Couric & Co.
September 16, 2008 7:28 PM

The Housing Crisis' "Ground Zero"

[Editor's note: This post was written by CBS News producer Paul Facey, who worked on the latest installment of "Where They Stand" with correspondent Ben Tracy. Check out Ben's blog from earlier today if you want more.]

(Getty Images)
If you really want to see the effects of the foreclosure crisis, take a tour of Las Vegas. I'm not talking about the Strip, but rather, the city's once-promising residential neighborhoods. That's what Ben Tracy and I did for our report on housing for the series "Where They Stand."

A local realtor took us around an area called Summerlin, where "For Sale" signs dotted the lawns of newly-built homes. They were barely lived-in by their former owners who lost the houses to foreclosure. There were blocks lined with empty plots of land owned by investors now too nervous to build. Homes that once sold between $600,000 and $700,000 were now selling at bargain basement prices as low as $300,000. Meanwhile, several projects in Summerlin have been put on hold, including a brand new complex of luxury condos that went into bankruptcy before any of the residents moved in.

As we visited several Vegas neighborhoods, it was easy to see why the city is considered "ground zero" of the foreclosure debacle. Las Vegas has seven of the top 100 worst-hit zip codes in the nation, and foreclosure filings are up 83 percent from a year ago, according to RealtyTrac. While there are many reasons for the housing crisis, Las Vegas residents seem to put most of the blame on speculators who bought up properties hoping to make a quick profit and fraudulent mortgage lenders who preyed on unsuspecting home buyers. In realty, there's plenty of blame to go around – including the borrowers themselves.

But as we spoke to struggling Vegas homeowners, one message came through loud and clear: Time is not on their side. They are looking for immediate help – either from the government or lenders willing to work out a deal. I don't proclaim to know the answer, but after covering this topic for nearly a year and witnessing firsthand the impact that abandoned foreclosed properties can have on an entire neighborhood, it's probably in everyone's best interest to figure out how to clean up this housing mess.

If you are facing foreclosure – or you know someone who is – there is a 24-hour national hotline for homeowners in need of help. It's called the Homeowner's HOPE Hotline. The number is 888-995-HOPE.

And don't forget to check out what we found in our piece about what the presidential candidates propose to do about the mortgage crisis. Just click here to read it, or check out all of the "Where They Stand" pieces to date.
Tags:
where they stand ,
mortgage ,
mess ,
crisis ,
economy ,
housing
Topics:
Where They Stand
Add a Comment
by femaledem September 17, 2008 5:14 PM EDT
Katie is doing her job unlike others..AKA MCPALIN..let''s see McCain co-wrote a housing bill in 2005/palin is KEEPING ALL PIG/POrk $$$ AND yet i HAVE TO LOSE MY HOME 5 MONTHS AGO..where the hell was the hotline # then???SO I would like MCPALIN TO SEND ME SOME OF THE PIG $$,CINDY MCCAIN TO GIVE ME AND MY SON one of their 7 HOMES of better still her $300,000 outfit to sell cause my phone was SHUT OFF TODAY and because I am disabled(due to an on the job injury/hospital after 31 years) no medial or dental coverage(dropped by employer after my injury) HEY JOHN I can''t lift my arms OR turn my head either!!! SOOOO CAN YOU people help me with all your millions and help send my 20 yr old son to college( he can''t so he can help me) WELL ??? ANY TAKERS?????
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by robynn58 September 17, 2008 3:49 PM EDT
I lived in Las Vegas, was a REALTOR and lost my home almost 2 years ago. No one was there to help me. Now banks are so-called willing to help homeowners. I doubt it. THere was no hotline 2 years ago. I ended up leaving aging parents in Las Vegas and relocating to Calfornia. While we bail out big business, no one in government gave a d*** about me.
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by VegasResident September 17, 2008 2:46 PM EDT
While I appreciate the political back and forth the comments section has become,I live in Vegas and am watching whole communities as foreclosures sit and waste around them. I don''t give a *** about either candidate, etc. Personally all of us out here are just trying to save our communities.
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by ubu2008 September 17, 2008 10:06 AM EDT
How out of touch was John McCain when he co-wrote legislation in 2005 to address this mess?

I join as a cosponsor of the Federal Housing Enterprise Regulatory Reform Act of 2005, S. 190, to underscore my support for quick passage of GSE regulatory reform legislation. If Congress does not act, American taxpayers will continue to be exposed to the enormous risk that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac pose to the housing market, the overall financial system, and the economy as a whole.

John McCain, May 26, 2006

CBS sees no value in reporting the facts, because the facts interfer with their personal interests.

CBS and Obama are hoping American is stupid!
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