Court Strips Landlord Of Control Over Dilapidated Buildings Innundated With Code Violations; Gives Hope To Dozens Of Poor, Boot-Fearing Residents
In St. Paul, Minnesota, the Star Tribune reports:
- Halima Eidl lives in a St. Paul apartment that has urine-stained carpet and also mold, mice, roaches and rats. Despite that, she isn't looking to move. But Eidl and about five dozen of the city's poorest families could find themselves homeless later this month.
- The families live in two East Side apartment buildings that are on the verge of bank foreclosure, city condemnation or orders for eviction. Because money is short, moving isn't possible for most tenants, including Eidl and her daughters, Rashida Eidl, 17, and Maidah Ali, 11. Halima Eidl said owners Peggy and Randall Chun repeatedly ignore requests to fix problems.
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- In early December, an inspection of the two buildings [...] yielded nearly 300 code violations -- an appalling number to City Council members. The buildings each have about 30 rental units and also have produced a substantial history of police calls for thefts, drug dealing and prostitution.
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- Wells Fargo filed in Ramsey County District Court to foreclose on the Chuns for the $3.1 million mortgage on the buildings, [...]. The bank will ask a judge [] to appoint a receiver who could begin repairs on the battered properties.
For more, see Families face eviction from infested St. Paul apartments (The landlords said they will make the necessary repairs on the rundown East Side property, but it may be too little too late).
For story updates, see:
- Judge to appoint receiver for shabby St. Paul apartments,
- Troubled east St. Paul buildings to change hands (New receiver will have to decide whether to fix the apartment units or to declare them uninhabitable).
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