Letter Writer Discusses ‘What ordinary people compete with when trying to buy or rent housing, and one small thing you can do about it’

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Remember opinions expressed do not necessarily reflect that of Redheaded Blackbelt nor have we checked the letters for accuracy.Letter to the Editor

This is a little bit complex so I’d suggest grabbing a good cup of coffee or tea before reading. For those more visually inclined, one of the sources for this article is a documentary video called “Who can still afford to live in the city?” which outlines some of these complex processes world wide in far easier way to digest than I can; https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NPloUxLWfB8

First some background. The Pandora and Panama Papers leaks opened up a treasure trove of information on large scale global money laundering in real estate. Some of the money laundered is from the theft of government funds by leaders of various countries such as Russia, Nigeria and Jordan, international organized crime and Chinese capital flight. Chinese capital flight is any citizen’s money valued over $50K USD leaving China. This is illegal and stopped whenever possible but large amounts do leave the country much to the government’s chagrin. Much of all of this money is held in anonymous offshore shell companies. The Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development estimates $11.2 trillion in privately held wealth from all countries including China and the US is held in these shell companies10. They are based in small island countries, provinces and states that are known as tax havens and the shells are managed by firms which guarantee anonymity. The total amount is larger than the GDPs of many countries combined.

The part of this money that is invested in US real estate is one of the major competitors that ordinary people in the US are up against when bidding on a home. Currently, US citizens are subject to proving where their funds came from when buying a property while foreign and opaque shell companies are not. This acts as an open invitation to global money launderers looking to park their money in single family homes, apartment buildings, condos, land and even trailer parks. Not only that, as prices rise because of this enhanced competition it increases rents to the point that even workers must often move away from their communities or face homelessness. It destabilizes the fabric of communities.

The United States is one of the favorite targets for real estate acquisition with this offshore money. Global Financial Integrity recently came out with a study which finds more than US$2.3 billion was laundered through U.S. real estate over a five-year period 1. Looking at the data available for total offshore money this amount seems severely underestimated perhaps because of the methodology or data sources used. All data on this money is estimated by one way or another- no one knows how much is offshore or how much is invested in the US. However, some other interesting findings were; over 50 percent of the reported cases in the U.S. involved politically exposed persons, the use of anonymous shell companies and complex corporate structures continues to be the number one money laundering (method), and that the U.S. remains the only G7 country that does not require real estate professionals to comply with anti-money laundering laws and regulations. Except when it involves it’s own ordinary citizens.

Some of this enormous amount of floating money hidden in shell companies is often transferred to other shell companies within the US and registered in a state such as Nevada, Delaware or Wyoming which does not require full information on who the owners of that company really are. Another way of hiding ownership and funding is to have a family member or friend who is a US resident pose as a “straw buyer” who may then buy up dozens of properties. Then each property can be re-registered as it’s own shell company if needed for trades. This method can also reduce taxes on these now domestic LLCs. To make a long story short, when a house bought with an offshore shell company’s money is sold or traded, that money is now laundered.

A large portion of this money is used to purchase properties in popular cities. There is no firm data on this and again the funds floating around are very large indeed so it is reasonable to assume the range of most estimates given are low. However, when averaging several not backed-by-firm-data estimates we arrive at a 6.5% market share. Even half of that figure nation wide would be enormous when considering how few houses have been built in the past decades. In a city of 30,000 6.5% would be 1,950 or almost 2,000 housing units. This is far more than almost any city’s plan for building affordable housing. When a city’s market becomes saturated with these buyers prices rise dramatically and locals are forced out. Locals then buy or rent properties in more distant areas. This creates a domino effect where the locals in more distant areas are also pressured out of their communities. The accumulative effect may also be greater; when these “investment” homes are taken off the market they are frequently lost to the market. When or if they change hands they commonly are traded between companies rather than going back on the local MLS. Overlapping and in addition to this are properties turned into Air BnBs by US companies and families large and small and those that are eventually bought by huge rental corporations.

