With millions of dollars in federal grants available to fix up dilapidated homes, Camden nonprofit redevelopment groups are eager for the city to use the state Abandoned Properties Rehabilitation Act, as it promised it would this year.
But using the law - pitched as a more efficient way than foreclosure to take control of blighted properties - has proven to be a lengthier process than many imagined. As the months pass, there is a growing sense of urgency among some groups to get titles to the properties they applied to rehabilitate before those essential grants expire.
Heart of Camden, the city's housing authority, and two for-profit developers have until February 2013 to use $14 million on a shared project that includes rehabbing 49 properties to be acquired through the act. The measure gives cities the power to hold a special tax sale or use eminent domain to gain control of derelict properties.
![Heart of Camden, the city's housing authority, and two for-profit developers have until February 2013 to use $14 million on a shared project that includes rehabbing 49 properties to be acquired through the act. The 2013 deadline is for "not only getting the properties, but constructing [the homes] as well," said Helene Pierson, Heart of Camden's executive director. Heart of Camden, the city's housing authority, and two for-profit developers have until February 2013 to use $14 million on a shared project that includes rehabbing 49 properties to be acquired through the act. The 2013 deadline is for "not only getting the properties, but constructing [the homes] as well," said Helene Pierson, Heart of Camden's executive director.](http://media.philly.com/images/600*450/20111203_jhomes_1024.jpg)