Chico home sales — and prices — soar after Camp Fire. ‘I need a house, I need it now!’
"It was, 'I need a house, I need it now!'" said Bronson, who runs an agency in
"It's just a frenzy. I've never even heard of anything as wild as this."
The reason is a simple but unprecedented case of supply and sudden demand: The
It's created what likely will be a long-term housing crisis in the area. And, for the moment, it's made
Three weeks ago, there were 240 to 250 homes for sale in
One of those buyers is
Jones and her husband spent several days after the fire unsuccessfully looking for a place to rent but, "every available rental was gone by Saturday morning" two days after the fire. "We looked at each other and said maybe we should try and buy."
Her home insurance company had already written a check for the full value of her destroyed
On Wednesday evening, less than a week after the fire, they toured a nondescript tract house for 10 minutes, then -- sitting in the dark in their agent's car out front -- wrote an offer "significantly" more than the asking price. They got the house, outbidding at least four others.
They will live there until they can rebuild in
The sales pace has barely let up in the weeks since, real estate brokers said. In fact, it's now encouraging some speculative behavior.
Realtor
Pearce estimated that the median sales price of a
He said he fears some people, desperate and emotional, are paying too much. Long-term, the market will stabilize, he said, and if new-home building occurs as expected in
"In two years, we will have a ton of new inventory and prices are going to drop again," he said. "Our market can't support that sales price. It is an inflated market and you are going to get stuck."
Pearce is president of
He points out that the area already suffered from a lack of rental and for-sale housing before the fire. Leaders are obligated, he said, to add housing, both temporary and permanent, to keep county workers in the county, and avoid an economic downturn should many decide to move away.
In
According to
"We need to find a way as fast as possible for legislators to cut the red tape," he said. "We need to make sure our work force stays here or else who will build?"
Both
"
Mayer estimated 14,000-plus people are in need of housing.
Others though have left the county and even the state to find temporary or permanent housing.
The city and the county also are talking about setting up temporary trailer communities, where people can live if and when federal emergency trailers are made available.
City officials said they had received some reports of increased rents in the days after the fire. Similar gouging behavior occurred in
Ramsey said his office also has put out word to people who have recently rented to let him know if they feel the rent is unusually high. Ramsey said his office will then check what the previous renter paid to try to determine if the landlord is guilty of gouging. So far, he said, no renters have contacted his office.
The state's post-disaster, price-gouging law does not apply, however, to home sales, according to a spokesperson for the state Attorney General. Sellers are free to ask any price they want, Butte DA Ramsey said.
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