When all property values rise it most often does not benefit people who own one single home. In some places in this county rising values equals rising property taxes which the original population can not afford. Anyone selling their home to move to another will find the value relative; the new home will cost much more as well which negates any gain in home value. Taxes may increase.

Another complication is that many of these “investment homes” remain empty and unmaintained. They are not rented, lived in or even vacationed in. It’s more common to see this in large cities and resort towns but as the properties are acquired there shell investors along with displaced residents start to move to more rural areas. As one woman explained “”One way of putting it, is this is not at all about housing. The buildings, they function as assets. You want those houses to be empty and unused. Because then you can play with them”12. It is unconscionable that working US citizens become homeless or have to migrate away from their jobs because foreign and hidden interests want to park their money in an empty rotting house! Others are rented at higher prices but not maintained, a quick example here; “In Cleveland, Ohio, a recently sanctioned Ukrainian billionaire Ihor Kolomoisky and his associates have become the biggest commercial real estate holders in the city. However, their negligence as landlords has contributed to the economic plight of Cleveland and other cities in Middle America”8. Apartment buildings are considered commercial real estate. There is no absentee landlord so distant to local communities as one who lives in another country.

Just as an aside, a common misunderstanding is that home owners were the overwhelming reason for foreclosures in the 2008 Great Financial Crisis. This not true as investors’ properties were far more likely to be foreclosed on. In a study of the crisis by the University of Pittsburgh the author Stefania Albanesi finds “The investor share of mortgage balances roughly doubled between 2004 and 2007 reaching a peak of approximately 30% and accounted for close to 50% of all foreclosures at the height of the crisis, even though their share in the borrower population peaked at 14%”3“. Following the crisis it was companies such as Blackstone and Invitation Homes which gobbled up huge amounts of foreclosed homes, both directly and from companies which bought and traded them. Blackstone alone is estimated to have spent $10 billion on its foreclosed-home-to-rental business5. It now raises money on the global stock market and there are few controls on where that money comes from. Another complication for home buyers was that in many areas all foreclosed homes were virtually unavailable for most ordinary people to buy as they required all cash sales. This was another huge advantage for offshore money as well as domestic giants.

Getting back to the original subject, in 2016 The US Treasury dept became more concerned with global money laundering. The branch of the Treasury called The Financial Crimes Enforcement or FinCEN created a pilot test program to collect real ownership (AKA “Beneficial Ownership”) information on real estate bought with offshore and opaque shell company money. FinCEN imposed temporary reporting requirements on title companies in New York City and Miami. It was later expanded to include all-cash sales in certain parts of Boston, Chicago, Dallas-Fort Worth, Honolulu, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Miami, New York City, San Antonio, San Diego, San Francisco and Seattle areas.

They found that all cash sales in these areas went down, sometimes drastically when the real owners of properties were required to be reported6. According to a study by the University of Miami; “After anonymity is no longer freely available to domestic and foreign investors, all-cash purchases by corporations fall by approximately 70%, indicating the share of anonymity-seeking investors using LLCs as “shell corporations.”7. Granted, both Miami and NYC have reputations as having 2 of the most corrupted real estate markets in the US, but the entire US housing stock is prone to rapidly rising prices in good part from these opaque interests.

And one small thing you can do

 

Currently the Treasury Dept, through FinCEN is looking for public feedback on it’s pilot programs which will most likely become permanent throughout the US. There are a few problem areas that effect ordinary home buyers that FinCEN wishes help in defining. One, the most important, is the cap on value that it now imposes.

Presently any properties sold for under $300,000 are exempt from reporting their Beneficial Ownership information, thus keeping ownership of those properties anonymous. If this exemption is kept then much money laundered by offshore companies- billions or even trillions of dollars- will be channeled into buying lower end properties in order to hide money. This would cause another rapid increase in prices of the sort of properties that most working families might just barely be able to afford as it is. It would also cause another increase in rents. Many Mom and Pop local landlords would also be cut out of the market by ever increasing prices.

