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Are Duluthians getting priced out of the local housing market?

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DULUTH — A few years ago, Amber Johnson would have been an ideal Duluth home buyer candidate: She could make a 25% down payment and offer above asking for a home in her price range.

But after 10 rejected offers this year, even including money for an appraisal gap, the St. Luke’s physician assistant quit trying.

“The listing price felt like a suggestion,” Johnson said. “I’d go in with what felt like a strong offer and someone would come swooping in with a cash offer. I had no ability to compete with that.”

Johnson is among many in Duluth struggling to buy a first home or upgrade to a better one in the kind of bargain-less market that some real estate agents say they’ve never seen in the Twin Ports. Even as mortgage interest rates jump to the highest level in two decades, most homes continue to sell quickly and at the list price or more in certain ranges.

In a city with a limited supply of single-family homes, local residents compete with investors, Twin Cities buyers who discovered during the pandemic they can work from anywhere and employees in growing industries like health care. They also compete with West Coast residents escaping the perils of wildfires and water shortages to live by the world’s largest freshwater lake. Duluth frequently is cited as a climate haven, a refuge as people flee the effects of global warming, coming for its outdoorsy, rugged beauty and relative lack of catastrophic weather and natural disasters.

And many of these buyers come with cash.

Between September 2021 and August, cash sales made up more than 20% of home purchases in the Duluth area, compared with 14.7% the summer before the start of the pandemic. According to the National Association of Realtors, Duluth ranked eighth in the nation for its annual increase of cash home sales in the first quarter of 2022.

In this market, some sellers won’t accept a financed offer, said Jenna Galegher, past-president of the Lake Superior Area Realtors (LSAR).

Although the association doesn’t track where buyers originate, “site unseen” offers, many from cash buyers, have been abundant in Duluth, she said.

But they’re not all from out-of-towners. Some first-time buyers are borrowing money from older relatives, who turn home equity into cash, said Karen Pagel Guerndt, president of LSAR.

“Once they have the property they refinance it and pay off mom and dad,” she said.

More expensive, no contingencies

Homes in Duluth are also selling for more money. The average sale price of a Duluth home has jumped 45% to $300,674 in the past five years. It’s an increase similar to the Twin Cities, where the average price in September was $365,000, up 47.8% from five years ago.

And back then, homes sold in Duluth for about $3,000 less than list price. Now they sell for $9,000 more than the asking price, or about 3%.

The higher end of the market was more intense last spring, said Brok Hansmeyer, a Duluth real estate agent. He recalled two $500,000-range Island Lake homes both selling for $111,000 over asking. The city’s lower-end market is now where buyers compete the most — the $100,000 to $300,000 range.

“People are living paycheck to paycheck,” Hansmeyer said. “If you need a seller to pay closing costs, it’s almost impossible.”

This week, only 15 single-family homes in Duluth were listed for under $200,000.

That’s the market with the most demand as higher interest rates force buyers to spend less. Many were shut out in the past couple of years and are still trying to buy, but they can’t afford to forgo an inspection or pay thousands over the listed price.

Local buyers who need to sell a house also struggle, said Deanna Bennett, a real estate agent with Messina and Associates.

“You can’t be contingent,” she said. “You have to sell your house first, move in with family or find something to rent. That’s where locals hurt the most.”

Taylor Bjork got 23 offers on his Duluth Heights home listed at $169,900 last spring. It sold for $35,000 more and he was ecstatic, thinking his family of four would be able to buy its “forever home” with nearly $100,000 to put down.

“The timing couldn’t have been worse,” he said. “To give up a surefire security blanket — a roof for your kids — without a backup, was really stressful.”

They arranged a short-term rent-back option with the new owners of their home and also lived with family before finding something in late summer that was suitable, ultimately paying $100,000 more than planned.

City leaders are working to increase housing stock on multiple fronts, including the creation of a Housing Trust Fund and the allocation of millions in American Rescue Plan Act money for affordable housing. Several apartment buildings across Duluth are planned or under construction, but the city lacks space for new single-family homes and condos.

