Does anyone think that Peoria or Peoria county is causing too ma
Joined:
X days ago
# Posts:
X,XXX
Contributor Points:
X
Does anyone think that Peoria or Peoria county is causing too many houses in the lower income areas to be demolished? Perhaps the newer building codes and overly strict inspectors that demand that repairs be considered rebuilds and must be done to current code is causing repair costs to exceed what people can afford or the value of the home? Any thoughts on the issue?
Replies:
@MadScientist :
Oh I have many thoughts on the subject. There's a clear trail of some properties having code violations and being forced thru court only to have the house suddenly catch fire and code enforcement rush in to do an emergency demo order. Yet a house that was hit by a vehicle and clearly a safety issue remains standing. I can go on and on.
skutfarcus, DennisinPeoria and AverageSue reacted Oh I have many thoughts on the subject. There's a clear trail of some properties having code violations and being forced thru court only to have the house suddenly catch fire and code enforcement rush in to do an emergency demo order.
Many of the ones I have seen demo'd were because of serious structural deficiencies that were economically not viable to be remedied. For the city to get to the point of demoing something there is a long history attempts to get the owners to make good on maintaining the property. To leave an empty deteriorating house is an attractive nuisance. It has become a serious problem here in Springfield. Homeless folks are breaking in and turning them into drug dens with a series of house fires following. They are wrecking these properties further.
mypeez, SuzyH and skutfarcus reacted
Are a majority of these houses individually owned or owned by a corporation?
Ultimately it is always an economic decision... anything can be fixed if you throw enough money at it. At what point does it just make sense to demo it and maybe build new? Over the years empty lots have been sold and had new houses built on them. It is perhaps a good thing that it is a slow process. I do believe Peoria makes every attempt to try to induce the owners to maintain their properties but sometimes that just is not possible. The south side is littered with abandoned properties whose owners just walk away. For them, it is not worth any money to fix them up
Are a majority of these houses individually owned or owned by a corporation? #msg1950677
@skutfarcus :
Most if not all of the vacant fires where an emergency demo was ordered right away have been individually owned and all different individuals.
RambleOn and skutfarcus reacted Most if not all of the vacant fires where an emergency demo was ordered right away have been individually owned and all different individuals.
Over the years empty lots have been sold and had new houses built on them. #msg1950680
financial equity and aspiring investors were buying up properties sight unseen all willy nilly. #msg1950682
Mahkno : Except in the city of Peoria, if you exclude the new developments or higher income properties, the number of new construction homes that sold through an agent over the last several years is almost zero. Nothing is rebuilt in the lower income areas. #msg1950684
It's easy to make bad decisions when someone else provides the money. #msg1950684
Also... I don't think Peoria or the County are being overly strict at all... I think it is quite the opposite. The lax inspections have led to the deterioration of housing stock. Peoria used to have robust intrusive rental inspections... now...they self report. The bar is pretty low.
RambleOn, mypeez and skutfarcus reacted
I'm guessing that some people bought these houses at prices and ways that made it cheaper than renting. Until they needed repairs/upkeep.
Bring the people but you need to provide for them as well. Smoke shops and fast-food restaurants gas stations and those downtown bars.
billybob and Kraken reacted
@skutfarcus :
I think that goes with anyone, any house. I know I've put as much money back into my house as I paid for it 35 years ago. Yes, some of it was to change things to personal taste like painting walls a different color, but there also have been plenty of plumbing, leaky basement walls, new roof, upgrade electrical, etc. issues. I think a lot of houses on the SS and to some extent EB and North Valley, the housing was cheap enough to buy, but not enough money available to maintain properly.
skutfarcus reacted I think that goes with anyone, any house. I know I've put as much money back into my house as I paid for it 35 years ago. Yes, some of it was to change things to personal taste like painting walls a different color, but there also have been plenty of plumbing, leaky basement walls, new roof, upgrade electrical, etc. issues. I think a lot of houses on the SS and to some extent EB and North Valley, the housing was cheap enough to buy, but not enough money available to maintain properly.
I know I've put as much money back into my house as I paid for it 35 years ago. #msg1950814
If it costs a minimum of $200,000 to build a house.... are you going to make that back down there? Nope. #msg1950686
Apartments in the warehouse district are set to add more homes over the next few years. What more could you ask for? Just keep taxing the residents until they can't afford to live there anymore.
** Would you be interested in keeping up to date with news & events going on in the Peoria area? Consider supporting an alternative social media platform for Peoria by creating an account today! (it's fast, easy, privacy focused, and free!)
« Back to Chat
Views: 370
# Replies: 33








