Learn languages naturally with fresh, real content!

Popular Topics
Explore By Region
Pittsburgh’s land bank struggles to sell vacant homes due to lack of ongoing funding, unlike Cleveland’s successful program.
Pittsburgh’s land bank, established in 2014, has made slow progress compared to Cleveland’s, which has demolished nearly 10,000 vacant properties since 2009 and restored $48 million in tax revenue.
Pittsburgh’s program only began processing properties in 2023 and completed eight sales in 2024, holding 62 properties, due to reliance on a one-time $3 million grant with no ongoing funding.
Cleveland’s success is driven by stable state funding from delinquent tax fees, enabling annual operations of about $30 million.
Pittsburgh leaders seek $1.5 million in 2026 funding but face delays from Pennsylvania’s budget impasse, limiting efforts to combat vacant housing amid rising costs and declining tax revenue.
El banco de tierras de Pittsburgh lucha por vender casas vacías debido a la falta de financiamiento continuo, a diferencia del exitoso programa de Cleveland.