Report / In Depth

Building and Scaling the Foreclosure and Eviction Analysis Tool (FEAT)

Lessons from Arizona, Florida, and Indiana

Untitled design (1)
A’lysia Alcorn/New America

Abstract

More than 10 million Americans lose their homes each year due to eviction and mortgage foreclosure. And yet, most local leaders don’t know where within their cities evictions and foreclosures occur, how rates change over the course of the year, or who is most at risk.

When local decision makers can access and analyze eviction and foreclosure (EF) data, they use the insights to keep more people housed. Over the last five years, the Future of Land and Housing program at New America has worked at the federal and local level to help local decision makers access EF data and equip them with the tools to understand it.

This report details the development of the Foreclosure and Eviction Analysis Tool (FEAT), a first-of-its-kind web application that allows users to understand where housing loss is most acute, when during the year housing loss is occurring, and who is most impacted, as well as the process and lessons learned from partnerships in three states—Arizona, Florida, and Indiana—to leverage FEAT to establish statewide eviction and foreclosure dashboards.

Acknowledgments

Building eviction and foreclosure data infrastructure is a long journey that requires many committed individuals and organizations. For our small role in building this infrastructure nationally and in the cities and states with whom we have been privileged to work, we’d like to acknowledge the following individuals and organizations.

The DataKind team, and in particular Caitlin Augustin, Larry Kilroy, and Jacob Harris, for partnering on the development of the Foreclosure and Eviction Analysis Tool. Thank you also to the Eviction Lab team, and in particular Peter Hepburn, Carl Gershenson, and Juan-Pablo Garnham, for being key partners in building FEAT’s Eviction Tracking System data pipeline.

Each of our state scaling partners, who led the journey of establishing statewide eviction and foreclosure data dashboards in Arizona, Florida, and Indiana. In particular we’d like to acknowledge Patricia Solis and Lora Phillips at Arizona State University’s Knowledge for Exchange Resilience; Shea Lemar, Brajesh Karna, Yueling Li, and Sandeep Sabu at Arizona State University’s Geospatial Research and Solutions Program; Maxine Becker at Wildfire AZ; Anne Ray and Renz Torres at the Shimberg Center for Housing Studies at the University of Florida; and Matt Dietrich, Ally Scott, Jay Colbert, and Marc McAleavey at Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis’ Polis Center.

The many organizations and individuals who are a part of the Eviction Data Coalition. These individuals and organizations offered their insights, expertise, and support in too many ways to name over the last three years, and our work in the eviction space would not be possible without them.

And finally, we would like to show our appreciation for New America colleagues Jodi Narde, Kelley Gardner, and Naomi Morduch Toubman, and graphic designer A’lysia Alcorn, for their support in the design, layout, and editing of this guide.

Support for this project was generously provided by the Rockefeller Foundation and Schmidt Futures’ Social Safety Net Product Studio.

Editorial disclosure: The views expressed in this report are solely those of the author(s) and do not reflect the views of New America, its staff, fellows, funders, or board of directors.

More About the Authors

Yuliya Panfil
Yuliya Panfil
Yuliya Panfil

Senior Fellow and Director, Future of Land and Housing

Programs/Projects/Initiatives

Building and Scaling the Foreclosure and Eviction Analysis Tool (FEAT)

Table of Contents

Close