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Detroit's
3,000
demolished
home
goal
within
reach
By COREY
WILLIAMS
Associated
Press
DETROIT
(AP) --
Not much
was left
standing
on a
block-long
section
of
Robinwood
after
demolition
crews
roared
through
late
last
year,
leveling
about 10
vacant
homes on
the east
side
Detroit
street.
Excavators
and
bulldozers
are
expected
to
return
soon as
part of
Mayor
Dave
Bing's
plan to
rid the
city of
3,000
blighted
and
dangerous
houses
in one
year.
The goal
is to
have
that
many of
the
homes
leveled
by the
end of
April.
Buildings,
Safety
Engineering
and
Environmental
Director
Kim
James
told The
Associated
Press
the city
should
be able
to reach
that
mark.
It's
about
1,150
demolitions
shy of
doing
so.
About
1,850
vacant
and
abandoned
houses
have
been
torn
down
across
Detroit
since
April
2010.
The 13
companies
hired by
the city
to do
the work
have
picked
up the
pace and
are
bringing
down 300
to 400
houses
each
month.
There
are nine
obviously
vacant
houses
and
seven
that
appear
to be
lived in
on
Robinwood
Street
between
Van Dyke
Avenue
and
Veach
Street.
Most
have
their
doors
and
windows
boarded
up,
while
others
sit dark
with
their
empty
insides
visible
to
anyone
walking
by.
For a
city
with
thousands
of
abandoned
houses,
tearing
down
such
structures
"is a
good
thing,"
said
Donald
Neal,
42, who
lives in
the
Robinwood
area.
"We got
a lot of
people
out here
that
could be
predators,"
Neal
said
Thursday.
"We have
elderly
people
and
children
who can
be
victimized."
Bing
estimates
that up
to
12,000
vacant
houses
pose
dangers
to the
community
and need
to be
cleared
out.
The
mayor
vowed
that
another
3,000
houses
would
come
down by
April
2012. He
wants
10,000
demolished
by the
time his
four-year
term
ends in
December
2013.
Only 860
empty
houses
were
torn
down by
the city
in 2009.
"We
inherited
and
continue
to deal
with
this
challenge
at a
time of
unprecedented
housing
foreclosures,"
Bing
told the
AP in a
statement
Thursday.
"We are
committed
to
removing
these
dangerous
eyesores
from our
neighborhoods
and will
continue
to work
with our
community
to do
so."
A
database
of
addresses
has been
compiled
with
about
6,600
houses
currently
on
Detroit's
demolition
list.
More
than
5,000 of
those
structures
have
been
assigned
to
contractors.
But the
task of
clearing
out the
stockpile
of
vacant
houses
across
the
139-square-mile
city has
proved
monumental.
In 1997,
then-Mayor
Dennis
Archer
pressed
for
federal
help to
tear
down
8,000 to
10,000
houses
and
buildings
that
were
beyond
rehabilitation.
A survey
that a
data
gathering
organization
released
last
year
placed
the
number
of
vacant
and
abandoned
homes in
Detroit
at about
33,000.
Even
with the
increased
demolitions
last
year,
some
parts of
the city
still
are
waiting
for
eyesores
to be
removed.
"Tearing
houses
down is
very
slow,"
said
retiree
Phillip
Ellis,
61, who
lives on
Heyden
Street
in
Northwest
Detroit.
"People
are
stripping
houses
and
tearing
them
down
quicker
than the
city
is."
Ellis
said he
and the
few
neighbors
who
remain
have
sought
the
city's
help for
more
than two
years.
At least
400
houses
in the
Brightmoor
neighborhood,
which
includes
Heyden
Street,
have
been
demolished
or are
scheduled
to come
down,
James
said.
"We have
calls
all day
long,
every
day"
from
residents
wondering
when
demolitions
will
occur,
James
said.
"We ask
them to
just
please
be
patient."
Standing
between
the
city's
efforts
to plow
over
even
more
houses
and cart
away the
remains
are time
and
money.
In many
instances,
the
process
- from
identifying
the
properties
to
contacting
owners
to
getting
approval
for
demolition
- can
take
months.
Detroit
also has
a budget
deficit
of at
least
$85
million
and is
relying
on
upward
of $25
million
in
federal
and
state
funds to
pay for
the
first
two
years of
demolition
under
Bing's
plan.
The city
is
exploring
additional
"innovative
funding
sources"
in the
corporate
and
philanthropic
sector,
mayoral
spokesman
Dan
Lijana
said.
But
Robert
Esters,
whose
family
lives in
the
Robinwood
area,
worries
that as
vacant
houses
are torn
down
nothing
will
replace
them,
leaving
already
empty
neighborhoods
even
more
barren.
"The
most
dangerous
ones
need to
be torn
down,"
said
Esters,
34. "But
there
are a
lot of
brick
structures
that can
be
rebuilt.
You've
got six
people
living
on a
block
when
there
should
be
more."
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