Michigan Locations

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Proposed Livonia High Rise Apartment Complex Meets Resistance

A proposed apartment complex development south of Wonderland Village in Livonia has neighbors up in arms. At a recent planning commission meeting, several residents spoke out against the project. The site is owned by Livonia-based Schostak Brothers. The request for the property would be to change the zoning from C-2 General Business to R-8 High Rise Residential. Residents have taken issue with the redevelopment of the site for years, but recent concerns include the appropriateness of a high rise apartment complex in the middle of a shopping center development with tenants having visual access into neighborhood backyards. The developer asked the commission to table the proposal to a future date, in order to work on additional details of the development.

Affordable Housing Options Scarce in Michigan

According to a report released by the National Low Income Housing Coalition, a two-bedroom apartment in Michigan is unaffordable for minimum wage renters…unless they work 77 hours a week. Affordable housing was an issue prior to the pandemic, and the economic upheaval has only made it worse. Lawmakers are doling out billions of dollars in emergency rent aid, but experts agree that this is only a short-term fix. Communities need more affordable housing options. With the eviction moratorium expiring, evictions are expected to increase, making it tougher still for displaced tenants to find a place to live. Governor Whitmer plans to use $100 million in federal COVID-19 relief dollars to create 2,000 new affordable rental homes, with funds going toward grants and loans for development, preservation of existing housing and security deposit assistance.

Southfield Homeowners Level Accusations of Exploitation

Former homeowners are accusing Southfield and the Southfield Neighborhood Revitalization Initiative LLC of exploitation. They assert that the company made millions from tax-foreclosed homes over a three year period of time. The company made as much as $10 million from 138 properties after paying more than $2 million in back taxes to acquire the properties. The city has partnered with the company to take homes in the foreclosure process before they go to county auction. A class-action lawsuit in Detroit’s federal court accuses the company and the city of Southfield of taking equity away from former homeowners without reparations.

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