Broome County Land Bank Demolishes Blighted Property in Vestal

The Broome County Land Bank acquired 2300 Owego Road in Vestal as a result of a Broome County tax foreclosure in March earlier this year. The residential property located in the Town of Vestal's Ross Corners neighborhood sat vacant for years causing severe neglect and outstanding structural issues. After the record breaking snowfall during the December's storm last year, the roof collapsed on itself falling into the house.

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Land bank forms partnership to help deal with racial disparities

ALBANY COUNTY — To deal with racial disparities in home ownership, the Albany County Land Bank is partnering with a not-for-profit housing development organization based in Syracuse.

Home HeadQuarters Inc. says it is the leading home-improvement lender to families of color living in Syracuse, out-lending all other financial institutions combined. Founded in 1996, it is the nation’s first designated Community Based Development Organization.

Albany County set up its land bank in 2014 to redistribute tax-foreclosed, vacant, or abandoned properties, returning the properties to productive use.

The new partnership will “provide more opportunities for historically underserved populations and minority contractors to purchase real estate and build wealth,” according to a release from the land bank.

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Land Bank partnership to help homebuyers denied traditional financing

ALBANY — The Albany County Land Bank is now working with a Syracuse-based organization to help city residents who can’t access traditional forms of financing and are interested in buying a land bank property.

The partnership with Home HeadQuarters Inc., a nonprofit housing and community development organization, is meant to increase access to the resources residents need to purchase and rehab land bank properties, especially those in traditionally underserved neighborhoods.

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Splash pad coming to Schenectady’s Wallingford Park in Mont Pleasant

SCHENECTADY — The Capital Region Land Bank’s board of directors and The Schenectady Foundation have agreed to build a splash pad at Wallingford Park.

The splash pad will be built in the city’s Mont Pleasant neighborhood as part of the Thriving Neighborhoods Challenge program that seeks to engage residents and neighborhood groups to revitalize neighborhoods and awards grants to unique proposals.

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Town Supervisor Mahan celebrates Earth Day with new conservation, sustainability plans

Conservation of 880 Troy-Schenectady Road

Last year, the Town Supervisor began discussions with the Albany County Land Bank to acquire and conserve 10.6 acres along the Schuyler Creek, which flows north and south through the site. This site was the subject of a foreclosure by the County, who then transferred the property to the Land Bank which had listed it for sale. After the Town received some initial calls from potential buyers, it was immediately determined that the development of this property would compromise a “natural buffer” to the Garling Heights neighborhood. In March, the Town Board approved of the acquisition from the Land Bank for $1. The Town is in the process of closing on the property and by doing so, it will be protected from future development.

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Developer sought for historic Waterloo house

An effort is underway to save what has been labeled a “severely distressed” historic village home.

The former home of Judge J.K. Richardson at 101 Virginia St. has fallen into such disrepair that it is uninhabitable.

The Finger Lakes Regional Land Bank Corporation, an agency of Seneca County, acquired the property in 2018 from Richard Kenney. The land bank paid to remove more than 7.5 tons of garbage and debris from the property, demolished and removed a collapsed garage and removed trees and grapevines that had overtaken the home, all in an effort to make the property more marketable.

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Build Back Brighter

The city's fits and starts of renewal struggled to take hold until about 10 years ago, when a few things happened in close conjunction to one another. The Newburgh Community Land Bank formed and started getting abandoned properties fixed up and back on the tax rolls. The Newburgh chapter of Habitat For Humanity, which was formed by three long-time Newburgh residents sitting around a kitchen table in 1999, evolved into a robust nonprofit that's since completed over 100 projects in the city.

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DEC announces partnerships to redevelop former industrial sites in Niagara and Orleans counties

ALBION — A new agreement between state agencies and municipalities in Orleans and Niagara counties will promote the redevelopment of dozens of potentially contaminated properties in the two counties.

The agreement is designed to remove contaminated properties from tax foreclosure lists and put them back into productive use, while addressing any potential contamination.

The cooperative agreement is between the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, the state Comptroller’s Office, Niagara County, Orleans County, the cities of Lockport, Niagara Falls and North Tonawanda, and the Niagara Orleans Regional Land Improvement Corp.

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DEC OKs deal with Niagara, Orleans counties on brownfield foreclosures

The state Department of Environmental Conservation announced Tuesday that it has completed an agreement allowing Niagara and Orleans counties to foreclose on contaminated brownfields without making the local governments pay for cleanups.

The communities, the counties and the Niagara-Orleans Regional Land Improvement Corp., a land bank, may market any of 81 properties listed in the agreement. The purchaser must join a DEC brownfield program and pay for remediation. Purchase prices will be shared with the DEC.

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Fabled 'Oz House' in Syracuse sells for $10,000

SYRACUSE, NY — The fabled 'Oz House' on Onondaga Street in Syracuse has sold for $10,000.

It's nicknamed the 'Oz House' because it was rumored that 'Wizard of Oz' author L. Frank Baum met his wife Maud Gage at the home. That was later debunked (the home where he met Gage has been demolished).

The 5,198 sq. ft. home is on Onondaga St. W. and was built in the mid-1800s.

