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    More squatters call foreclosures home

    More squatters call foreclosures home

    http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/30148409

    MIAMI - When the woman who calls herself Queen Omega moved into a three-bedroom house here last December, she introduced herself to the neighbors, signed contracts for electricity and water and ordered an Internet connection.

    What she did not tell anyone was that she had no legal right to be in the home.

    Ms. Omega, 48, is one of the beneficiaries of the foreclosure crisis. Through a small advocacy group of local volunteers called Take Back the Land, she moved from a friend’s couch into a newly empty house that sold just a few years ago for more than $400,000.


    Michael Stoops, executive director of the National Coalition for the Homeless, said about a dozen advocacy groups around the country were actively moving homeless people into vacant homes — some working in secret, others, like Take Back the Land, operating openly.

    In addition to squatting, some advocacy groups have organized civil disobedience actions in which borrowers or renters refuse to leave homes after foreclosure.

    The groups say that they have sometimes received support from neighbors and that beleaguered police departments have not aggressively gone after squatters.

    “We’re seeing sheriffs’ departments who are reluctant to move fast on foreclosures or evictions,” said Bill Faith, director of the Coalition on Homelessness and Housing in Ohio, which is not engaged in squatting. “They’re up to their eyeballs in this stuff. Everyone’s overwhelmed.”

    On a recent afternoon, Ms. Omega sat on the tiled floor of her unfurnished living room and described plans to use the space to tie-dye clothing and sell it on the Internet, hoping to save some money before she is inevitably forced to leave.

    “It’s a beautiful castle, and it’s temporary for me,” she said, “and if I can be here 24 hours, I’m thankful.” In the meantime, she said, she has instructed her adult son not to make noise, to be a good neighbor.

    'A modern-day underground railroad'
    In Minnesota, a group called the Poor People’s Economic Human Rights Campaign recently moved families into 13 empty homes; in Philadelphia, the Kensington Welfare Rights Union maintains seven “human rights houses” shared by 13 families. Cheri Honkala, who is the national organizer for the Minnesota group and was homeless herself once, likened the group’s work to “a modern-day underground railroad,” and said squatters could last up to a year in a house before eviction.


    Other groups, including Women in Transition in Louisville, Ky., are looking for properties to occupy, especially as they become frustrated with the lack of affordable housing and the oversupply of empty homes.

    Anita Beaty, executive director of the Metro Atlanta Task Force for the Homeless, said her group had been looking into asking banks to give it abandoned buildings to renovate and occupy legally. Ms. Honkala, who was a squatter in the 1980s, said the biggest difference now was that the neighbors were often more supportive. “People who used to say, ‘That’s breaking the law,’ now that they’re living on a block with three or four empty houses, they’re very interested in helping out, bringing over mattresses or food for the families,” she said.


    Ben Burton, executive director of the Miami Coalition for the Homeless, said squatting was still relatively rare in the city.

    But Take Back the Land has had to compete with less organized squatters, said Max Rameau, the group’s director.


    “We had a move-in that we were going to do one day at noon,” he said. “At 10 o’clock in the morning, I went over to the house just to make sure everything was O.K., and squatters took over our squat. Then we went to another place nearby, and squatters were in that place also.”


    Mr. Rameau said his group differed from ad hoc squatters by operating openly, screening potential residents for mental illness and drug addiction, and requiring that they earn “sweat equity” by cleaning or doing repairs around the house and that they keep up with the utility bills.

    “We change the locks,” he said. “We pull up with a truck and move in through the front door. The families get a key to the front door.” Most of the houses are in poor neighborhoods, where the neighbors are less likely to object.

    Kelly Penton, director of communications for the City of Miami, said police officers needed a signed affidavit from a property’s owner — usually a bank — to evict squatters. Representatives from the city’s homeless assistance program then help the squatters find shelter.

    To find properties, Mr. Rameau and his colleagues check foreclosure listings, then scout out the houses for damage. On a recent afternoon, Mr. Rameau walked around to the unlocked metal gate of an abandoned bungalow in the Liberty City neighborhood.

    “Let the record reflect that there was no lock on the door,” Mr. Rameau said. “I’m not breaking in.”

    Inside, the wiring and sinks had been stripped out, and there was a pile of ashes on the linoleum floor where someone had burned a telephone book — probably during a cold spell the previous week, Mr. Rameau said.

    “Two or three weeks ago, this house was in good condition,” Mr. Rameau said. “Now we wouldn’t move a family in here.”

    So far the group has moved 10 families into empty houses, and Mr. Rameau said the group could not afford to help any more people. “It costs us $200 per move-in,” he said.

    Moving back home
    Mary Trody hopes not to leave again. On Feb. 20, Ms. Trody and her family of 12 — including her mother, siblings and children — were evicted from their modest blue house northwest of the city, which the family had lived in for 22 years, because her mother had not paid the mortgage.


    After a weekend of sleeping in a paneled truck, however, the family, with the help of Take Back the Land, moved back in.

    “This home is what you call a real home,” Ms. Trody said. “We had all family events — Christmas parties, deaths, funerals, weddings — all in this house.”

    On a splendid Florida afternoon, Ms. Trody’s dog played in the water from a hose on the front lawn. The house had mattresses on the floors, but most belongings were in storage, in case they had to leave again.

    “I don’t think it’s fair living in a house and not paying,” Ms. Trody said.

    She said the mortgage lender had offered the family $1,500 to leave but was unwilling to negotiate minimal payments that would allow them to stay. She said she and her husband had been looking for work since he lost his delivery job with The Miami Herald.

    In the meantime, she said, “I still got knots in my stomach, because I don’t know when they’re going to come yank it back from me, when they’re going to put me back on the streets.”

