PHILADELPHIA -- To walk Thayer Street in northeast Philadelphia is to count, door by door, the economic devastation afflicting a working-class neighborhood. On a single block, 18 of the 42 brick rowhouses have gone into foreclosure in the past three years.
There's Marciela Perez, who fell ill with cancer, lacked health insurance and stopped making mortgage payments. Barrel-chested Richard Hidalgo, who got divorced and could no longer make his monthly nut. And Mike O'Mara, a rawboned and crew-cut truck driver who took on too much debt, lost his job and fell behind on his mortgage.
Cynthia Boyd 42, is barely holding on to the house she bought in Philadelphia. Boyd, who had problems making her mortgage payments after she became sick and had family problems, tried unsuccessfully to file for bankruptcy. (By Barbara L. Johnston For The Washington Post)
"Mortgage companies convinced us to refinance, and each time our bill went up," O'Mara said as he surveyed his narrow street from his shaded front porch. "You fall behind and they swoop down on you."
Philadelphia, its suburbs and indeed much of Pennsylvania have experienced a foreclosure epidemic as low-income homeowners take on mortgage debt they cannot afford. In 2000, the Philadelphia sheriff auctioned 300 to 400 foreclosed properties a month; now he handles more than 1,000 a month. Allegheny County, which includes Pittsburgh, had record auctions of foreclosed homes, and officials speak of a "Depression-era" problem. The foreclosures fall particularly hard on black and Latino families.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/05/29/AR2005052900972.htmlIt's here. They just are trying to not talk about it.
One more thing: If you think that this will mean that the rich will just snap these place up, you are sadly mistaken. The banks are gonna get creamed. The damage is gonna be deep and wide and systemic.