In 2015, Greater Syracuse Land Bank sold the home to the "All Things Oz Historical Foundation."

Read more here.

Housing First Trust Fund aims to increase homeownership, rental assistance in Rochester

According to city officials, the Housing First Trust Fund would be a “dedicated revenue source to fund efforts to improve residents’ access to stable, affordable and quality housing,” with a number of potential goals of:

  • Provide funding to the Rochester Land Bank to acquire higher-quality properties for owner occupancy programs

  • Work with the renters of two-family homes to help them acquire the property, become owners and accelerate their financial growth to stabilize city neighborhoods

  • Allow the Land Bank to offer properties directly to residents seeking to buy a home without them having to competitively bid against investors

  • Provide new owner-occupants with $24,999 rehabilitation grants, as well as financial literacy and financial planning assistance to ensure long-term stability and wealth building

  • Strengthen neighborhoods by offering any city-owned tax lien acquisitions via lottery for one dollar to residents on the same street. This would allow homeowners to build wealth and strengthen stability of city neighborhoods. Owners of these properties would be eligible for rehabilitation grants and other services to ensure the creation of safe and affordable rental properties

  • Expand emergency-based debt and rent relief to qualifying residents. This will help prevent evictions and foreclosures and stop temporary financial crises from becoming negatively life-altering events

  • Reduce owner and tenant utility costs by making energy efficiency improvements in newly constructed or renovated housing for low-income residents

  • Fund supportive services within housing court to help families overcome problems related to eviction

Read more here.

Land Bank Finalizing Loan Fund Details

The Chautauqua County Land Bank Corp. is in the process of finalizing details to establish a loan fund to assist individuals and families improve the communities in which they live.

The land bank’s rehab program works to stabilize neighborhoods by targeting blight and/or declining properties that are negatively impacting neighborhood property values. By acquiring these properties, land bank officials can clean them up, secure them and offer them at below market value to interested purchasers who will commit to renovating the property to specified levels. The reinvestment rehabilitates the property and helps to reverse the trend of declining property values in the neighborhood.

Read more here.

Land bank wrapping up quartet of rehabs in Fulton

FULTON — Four Fulton properties overhauled by the Oswego County Land Bank in recent months are coming to completion as part of the organization’s continued effort to rehabilitate blighted properties across the county.

The Oswego County Land Bank, which was formed in 2016 as a nonprofit corporation governed by an 11-member board, is aimed at improving neighborhoods and the county housing stock by renovating or demolishing strategically targeted properties. Fulton and the county Land Bank have partnered on several property swaps and rehabs in the past few years, and the relationship is delivering a quartet of newly renovated homes to the local housing market.

Read more via oswegonewsnow.com

Alfred State: HVAC students assist Allegany County Land Bank with plumbing work

A group of Alfred State College students in the heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) program recently gained some valuable hands-on, real-world experience while making a difference in the local community.

Under the guidance of Instructor Scott Hillman, 16 HVAC students installed an entire plumbing system at a newly built house on Clark Street in Wellsville. Students who participated in this effort include Tori Cornwell, of Buffalo; Jared Dallas, of Franklinville; Tom Dycha, of Hamburg; Bill Fon, of Dobbs Ferry; Brandon Goodling, of Rixford, PA; Matthew Holmes, of Pike; Allix John, of Buffalo; Jesse Kabat, of Seneca Falls; Patrick Mootry, of Buffalo; Elizabeth Parker, of East Aurora; Paul Risasi, of Buffalo; Quinn Scoma, of Rochester; Noah Scott, of East Aurora; Trevor Vacinek, of Freedom; Adam Venton, of Fulton; and Dakota Yehl, of Hinsdale.

According to Hillman, the project came about after Jason Isaman of the Allegany County Land Bank Corporation (ACLBC) met with the Building Trades Department to determine whether students could assist in some way with the construction of a new house. Hillman said he is very proud of the students and the work they have achieved.

“They were able to take the lessons and the theories learned in the classroom and apply them directly into installing the plumbing system for this new house,” Hillman said. “This type of ‘live work’ is vital to meeting our student learning objectives; the students are able to physically use the skills they’ve learned.  This particular project is special because we were able to give back and improve the local community as well, so it’s a win-win for all.”

Article via the Wellsville Regional News.

Broome County Land Bank demolishes blighted building in the town of Union

TOWN OF UNION (WBNG) -- The Broome County Land Bank started a series of four demolition projects Tuesday morning.

The land bank acquired 7 East Maine Rd. in the town of Union from a Broome County Tax Foreclosure in early 2020

The property consists of several mobile homes that have sat vacant for years leading to significant structural damage. Each one has been condemned as unsafe.

Broome County Land Bank targets distressed, vacant, abandoned and foreclosed properties with the goal of creating economic development.

"One of our main priorities is to return these properties we acquire return them to the tax roll as soon as possible. So that is what we are trying to do with many of our properties," said Jessica Haas, the executive director of the Land Bank.

Properties in the town of Union and Binghamton will be demolished. The total cost of the demolitions is $51,000.

Check out the full new report via News 12 WBNG.com HERE