Archive for August, 2009

Wasik Chosen in Thoreau Essay Contest

Monday, August 31st, 2009

An essay I wrote on global warming was chosen to be in included in a recently published anthology entitled “Thoreau’s Legacy.” Here’s an article about the citation:

August 27, 2009

John Wasik of Grayslake is one of 67 Americans whose essays and photographs will be included in a new book on global warming.

The anthology titled Thoreau’s Legacy: American Stories About Global Warming tells what global warming means personally to Americans.

Wasik wrote an essay titled Counting Cranes that will be in Chapter VI of the new book, published by the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS) and Penguin Classics.

“Little things you do to help the environment add up,” Wasik said. “You can make a difference if you live simply.”

He said he felt honored to be selected for Thoreau’s Legacy: American Stories About Global Warming.

The competition to be included in the anthology was strong. Established and aspiring writers and photographers from across America sent in nearly 1,000 submissions. People submitted 200- to 500-word personal accounts or photographs that focused on the places they love and want to protect, and the steps they are taking in their own lives to stem the tide of global warming.

A team of reviewers from Penguin Classics and UCS selected 67 contributions for the anthology. They partnered with Mixit Productions to produce an interactive book. It is available free online at www.ucsusa.org/americanstories; as a free eBook at us.penguingroup.com/static/pages/ebooks/thoreauslegacy/index.html; or for $24.95 as a limited edition hardcover book at www.ucsusa.org/americanstories/buy-th-book.html.

Author Barbara Kingsolver wrote a forward on global warming for the book, where she said that “we must radically reconsider the power relationship between humans and our habitat.”

The anthology highlights the tradition of environmental writing embraced by Henry David Thoreau, who encouraged people to appreciate the world around them and to preserve it for future generations. The diverse contributors include scientists, students, grandparents, Native Americans, journalists, veterans, evangelical Christians, artists and businessmen.

For Wasik, his focus is on conserving our natural resources.

“I can’t say that global warming has been a passion (of mine), but conservation has been,” Wasik said. “We live in a conservation community — Prairie Crossing in Grayslake — where we have an organic farm and acres of open land and trails.”

He shares his passions through his writing.

“I’ve been an environmentalist most of my life and have written several books on the subject,” said Wasik.

His most recent book is titled The Cul-de-Sac Syndrome: Turning Around the Unsustainable American Dream. He has also written The Audacity of Help: Obama’s Economic Plan and the Remaking of America, which addresses President Barack Obama’s plan to create “green” jobs.

Wasik heard about the Thoreau anthology through his membership in UCS, a science-based non-profit organization working for a healthy environment and a safer world. UCS combines independent scientific research and citizen action to develop innovative, practical solutions and to secure responsible changes in government policy, corporate practices and consumer choices, according to a release.

UCS partnered with Penguin Classics, a publisher committed to using paper products from manufacturers that follow sustainable paper production techniques and to in-house conservation and recycling.

– Marcia Sagendorph/For Pioneer Press

How American Homes Were Transformed

Friday, August 28th, 2009

Occasionally I get great comments posted elsewhere regarding something I said on radio or in a blog. This posting, from a history scholar, was a reaction to my interview on NPR’s Marketplace last week. I’m looking forward to a dialogue and reading her book:

After hearing your interview with John Wasik, author of The Culdesac Syndrome yesterday, I would like to offer an historian’s perspective on American’s seemingly insatiable appetite for home ownership. Contrary to what Wasik said, Americans’ desire for home ownership is not rooted in the eighteenth century. Americans in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries linked home ownership to productive property. A house sat at the center of a farm and its value came from a farmer’s ability to produce what he needed to sustain his household. Home and work sites overlapped. Thomas Jefferson’s vision of a nation of small farmers celebrated property ownership precisely because property, he believed, made men independent.

Industrialization and urbanization in the second half of the nineteenth century altered this view. A single-family house on an urban street did did not have an obvious productive value. (Though of course, wives, daughters and servants worked to clean, prepare food, raise children so that the male head of household could earn an income outside the home.) Most men and some women in cities worked for wages in factories, workshops and offices. Work was separated from domestic spaces and the family home was increasingly viewed as a site of leisure and mark of status. Middle class families tended to place great emphasis on the location of their homes and on décor, but ownership was not a priority.

