young renters are living large

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91 o 68 o Clouds: Slight chance for a stray thunderstorm. 14C PANTHERS PRESEASON STORYLINES The Peppers effect and Michael Vick are among the topics David Scott will be watching as the Panthers prepare for training camp. SPORTS The essential guide to Charleston All the basics – plus some great tips – for the perfect weekend getaway. TRAVEL Ask Amy ........... 4E Books ................ 3E Classified .......... 1F Crossword........ 4E Editorial ......... 20A Horoscope ....... 4E Movies............... 5E Obituaries ........ 3B Sports................ 1C Travel ................... 1I Delivery Assistance or to Subscribe ... 800-532-5350 By Elizabeth Leland [email protected] Lexi Haas wants to run. Up the stairs, around the dance stu- dio, across the soccer field, the way her sisters and brother and friends run. In sandals, tied up in sneakers, twirling, gliding, skipping, stomping, running on her own bare feet. She wants to give away her wheel- chair, and the 2 1 2-pound weights that keep her legs from jerking uncontrol- lably. She wants to quit her therapy ses- sions and do simple things most of us take for granted. Lexi is 7 and all she really wants is to be like other children. But Lexi can’t, because she has a rare form of brain damage caused by jaun- dice. Her mother and father have de- voted all of her life to finding a way to fix what’s wrong. Now they’re taking the biggest step. They will kiss Lexi goodbye early Wednesday and trust their daughter to a neurosurgeon who will operate on her brain, hoping to win back a part of her life stolen shortly af- ter birth. Every morning, before the sun peeks through the window, Lexi is ready to get up. But she can’t walk and she can’t talk. She has cerebral palsy and a move- ment disorder called hyperkinetic dys- tonia. Yet she’s so smart she placed fifth among 100,000 students in a national French exam. She lies in bed, making squeaky, chirpy sounds until her mother hears. If her mother doesn’t wake up, Lexi will sometimes lose patience and try to get up herself. Thump. She falls on the floor. Fighting to get Lexi up and running “I feel like we’ve been given this amazing child,” Susan Haas says about Lexi Haas, who has a complication of jaundice called kernicterus. “She’s got something to say. She’s got an amazing brain in there, and I want people to know that.” PHOTOS BY TODD SUMLIN – [email protected] If Lexi has something to tell her parents, Susan and Ken Haas, she spells out words by pointing to letters on a magnetic board. This day, she wants to wrestle with her brother. She’s 7, and she can’t walk or talk. Her body jerks wildly. Her brain surgery this week may be the first one of its kind. SEE LEXI AND HER FAMILY “You deserve a big life,” Susan Haas tells her 7-year-old daughter. Watch video of them as they prepare for Wednesday’s surgery and see more photos at charlotteobserver. com/local SEE LEXI, 6A © 2009 The Charlotte Observer Vol. 140, No. 207 + SUNDAY JULY 26, 2009 $2.00 SUNDAY JULY 26, 2009 $2.00 charlotteobserver.com ••• + Price varies by county CDEF THINK YOU KNOW CHARLOTTE? The stories behind the road names. CAROLINA LIVING 10 ways to save on back-to-school shopping MoneyWise SAVE $128 WITH COUPONS INSIDE By Rob Christensen [email protected] RALEIGH President Obama’s trip to Raleigh on Wednesday is the latest indication of an intense and unusual political battle in the middle of summer in North Carolina – the fight over the president’s plan to overhaul health care. It’s July in a nonelection year, but the state’s politi- cal machinery is fully engaged, complete with letter- writing campaigns and bus tours. Rallies, phone banks and door-to-door canvassing are under way, TV commercials fill airwaves, and petitions appear beside ripe tomatoes at farmers markets. The flurry of activity comes as Obama tries to per- suade Congress to pass a health reform plan by the end of the year. Though the health care debate is national, it is par- ticularly loud in North Carolina, a state with a con- centration of moderate Democrats that both sides see as persuadable, particularly Sen. Kay Hagan. N.C. key in health overhaul debate Obama’s visit to Raleigh Wednesday highlights state’s swing position. SEE HEALTH CARE, 4A By Peter St. Onge and Jim Utter [email protected] In a U.S. District courtroom this month, Charlotte lawyer William Diehl launched a defense of his client, Jeremy Mayfield, by targeting the NASCAR drug policy that led to the driver’s suspension this year. That policy, according to Diehl, was so open- ended NASCAR could administer any penalty for any substance it deemed dangerous, even if a driver didn’t learn it was banned until after a positive test. “If they decide to ban Coca-Cola or coffee or orange juice, their argument is, we can,” Diehl said. NASCAR’s response? We can, but we wouldn’t. Drug policy experts say NASCAR’s substance- abuse rules, unlike those of other sports, allow the governing body to make those same kind of on-the- fly calls regarding testing protocol and punishment. The result, experts say, is a deeply flawed program. “I’ve never seen anything like it,” said Charles Yesalis, a Penn State health policy professor and an adviser to sports organizations. “For a sport that pro- motes itself as being red, white and blue, these rules are almost Stalinist. It’s un-American.” SEE NASCAR, 11A Mayfield’s case exposes questions in NASCAR rules Some drug policy experts see holes: ‘Program falls apart all over the place.’ as a busboy at a nearby bar. Monta- gue – who interns for the Panthers – plans to spend the afternoon playing Xbox 360 at the $375,000 house the roommates started rent- ing in December. “We love living here,” said Mon- tague, who graduated with Bran- tley and a third roommate from UNC Chapel Hill last year. The three rent the house for a total of $1,000 per month. The recession and poor housing market have given some young Charlotte residents a chance to live in some of the city’s prime loca- tions. As homeowners struggle to cover costs, younger people are gaining newfound access to some YOUNG PROFESSIONALS LIVING LARGE Slow economy makes rent more affordable in prime Charlotte neighborhoods. T.ORTEGA GAINES – [email protected] Andy Brantley (left), 24, and Eli Montague, 23, are UNC Chapel Hill grads and roommates renting a house in Myers Park with a third roommate for a combined $1,000 a month. SEE RENTERS, 10A By Cameron Steele [email protected] It’s 3 p.m. on a recent weekday, and Andy Brantley, 24, and Eli Montague, 23, are relaxing on blue, oversized couches, watching “SportsCenter” on a 40-inch, flat- panel TV. Montague’s SUV is one of the only cars left on Idlewood Circle, a quiet, tree-lined street between Park Road and Freedom Park. Most of the neighbors are at work. Brantley will have to leave in a couple hours for his part-time job

