordingly or sell the property and buy in a Class A area.

  15. #15
    Mr. Houdini Guest

    Default

    How much can I get for donating some plasma?

  16. #16

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Det_ard View Post
    It's a game of musical chairs, instead of taking away chairs, people leave the state. Same number of dwellings, fewer people, everyone shifts to slightly better housing at the same cost, resulting in abandonment of the worst of the worst. It's no coincidence that Detroit has hollowed out even more the past three years at the same time the inner ring burbs like Harper Woods, Eastpointe, S. Warren, Oak Park, S. Ferndale, Southfield etc. see an influx of Detroiters and an increase in Section 8 rentals.

    Landlord's just gotta deal with it. Either accept that the demographics of your area have slipped and adjust accordingly or sell the property and buy in a Class A area.
    We better start sprawling again: http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?hl=en...dbc0b292230951

  17. #17

    Default

    There simply isn't enough wealth to spread any further. We've sprawled to the point of going broke.

  18. #18

    Default

    Honestly, this thread can be tied in quite nicely with the sterling heights one. Black or white, open or closed minded, sad but true poor people are moving around because housing prices are down in areas where they haven't been in the past. Thus poor people can move in where they were once "blocked" out before. So the poor people bring down the economies even further in certain areas with their dumpy cars and lack of property management and proper social interactions and increased crime rate that they have tried to move from.

    Maybe we should have a civility class for these people before they move into 'our' neck of the woods?

  19. #19

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Detroitnerd View Post
    There simply isn't enough wealth to spread any further. We've sprawled to the point of going broke.
    Exactly. I was really hoping my map showed how ridiculous the sprawl concept is.

    There's one silver lining to the poor being more mobile: It balances the true cost of society across more of the region instead of a single municipality shouldering the entire cost.

  20. #20

    Default

    Even worse, there will be no money to retrofit these areas to be denser and more walkable. They will just decay, eventually.

    And will Detroit have bulldozed many of its "good bones" by the time we've figured out we have to do a major regional retrenchment?

  21. #21

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Detroitnerd View Post
    Even worse, there will be no money to retrofit these areas to be denser and more walkable. They will just decay, eventually.
    Agreed. It is not going to happen overnight, but probably faster than many people think. A change in demographics is upon us. A wealthy core is beginning to emerge surrounded by a growing ring of poverty. If trends continue, there's going to be a double doughnut, i.e. a wealthy core, engulfed by an inner-ring of poverty, surrounded by wealthy outskirts.

    And will Detroit have bulldozed many of its "good bones" by the time we've figured out we have to do a major regional retrenchment?
    Right now, I think we are at a critical point. Any more demolition and the city is at risk of being obsolete in terms of density. If nothing else changes, there can be effective infill of new dense developments to close the gaps.

  22. #22
    gdogslim Guest

    Default

    Welcome to Johnson's and the Democrats 'Great Society' effects.
    Isn't it Great?

  23. #23

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by DetroitPole View Post
    Guess what? The chickens are coming home to roost. So we can either deal with it as a society [[where to begin?) or move out to, God knows where now, Mount Pleasant? Traverse City?

    Fleeing has been our strategy for the past five decades. Nice to see how well that's worked out.
    Well stated.

    It's about time people acknowledge the failures of the suburban sprawl/ fleeing mentality and come up with solutions to the problems. Unfortunately for the region, most of the powers to be cater to the masses with the usual rhetoric of fear and hate, and of coarse, race baiting.

  24. #24
    lincoln8740 Guest

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by detroitxpert View Post
    Seems as though the section 8 reps are advising their clients to move out the the suburbs instead of renting a house in Detroit that will require them to pay their own heat, which could be several hundred dollars in winter months. Section 8 will only approve a file that has rent under a certain amount and with mostly free utilities,,
    You think you got it bad. Just imagine what's left in Detroit Section 8 housing after the "smart" poor people move out. It's the complete bottom of the barrel.

    Everyday they do absolutely nothing. The only way they tell the difference between the weekend and a weekday is that Judge Joe Brown is not televised on the weekend.

    BTW--what was your last REAC score at your building?

  25. #25
    lincoln8740 Guest

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Detroitej72 View Post
    . Unfortunately for the region, most of the powers to be cater to the masses with the usual rhetoric of fear and hate, and of coarse, race baiting.
    What the hell does the above have to do with someone wanting to live in a house with a huge yard, good schools and excellent police protection?

    Get Detroit to have two out of three above and then you can try and get rid of the evil "sprawl" until that time I will stick with not having to lock my doors at night.

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