It was, in fact, immigrant working class families who pursued homeownership with the greatest zeal. Many used their homes to generate additional income, taking in boarders, growing small kitchen gardens, and taking out multiple loans on their property. And, many were willing to sacrafice the upward social mobility of education to achieve home ownership; they pulled their children out of school at young ages, putting them to work for wages to contribute to the family’s goal. Ironically, it was European immigrants, many of whom had been denied the right to own property in their homelands, who established home ownership as the American dream.

New Deal housing programs completed the process. The New Deal introduced federally insured mortgages for home buyers and loans for builders, as well as federally-financed construction of high ways and tax breaks for mortgage interest. All of these made home ownership affordable for expanding numbers of American families.

It is important to note that shifts in the economy—the dramatic shift from an agricultural to an industrial economy—transformed the ways Americans conceived of the family home. Equally important was the role of the federal government in subsidizing home construction and purchases. The American dream then is little more than a century old and rooted in the massive social and economic changes of the late nineteenth century.

Margaret Garb, associate professor
Department of History
Washington University in St. Louis

Author: City of American Dreams: A History of Home Ownership and Housing Reform, Chicago 1871-1919.

Walking the New American Dream

Thursday, August 27th, 2009

This is a piece I did expanding upon the idea of creating more walkable, human-scale neighborhoods. Originally posted at: http://tiny.cc/wx4Dj

By John F. Wasik

You want to find a neighborhood that will hold its value and may even appreciate once the housing recession ends?

Take a walk.

Communities that have amenities and services within walking distance and don’t require a car may win out over time and may even reward you with equity gains.

Although we’re seeing some moderation in the home-value free fall of the past three years, the value of walkability may be difficult to measure as U.S. home prices continue to show signs of distress in most markets.

Yet it’s worth trying to envision the other side of this pernicious slump. If you’re choosing a place to relocate, retire to or reinvent yourself in, the most walkable cities offer plenty of options.

Pedestrian-friendly cities can make huge personal economic sense. If you don’t need a car, you can save thousands a year on financing, leasing, insurance, maintenance, gas and parking fees — especially if you own more than one vehicle.

Living where there’s ubiquitous and reliable public transportation and services within a mile or less also means fewer worries about traffic jams, accidents, wasted money and time. And walking is good for you, so you could improve your health and lose weight.

Best Neighborhoods

Almost without exception, the most walkable neighborhoods are within older, established cities and suburbs and not sprawling, car-dominated communities, or what I call “spurbs,” according to research I did for my new book The Cul-de-Sac Syndrome (also available from Barnes and Noble).

According to Walkscore, a service that rates 40 cities and more than 2,500 neighborhoods, San Francisco, New York, Boston, Chicago, Philadelphia and Seattle rank as the most walkable cities. (See more cities.)

Within those cities, areas such as New York’s Soho; San Francisco’s Chinatown; Boston’s Back Bay; Chicago’s Loop; Philly’s City Center and Seattle’s Pioneer Square rank highly as the most pedestrian-friendly neighborhoods in the country.

Having walked these neighborhoods and most of the other top-rated cities, I concur that these areas meet Walkscore’s criteria of being mixed-income, mixed-use, amenity-packed and densely populated.

Christopher Leinberger, a fellow at the Brookings Institution and a director of Walkscore’s board, noted that long-term trends favor these neighborhoods because “Millenials,” or the children of baby boomers, prefer them over suburbs. Their retiring parents may eventually favor them as well.

“Millenials are saying ‘why do I have to invest in a fleet of cars?’” Leinberger says.

Values Rising

In the face of a national housing downturn, does it make sense to invest in the most-walkable neighborhoods (or stay put if you’re already there)?

According to Leinberger’s research, he surmises that each additional point on the Walkscore scale — 100 is the highest walkability rating — may translate into from $1,000 to $3,000 more per square foot of housing value.

A superficial analysis bears witness to his observation. You’ll pay a lot more for housing in New York’s Tribeca, which is rated 100, than in Charlotte, North Carolina, which is rated 38.

I know that’s not a fair comparison. New York, San Francisco, Boston and other older cities will always be more expensive due to scarcity of land, jobs and general desirability.

Still, I can argue that prices overall have held up better in the walkable cities relative to the S&P Case-Shiller 20-city index.

New York home prices, for example, gained 4% over the past five years through March 31, versus a decline of about 10% in the 20-city index for that period. Seattle was almost 28% above the multi-city average. Boston was about a half a percentage point better.

Declines Still Ahead

In contrast, a relatively pedestrian-hostile city like Atlanta lagged the national average by about 2 percentage points. And walkability isn’t everything. The highest-priced, foreclosure-wracked but very walkable San Francisco trailed the national benchmark by 17 points.