Another problematic area is that while the target is opaque shell companies, the indicator looked for presently is only all cash sales. If that did not change then it is predictable that these companies would then take measures to bypass that red flag. Yet another area of contention which may not sit well with some is that certain members of congress prefer that any information on Beneficial Ownership remain within the Treasury dept and not become publicly accessible9.

As of now most comments seem to be formal letters from politicians or financial institutions and their lobbyists. But they can also be informal statements from the public. Polite well thought out statements will have a much better reception even if you disagree with some aspects. Quality may count more than quantity. You can look over some of the previous statements when they asked for comments on May 5th 2021. They will accept comments until February 7th, 2022.

To comment on the proposed regulations the Treasury Dept is asking people to go here; https://www.regulations.gov/docket/FINCEN-2021-0005/document You can upload your letter to them from within the form. The most common format seems to be PDF. Adobe has a free online PDF converter here; https://www.adobe.com/acrobat/online/convert-pdf.html

All comments need to be marked; Re: FINCEN-2021-0005-0217 and RIN 1506-AB49.

 

or write to;

Re: comments FINCEN-2021-0005-0217 and RIN 1506-AB49

Financial Crimes Enforcement Network

P.O. Box 39

Vienna, VA 22183

The full proposal and comment request as it now stands is here;

https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2021/12/08/2021-26548/beneficial-ownership-information-reporting-requirements

Homes should be lived in, not seen mainly as investment and laundering assets to be used by the entire world’s ultra wealthy. We can not ever build enough housing in any form to satisfy that demand. No corporation or foreign interest should come before our own peoples’ need for shelter. This is one small thing you can do. Perhaps you can think of more that should be done and let your representatives know whether they are local, state or federal. A personal letter or phone call often counts more than anything else.

1 Acres of Money Laundering: Why U.S. Real Estate is a Kleptocrat’s Dream, August 2, 2021, https://gfintegrity.org/report/acres-of-money-laundering-why-u-s-real-estate-is-a-kleptocrats-dream/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subprime_mortgage_crisis https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subprime_mortgage_crisis 3rd paragraph

3 Real Estate Investors and the 2007-2009 Crisis* Stefania Albanesi University of Pittsburgh, NBER and CEPR March 13, 2018 https://www.riksbank.se/globalassets/media/forskning/seminarier/2018/housing-credit-and-heterogeneity-13-14-sept/albanesi—real-estate-investors-and-the-2007-2009-crisis.pdf ” This paper studies the role of real estate investors in the 2001-2006 housing boom and in the 2007-2009 foreclosure crisis.

https://www.jacksonville.com/story/business/real-estate/2011/07/03/real-estate-investors-behind-two-thirds-jacksonvilles/15897916007/ “There were a lot of middle-class families taking their savings out, figuring they could make more money in the real estate market than on the stock market.”

5 Blackstone Profits from the Foreclosure Crisis https://www.invitationtenants.com/blackstone-profits-from-the-foreclosure-crisis/

6 How dirty is Miami real estate? Secret home deals dried up when feds started watching https://www.miamiherald.com/news/business/real-estate-news/article213797269.html

https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3186634 “After anonymity is no longer freely available to domestic and foreign investors, all-cash purchases by corporations fall by approximately 70%, indicating the share of anonymity-seeking investors using LLCs as “shell corporations.” “

https://nationalmortgageprofessional.com/news/biden-combats-corruption-us-real-estate NOTE, although Biden is credited for this here, this anti-laundering program actually started in 2016.

9 see document refered here; https://www.regulations.gov/comment/FINCEN-2021-0005-0211 comment to Janet Yellen re; by the US house of representatives Committee on Financial Services

10 Governments sharing bank details uncover $11 trillion in offshore assets https://www.reuters.com/article/uk-oecd-tax/governments-sharing-bank-details-uncover-11-trillion-in-offshore-assets-idUKKBN241129

11 https://revealnews.org/article/unmasking-the-secret-landlords-buying-up-america/

12 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NPloUxLWfB8 “Who can still afford to live in the city?”

