Current:Home > StocksYou could buy a house in Baltimore for $1, after plan OK'd to sell some city-owned properties -TradeGrid
You could buy a house in Baltimore for $1, after plan OK'd to sell some city-owned properties
View
Date:2025-04-18 05:20:21
Baltimore officials approved a program that would sell city-owned vacant homes for as little as $1.
The city's Board of Estimates voted on the program during a meeting on Wednesday morning, despite pushback from City Council President Nick Mosby.
The board passed the new pricing structure for city-owned vacant homes on the "Buy Into BMore" website in a four-to-one vote where Mosby was the sole opposition.
Baltimore has over 13,500 vacant properties, nearly 900 of which are owned by the city, according to the Department of Housing and Community Development.
The fixed-price program would only apply to certain city-owned properties, according to a page on DHCD's website.
Buyers need to promise to fix up the homes
Those purchasing a home in the program must promise to renovate the property and have at least $90,000 to fix it up. Owners must also move in within a year, and stay in the home for five years.
During Wednesday's meeting, Mosby said the program does not have guardrails written in place that would ensure city residents had priority to buy these homes and won't be forced out of these neighborhoods when their conditions improve.
“If affordability and affordable home ownership and equity and all of the nice words we like to use are really at the core competency as it relates to property disposition, this is a really bad policy,” Mosby said. “This is a bad policy because it doesn’t protect or prioritize the rights of folks in these communities.”
Who can buy a home for $1?
As part of the program, only individual buyers and community land trusts would be able to purchase the properties for $1. Nonprofits with 50 or fewer employees would pay $1,000 while developers and nonprofits with more than 50 employees would have to pay $3,000.
veryGood! (5532)
Related
- Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
- Rachel Lindsay Details Being Scared and Weirded Out by Bryan Abasolo's Proposal on The Bachelorette
- Ancient 'hobbits' were even smaller than previously thought, scientists say
- Federal appeals court upholds Maryland’s ban on assault-style weapons
- Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
- NYC journalist who documented pro-Palestinian vandalism arrested on felony hate crime charges
- Former national park worker in Mississippi pleads guilty to theft
- Dozens of earthquakes in SoCal: Aftershocks hit following magnitude 5.2 quake
- Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
- USA basketball players juggle motherhood and chasing 8th gold medal at Paris Olympics
Ranking
- Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
- Wall Street hammered amid plunging global markets | The Excerpt
- USWNT's win vs. Germany at Olympics shows 'heart and head' turnaround over the last year
- No drinking and only Christian music during Sunday Gospel Hour at Nashville’s most iconic honky tonk
- Chuck Scarborough signs off: Hoda Kotb, Al Roker tribute legendary New York anchor
- Nelly Furtado Shares Rare Insight Into Life With Her 3 Kids
- Vote sets stage for new Amtrak Gulf Coast service. But can trains roll by Super Bowl?
- Man who decapitated newlywed wife sentenced to 40 years in Texas prison
Recommendation
Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
A judge has branded Google a monopolist, but AI may bring about quicker change in internet search
Blake Lively Reveals Ryan Reynolds Wrote Iconic It Ends With Us Scene
US, China compete to study water on the moon: Why that matters for future missions
In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
Rachel Lindsay Details Being Scared and Weirded Out by Bryan Abasolo's Proposal on The Bachelorette
Nelly Furtado Shares Rare Insight Into Life With Her 3 Kids
Why AP called Missouri’s 1st District primary for Wesley Bell over Rep. Cori Bush