San Diego Housing Commission

Written by Jim the Realtor

August 23, 2011

Will Carless continues his investigative report on how the City of San Diego is blowing millions:

In late 2008, as foreclosures flooded the local housing market and the nation’s economy hovered on the brink of meltdown, the San Diego City Council scrambled for ideas to tackle the crisis here.

Desperate to show leadership on a red-hot political issue, it turned to its affordable housing agency for help.

The San Diego Housing Commission responded with a plan: It could buy foreclosures and tackle the city’s epidemic head-on. But the commission, which is overseen by a board of unelected appointees, first wanted to be set free.

The agency wanted to buy properties without the City Council’s approval. Waiting as long as 90 days for the council to approve the bids would unnecessarily delay highly competitive deals that had to be done quickly, the commission argued.

The City Council agreed. At a March 2009 public meeting, it approved a new policy for the agency, handing it the power to spend public money buying property with radically reduced oversight. Given that this was about fighting the foreclosure crisis, Councilmen Tony Young and Ben Hueso reasoned that cutting down on bureaucracy made sense.

“Now we’re actually going to address this issue,” Young said then.

In the two and a half years since that meeting, however, the Housing Commission has rarely used its new power to buy foreclosures.

The agency has bought just eight foreclosed single-family homes and one foreclosed apartment building in that time. That’s 45 units out of 756 units the commission has bought or built since then.

Rather than mopping up after the foreclosure crisis, the agency has instead used its new freedom to spend more than $70 million buying non-foreclosed apartment buildings and lending developers tens of millions of dollars to build new affordable apartments.

The commission has been able to make those deals while bypassing the City Council, avoiding the public scrutiny it once would’ve faced.

Click here for the full story:

http://www.voiceofsandiego.org/public_safety/pavement/article_f7093c46-cdbd-11e0-b20d-001cc4c03286.html

5 Comments

  1. Anonymous

    the need for new power…far-reaching effect…facing little public oversight.
    reminds me of treasury secretary hank paulson’s three page ransom note, er i mean tarp and his immediate need for $700 billion yet no need for oversight. argh!

  2. Jim the Realtor

    You’d think the City Council would be up in arms.

    Wyatt Earp…”You gonna do somethin’? Or are you just gonna stand there and bleed?

  3. Daniel(theotherone)

    All i can say is F, F and double F.

  4. anon

    Yet another reason to live in unincorporated areas.

    When I write my book of “Scams”….city councils will get their own chapter.

  5. MarkB

    That was a fascinating story. If I lived down in San Diego I would be very irritated by that fascinating story.

    In general public entities are supposed to be one hundred percent transparent. That story seems to be about a public entity acting in a completely opposite way. Yikes!

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