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FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
2/14/2008
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Senators Pippy, Rhoades Unveil
Measures to Combat Blight
Giving communities the tools to prevent and remediate abandoned
properties.
Harrisburg – Sen. John Pippy (R-37)
joined Sen. James Rhoades (R-29), legislators and others to announce
legislation that would help municipalities prevent blight and remediate
abandoned properties.
Pippy, chairman of the Senate Urban
Affairs and Housing Committee was on hand Tuesday for a news conference
that also announced the findings and recommendations of a statewide
Blight Task Force convened by Sen. Rhoades.
Pippy said blight is not just an
urban problem, with it affecting smaller communities and rural areas as
well.
“Blight is one of those problems
that cause such a ripple effect, it’s sometimes hard to appreciate,”
said Pippy. “It depresses property values, of course. And it promotes
crime. But, just as bad, blighted properties send a signal to the whole
community that hope is lost, that no one cares, and that the
neighborhood’s best days are behind it.”
One measure, the Neighborhood
Blight Reclamation and Revitalization Act sponsored by Sen. Rhoades,
would expedite the process of prosecuting owners of blighted properties
and give municipalities the authority to go after the financial assets
of negligent owners. The bill would clarify the identity of property
owners and hold them responsible for the municipal costs to secure,
remediate or demolish blighted structures.
“Under current law, when a property
becomes blighted, the local taxpayer usually ends up footing the bill,”
Rhoades said. “My legislation would hold landlords accountable for the
costs that blight places on our communities.”
Property owners would also be
required to bring any property they own that has serious code violations
which threaten the public’s health and safety into code compliance
before they could obtain any municipal or state permits or approvals for
any other property they own in the commonwealth, a requirement supported
by Sen. Pippy.
“If you’re not maintaining property
‘A,’ why should we give you a permit to build or occupy property ‘B?’”
said Pippy.
Sen. Pippy’s legislation would
establish the “Pennsylvania Housing Affordability and Rehabilitation
Enhancement Act” or “PHARE.” Through this initiative, the underfunded
Pennsylvania Housing Finance Agency would be given the resources to
develop programs to build, rehabilitate and preserve homes for
low-to-moderate-income individuals and families, senior citizens, and
people with disabilities.
The proposals are supported by the
Blight Task Force, a statewide coalition of housing and municipal
organizations dedicated to tackling the problems of blighted and
abandoned building across the commonwealth.
Pippy said the Senate Urban Affairs
and Housing Committee will hold a public hearing on the package this
spring in Pittsburgh.
“Combating blight isn’t easy. There
are parts of the problem that are beyond mere legislative solution. But
we must do what we can to confront blight’s message of despair, property
by property, community by community,” said Pippy.
* Additional information,
including video of the news conference and the findings and
recommendations of the Blight Task Force, are posted on the Urban
Affairs and Housing Committee web page at
www.senatorpippy.com.
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CONTACT: Greg Mahon (717)
787-5839
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