Print
Return to online version

November 10, 2010

Who the Government Thinks Is "Good"

Justin Katz

It's not a new program, and I know I've read about it before without finding reason for objection, but, somehow, I'm seeing this sort of thing in a new light, recently:

Foreclosures are leading to home-buying deals — half off the appraised value — as the federal government sells houses it has repossessed.

For people who work in a select range of occupations, the Federal Housing Administration sells houses at half price under its Good Neighbor Next Door program, or GNND. These homes were insured by the FHA and foreclosed on. Now, the Department of Housing and Urban Development is selling them.

Back in pre-Obama times, I just didn't see anything notable in government efforts to move public employees into the communities that they were serving. It seemed a noble plan. But after a stimulus program that drove the United States into massive debt in order to insulate the public sector from the Great Recession, after Congress slipped a takeover of higher-education loans into its oppressive healthcare legislation, and with a president who speaks of forgiving loans for students who enter into "public service," the housing program has come under a wholly different light.

One doesn't have to work for the local government to serve the local community, and surely many other professionals can just as accurately be assumed to be "good neighbors" as public-sector employees.

Comments

"One doesn't have to work for the local government to serve the local community..."

No, but I'd take a homeowner next door over an absentee landlord anyday.

Posted by: Russ at November 10, 2010 10:16 AM

Isn't this government helping "government types". I wonder what percentage of the selected professions draw their paycheck from the private sector.

Most of those jobs are fairly well paid, I wonder how many will seek to live in a neighborhood being "re-vitalized"?

I forsee people buying them, declaring them as a primary residence for 3 years while renting them out, then flipping them for a handsome profit. You would have to be nuts not to forsee that.

Posted by: Warrington Faust at November 10, 2010 6:52 PM