A housing nonprofit run by a Ramsey County Board member owes nearly $40,000 in property taxes on 14 properties, including a St. Paul duplex that soon may face forfeiture.
Commissioner Blake Huffman, a former Wells Fargo Home Mortgage executive who ran briefly last year for governor, formed Journey Home Minnesota in 2008 to provide housing for financially struggling veterans, their families and single parents. Huffman and the nonprofit own 18 properties in the metro area and one on the North Shore; another property in Shoreview belongs to a limited liability corporation that lists Huffman as its sole registered agent.
Of those 20 properties, 14 owed a total of $39,673 in overdue taxes as of Tuesday, according to tax records. Huffman's LLC also had racked up $3,711 in delinquent taxes on its Shoreview property before paying them in the past week.
Huffman said in an interview that his nonprofit has run into cash-flow issues while in the process of selling off several of its properties.
"It's really kind of boring," Huffman said. "We had up to 45 houses at one point. We thought it was too big, so we're shrinking our portfolio. I've talked to the banks and the county, and our commitment is to get caught up by the end of July, in the next week or so."
He said that the nonprofit is "perfectly fine" financially.
"It's a short-term issue," he said. "We have about four properties left to downsize. Once that happens we're back to where we need to be."
Some taxes have been overdue for years. Journey Home is behind on taxes for a vacant Sherburne Avenue duplex in St. Paul that were due in 2016, 2017 and the first half of 2018.