The mortgage foreclosure crisis has caused a drop in cities’ revenues, a spike in crime, more homelessness and an increase in vacant properties, a survey of elected local officials out today shows. About two-thirds of 211 officials surveyed by the National League of Cities reported an increase in foreclosures in their cities in the past year, according to the online and e-mail questionnaire. A third of them reported a drop in revenues and an increase in abandoned and vacant properties and urban blight. SURRENDER: Mortgage lenders see more borrowers give up ‘There’s a reduction in revenues at the same time that more services are needed,’ says Cynthia McCollum, president of the National League of Cities and councilwoman in Madison, Ala., a suburb of Huntsville. ‘Because of foreclosures, people are stealing, crime is on the rise and we don’t have more money for cops on the street.’ More than a fifth of city officials responding said homelessness and the need for temporary and emergency housing increased in the past year. The ills of foreclosures are dominating the agenda of the league’s meeting with congressional lawmakers in Washington, D.C., this week to secure federal funding for local […]

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