Lynn Harrington

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VMG
Guest
VMG
2 years ago

As usual, the US Government is late to the party…

So many places in California are unaffordable now, and the super wealthy are playing monopoly with the future of farmland, housing and small business…

Thanks for a stimulating item, I hope it gets some protestors protesting, but remember, that $40,000 house I bought in 1984, sold for $190,000 in 2005, and the $80,000 house I bought in 1988 is now supposed to be worth $350,000 (still own it), and, the $340,000 house I bought in 2013, is said to be worth something like $680,000… OH I forgot the $330,000 house I bought in Redway in 2012, which I sold in 2017 for $390,000…

It’s all perfectly crazy, and those “flipper” shows on TV, don’t help at all… You can make money in real estate and never fix a damn thing…

Buy what you can, whenever you can, but my parents never did this and they lived in the same house for over 40 years…

If you never invest in anything, you will never have anything, but, there is less and less to have, every day…

Mexican Cartels are not mentioned in this item, but they are buying up single family dwellings and apartments in California at a shocking rate, with the very same drug-cash handed over by addicts for their wonderful products, Meth, Fentanyl etc…

Block foreign investments? Go after offshore financial instruments? Change laws?

The financial crisis was caused by crazy lending and certain individuals “shorting” mortgage company securities, but the “housing crisis” is being caused by the mega-rich having nothing secure and paying a decent return, to invest in…

Last edited 2 years ago
hmm
Guest
hmm
2 years ago
Reply to  VMG

The kinda rich owning multiple homes is a bigger contributing factor to our housing shortage than the megarich. The mega rich tend to invest in commercial properties.

I have read about the topic covered in this letter quite a bit. It is a problem, but the reason it is getting media attention is that it is a problem we might be willing to address. Whereas preventing us citizens from buying additional single family residences as investment/rental property feels too draconian to many people (mostly to those who own more then 1 home).

Dave Kirby
Guest
Dave Kirby
2 years ago
Reply to  hmm

Interesting topic. Sean Hannity has chosen real estate as a place to put his cash. The last time I looked he was landlord of 100 pieces of real estate. Not bad for a guy who started out as a roofer. The fact is that less than half of prospective buyers will ever own a house on a lot. Back when I was a kid if you kept your nose clean and got a decent job the house with a yard was almost automatic. I grew up in a 1949 ” Vets No Down” tract house in Duarte Ca. . We need to make multi family set ups more attractive.

FogDog
Guest
FogDog
2 years ago
Reply to  VMG

Locally lots of growers both from out of state and locally have been / are looking to buy up homes to grow in on the black market. They grow equity while doing it and launder the dirty money through front businesses. It both drives home prices up by creating scarcity and ruins neighborhoods because ordinary people have to deal with everything that comes with black market production next door.

VMG
Guest
VMG
2 years ago
Reply to  FogDog

People grow marijuana absolutely everywhere, and it didn’t start yesterday…

Don’t worry, I won’t be growing weed in my home…

There is another problem: Millennials inheriting Bay Area properties and investing the cash in:

Rentals. Everywhere.

It’s California, “The Flipper State”…

Housewife-real-estate agents are another problem:

If everyone is a real-estate agent, and every agent is doing a flip or two every year, you will end up with what we got here…

There are places in CA which are still affordable:

Bakersfield: https://www.sfgate.com/news/article/In-Bakersfield-Many-Find-a-California-They-Can-16693890.php?IPID=SFGate-HP-Editors-Picks

Modoc County
Redding
Stockton
Yuba County

You may not like it there, but you can get a house in Bako for $340,000 and breathe the dark-brown air all day!

Bozo
Guest
Bozo
2 years ago

Don’t want to cut trees = no housing.
Don’t want to develop land = no housing.

Yup.