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Page 1: Young renters are living large

91o 68o

Clouds: Slight chance for a straythunderstorm. 14C

PANTHERS PRESEASON STORYLINESThe Peppers effect and Michael Vick are amongthe topics David Scott will be watching as thePanthers prepare for training camp. SPORTS

The essential guide to CharlestonAll the basics – plus some great tips – for theperfect weekend getaway. TRAVEL

Ask Amy...........4EBooks ................3EClassified ..........1FCrossword........4EEditorial .........20AHoroscope .......4EMovies...............5EObituaries ........3BSports................1CTravel ...................1IDeliveryAssistance or toSubscribe...800-532-5350

By Elizabeth Leland

[email protected]

Lexi Haas wants to run.

Up the stairs, around the dance stu-

dio, across the soccer field, the way her

sisters and brother and friends run. In

sandals, tied up in sneakers, twirling,

gliding, skipping, stomping, running

on her own bare feet.

She wants to give away her wheel-

chair, and the 2 1⁄2-pound weights that

keep her legs from jerking uncontrol-

lably. She wants to quit her therapy ses-

sions and do simple things most of us

take for granted.

Lexi is 7 and all she really wants is to

be like other children.

But Lexi can’t, because she has a rare

form of brain damage caused by jaun-

dice. Her mother and father have de-

voted all of her life to finding a way to

fix what’s wrong. Now they’re taking

the biggest step. They will kiss Lexi

goodbye early Wednesday and trust

their daughter to a neurosurgeon who

will operate on her brain, hoping to win

back a part of her life stolen shortly af-

ter birth.

