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A new pilot program uses a camera mounted on a car and AI software to survey Cleveland's housing stock.
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Dozens of residents are being forced out of their Shaker Square apartments after a lawsuit filed by Cleveland prompted new owners for their troubled properties.
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Medina County officials have commissioned their own study to get in-depth projections of the county's population in the next 25 years.
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The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development capped funds for programs that house formerly homeless people at 30% of their previous allocation.
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Cleveland Mayor Justin Bibb said President Donald Trump's aggressive federal cuts could affect core city services and close neighborhood community development corporations.
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Cleveland City Council approved $18 million toward the Cleveland Housing Investment Fund.
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Increases from the state-mandated sexennial appraisal's results ranged from a low of 15% in Hunting Valley to a high of 67% in East Cleveland.
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The program will renovate 100 homes in Cleveland's middle neighborhoods to try to retain residents typically lost to surrounding suburban communities.
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It's the seventh year of what the nonprofits call the Building Great Futures initiative, which so far has provided paying work for 70 students and rehabbed 16 homes for local families, which are then sold by Habitat for Humanity to families with a zero-interest mortgage.
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Legal Aid of Greater Cleveland has filed a complaint on behalf of the tenants.