State’s Foreclosure Rates Have Plummeted
Lowest since at least 2008, research shows, at one-third the peak in metro area.
Foreclosure rates in Wisconsin are at a nearly two-decade low, according to one state researcher.
Russell Kashian, an economic professor at the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater, began tracking foreclosures in 2008 to identify hot spots in Wisconsin.
Kashian, the director of UW-Whitewater’s Fiscal and Economic Research Center, said the rates have decreased due to stricter lending standards, more renters and high employment rates. Although he started tracking foreclosures for the state in 2008, Kashain kept up-to-date data on foreclosure filings for prior years.
Through his research, he found Milwaukee County had one of the highest foreclosure rates in the state.
The research estimates that 36 to 55 foreclosures were filed per 10,000 people in Milwaukee County in 2009. Those numbers were 11 to 20 foreclosures filings per 10,000 people in 2019.
“The foreclosure rate has gone down considerably, to almost one quarter,” Kashian said. “It’s gone down greater in wealthier areas, and it’s gone down less in minority areas and less affluent areas.”
Lynnea Katz-Petted is the CEO of Revitalize Milwaukee, a nonprofit that helps residents prevent foreclosures and renovate foreclosed homes. Katz-Petted said although the state is seeing a decrease in foreclosure rates, her organization is seeing an increase in foreclosures on older homeowners.
“There’s always been a ton of money for foreclosure prevention or education to help new buyers which is really, really important,” Katz-Petted said. “But on the same token we have a huge population of seniors who want to and can stay in their homes, they just need some assistance.”
Researchers say rates in Wisconsin are so low because of stricter lending standards, high employment rates and more renters.
There have been nearly 3,600 foreclosure filings in Wisconsin this year.
Listen to the WPR report here.
Wisconsin Foreclosure Rates Lowest They’ve Been In 2 Decades was originally published by Wisconsin Public Radio.