Flood-home auction recoups sliver of Alberta government costs to buy properties - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 04:05 AM | Calgary | -12.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Calgary

Flood-home auction recoups sliver of Alberta government costs to buy properties

The Alberta government managed to recover some of its money from an auction of flood-affected houses in the province, but is still out $14.4 million from the purchase of the 26 properties.

Almost $3M raised from sale of houses that were purchased for $17.4M

1578 Gascony Lane S.W. in High River was assessed at $704,000 in 2013 and was sold at auction for $190,050 on Friday. (Andrew Brown/CBC)

The Alberta government managed to recover some of its money from an auction of flood-affected houses in the province, but is still out $14.4 million from the purchase of the 26 properties.

An auction of homes that were deemed habitable took place on Friday, with buyers snapping up some fancy houses for some low-end prices.

"Some of these properties were fairly high-end properties, so we did pay, we gave the previous owners what their properties were assessed at in 2013," said Dallas Huybregts, a spokesmanfor Alberta Infrastructure.

"We're happy with the results. We were able to recover money from some of these propertiesas opposed to the ones that needed demolition due to their flood damage."

The 26 houses sold on Friday ranged in assessed value which includes the house and the property on which it sitsfrom just shy of $1 million to $417,000. Auction prices for the housesranged from around $29,000 to $262,552.

The auctionbrought in almost $3 million, leaving a wide gap between the $17.4 million spent to purchase the homes.

In total, the government doled out$96million to buy 94 properties across the province in the wake of the 2013 flood.

In addition to the 26 auctioned on Friday, 14 homes in the High River area are still waiting for final inspections to determine whether they'll be razed or sold.

"There's a possibility that there might be another auction process in the future, however no decisions have been made on those properties yet soI can't say one way or another whether it will happen or not," saidHuybregts.

No other areas of the province will see future auctions.

Those who bought homes on Friday have 160 days to remove them from the properties so the government can start remediation efforts to returnthe land to a natural state.

Huybregts said if the new owners fail to meet that deadline, the province will demolish the homes.