I’m not saying that walkability is the sole reason for picking a place to live, nor does it guarantee affordability or appreciation.

For a better deal in housing, you’ll definitely have to look outside of the most walkable cities.

Places like Hinesville, Georgia; Farmington, New Mexico; or Lebanon, Pennsylvania; might be better places to look for better prices and lower risk of losing equity, according to Homesmart Reports, a home investment risk-rating service.

In the meantime, home prices will not be a random walk. The cities where there was rampant overbuilding, speculation, over leveraging or foreclosures will still continue to decline. Even places not hit most directly by the bust will be hurting. Unemployment will continue to ravage even the best-planned urban settings.

But keep in mind that taking a stroll and real estate investing still have two things in common: You have to be patient to reap the long-term benefits.

John F. Wasik, author of The Cul-de-Sac Syndrome: Turning Around the Unsustainable American Dream, is a personal finance columnist for Bloomberg News and the author of several books. His most recent book, The Merchant of Power, was praised by Studs Terkel and well reviewed by the New York Times. Wasik has won more than fifteen awards for consumer journalism, including the 2008 Lisagor and several from the National Press Club. He has appeared on such national media as NBC, NPR, and PBS. He lives in Chicago. For more information please visit www.johnwasik.com.

Spurbs on the Wane

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009

This is a piece that ran on www.greennow.com.

Revive US housing by killing cars and ’spurbs’
August 25th, 2009

By John F. Wasik

If US housing is going to rebound long-term, we need to vanquish the car and stop encouraging sprawl.

First, let’s hasten the demise of the spurb, an ugly word I made up to describe sprawling, unwalkable urban-suburban areas that have no connection to public transportation and central cities.

The spurb’s time has long past. Future energy demands from the rest of the world mean higher energy prices down the road. We need homes where there are jobs, infrastructure and transportation.

If the housing bubble and bust has taught us anything, it’s probably a bad idea to build homes in the middle of nowhere, stretching along vast deserts and inland regions that are poorly served by highways. Americans are tired of wasting their lives in endless commutes.

Not only does driving everywhere waste our precious time, it ruins our health leading to heart disease, obesity, asthma and a host of other ailments. It’s bad for our individual well being and the health of the planet. Cars contribute to climate change and bad air.

As I’ve explored the extensive downside of the spurb in my book The Cul-de-Sac Syndrome, I’ve also examined what we could do about it. I traveled from the San Francisco Bay to the tip of Florida to see what works and how we could re-invent the American home and community.

The first order of this revival is to reawaken our sense of the walkable neighborhood. They used to exist in every small town in America and every established city neighborhood. In New York, Philadelphia, Boston, Chicago, Denver, San Francisco, Seattle and Portland, Oregon, they still exist and are thriving.

A walkable neighborhood means situating amenities such as stores, dry cleaners, libraries, bakeries and restaurants within about a three-quarter-of- a-mile walk. Not only can you abandon your car in these areas, you become healthier and start to know your neighbors. You look out for them and they look out for you. You can’t do that in the freeway-choked suburbs of Los Angeles or the ring of overdeveloped towns surrounding Dallas. You’re shackled to your car, but hey, it’s the American Way, isn’t it?

While it’s too early to tell, walkable cities may hold their real-estate values better than car-dependent areas. According to the research of urbanologist Christopher Leinberger of the Brookings Institution, with each incremental increase in walkability, property values are likely to rise.

That bodes well for pedestrian heavens like Boston’s Back Bay, Portland’s Pearl District and Chicago’s Lincoln Park. It’s bad news for sprawl-infested, foreclosure-ridden places like Stockton, Calif., Southwest Florida and suburban Phoenix and Las Vegas.

That doesn’t mean that spurbs are doomed or cities will prevail when we work our way out of this bust a few years from now. Nearly every community can be rebuilt to accommodate light rail, pedestrians and bikes. Maybe when diesel buses are converted to fuel-cell/electric vehicles, they, too, will make economic and environmental sense.

The key theme is to make communities more people-centric. The population is getting older, so this is a win-win situation. Design new communities around transit stops. Create pedestrian-only zones in suburbs and cities that ban cars.

Two of my favorite examples of “people places” are the pedestrian mall in Charlottesville, Va., and the ramblas in Barcelona. The first is a celebration of public, private and sidewalk culture. You can walk to a movie, dining, an ice rink or municipal buildings. In the Spanish city, when my wife and I were vacationing a few years ago, we walked from our hotel in the middle of the city to the beach and downtown neighborhoods. It was several miles, but we didn’t have to cross a major highway and ate, shopped and people-watched the whole way with great delight.

