| |
Evicted
101-year-old
Detroit
woman
can't go
home
DETROIT
- The
federal
government
now says
a
101-year-old
Detroit
woman it
promised
could
move
back
into her
foreclosed
home
four
months
ago
can't
return
because
the
building's
unsanitary
and
unsafe.
Texana
Hollis
was
evicted
Sept. 12
and her
belongings
placed
outside
after
her
65-year-old
son
failed
to pay
property
taxes
linked
to a
reverse
mortgage
and the
U.S.
Department
of
Housing
and
Urban
Development
foreclosed
on the
home.
Two days
later,
the
department
said she
could
return.
But now,
HUD said
it won't
let
Hollis
move
back in
because
of the
house's
condition.
She had
lived
there
about 60
years.
"Here I
am, 100
years
old, and
don't
have a
home,"
Hollis
said,
rounding
off her
age. "Oh
Lord,
help
me."
Department
spokesman
Brian
Sullivan
told The
Detroit
News (
http://bit.ly/yoTW9X
) that
an
inspection
determined
the
house
"was
completely
unsuitable
for a
person
to live
in."
"We
can't
allow
someone
to live
in that
(atmosphere)
now that
we are
essentially
the
owners
of the
property,"
Sullivan
said.
"The
home
isn't
safe;
it's not
sanitary.
It's
certainly
not
suitable
for
anyone
to live
in,
especially
not a
101-year-old
mother."
HUD
doesn't
want to
pay to
fix up
the
house,
but
Sullivan
said the
department's
seeking
other
agencies
that
might
help
with the
work and
get
Hollis
back
into her
home.
"We're
not
giving
up,"
Sullivan
said.
"We're
talking
with
anybody
and
everybody
about
solutions
to this
situation,
but the
condition
of the
property
is a
challenge."
After
hearing
about
her
longtime
friend's
eviction,
Pollian
Cheeks,
68,
offered
Hollis a
room at
her home
within a
mile of
Hollis'
house.
Hollis,
who once
taught
Cheeks
in
Sunday
school
at St.
Philip's
Lutheran
Church,
agreed
to the
invitation
and has
been
staying
at
Cheeks'
house in
the
meantime.
"Polly's
just as
nice to
me as
anybody
could
be. She
goes out
of her
way to
help
me,"
Hollis
said,
holding
back
tears.
"It's
just
like
living
at home,
but it's
not my
home."
Hollis's
son took
out the
reverse
mortgage
for the
$32,000
assessed
value of
the
property,
an
option
that HUD
permits
for the
elderly.
HUD took
control
of the
mortgage
after
the
amount
paid to
the
family
exceeded
the
value of
the
house in
2006.
|