North west
Guest
North west
2 years ago
Reply to  Bozo

Sounds like you didn’t read the article?

c u 2morrowD
Member
2 years ago
Reply to  North west

side effects

Bozo
Guest
Bozo
2 years ago
Reply to  North west

It’s as simple as… no available housing = big $$ market.

hmm
Guest
hmm
2 years ago
Reply to  Bozo

It is not. Read the article.

Bozo
Guest
Bozo
2 years ago
Reply to  hmm

Oh boy. No it is not. Look at the attached graph.
Apply a standard growth curve. If you have had any statistics at all you can pretty well place a curve on the graph.

We are (currently) just about on the ‘standard growth’ curve.

saupload_ttma-new-home-sales-market-cap-197601-202007.png
hmm
Guest
hmm
2 years ago
Reply to  Bozo

We cannot infinitely develop land. We have likely already surpassed the level of development that is sustainable. We can however keep a minority from owning almost everything.

Bozo
Guest
Bozo
2 years ago
Reply to  hmm

And… in Canada. Minus the big ‘housing price boom’ of 2008 or so.

canada prices.png
rollin
Guest
rollin
2 years ago
Reply to  Bozo

Only sensible comment on this whole thread. The rest are just clueless communists demanding the government, who caused the problem in the first place, to do something. They are too stupid to see that EVERYTIME the government “does something” it compounds the problem. 

Sonnyb
Guest
Sonnyb
2 years ago

Maybe you should half stayed in school too get a good paying job and than you can afford the down payment and not worry about you’re struggles while sitting on the couch with a bowl in front of you but that makes to much since so why bother when it is easier to blame some thing else. NLM

lol
Guest
lol
2 years ago
Reply to  Sonnyb

A friend of mine is a successful financial advisor locally. He has more than enough for a down payments. The last four single family homes that he attempted to buy in this area received cashed offers for over asking price, all from people out of town.

c u 2morrowD
Member
2 years ago
Reply to  lol

and there’s the rub. Greed. I would love to see the day when real estate companies get a slap in the face from legislation. You post it at a price, it sells at that price. Could you imagine if the auto industry played by the same rules as the real estate companies do. We’d all be riding bikes to work.

Last edited 2 years ago
Bug on a Windshield
Guest
Bug on a Windshield
2 years ago
Reply to  Sonnyb

It cracks me up when people say others should’ve gone to, or stayed in, school, but then can’t spell or use punctuation correctly themselves. I get the occasional misspelled word due to faux auto correct, but so many? Proof read. But, hey, you have a good paying job, so, eh. Oh, wait, I’m sorry, I didn’t hear your inflection; you were being sarcastic.

Last edited 2 years ago
hmm
Guest
hmm
2 years ago

Only US citizens should be allowed to own property in the US.

Citizens should only be allowed to own single family homes in their county of permanent residence.

Only real estate developers should be allowed to own more then 1 single family home.

hmm
Guest
hmm
2 years ago
Reply to  hmm

And no company should be aloowed to own single family residences, other than land developers.

Kiki
Guest
Kiki
2 years ago
Reply to  hmm

I would agree with you completely except for our own experiences. We moved up to Humboldt to build our own home, grow our own food and live peacefully on the land. We lived modestly, did not travel, buy fancy clothes or accessories, go out to eat much, etc. We both were educated with what were considered reasonably well paying jobs. At the end of each year, when we thought we had done well, we were hit with an income tax that floored us. After several years we asked our accountant what was going on. We were told we were the IRS’s dream. Good income and NO deductions. The actual words were: the good news is you will never be audited, the bad news is that you have given the IRS enough money to pay for another house! The solution, you have to get a mortgage. We purchased a fixer-upper (all we could afford) and worked hard to repair it and rent it out. When that mortgage was paid, we purchased an office for our business and fixed that up, then another house needing work when the office was paid for. As soon as we bought the first one we started to see a profit on what we had earned and now we are retired and doing fine but by no means wealthy and still doing all repairs on the properties ourselves. All those properties (we sold the last one and took a capital gains hit) have been rented to locals at below rental norms and we have been laughed at for being “poor landlords”. This is a multi-faceted problem due to all the loopholes in our taxes for the rich. We would have loved to not have to buy other properties and become landlords, it has been nothing but work. Our laws have become so skewed to benefit the rich that the middle class has been destroyed. We were lucky to have the funding and skills to pull off what we did but worked our butts off to do so. We need major changes in our government.