    The block was dotted with foreclosed homes.

    Three of her neighbors said they knew she was squatting and supported her. One is Joanna Jean Pierre, 32, who affectionately refers to Ms. Trody as Momma.

    Ms. Pierre said Ms. Trody was a good neighbor and should be let alone. “That’s her house,” Ms. Pierre said. “She should be here.”

    Ms. Trody said that living here before, “I felt secure; I felt this is my home.”

    “This is where I know I’m safe,” she added. “Now it’s like, this is a stranger. What’s going to happen?”


    Even without furniture or homey touches, she talked about the house as if it were a member of her family.

    “I know it’s not permanently, but we still have these couple days left,” she said. “It’s like a person that you’re losing, and you know you still have a few more days with them.”
    Last edited by janelle; 04-10-2009 at 09:49 AM.

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    I don't think this is right.to the qwners of the houses. Why is it that these so-called groups popping up don't mind breaking the law. The real home owners ought to sue them for any damages that are done to the homes but I bet they wont for fear they'll get on tv and talk about how heartless they are.

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    most of these places are foreclosures so the bank owns them. You know the ones that had to borrow money from the government to keep from going under. You know the same ones that are now going to give their employees huge bonuses with that government money. I don't feel bad for the banks at all. Now if they belong to an invidiual hardworking person then that is different. But banks no I say squat all they want.

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    But Take Back the Land has had to compete with less organized squatters, said Max Rameau, the group’s director. “We had a move-in that we were going to do one day at noon,” he said. “At 10 o’clock in the morning, I went over to the house just to make sure everything was O.K., and squatters took over our squat. Then we went to another place nearby, and squatters were in that place also.”
    : HOW DARE THEY ! WE STOLE IT FIRST !

    What are they going to do - call the police ?


    To find properties, Mr. Rameau and his colleagues check foreclosure listings, then scout out the houses for damage. On a recent afternoon, Mr. Rameau walked around to the unlocked metal gate of an abandoned bungalow in the Liberty City neighborhood.

    “Let the record reflect that there was no lock on the door,” Mr. Rameau said. “I’m not breaking in...
    Details, details ...
    Laissez les bon temps rouler! Going to church doesn't make you a Christian any more than standing in a garage makes you a car.** a 4 day work week & sex slaves ~ I say Tyt for PRESIDENT! Not to be taken internally, literally or seriously ....Suki ebaynni IS THAT BETTER ?

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    Quote Originally Posted by ma4angels View Post
    most of these places are foreclosures so the bank owns them. You know the ones that had to borrow money from the government to keep from going under. You know the same ones that are now going to give their employees huge bonuses with that government money. I don't feel bad for the banks at all. Now if they belong to an invidiual hardworking person then that is different. But banks no I say squat all they want.

    I feel bad for the hardworking person paying for the bank bailout (me and you) because people bought what they couldn't afford. The more 'bad' we wish on an instutition, the more 'bad' we will upon ourselves....

    We will also have to foot the legal bill when the banks try to evict them too.....

    Nothing is FREE!!!! Someone has to pay.....in this case....us.

    Perhaps the banks should rent the property out until they can sell it....at least they would get something on their return.

    Squatters should get their behinds out of there......it's stealing....
    Mrs Pepperpot is a lady who always copes with the tricky situations that she finds herself in....

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    Well, I would say go hang the banks but the government made the banks give out these loans. Yes, some banks told the government to forget it but most did not. We should be able to trust our government but anyone with a lick of sense knew these loans would come due someday and there would be hell to pay.

    Guess who is stuck with paying hell---the taxpayers---you & me.

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    Why doesn't this advocacy group work with the folks that lost the home to keep THEM in the home rather than finding a different person to squat.

    I don't understand how letting someone get displaced to help another who is displaced is doing any good.

    I think these banks should make the squatters get out of there! and those stupid neighbors that like their squatter should be making the house payment for her if they like her so much.
    If you can't get to DC on 9/12, come on down to Quincy! http://www.quincyteaparty.com

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    I am sorry if I feel sorry for people who are out of work and kicked out of their homes. I think some had a good idea let these people help them stay in their own homes. I realize that taxpayers pay the price . The banks still are taking government money and giving the high dollar bonuses to their employees and really not helping this foreclosure situation at all. So no I still don't care about the banks. Alot of people are a pay check away from foreclosure these days . Where is the help the was promised.

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    The bonuses are wrong, but 2 wrongs do not make a right.....it only compounds a problem.

    Where is the help the was promised.
    Well, it isn't with this President's strategies, that's why I didn't vote for him.....:...but that doesn't mean we throw our hands up and give everything away and leave it on the backs of others who are struggling too....i.e. those one paycheck away...they can't afford to support it neither....

    Alot of people are a pay check away from foreclosure these days .
    I'll guess they'll have to rent.. Where can you live for free and not on the back of another?
    Mrs Pepperpot is a lady who always copes with the tricky situations that she finds herself in....

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    I would understand if they were the owners that lost the home. These are people that never did anything to keep or lose the home. How can the banks recover if they cant take control of the houses. Not all people in these homes will take care of them. Some will destroy them and even cause more issues. I would be upset if I lost my home and someone just went in and squatted in it.
    Some Say, I Am One In A Angry Mob.....

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    They do that with empty apts here too. We have a lot of vacants right now and sometimes when maintenance goes in to do them for rental, they find someone living there and usually it isn't the tenants who were evicted.
    <a href=http://i24.photobucket.com/albums/c28/unsocialhippie/thwayne.jpg target=_blank>http://i24.photobucket.com/albums/c2...ie/thwayne.jpg</a>

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