El Pinko
(1000+ posts)
Send PM |
Profile |
Ignore
|
Fri Feb-22-08 12:32 AM
Original message |
LAT: Exurban Blight - surge in foreclosures is taking a heavy toll |
|
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/editorials/la-ed-foreclosures20feb20,0,5022514.storyExurban blight
The surge in foreclosures is taking a heavy toll on formerly booming inland communities in California. February 20, 2008
Last week, the research firm RealtyTrac released its foreclosure rate rankings for 2007. It was no surprise to see Detroit, long a poster child for industrial decline and urban blight, at the top of the heap. But what to make of the four California metro areas -- Stockton (No. 2), Riverside/San Bernardino (No. 4), Sacramento (No. 5) and Bakersfield (No. 7) -- that also appeared among the top 10? If the effects of the sub-prime mortgage meltdown go on unabated, will these cities too come to exemplify a new class of sunnier and warmer, but in other ways equally bleak, slums?
....
According to data from the foreclosure tracking firm Default Research, hardship in the Inland Empire and other parts of California appears to be concentrated in exurban neighborhoods such as Palmdale, Perris and Fontana. It's more than a little sad that the recent growth in these communities was fueled in part by an influx of Latino and African American families who took out sub-prime loans to buy relatively affordable homes -- homes as far away from the gangs and blight in neighborhoods like Pacoima and South Los Angeles as they could possibly get. (Those areas too suffer a disproportionate share of foreclosure activity.)
California's inland exurbs became boomtowns because borrowers, wisely or not, chased the American dream. Now they may face an American nightmare, different but no less dismaying than the one they so recently fled.
|
billbuckhead
(1000+ posts)
Send PM |
Profile |
Ignore
|
Fri Feb-22-08 12:35 AM
Response to Original message |
1. Minorities will be hit very hard by the mortgage crisis |
|
In Atlanta this morning on the local NPR, they said inside the perimeter of Atlanta has yet to be affected but Southwest DeKalb was very hard hit.
|
rwenos
(1000+ posts)
Send PM |
Profile |
Ignore
|
Fri Feb-22-08 12:38 AM
Response to Original message |
2. Hard to Think about Bakersfield |
|
as anything but a penal colony. Well . . . Buck Owens came from there, and he was one of the few country singers I could listen to.
I spent a month there once . . . for a five-day stay. It's the kind of place where retired LAPD guys confess on local TV news they used to thunder up from LA on the weekends for Klan meetings. (True story I heard during that trip, in 2005.) Overall impression: God, Guns and the GOP.
The exurbs of Cali are SCARY. On the other hand, where are people supposed to live? (I hear the houses are WAY cheaper around Houston.) BAKERSFIELD PEOPLE -- MOVE TO HOUSTON!
|
DU
AdBot (1000+ posts) |
Sat Apr 20th 2024, 01:20 AM
Response to Original message |