For six years, he has lived in the house next to the blighted Concord property.
The legal posting is part of the process in the state's Abandoned Properties Rehabilitation Act, passed in 2004 and ignored by city officials until this year.
More than 30 adults and several schoolchildren turned out for Thursday's ceremonial event to watch Redd post the bright-orange legal notice on the Concord property. City workers had posted the rest of the notices earlier in the day.
In April, Redd announced that Camden's new Business Growth and Development Team would handle all inquiries about vacant properties from interested developers and annoyed neighbors and speed the process of condemning or saving them.
So far, the team has received 154 property proposals, all from Cramer Hill community groups. Of the 91 properties inspected so far, 59 have made the cut to be put on the abandoned-properties list, City Attorney Marc Riondino said.
Properties on the list are not occupied or on demolition lists or subject to liens under the Tax Lien Financing Corp.
It wasn't until recent years that local groups, such as Camden Churches Organized for People and the Cramer Hill development group, started pushing hard for use of the Abandoned Properties Rehabilitation Act. The act gives the city power to hold a special tax sale, accelerate foreclosure of tax liens, and use spot-blight eminent domain to turn over properties to entities that will rehabilitate them in accordance with the city's master plan.
The Cramer Hill development group hopes to start working on 20 houses from the first batch once it gets clearance from the city Legal Department and Division of Planning and Development.