Jim’s Guest is Someone Else’s Depository
Guest
Jim’s Guest is Someone Else’s Depository
2 years ago
Reply to  Kiki

All that you have done is the proper way to build wealth in America. The only glaring difference between your experience and my experience is:

You need a different accountant!

grey fox
Member
2 years ago

Yes should be dealt with,,But this also..The money needed to pay for the pandemic is actually close at hand, hidden away in offshore financial centers (OFCs), more commonly known as tax havens. OFCs are estimated to hold up to $36 trillion in cash, gold, and securities, not including tangible assets such as real estate, art, and jewels. Bet these investigations don’t go to deep. Might step on some pretty big toes.

Mary Ella Anderson
Guest
Mary Ella Anderson
2 years ago

Arcata has been on a multiplex housing building binge, labeling it as “affordable.” When I pointed out to an Arcata City Council Member that these 1 bedroom, one bath apartments are renting for over $900 a month not including utilities and were completely unaffordable for any low wage worker in the area, she had no response. Eureka is just as bad – building large swaths of expensive housing and very little actually affordable housing for those who work minimum jobs. Humboldt County is far from paradise and largely controlled by outside interests.

Guest
Guest
Guest
2 years ago

There is a big difference between “affordable housing”, and “affordable homes”.

Karl Verick
Guest
Karl Verick
2 years ago

The sentinel word is percentage of income. In 1975 I was working for $2.30 an hours, but rented a three room apartment, heat and light included, for $95/month, or 35% of my income. In two weeks minimum wage in CA hits 15$/hr. at 35% you would need to find a place for $830 utilities included, or face being crushed beneath the wheel.

Xebeche
Guest
Xebeche
2 years ago

If you think “public comment” is going to stop the economically super advantaged from continuing their predatory ways, I have a lovely ocean view condo in Kansas for sale…cheap.

Guest
Guest
Guest
2 years ago
Reply to  Xebeche

It’s probably a time share…

Dottie Simmons
Member
2 years ago
Reply to  Xebeche

Actually, when enough people speak up, it actually does influence lawmakers and Gov’t agencies. Has in the past, does now, and with luck will continue to in the future. But it takes something beyond apathy or venting privately: it takes follow through.

hmm
Guest
hmm
2 years ago
Reply to  Dottie Simmons

This one might take bringing back the guillotine.

Farce
Guest
Farce
2 years ago
Reply to  hmm

Thank you for mentioning the guillotine. I think we need to at least bring it up, perhaps build a couple to bring to demonstrations- ust to get the point across. And if that doesn’t work well then…the only correction to the sick greed of the uber-wealthy has always been action in the streets, sometimes violent. They are not giving back anything because you ask them nicely…that’s not how it has ever worked. Would be nice but…let’s get real

Michael M
Guest
Michael M
2 years ago

AirBnB has ruined the market too. Instead of renting your invested nest egg to a local working person speculators buy properties to be unlicensed hotels in the midst of residences. Prices rise as people figure short term rentals will get them enough cashflow to cover the inflated price of a house. A business plan of investing for retirement while providing homes for essential workers does not pencil out anymore, you need to max out rent just to pay interest on a mortgage and only expect to make money when the house is flipped.

hmm
Guest
hmm
2 years ago
Reply to  Michael M

Yes air bnb and verbo have decimated housing inventory in some counties.

Justanotherperson
Guest
Justanotherperson
2 years ago
Reply to  Michael M

When I lived in Arcata, our neighbors, longtime local realtors, owned an air b&b fiefdom. 4 separate units on one parcel near the community forest that were ALWAYS booked.

