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Berea City Council considers plans for City-owned houses, works toward keeping student renters out of Historical District

By SIMON SKOUTAS Managing Editor

On Feb. 16, a Berea City Council finance committee meeting was held to hear the proposals from both the city and the Century Home Garden District Homeowners Association as to what should be done to the two vacant City-owned houses located on 180 and 190 Beech St., an area in which the City is attempting to disallow Baldwin Wallace University students from renting.

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Ward 4 Berea City Councilwoman Erika Coble, who represents part of BW and the Historical District of Berea, said the City wanted to receive the houses and place owner-occupied deed restrictions on the properties which would not allow them to be rented to students. Coble said this decision was made not because of the BW students themselves, but because of the landlords.

The two houses on Beech Street were obtained by the City in 2016. At that time, the historical homes were leased to students by DiGeronimo Companies, a construction company based in Independence, Ohio. Through an agreement with the City, DiGeronimo Companies was given a City-owned parking lot and an alleyway to construct the building on Front Street which houses BW dorms and various businesses such as Starbucks.

When houses within the Historical District of Berea were rented to students in the past, there were some problems, said Marlene Shurell, president of the HOA.

“There were some problems when they had the party houses because, you know, kids are kids, and the kids who went to the party houses are the kind that like to act up a little,” Marlene Shurrell said.

Dan Karp, assistant vice president and director of university relations, said that when students break the rules in the rental homes not owned by BW, people will reach out to BW for help. Although BW administration tries to offer help, the landlords are rarely notified.

“The third-party landlord is responsible that if students don’t take good care of the property... We do try to help and resolve the issues where we can because you’re our students, and we want you to be good neighbors,” Karp said.

Ward 5 Councilman Rick Skoczen said that regardless of whether money is put into the two City-owned houses, anyone could still purchase the houses and place them in a college student’s name, and the City might end up with the “college issue again.”

“It would get us back to

[where] we didn’t want to be, which was that [we] had college students back in the district,” Skoczen said. “We don’t know if they’re renting and then we can be back to square one with what we were dealing with before.”

One of the proposals from the City of Berea was that the City would acquire 188 Beech St., which is currently owned by BW; in turn, the University would take a portion of land behind 190 Beech St. The backyard of 190 Beech St. faces the side of the Lou Higgins Recreation Center, and BW would want to turn this into a deed-restricted landscaping barrier. This option included tearing down all three houses and building two new

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