Laserfiche WebLink
6. NEWIBUSINESS (Cont'd <br />The Chair again referred the comments to Mr. Crighton, who stated <br />this furnace, at this structure, was working at the time the <br />house was inspected and since then, during the construction in <br />the performance of the contract, the furnace is no longer oper- <br />ating. In situations like this, Mr. Crighton stated, we request <br />a change order. The furnace that the homeowner had was in- <br />stalled in 1947 and it had been converted. <br />Mr. Wiggins moved for the approval of the above Change Order No. 1 <br />to Rehabilitation Contract No. SECD /PR /CS -1/08, for an increase in <br />contract amount of $1,072.00, or an amended contract total of: <br />$4,259.00. Motion was seconded by Mr. Donaldson and carried. <br />Ms. Jeanne Derbeck, South Bend Tribune Reporter, stated that over <br />and over again, we get these change orders, and "I can see why <br />they arrive, but my question is, with some of these really old <br />houses that are in bad shape like this, if there is not a point <br />at which there is a cut -off point of how much money ought to be <br />put into them. When you don't know before you start how much <br />money is going into it, you can - -with these thousands of dollars- - <br />be trapped into spending more money than the house is worth." <br />President Nimtz said there is another side of the picture, and <br />that he, as President of Southhold Restorations, and as an <br />owner of a house in which he was born in some 60 years ago, <br />and an entrepreneur owning some places around here, that once <br />you tear a house down, it is hard to get somebody to put money <br />into it to build a new structure there. If part of the plan here <br />is to keep neighborhoods in existence and not just to have vacant <br />spaces, this is one of the prices you have to pay to keep neighbor- <br />hoods in existence without a lot of vacant space in them. <br />Ms. Derbeck said the historical old houses are different and some <br />old houses may be reconditioned, but some of these old houses in <br />the southeast neighborhood, if we are not just throwing away money <br />just for a year or two. Commissioner Wiggins said this work is sup- <br />posed to bring the house up to standard that is established by the <br />City for safe and standard housing which would put it on some kind <br />of an equivalent basis with new construction in part. The price <br />for any kind of new housing today, I would guess would be in the <br />neighborhood of $29,000. To buy or build an equivalent space <br />at current market prices is absolutely prohibitive. This is the <br />best bargain in the world to repair a lot of these older homes <br />rather than have them demolished and gone, and the necessity exists <br />then to create new equivalent space for people to live in. One <br />of the problems we have discovered is that it was even difficult <br />to get contractors to do this type of repairs. You are not sure <br />what you will get into, until the work is started; no one can tell <br />what is behind that surface until they get into it. There are <br />people who can't afford to even keep up the structures that they <br />have; they ought to have that kind of an alternative. There's <br />no incentive here really for people to maintain them, and there <br />