The house I lived in was on a parcel with 3 homes. I got out before it was sold. Once sold, the remaining longterm renters were booted for air b&b.

A friend bought a home near downtown Arcata in Jan ’20. They somehow got a sweetheart deal for the last reasonable house in Arcata… But I digress… 6 air b&b units surround them on all sides.

Doesn’t seem to me like Arcata does a good job regulating their Air BnB regulations. I’m just one person and I know of 13 air b&b rentals…

Last edited 2 years ago
Lynn H
Guest
Lynn H
2 years ago
Reply to  Michael M

Yup. BTW, you might find this interesting; the city of Berlin in Germany is considering radical measures for housing as workers flee the city;

https://www.berlin.de/rbmskzl/aktuelles/pressemitteilungen/2021/pressemitteilung.1107752.php

Google translater does a really good job with this. I guess formal German and English are more predictable than vernacular.

Fort Bragg area is the worst right now. Having an extreme problem finding workers as they’ve all moved away. Going to be no one left there but rich people and homeless.

Last edited 2 years ago
thetallone
Guest
thetallone
2 years ago

It’s called overpopulation. If you can’t afford shelter or food, that’s okay, it’s gonna sell to someone else, so no problem for the business class.

hmm
Guest
hmm
2 years ago
Reply to  thetallone

Overpopulation is major problem. Global pop is expected to stabilize at 11 billion. Even with cold fusion we could not sustain 11 billion humans. I believe that even with advanced technology the world population would have to be 5 billion or less to prevent eventual ecological collapse.

However, if corporations and individuals were limited to owning 1 single family residence, our housing inventory would skyrocket!

StoptheplanetIwantoff
Guest
StoptheplanetIwantoff
2 years ago
Reply to  hmm

We really missed an opportunity with covid.

hmm
Guest
hmm
2 years ago

We will have many more chances with zoonotic disease.

Lynn H
Guest
Lynn H
2 years ago

BTW, this article is free to distribute for personal or commercial use. I do have an updated (further edited) version I’d prefer to send if you contact me; photos(AT)eth123.com. Also, any media writer is free to contact me if they wish to re-write or edit it and use the information here. I’d also be happy to do more research.

There are a lot of side issues that aren’t adressed here- such as AIR BNBs and second and fourth homes, & also, the Panama and Pandora Papers leaks are pretty firmly held by gatekeepers. No information in those documents on US politicians or powerful people in the US is ever let out to public view. BUT, this particular part of the housing problem is something a lot of people including myself have a hard time complaining about because it’s so complex. It’s hidden in so many ways, from shell companies to straw buyers posing as individual buyers. So maybe this helps.

hmm
Guest
hmm
2 years ago
Reply to  Lynn H
Last edited 2 years ago
Lynn H
Guest
Lynn H
2 years ago
Reply to  hmm

Oh! Old Kolomoisky again. Wow, he certainly did a lot of economic damage didn’t he? Nice article, I’m halfway through it, thanks.

Steve Michaels
Guest
Steve Michaels
2 years ago
Reply to  hmm

How about this? Stop voting for politicians. Vote for citizens. People who like you would like to actually make this country fair for all honest and decent citizens. Stop electing lifetime politicians who are the very essence of greed and filth. The very ones who are being paid by the foreign and domestic money launderers. However, this must begin at the local level and must include people like you, yes you, running and being elected to positions of influence everywhere. Its not enough anymore to just complain or protest or say, “we know what your doing”. They lie to our face and when we catch them, they just lie again. They have now bought the only weapon we ever had, the press. They bought them. They literally own them. Why do you think they are trying to convince us that social media must be regulated? Think about that. The only place where they cant control the narrative. They are trying to convince you that they need to regulate this. Sorry people but if you dont put honest and decent people in positions of power then you cant expect to get honest and decent results and your delusional if you think more than 50% of town, city, state, and federal politicians are honest or decent. I only say 50% because I long to believe that there is still hope. That some have not sold us out. Greed is killing our world, our kids, our hope, our souls.
Theres no super heroes coming to save us kids. We have to do it ourselves.