Every morning, before the sun peeks

through the window, Lexi is ready to

get up. But she can’t walk and she can’t

talk. She has cerebral palsy and a move-

ment disorder called hyperkinetic dys-

tonia. Yet she’s so smart she placed fifth

among 100,000 students in a national

French exam.

She lies in bed, making squeaky,

chirpy sounds until her mother hears.

If her mother doesn’t wake up, Lexi will

sometimes lose patience and try to get

up herself. Thump. She falls on the

floor.

Fighting to get Lexiup and running

“I feel like we’ve been given this amazing child,” Susan Haas says about Lexi Haas,who has a complication of jaundice called kernicterus. “She’s got something tosay. She’s got an amazing brain in there, and I want people to know that.”

PHOTOS BY TODD SUMLIN – [email protected]

If Lexi has something to tell her parents, Susan and Ken Haas,she spells out words by pointing to letters on a magnetic board.This day, she wants to wrestle with her brother.

She’s 7, and she can’t walkor talk. Her body jerks

wildly. Her brain surgerythis week may be the

first one of its kind.

SEE LEXIAND HERFAMILY

“You deserve a biglife,” Susan Haas tells her 7-year-olddaughter. Watchvideo of them asthey prepare forWednesday’ssurgery and seemore photos atcharlotteobserver.com/local

SEE LEXI, 6A

© 2009 The Charlotte ObserverVol. 140, No. 207

+

SUNDAY • JULY 26, 2009 • $2.00SUNDAY • JULY 26, 2009 • $2.00 charlotteobserver.com••• +Price varies by county C D E F

THINK YOU KNOWCHARLOTTE?The stories behind the road names.CAROLINA LIVING

10 ways to save on back-to-schoolshoppingMoneyWise

SAVE

$128WITH COUPONS

INSIDE

By Rob Christensen

[email protected]

RALEIGH — President Obama’s trip to Raleigh onWednesday is the latest indication of an intense andunusual political battle in the middle of summer inNorth Carolina – the fight over the president’s planto overhaul health care.

It’s July in a nonelection year, but the state’s politi-cal machinery is fully engaged, complete with letter-writing campaigns and bus tours. Rallies, phonebanks and door-to-door canvassing are under way,TV commercials fill airwaves, and petitions appearbeside ripe tomatoes at farmers markets.

The flurry of activity comes as Obama tries to per-suade Congress to pass a health reform plan by theend of the year.

Though the health care debate is national, it is par-ticularly loud in North Carolina, a state with a con-centration of moderate Democrats that both sidessee as persuadable, particularly Sen. Kay Hagan.

N.C. keyin health overhauldebate Obama’s visit to Raleigh Wednesdayhighlights state’s swing position.

SEE HEALTH CARE, 4A

By Peter St. Onge and Jim Utter

[email protected]

In a U.S. District courtroom this month, Charlottelawyer William Diehl launched a defense of his client, Jeremy Mayfield, by targeting the NASCARdrug policy that led to the driver’s suspension thisyear.

That policy, according to Diehl, was so open-ended NASCAR could administer any penalty forany substance it deemed dangerous, even if a driverdidn’t learn it was banned until after a positive test.“If they decide to ban Coca-Cola or coffee or orangejuice, their argument is, we can,” Diehl said.

NASCAR’s response? We can, but we wouldn’t.Drug policy experts say NASCAR’s substance-

abuse rules, unlike those of other sports, allow thegoverning body to make those same kind of on-the-fly calls regarding testing protocol and punishment.The result, experts say, is a deeply flawed program.

“I’ve never seen anything like it,” said Charles Yesalis, a Penn State health policy professor and anadviser to sports organizations. “For a sport that pro-motes itself as being red, white and blue, these rulesare almost Stalinist. It’s un-American.”

SEE NASCAR, 11A

Mayfield’s caseexposes questionsin NASCAR rulesSome drug policy experts see holes:‘Program falls apart all over the place.’

as a busboy at a nearby bar. Monta-gue – who interns for the Panthers– plans to spend the afternoonplaying Xbox 360 at the $375,000house the roommates started rent-ing in December.

