tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2382985764534737174.post3422923541674519132..comments2023-04-17T09:38:19.704-05:00Comments on North by Northside: 619 26th Ave N Prepped for DemolitionJeff Skreneshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14597476540441866248noreply@blogger.comBlogger6125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2382985764534737174.post-77432706865149981182011-03-17T13:11:17.962-05:002011-03-17T13:11:17.962-05:00If a community can not see potential in a row of l...If a community can not see potential in a row of large intact Victorian houses with uniform scale and massing and double decker porches all facing towards a park, then that is a neighborhood either that does not believe in itself or does not simply does not have vision. It doesn't take much imagination to picture these porches opened up with turned posts and hanging plants. Has anyone ever seen the bright yellow double decker porches on 13th Street in NE? These would be even more amazing than those and even face a park. But yet, we decide to tear them down. For what? A vacant lot? Some craker jack infill? <br /><br />PLEASE don't tell me that the numbers don't work to rehab. We are spending money on demolition; garbage removal, sidewalk clearing, and lawn maintenance on vacant lots, loosing possible tax revenue, and then in the end spending HUGE amounts of money in gap financing for the cracker jack boxes we are building in place of our historic buildings. Not to mention that the historic buildings are built with high quality old growth lumber that simply will never exist again. If you want to talk about numbers that don't work, the numbers for creating vacant lots and infill housing do not work either . You basically get what you incentivize. <br /><br />Right now we are incentivizing demolition and infill. But it is not as if this is gravity - some unstoppable force that just naturally happens. We have created these incentives. We choose what we incentivize. If we wanted gorgeous Victorians with highly aesthetic double decker porches facing the park, and that are a piece of our neighborhood's history and memory, we could have that too. We would just need to incentivize it. And unfortunately we are not doing that.M. Clintonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09635142448830357080noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2382985764534737174.post-18792802270822945682011-03-16T17:01:13.918-05:002011-03-16T17:01:13.918-05:00I wonder what will happen to the remaining interio...I wonder what will happen to the remaining interior architectural elements...Rantyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06626743769899478163noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2382985764534737174.post-8525665936077393262011-03-16T10:11:18.074-05:002011-03-16T10:11:18.074-05:00If we ever could embrace the truth and get our lea...If we ever could embrace the truth and get our leaders to stand up for real community improvement, there are lots of tools out there.<br /><br />-Start with higher community behavioral standards. Make EVERYONE who owns property in NoMi accountable for behaviors at that site by enforcing Minnesota's Nuisance Property Laws. It's not enough to wait until the property has been totally trashed and the good neighbors move away to take action.<br /><br />http://preview.tinyurl.com/4f55vb5<br /><br />-Raise the tax rates for non-homestead residential properties to make them equitable with rental subsidies. Non-homestead revenues are currently 17% lower than homestead taxes yet account for a vastly disproportionate amount of city service expenditures.<br /><br />-Create Community Design Standards that prevent developers from gutting the character of residential streetscapes by using inappropriate materials and unorthodox usages. Change the building codes so that contractors are not allowed to take out 60% of a historic buildings elements before they are subject to design review. <br /><br />-Establish Rehabilitation Codes that do not try and hold older structures to the same standards as new construction. Make this code appropriate for homesteaders who need more time to finance these projects.<br /><br />http://preview.tinyurl.com/4582b3b<br /><br />-Establish financing options that utilize federal tax dollars to strengthen our community and encourage investment rather than tear it down. Create training and Back-to-work programs focused on residential maintenance and repair to strengthen inner-city economies and make skills available to local homeowners.<br /><br />-Do away with the additional licensure requirements for Mpls. tradesmen and open up the city to all State licensed trades people to reduce the cost of rehab. (Like every other city in the State!) <br /><br />-Change tax incentives to promote residential reinvestment. Create Residential Tax Investment Financing (TIF) Districts that use local tax dollars brought into a community from rehabs and improved lots to finance loans and grants for other residential initiatives within the community. <br /><br />-Market vacant homes and lots by Proposal and open up bidding to homesteaders under more relaxed regulation and assistance programs.<br /><br />-Create Home Ownership Omnibudsman in CPED that actually try and help homesteaders find solutions that will allow them to purchase and rehab properties safely and economically. <br /><br />Sure, many of these suggestions are geared from preservation concepts, but we have to come to terms with the fact that we live in an older community and these solutions are the ones that will work for us.<br /><br />http://www.placeeconomics.com/pub/PlaceEconomicsPUB2003b.pdfAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2382985764534737174.post-27510606590388602562011-03-16T10:08:59.661-05:002011-03-16T10:08:59.661-05:00First, all the property along 26th has been silent...First, all the property along 26th has been silently earmarked for demo to make way for the proposed bike-way. (If I owned a home there, I wouldn't get too comfortable).It has to be done this way because Minnesota has gutted the Emanate Domain laws due to previous abuses.<br /><br />This will make the main arterial route to those Northside Neighborhoods look like crap until they can pull together funding and disclose this agenda. Of course, as soon as they do disclose this intent, the poverty pimps who own these properties will start taking more interest so they can sell them back to the city at a huge profit - which makes the plan financially impossible. (Want an example- Look at Penn and Keith Rietmann)<br /><br />Second, There isn't a politician out there who wants to take on the combined juggernaut of white suburban greed (Slumlords) and "cultural diversity" zealots (like Don Allen) who want to keep the ghettos status quo. (Big fish in a muddy little pond syndrome.)This has to change. <br /><br />Also, the progressive homesteaders in NoMi who are trying to persevere are up against the combined will of stable outlying communities who know that enforcing tighter standards in North Minneapolis will drive the lumpenproletariat outward, destabilizing their neighborhoods.(Slumlords, drug dealers, con-men and the like never reform - they just take the path of lease resistance to a new locations that are willing or less able to cope with those lifestyles.) That's why the County and the Met Council doesn't get more involved in solutions.<br /><br />We are using children and the poor to cloak a social agenda that tries to geographically contain these anti-social behaviors and the longer we let this action exist, the the more ingrained it becomes in our combined psyche.<br /><br />Children inundated with these behaviors feel it is their destiny, Outside communities are able to document NoMi as a problematic source, and we feed into the notion that it's our obligation to endure antisocial behaviors and look the other way as bureaucrats and poverty pimps are subsidized to provide substandard housing while our community falls apart around our ears.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2382985764534737174.post-63724225033671711172011-03-16T07:50:56.087-05:002011-03-16T07:50:56.087-05:00I didn't name the landlord in the post itself ...I didn't name the landlord in the post itself because he doesn't own the place anymore and I couldn't remember his name with enough certainty. But his name was something like Eduardo Perro. I don't think he had other properties in Minneapolis. If I can confirm from folks on the block then I'll post that for sure.Jeff Skreneshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14597476540441866248noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2382985764534737174.post-1032120565205205152011-03-16T07:35:53.516-05:002011-03-16T07:35:53.516-05:00I think this was a decent house. I think it could ...I think this was a decent house. I think it could still be saved if anybody cared enough to save it and had the resources. <br /><br />Jeff. Name the landlord, please. Thanks.Johnny Northside!https://www.blogger.com/profile/18182711866120550770noreply@blogger.com