Bree St. Peters is in a rush to fix up her future home.
She and others who bought abandoned north Minneapolis houses at a special Hennepin County auction last year — under the condition they fix them up and live in them — are racing against a one-year Sunday deadline to get the projects done. She's removed most of the lead paint at the duplex, installed windows and gutted the kitchen, which is now awaiting new cabinets. But there's still work to be done.
Her progress is offering county officials lessons in what could become a new tool for revitalizing neighborhoods hit by the foreclosure crisis. Small rehab firms are poised to buy more North Side homes from the city this year than any year in recent history, but housing officials are most interested in seeing responsible homeowners invest and put down roots in the city's most challenged neighborhoods.
"I think it's a great opportunity," said St. Peters, who plans to get an extension to complete the work.
But results have been mixed. Half of the six buyers likely won't complete the rehabs. Of those whose projects will not be finished, one is awaiting sentencing in a federal drug and weapons case, and another was injured after falling off a truck. Still, officials are encouraged that the sale is producing a few new homeowners living in spruced-up houses — something that's not guaranteed in a regular auction where tax-forfeited properties go to the highest bidder.
"One of the complaints I hear from people in the neighborhoods is that these [bidders] are speculators, these are slumlords that are simply trying to grab these properties," said Mark Chapin, the county's director of resident and real estate services.
But the special auction buyers are different. "They're not speculators and they're not going to flip it," Chapin said.
Tax forfeitures are on the decline after peaking during the recession, but there are still plenty of homes that need extra care. The North Side has about 305 vacant properties, 62 percent of the vacancies in Minneapolis, some of which may ultimately fall into foreclosure or forfeiture.