“We love living here,” said Mon-tague, who graduated with Bran-tley and a third roommate fromUNC Chapel Hill last year. Thethree rent the house for a total of$1,000 per month.

The recession and poor housingmarket have given some youngCharlotte residents a chance to livein some of the city’s prime loca-tions. As homeowners struggle tocover costs, younger people aregaining newfound access to some

YOUNG PROFESSIONALS LIVING LARGESlow economy makes rentmore affordable in primeCharlotte neighborhoods.

T.ORTEGA GAINES – [email protected]

Andy Brantley (left), 24, and Eli Montague, 23, are UNC ChapelHill grads and roommates renting a house in Myers Park with athird roommate for a combined $1,000 a month.SEE RENTERS, 10A

By Cameron Steele

[email protected]

It’s 3 p.m. on a recent weekday,and Andy Brantley, 24, and EliMontague, 23, are relaxing on blue,oversized couches, watching“SportsCenter” on a 40-inch, flat-panel TV.

Montague’s SUV is one of theonly cars left on Idlewood Circle, aquiet, tree-lined street betweenPark Road and Freedom Park.Most of the neighbors are at work.

Brantley will have to leave in acouple hours for his part-time job

Page 2: Young renters are living large

10A Sunday, July 26, 2009 ••• charlotteobserver.com • The Charlotte ObserverFROM PAGE ONE

of Charlotte’s traditionally eliteneighborhoods by renting nicehomes for cheap prices, somehousing experts say.

Brian Augustine, a real es-tate agent for Elite Team Prop-erties, which specializes inprestigious neighborhoods likeMyers Park, said more youngpeople are living the high life,as high-end homes that costmore than $400,000 sit on themarket for months withoutselling.

The Charlotte-area housingmarket has faced widespreadtrouble. The number of single-family detached homes sold inMecklenburg County duringthe first quarter fell 52 percentfrom a year ago, according toMarket Opportunity ResearchEnterprises.

But the high end has been hitespecially hard: Sales of pricierhomes fell more sharply, with a65 percent decline in the pricerange of $350,000 and above,according to the Rocky Mountfirm that compiles data fromcourt records. And county-wide sales have really stalledfor million-dollar-plus man-sions: Only 12 sold during thefirst quarter, an 83 percent de-cline.

That means homeownersare more willing to rent andless picky about whom theyrent to, Augustine said. Home-owners are scrambling to washtheir hands of “unsellable”homes. Some bought fixer-up-pers that won’t sell, while oth-ers moved and are stuck with afirst house that hasn’t attracteda buyer.

Many of these peoplechoose to rent for less thantheir monthly property costs,which opens the door foryounger people – often consid-ered the scourge of establishedneighborhoods – looking fordeals.

“It’s a golden opportunityfor young people … to rent inthese nicer neighborhoods. It’sjust golden, really golden, forpeople to rent across theboard,” Augustine said.

Valerie Mitchener, owner ofHM Properties,said her real es-tate and propertymanagementcompany is rent-ing “way morehigh-end proper-ties now than lastyear.” She saidshe hasn’t rented to young peo-ple yet but can see how it’s eas-ier for them to rent in MyersPark now with stalled high-endhome sales.

Mitchener’s young niece hastaken advantage of the chanceto live in an area that wouldusually be out of her pricerange; she is renting a nicehouse in Dilworth with threeroommates.

Prestige more than size

Many young renters aredrawn more to the prestigious

feel of the area than the size ofthe house they rent.

Montague’s 1,400-square-foot house isn’t exactly aMcMansion, but its Myers Parksurroundings give his post-col-lege, pre-professional life amore established feel than anapartment would have, he said.Houses on the street rangefrom $350,000 to $800,000.

Montague and Brantley pay$350 per month each, andCameron Easley, the thirdroommate, pays $300.

That’s about half the month-ly rent for the average apart-ment in Charlotte, which is$725 per month for a one-bed-room, a March industry mar-ket report indicates. Still, apart-ment prices are the lowestthey’ve been since 2005, andmany apartment landlords arewilling to cut deals to in an at-tempt to halt the climbing va-cancy rate.

