City officials and banks in at least six east metro communities are dealing with properties abandoned by Journey Home Minnesota, the defunct veterans' charity founded by former Ramsey County Commissioner Blake Huffman.
Journey Home — which at one point owned more than a dozen homes in Ramsey County that were to be rented to needy veterans — has stopped paying mortgages, maintaining the properties and returning phone calls, according to court filings and officials in Roseville, Vadnais Heights, Shoreview, Maplewood, Arden Hills and North Oaks.
Work begun by Journey Home on at least three residential construction sites has been stopped, leaving half-built homes, a dumpster, debris and, on one of the lots, a hazardous, gaping hole.
Journey Home also has defaulted on a $347,000 mortgage that Sunrise Banks issued for a home in North Oaks, according to court filings. The bank is asking a Ramsey County judge to appoint a receiver to liquidate the charity's assets.
Huffman, 54 and a former Wells Fargo vice president, was elected to the Ramsey County Board in 2012 and resigned in June after an investigation revealed that his charity had received $60,000 from the county to buy two homes for needy families and then sold one of them to Huffman's son Zach.
At the time, Huffman said the charity was in financial trouble. He did not return a call for comment Friday.
The investigation, which involves federal housing funds administered through Ramsey County, continues. Last month the county demanded that Journey Home fix or repay a total of $140,000 in housing assistance it had received to buy three homes that were to be used as affordable housing. The charity didn't adhere to terms of the program, such as income restrictions, according to the documents.
The county also alleges that the charity sold two properties without permission and used a third one as loan collateral, which would be a violation of the agreement.