Life on the other side of the housing bust can be livable, healthier, more economical and ecologically sound. Think of the money you would save by not having to own a car or two (or three). You would get more exercise and help local merchants, not gargantuan chain-store operators situated in mega-shopping districts. You could patronize farmer’s markets and get fresh food instead of worrying where your food came from and what pathogens it contained.

What will it take to ensure that the spurb mentality doesn’t take over again? Demand that Washington divert most of its transportation dollars (in the upcoming transportation bill) away from new highways and into public transit, high-speed rail, pedestrian and bike paths. Demand that local and regional planners build walkable communities with affordable, energy-efficient housing near where people actually work. That may require changes in zoning and building codes, but this is America, we were founded on the idea of building something better for everyone.

Getting out of the traffic jam that was and continues to be the defining suburban experience will also give you more of the commodity you can’t replace — your time. How much is your time worth in your present lifestyle? Let your elected officials know now.

John F. Wasik, author of The Cul-de-Sac Syndrome: Turning Around the Unsustainable American Dream, is a personal finance columnist for Bloomberg News and the author of several books. His most recent book, The Merchant of Power, was praised by Studs Terkel and well reviewed by The New York Times. Wasik has won more than 15 awards for consumer journalism including the 2008 Lisagor and several from the National Press Club. He has appeared on such national media as NBC, NPR, and PBS. He lives in Chicago. For more information, visit www.johnwasik.com.

Copyright © 2009 John F.Wasik, author of The Cul-de-Sac Syndrome: Turning Around the Unsustainable American Dream.

Nat Turner’s Revenge

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

Here’s a review from a website entitled “Nat Turner’s Revenge:”

http://natturnersrevenge.blogspot.com/2009/08/cul-de-sac-syndrome-john-wasiks-slap-of.html

The unattainable home

Monday, August 24th, 2009

This is an essay I wrote that appeared on several websites, mostly drawn from my “Cul-de-Sac Syndrome.”

By John F. Wasik

Even before the home bubble burst, homes cost too much for more than four out of 10 Americans. Only 56 percent of Americans could afford a modestly priced home in 2002, the first full year of the bubble. And as Americans went deeper into debt to finance their dream, they accumulated less and less of a tangible ownership stake. Home equity as a percentage of market value peaked in 1982 — at 70 percent — after a brutal recession. More than half of American homeowners with a mortgage would owe more than they owned at the end of 2008. About 7.5 million were spending more than half of their income on housing costs.

The craving for upward mobility through home ownership escalated even as families on the edge of “making it” were falling behind economically. The think tank Demos said that 23 million families became “economically insecure” from 2000 to 2006, while 4 million experienced economic decline. This erosion in prosperity was triggered by a 22 percent decline in financial assets (following the dot-com bust), loss of health benefits, and an overall rise in the cost of homeownership (up 9 percent during that period). The reaction to this backsliding — buying a home as an investment — was the equivalent of a couple on the verge of divorce deciding to have a child in hopes that it would save their marriage. For more than 3 million in or facing foreclosure in 2009, this thinking proved financially catastrophic.

The housing bust represents a profound loss of wealth since few households had significant savings outside of their homes, as values dropped to a median $200,000 in early 2009 from $221,900 at the height of the bubble in 2006. In California, always on the fault line between profound innovation and multiple disasters, the boom and bust was a tragic manic-depressive episode. The median home price in Southern California alone slid to $285,000 by the end of 2008, 44 percent below the peak of $505,000 in 2007. Although the decline allowed more people to afford homes, even during the bust only one-fifth of Los Angeles residents could afford the median-priced home — up from 2 percent during the boom.

The Bust’s Fallout

The housing bust created a firestorm of collateral damage.