One-level living for folks at retirement age and spec homes are in the highest demand, Bennett said.

‘They think it’s a bargain’

Even as winter approaches, real estate agents expect the market to remain competitive. They also expect more buyers from the West Coast and Colorado, choosing the region for its climate change resilience.

California desert resident and Wisconsin native Jeremy Christensen is one of those hopeful climate buyers, planning to finance a home in Duluth next summer.

“Compared to California, the market is insanely cheap,” he said, for much nicer homes for the price. “But I know I am not alone in thinking about (the area as a climate haven). I have friends who know nothing about the Midwest who are looking for climate-safe properties along the Great Lakes.”

Duluth real estate agent Casey Carbert said she she gets weekly calls from people living outside the area.

“They think it’s a bargain — we have had multiple offers for properties on Lake Superior,” Carbert said. “One million dollars to live on the lake? It’s a good deal if you’re from California.”



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Star Tribune

Bong Bridge will get upgrades before Blatnik reroutes

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DULUTH – The Minnesota and Wisconsin transportation departments will make upgrades to the Richard I. Bong Memorial Bridge in the summer of 2025, in preparation for the structure to become the premiere route between this city and Superior during reconstruction of the Blatnik Bridge.

Built in 1961, the Blatnik Bridge carries 33,000 vehicles per day along Interstate 535 and Hwy. 53. It will be entirely rebuilt, starting in 2027, with the help of $1 billion in federal funding announced earlier this year. MnDOT and WisDOT are splitting the remaining costs of the project, about $4 million each.

According to MnDOT, projects on the Bong Bridge will include spot painting, concrete surface repairs to the bridge abutments, concrete sealer on the deck, replacing rubber strip seal membranes on the main span’s joints and replacing light poles on the bridge and its points of entry. It’s expected to take two months, transportation officials said during a recent meeting at the Superior Public Library.

During this time there will be occasional lane closures, detours at the off-ramps, and for about three weeks the sidewalk path alongside the bridge will be closed.

The Bong Bridge, which crosses the St. Louis River, opened to traffic in 1985 and is the lesser-used of the two bridges. Officials said they want to keep maintenance to a minimum on the span during the Blatnik project, which is expected to take four years.



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Red Wing Pickleball fans celebrate opening permanent courts

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Red Wing will celebrate the grand opening of its first permanent set of pickleball courts next week with an “inaugural play” on the six courts at Colvill Park on the banks of the Mississippi, between a couple of marinas and next to the aquatic center.

Among the first to get to play on the new courts will be David Anderson, who brought pickleball to the local YMCA in 2008, before the nationwide pickleball craze took hold, and Denny Yecke, at 92 the oldest pickleball player in Red Wing.

The inaugural play begins at 11 a.m. Tuesday, with a rain date of the next day. Afterward will be food and celebration at the Colvill Park Courtyard building.

Tim Sletten, the city’s former police chief, discovered America’s fastest-growing sport a decade ago after he retired. With fellow members of the Red Wing Pickleball Group, he’d play indoors at the local YMCA or outdoors at a local school, on courts made for other sports. But they didn’t have a permanent place, so they approached the city about building one.

When a city feasibility study came up with a high cost, about $350,000, Sletten’s group got together to raise money.

The courts are even opening ahead of schedule, originally set for 2025.



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Nine injured in school bus crash in rural Redwood County, MN

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REDWOOD FALLS, MINN. – A truck crashing into a school bus left nine with minor injuries Wednesday morning in rural Redwood County, a statement from the Redwood County Sheriff’s office said.

The bus driver, serving the Wabasso Public School District, failed to yield when entering the intersection of County Road 7 and 280th Street, the statement said.

Deputies received word of the crash around 8:15 a.m. and identified the bus driver as Edward Aslesen, 72, of Milroy.

The nine injured passengers on the bus were transported to local hospitals, the statement said.



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