Tax the Deadbeats, Tax the Banksters
By: emptywheel
November 5, 2010
The narrative the banksters and their enablers have used to fight a foreclosure moratorium focuses on property values. If we put off foreclosures, they argue, it’ll have detrimental effects on the local community, not least by (continuing to) drive down local property values.
And, as this post from Mike Konczal (subbing for Ezra) notes, those deadbeat banks are costing local communities a fortune.
At $20,000 a pop, three vacant, unsecured and abandoned properties is the same as a teacher’s salary.
As Konczal explains, LA recently figured out a way to do something about the deadbeat banksters ruining our communities:
"Given the high economic and social costs, the Los Angeles City Council, led by community activists including Alliance of Californians for Community Empowerment and others, as well as city workers who are members of SEIU Local 721 and L.A. Council member Richard Alarcon, did the sensible economic thing: They proposed a tax on abandoned and unkempt properties.
The details: “L.A.’s City Council recently passed a ‘foreclosure registry’ ordinance, requiring lenders to maintain foreclosed properties or be fined $1,000 per day, up to $100,000 a year. Lenders will have 30 days to fix problems before fines set in.”
What a sensible and elegant policy solution. This encourages banks to find suitable negotiations with homeowners to keep people in their homes. It has a serious stick to require banks to actually obey the law when it comes to the destruction of blight in neighborhood.
It works because everyone is well-incentivized to do their jobs; the city will collect money, which it loves to do, if the banks don’t comply. Citizens have a means to report blight, which they want to do to keep their neighborhoods well functioning and safe. In fact, cool online innovations like SEIU’s “Hoodwinked LA” Web page, which allows citizens to track foreclosed properties to report to city officials, have been created to empower people. And banks will avoid destroying neighborhoods out of neglect lest they pay a tax, which they had no incentive to do previously. The thing practically runs itself."
http://voices.washingtonpost.com/ezra-klein/2010/11/two_ways_to_respond_to_the_for.htmlNot only does this policy have important benefits for local communities, not only does it incent everyone to modify loans and prevent foreclosures.
But it highlights the fact that banks are the deadbeats destroying your local community, not individual homeowners.
I hope as other communities follow LA’s example, they call this the “Deadbeat Bank Tax.”
Read the full article at:
http://emptywheel.firedoglake.com/2010/11/05/tax-the-deadbeats-tax-the-banksters/