100 tax-foreclosed homes in Sherman Park to be renovated

City seeking interested developers for $1 million project

The City of Milwaukee will grant up to $1 million to subsidize the renovation of 100 tax-foreclosed homes in the greater Sherman Park area on the city’s northwest side.

Crews from Northcott Neighborhood House deconstruct a city-owned home at 2709 N. 40th St. In the wake of unrest this summer in the Sherman Park neighborhood, the State of Wisconsin is allocating $2 million for the City of Milwaukee to help train residents in construction trades by rehabilitating, deconstructing or demolishing homes.
Crews from Northcott Neighborhood House deconstruct a city-owned home at 2709 N. 40th St. In the wake of unrest this summer in the Sherman Park neighborhood, the State of Wisconsin is allocating $2 million for the City of Milwaukee to help train residents in construction trades by rehabilitating, deconstructing or demolishing homes.

The city issued a request for qualification Thursday asking interested developers to attend an informational meeting at 1:30 p.m. Jan. 9 at City Hall.

The project, called The Milwaukee Employment/Renovation Initiative will focus on homes in the area bounded by North 60th Street, North 20th Street, Capitol Drive and Lloyd Street.

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Selected developers will be required to purchase five or more city-owned foreclosed properties within the target area, renovate the homes to code-compliant standards, and hire at least one unemployed or underemployed person for each house purchased.

The maximum grant per house is $10,000. Grant funds will be paid to developers after work is completed and a code compliance certificate has been issued, according to the RFQ.  Developers will be required to provide payroll documentation regarding the hiring of an unemployed or underemployed individual.

A $2 million Wisconsin Department of Financial Institutions grant will pay for the program. Half of the money will be used for the Milwaukee Employment/Renovation Initiative, while the remaining $1 million will be used to demolish or deconstruct 100 city- and privately-owned blighted properties.

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The state has turned its focus on the Sherman Park neighborhood since this summer.

In August, violent protests erupted in Sherman Park after Milwaukee police officer Dominique Heaggan-Brown fatally shot Sylville Smith. Heaggan-Brown was fired and charged last week with first degree reckless homicide.

Gov. Scott Walker held a press conference in August announcing a $4.5 million plan to address the needs of the neighborhood and what he called “unacceptably high levels of unemployment.”

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