Their hands wrapped in plastic bags for protection, Rosie Lee and two of her sons gripped snow shovels and grimaced as they scooped sewage-soaked debris from the basement of their foreclosed rental duplex in north Minneapolis. The smelly waste came from a plumbing leak that went unrepaired for four months until city inspectors took steps to condemn the bank-owned house on Bryant Avenue N. last week.
"I just hope my babies don't get sick," said Lee, a single mother who lives in the five-bedroom unit with seven children ages 1 to 15.
The Lees' home is one of more than 50 Minneapolis rental houses formerly owned by Pamiko Properties LLC, whose recent financial collapse highlights a concern of housing activists: The city issues rental licenses to landlords without doing background checks.
If one had been done on Pamiko, it could have revealed that owner Paul Koenig filed for bankruptcy in 2000, hadn't paid tens of thousands of dollars in taxes and had been involved in an earlier failed real estate venture on the North Side. Now, many Pamiko properties are abandoned, boarded up or condemned for lack of upkeep or unpaid property taxes.
"The Pamiko case is a poster child for why our rental licensing system needs reform," said Don Samuels, a City Council member from north Minneapolis.
It's also another painful blow to the North Side of Minneapolis, which suffered some of the worst excesses of the real estate boom, including predatory lending, mortgage fraud and, now, widespread foreclosures.
Koenig denied that he mismanaged the rentals and said they went downhill only after banks took them over. He suggested his critics don't like him because he often rented to black families on public assistance. Neighborhood activists and the banks' property manager dispute Koenig's claims.
Yet the city inspections manager doesn't dispute that its system of monitoring properties needs improvement.