FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
01/08/2013 |
CITY WINS JUDGMENT AGAINST
BLIGHTED LAKE TERRACE SHOPPING CENTER IN GENTILLY
|
Civil District Court Judge Says
the Property is Guilty of Blight and Public Nuisance
|
NEW ORLEANS, LA—Today the City
announced Civil District Court Judge Lloyd J. Medley, Jr. has upheld the City of
New Orleans’ code enforcement action against the Lake Terrace Shopping Center
located at 1532 Robert E. Lee Boulevard in Gentilly. The City has aggressively
pursued action against the property owner to force development of the longtime
blighted property. The shopping center has sat vacant since Hurricane
Katrina,
“I am pleased with Judge Medley’s ruling,” said
Mayor Mitch Landrieu. “His ruling helps advance the City’s goal of remediating
this eyesore and restoring the quality of life for those neighborhoods.”
On December 11, 2012, Civil District Court Judge
Lloyd J. Medley, Jr. affirmed the judgment rendered by the City of New Orleans
Code Enforcement rendered on June 7, 2012 against DMK Acquisitions and
Properties LLC that the property is guilty of blight and public nuisance.
Now that the blight judgment has been affirmed,
the City of New Orleans is considering any and all legal remedies available with
respect to the property, including but not limited to expropriation, lien
foreclosure, or demolition. As a large commercial property, it is the City’s
position that the shopping center must return to commerce. The surrounding
neighborhood has played an active role in the Code Enforcement Hearings as
well.
While DMK Acquisitions and Properties LLC may
still appeal the ruling to the Fourth Circuit Court, the City will continue its
aggressive strategy to remediate and ultimately put the property back into
commerce.
Nearly two years ago, Mayor Landrieu announced a
new, aggressive blight strategy aimed at reducing the blight count in New
Orleans by 10,000 properties by 2014. A recent study released by The Greater New
Orleans Community Data Center showed that blighted properties have been reduced
by approximately 8,000 addresses since 2010. The study attributed the reduction
in part to the focused efforts of City agencies to bring properties into
compliance by prioritizing aggressive code enforcement and code lien foreclosure
sales.
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Saturday, January 12, 2013
DMK - Blight Judgement
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