http://www.azstarnet.com/business/278313With huge problems in housing market, TV program's upscale, hit-and-run approach seems oddly out of sync. Instead, how about remodeling modest foreclosed properties?Tucson, Arizona | Published: 02.01.2009
The hit TV show "Extreme Makeover: Home Edition" blitzed into town last week, capturing our attention with a feel-good story just as the economy shed 72,000 more jobs.
In the span of 106 hours, host Ty Pennington, with the help of hundreds of local volunteers, will have torn down Kathleen and Michael Bell's run-down Catalina Foothills home and replaced it with a 3,100-square-foot masterpiece.
This is something of a fairy-tale moment for the Bells, whose old home was hardly livable and whose 14-year-old daughter, Lizzie, has a rare blood disorder that necessitates transfusions every few weeks. It's a touching story, and one the community has rallied around with volunteers and materials.
And yet at a time when foreclosures are spiking and thousands of jobs are being lost, something about "Extreme Makeover: Home Edition's" hit-and-run nature seems out of place, a throwback to our housing bubble.
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But even if the show were paying its permit fees, what happens after "Extreme Makeover: Home Edition" leaves town and the recipient's property taxes spike or energy costs soar?
There have been a number of stories of "Extreme Makeover: Home Edition" families running into financial trouble. Families in Detroit and Atlanta have faced foreclosure, news reports say. Similarly, a man in Oregon had to sell his home because he couldn't afford the increased property taxes and maintenance costs.
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Instead of swooping in and out of town to build one sprawling upscale home, my version of the show would remodel 20 of those foreclosed properties, making sure they have good roofs, quality plumbing and wiring, and working heating and cooling. Volunteers would rush to help. Materials would be donated. Foreclosures would be taken off the market.It wouldn't be as sexy as building a sprawling upscale home, and the ratings probably wouldn't be great, but it's the kind of work that could go a long way toward improving people's lives and changing the housing crisis we all are facing.