Montague, whose familylives in Charlotte, said he andhis roommates found theirhouse after his dad introducedhim to a co-worker who hadbought the house to fix it upand then sell it early last fall.But then the recession hit andthe owner, who declined to beinterviewed, decided to rentthe house to help take the stingout of mortgage payments andproperty taxes.

It’s been a great deal forMontague and his roommates.None of them has a permanentjob right now, and Montagueand Brantley make about mini-mum wage.

Brantley said that for suchcheap rent, there’s plenty ofroom in the three-bedroom,one-bathroom house. He andhis roommates don’t even use

the dining room, screened pa-tio, playroom or basement,opting instead to hang out inthe living room or kitchen.

“It’s really pretty spacious,”Brantley said, “and it’s an awe-some, central location.”

Central to the neighborhoodbars, that is. The house is a five-minute cab ride from neigh-borhood hangout Selwyn Puband Montford Drive hot spotssuch as Andrew Blair’s andBrazwell’s.

That’s a perfect spot for thethree fraternity brothers whomoved to Charlotte so theycould remain close to friendsas they looked for jobs.

‘For Sale’ signs helped

UNC graduate Brynn Hard-man, 23, said she and her threeroommates found their rentalnear Myers Park High Schoolby driving around the neigh-borhood and knocking ondoors of houses that had “ForSale” signs in the yard.

They knew that no one wasbuying because of the pooreconomy and were set on liv-ing in Myers Park, said Hard-man, who works for a pharma-ceutical company in Charlotte.When she and her roommates– University of Georgia gradu-ates Emily Howard, KatieFletcher and Lindsay Bissell –spotted a home in the area thatwas for sale by owner, theyasked the owner if he’d be will-ing to rent to them.

He was, and the women nowpay a total of $1,700 per month– or $425 each – for the$595,000, three-bedroom, two-bath house that’s 2,300 squarefeet. The landlord, whocouldn’t be reached for com-ment, even left behind furni-

ture for the women to use.“It’s such a homey neighbor-

hood. We lucked out,” Hard-man said.

She said she spends most ofher weekday evenings goingon runs through the tree-cov-ered area. Although someneighbors might worry aboutpeople her age being too loud,Hardman said the group triesto be respectful of thosearound them.

The women haven’t had any“outrageous” parties at theirhouse “yet,” Hardman says,though they do routinely havefriends over to drink cocktails– or “pregame” – before head-ing out to bars or day parties atLake Norman.

Charlotte resident AndyPressley, 38, who lives downthe street from Hardman and

her roommates, said he and therest of his neighbors have en-joyed getting to know thewomen. Hardman said anothercouple who lives on their streetinvited her to swim and sun-bathe by their pool.

That’s a more neighborly at-titude than some local housingexperts expected. Augustinethinks the increased ability foryoung people to rent in eliteneighborhoods could antago-nize homeowners who’ve hadhouses in those neighbor-hoods for generations. He saidsome neighborhoods – espe-cially newer ones such as PiperGlen – try to restrict who canrent a home there.

Rusty Bryson, president ofthe Myers Park HomeownersAssociation, said that’s not thecase in Myers Park.

“The neighborhood hasbeen historically associatedwith wealthier homes, but thetruth is it has a range of diversehomeowners now,” he said. Hesaid that change isn’t a result ofthe recession and poor hous-ing market, but is a gradualshift that’s occurred over thepast decade.

But Bryson does think therecession has allowed neigh-borhoods like Myers Park tocompete with uptown apart-ment prices.

“Uptown apartments whichused to be affordable to20-year-olds aren’t anymore,so they’re turning to areas likeMyers Park,” he said.— STAFF WRITER STELLA M. HOPKINS AND

STAFF RESEARCHER MARION PAYNTER

CONTRIBUTED.

LIVING THE AFFORDABLE DREAMRENTERS• from 1A

T.ORTEGA GAINES – [email protected]

Roommates Andy Brantley (left) and Eli Montague, 23, are renting a house in Myers Park, along with another roommate. “We love living here,” says Montague.Many younger people are better able to rent in Charlotte’s traditionally elite neighborhoods as homeowners struggle to cover costs and offset debt.

Mitchener