Nooo
Guest
Nooo
2 years ago
Reply to  Lynn H

Although it sounds ominous, I can’t see that totally foreign owned investment housing purchase is going to move down market. It is simply too burdensome to rent out individual houses . Especially in California. Buying upmarket homes in order to have foreign students sent to US universities at residence tuition or luxury apartment complexes or massive acreages in the west or farm conglomerations maybe but the three bedroom, 2 bath home in mediocre area? I just can’t see it as worth the effort. Just because those are not examined sales doesn’t mean illegal money will go after it. Checking cash sales of homes is more like catching money laundering in criminals rather than a social crisis. Needs doing but not really a wide spread issue. Zombie housing left to deteriorate seems more serious especially in the next few years.

Lynn H
Guest
Lynn H
2 years ago
Reply to  Nooo

“Needs doing but not really a wide spread issue.”

Of course it is. There is a “we buy houses for cash” operation in Willits. There is a front guy running it like a franchise and buying crappy houses in the area, each registered as it’s own LLC in Nevada. The website he runs off is owned by someone or some entity that owns 30 or so registered websites for different “we buy houses” businesses across country & each one has it’s own front guy pretending to be a small family business. That guy filed for bankruptcy several times- I doubt very much it’s his own money. I followed his business registries, found the bankruptcy notices and looked at his url registry. All easily found with internet searches.

Nearly half of the property for sale on the tax auctions in the Fort Bragg area several years ago were bought by shadow LLCs. I looked at the sales records for each one. Most of those were low end at the time.

One of the people busted in this area a couple years ago that may be in international organized crime seems to own crappy row house rentals in Chicago and Florida.

I’d bet not all of these above are rented out. Some are sitting empty and rotting.

Last edited 2 years ago
El Cid
Guest
El Cid
2 years ago

Another part of the equation of ridiculous rental costs is hyper inflation in building and maintenance supplies, and ever increasing taxation. Not much we can do about the inflation, but many renters vote for extreme tax measures without realizing the consequences, some of which lead to the decrease in affordable housing. Bond issues are not free money, and are directly added to the costs of the rent. An example of taxation eroding affordable housing is the recent passage of Proposition 19, which was promoted as a way to help wildfire victims and hire more firefighters. The Realtor’s Association was the major sponsor, and it effectively repealed part of Prop 13, which allowed rental property handed down to children of deceased parents to keep the property at the same value. The net effect of this new law, will increase the taxes on inherited rental property to more than the rental value, which will force the sale to wealthy out of area investors, who will renovate the properties into Air B&B’s or demo them out into apartments with low interest government loans, and will remove reasonable rental property from the market. https://www.change.org/p/gavin-newsom-repeal-california-prop-19

Connie DobbsD
Member
Connie Dobbs
2 years ago

Enjoy your omelet.

Steve Koch
Guest
Steve Koch
2 years ago

Who is Lynn Harrington? Is she a local person? What else has she written? Is she a political or industry activist?

Knowledge
Guest
Knowledge
2 years ago

We currently have 52 housing cases on the docket. Of those 52 cases, 34 are evictions of non citizens. This is in Southern Humboldt and Northern Mendocino.

This is entirely new to our office.

Personally I was unaware there was any housing available in the area and extremely surprised to see it was given to trimmers or illegals or whatever you wish to call the defendants.

I remember when the community literally had to pull resources to find a teacher a house or we would lose serious funding and a teacher. It was madness.

Knowledge
Guest
Knowledge
2 years ago

There are literally woman and children in our community living in the forest, homeless.

I am not talking about bums or vagrants.

Lynn H
Guest
Lynn H
2 years ago

The link to the video mentioned above is no longer available. The distributer DW had a license that’s time ran out and all copies have been pulled from the internet. For now there is a podcast of the audio here;
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt8976772/
which is easily understandable.