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7/28: Cracks In The Free Housing Market

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kkktookmybabyaway

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7 p.m.

 

• Damn Bush economy. Now people that didn't pay for their houses are losing them. How bad can this get?

 

More than 1,800 people showed up to help ABC's "Extreme Makeover" team demolish a family's decrepit home and replace it with a sparkling, four-bedroom mini-mansion in 2005.

 

Three years later, the reality TV show's most ambitious project at the time has become the latest victim of the foreclosure crisis...

 

What's this?

 

After the Harper family used the two-story home as collateral for a $450,000 loan, it's set to go to auction on the steps of the Clayton County Courthouse Aug. 5. The couple did not return phone calls Monday, but told WSB-TV they received the loan for a construction business that failed.

 

The house was built in January 2005, after Atlanta-based Beazer Homes USA and ABC's "Extreme Makeover" demolished their old home and its faulty septic system. Within six days, construction crews and hoards of volunteers had completed work on the largest home that the television program had yet built.

 

The finished product was a four-bedroom house with decorative rock walls and a three-car garage that towered over ranch and split-level homes in their Clayton County neighborhood. The home's door opened into a lobby that featured four fireplaces, a solarium, a music room and a plush new office.

 

Materials and labor were donated for the home, which would have cost about $450,000 to build. Beazer Homes' employees and company partners also raised $250,000 in contributions for the family, including scholarships for the couple's three children and a home maintenance fund.

 

ABC said in a statement that it advises each family to consult a financial planner after they get their new home. "Ultimately, financial matters are personal, and we work to respect the privacy of the families," the network said.

 

Some of the volunteers who helped build the home were less than thrilled about the family's financial decisions.

 

"It's aggravating. It just makes you mad. You do that much work, and they just squander it," Lake City Mayor Willie Oswalt, who helped vault a massive beam into place in the Harper's living room, told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

 

You know, say what you want about Jimmy Carter (Lord knows I have), but at least Habitat for Humanity makes its housing recipients work on a few homes before getting one built for them.

 

8:30 p.m.

 

• Happy birthday to you, happy birthday to you. Happy birthday crack-in-Shittsburgh. Happy birthday to you.

 

...It was the summer of 1988 when crack cocaine came blowing into Pittsburgh, first popping up in low-income black neighborhoods. By fall, the drug and its effects could be seen in nearly every city neighborhood and had a hold on people from a wide range of backgrounds and lifestyles -- many of whom never touched crack only months before, said city police Chief Nate Harper...
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