* Lehman Brothers, one of the oldest and most venerable investment banks, was forced into bankruptcy and liquidation during a run on its assets in the late summer and fall of 2008. Its subprime mortgage and credit default swap holdings were essentially to blame, creating the largest business bankruptcy in U.S. history. Its demise released a tsunami of securities- and derivatives-related demons. Basically, when home prices collapsed, the value of the securities holding mortgages also went south. These “toxic assets” imperiled any institution that held them.
* When the run commenced on Lehman, it drove Merrill Lynch, the country’s largest brokerage house, into the arms of Bank of America, creating the world’s largest brokerage with more than $2.5 trillion in assets and 20,000 “financial advisers.” Merrill, whose symbol was an optimistic though ferocious black bull, had also invested billions in tainted subprime securities. Government regulators also forced the sale of Bear Stearns Companies, another major mortgage securities player, to JPMorgan Chase for a bargain-basement sale price of $10 a share (the initial price was $2 a share). Like Lehman, Bear effectively evaporated.
* The U.S. government seized Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, the two largest mortgage issuers and guarantors, and promised to infuse the companies with cash to keep them afloat. Their liabilities vastly exceeded their assets and they were losing a total $50 billion in the third quarter of 2008 alone. Since they insured, loaned, or sold securities representing $5 trillion — about half of the U.S. mortgage market — they were deemed “too big to fail.”
* Caught in the opaque business of insuring mortgage securities through the shadowy and then-unregulated world of credit default insurance, the government effectively took over AIG, the world’s largest insurer. The Federal Reserve lent it more than $80 billion
by early 2009, part of a $150 billion bailout. It, too, was deemed too large to go bust, because its mortgage and derivatives positions threatened the global financial system.
* Seeking refuge in the regulated banking system, the remaining Wall Street investment banks morphed into old-fashioned, deposit-oriented banks. Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley applied to become regulated banking companies with federal oversight. American Express followed later in the year. The Age of Froth was truly over as the cowboy operations that thrived on 30-to-1 (and higher) leverage became history.
* The mother of all bailouts came as wintry storms arrived with an Old Testament vengeance in the autumn of 2008. With rancorous and reluctant Congressional approval, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke on October 1 ushered through a sketchy $700 billion bailout package called the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP), which would pump money into banks, possibly buy bad mortgages, and prop up the financial system for a short time. This massive cash transfusion was designed to prevent credit markets from shutting down and avert a global depression. Meanwhile, the Fed was lending some $2 trillion to banks, attempting to break a credit freeze that threatened to shut down all institutional lending. Paulson later backtracked on his earlier proposal to buy mortgages, triggering even more concerns that his master plan was ill conceived and ineptly managed. Sensing that the real purpose of all of the bailout measures was to stem the foreclosure crisis, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation announced its own mortgage bailout plan on the heels of the Paulson announcement. Several large banks said they would do voluntary loan modifications to reduce the cost of adjustable-rate loans, although they were under no legal obligation to do so.
* After more dithering over how TARP funds would be allocated, Secretary Paulson and Fed Chairman Bernanke moved to prop up Citigroup, one of the largest global lenders, with a $20 billion cash infusion and guarantee of more than $300 billion of its loans. Within days, responding to criticism that banks were the exclusive benefactors of the government’s bailout, the Fed moved to guarantee certain mortgage, credit-card, and student-loan securities.

John F. Wasik, author of The Cul-de-Sac Syndrome: Turning Around the Unsustainable American Dream, is a personal finance columnist for Bloomberg News and the author of several books. His most recent book, The Merchant of Power, was praised by Studs Terkel and well reviewed by The New York Times. Wasik has won more than 15 awards for consumer journalism including the 2008 Lisagor and several from the National Press Club. He has appeared on such national media as NBC, NPR, and PBS. He lives in Chicago. For more information, visit www.johnwasik.com.

Copyright © 2009 John F.Wasik, author of The Cul-de-Sac Syndrome: Turning Around the Unsustainable American Dream.

Marketplace Radio Interview

Friday, August 21st, 2009

This interview ran on NPR’s Marketplace Radio and reached an audience of 8 million listeners:

http://marketplace.publicradio.org/display/web/2009/08/19/pm-cul-de-sac-q/

What Makes Financial Sense?

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

This is a podcast I did with Jim Puplava from the Financial Sense radio show on Cul-de-Sac:

http://www.kristjanvelbri.com

Cliff’s Notes on the American Dream

Monday, August 17th, 2009

This is a show I did with Cliff Kule on Cul-de-Sac.

http://www.cliffkule.com/2009/08/cul-de-sac-syndrome-turning-around.html

Is Suburbia Dead?

Friday, August 14th, 2009

I hope you’ve had a chance to scan my book “The Cul-de-Sac Syndrome,” which examines how we got into the housing mess — and how we can get out of it. The following links are to two segments I recently did for First Business TV.

Part 1: University Village
http://www.firstbusinessx.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1551&Itemid=76
Part 2: Round Lake
http://www.firstbusinessx.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1555&Itemid=76

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