Flint
has highest rate of vacant homes in United States: report
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[February 11, 2016]
DETROIT (Reuters) - Flint, Michigan,
known for its drinking-water crisis, is also suffering a real-estate
slump as the city's rate of vacant homes stands at the highest in the
nation, pushing down house prices, according to a report released on
Thursday.
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With fallout from the water emergency expected to send house
prices lower, the vacancy rate may continue to rise, according to an
executive at research firm RealtyTrac.
"The water crisis didn't cause the root problem in Flint that's
contributing to these high vacancy rates, but it's going to
exacerbate the issue going forward," RealtyTrac vice president Daren
Blomquist said.
Flint's real estate problems lie in the loss of higher-paying
manufacturing jobs in recent decades and a roughly 20 percent
decline in its population since 2000.
The city of some 100,000 people was under the control of a
state-appointed emergency manager in 2014 when it switched its
source of water from Detroit's municipal system to the Flint River
to save money, sparking the current water situation.
Flint's residential vacancy rate in February of 7.5 percent was the
worst in the country, and almost five times the national rate of 1.6
percent, according to the report, which can be viewed at
http://www.realtytrac.com/news. The Flint rate was unchanged from
the last time RealtyTrac ran the data in September.
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The picture is even worse for Flint's investment properties, most of
which are rentals. In February they had a vacancy rate of 23
percent, the highest level in the country, compared with a national
rate of 4.3 percent, Blomquist said.
Median home prices in Flint slid 8 percent in December - the last
month for which the data was available - from the previous month,
Blomquist said. That was the biggest decline for any metro area in
the United States, and preliminary January data shows the decline
will continue.
(Reporting by Ben Klayman in Detroit; Editing by Andrew Hay)
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