DETROIT (AP) — In a story Sept. 22 about a program in Detroit that allows people facing tax foreclosures to own their homes, The Associated Press, relying on information from Quicken Loans, reported erroneously the entity handling the tax foreclosure auction. It is the Wayne County Property Tax Foreclosure Auction, not the Wayne County Land Bank.
A corrected version of the story is below:
People living in Detroit houses in danger of tax foreclosure are being urged to apply for a program that could allow them to one day own the homes.
DETROIT (AP) — People living in Detroit houses in danger of tax foreclosure are being urged to apply for a program that could allow them to one day own the homes.
Make It Home is a partnership between the city, United Community Housing Coalition and the Quicken Loans Community Fund.
The Quicken Loans Community Fund has provided grants to the coalition, which allows the city to buy houses in Wayne County tax foreclosure auctions. The houses are transferred to the housing coalition, which works with renters or owners who make monthly payments to buy the homes outright.
Officials with the Quicken Loans Community Fund say hundreds of occupied homes were not bid on during this month's Wayne County Property Tax Foreclosure Auction and could be back up for bid in October.