Detroit battles tax penalties that create city of renters
Pearlie Mack was a homeowner for years, until a series of difficult-to-prevent disasters.
First, an electrical fire left her West Side Detroit home in ashes in 1998. So Ms. Mack, who serves meals for a living at a Detroit public school in her neighborhood, took the insurance money and purchased a new two-family flat. When a tree branch fell and knocked a hole bigger than a sofa in her roof, she didn’t have the insurance to cover that. No longer able to own a home, she was forced to rent.
Last summer, a bright orange foreclosure notice was tacked on the front door of the house she rented. Her landlord had lost the home, but had continued to charge her $500 a month in rent.
To say stories like Mack’s are commonplace in Detroit is an understatement. But what makes her tale unusual is that it comes with a happy ending: Thanks to a program now wrapping up its second year, Mack was able buy the home she rented from the county.
“It feels good, it feels real good” she said with a laugh earlier this month. “If I had to move, it would have been a
Nudge from a lawsuitCatch-22 in county budget?Progress, but still a tide of foreclosure noticesAssistance, one door-knock at a timeTianna Hodge’s predicamentYou’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.
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