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Foreclosure waits at the end of the boom - Many in Brooklyn could lose their homes in the next two years
New York State Foreclosure News
The next two years could leave thousands of Brooklynites homeless, as the aftermath spawned by a “rogue” industry comes to light, a federal lawmaker recently warned.
A rash of foreclosures fueled by subprime mortgages is the cause, according to Senator Charles Schumer.
And for many, the future could be grim.
Schumer,
who recently released an analysis of the crisis, said that by the end
of 2008, 6,100 families in Brooklyn could be at risk of losing their
homes.
“It’s long overdue that we ensure that working people
across Brooklyn are protected from loans that promise them the world
and instead give them a mountain of debt, leaving them homeless,”
Schumer said.
Schumer said he has a three-point plan that
calls for federal regulation of “rogue mortgage lenders;” the
elimination of liar loans, or loans that are mathematically designed to
fail the homeowner; and the establishment a foreclosure prevention task
force.
The “impending avalanche” of mortgage foreclosure can
be directly linked to the popularity of costly non-traditional mortgage
products offered over the past decade, Schumer said.
While
they offer attractive and easy lending terms, he continued, these
products, including hybrid adjustable-rate mortgages, include
excessively high interest rates that can sharply spike, leaving new
homeowners struggling to meet escalating payments.
The problem
is magnified in the subprime mortgage market, where borrowers with
weaker credit histories and lower incomes have flocked to mortgages
that have higher interest rates than prime mortgages.
While
industry backers say the subprime market has enabled millions to become
first time homebuyers, Schumer said subprime loans leave borrowers in
an “extremely precarious financial state.”
“Despite subprime
loans being universally more expensive than prime loans, they still
remain a main source of capital for millions of low-income Americans,
especially minorities, who wish to fulfill the American Dream and
purchase a house,” Schumer said.
The most popular “affordable” subprime loans are adjustable rate mortgages that offer an initial fixed rate that is set low.
But
the rate resets after an initial fixed rate period to a more onerous
rate that leads to a significantly higher mortgage payment that
low-income borrowers will have difficulty affording, Schumer said.
Schumer’s
analysis showed that in the next two years, 91,000 families will be at
risk of foreclosure because of these lending practices. In the New York
Metropolitan area alone, an estimated 53,000 families will see their
mortgages reset to onerous rates, he said.
“The bottom line
here is that the subprime bust is leading us right into a foreclosure
boom, and thousands of Brooklyn residents will be left in the lurch,”
Schumer said.
Oda Friedheim, a staff attorney with the Legal Aid Society said the issue is nothing new.
“Too
bad it took Wall Street’s pain to put the problem on the spotlight,”
she said. “They have a bellyache because they swallowed too many bad
loans,” she said.
“Our clients have been suffering for years under these abusive mortgages,” she added.
Deyanira
Del Rio, the associate director of the Manhattan-based Neighborhood
Economic Development Advocacy Project has been tracking mortgage
lending and foreclosure data for the past seven years.
“What
we have seen is that consistently higher priced mortgage loans are
overwhelmingly concentrated in neighborhoods that are overwhelmingly
black and Latino,” she said, noting her group will soon release a study
showing this trend.
For the longest time, she said, mainstream
banks were not making credit available to these neighborhood. “There
was a void,” she said.
In the mid-1990’s, a new crop of
mortgage lenders started flooding these same communities with
aggressive sales pitches, and “high cost and exploitative loans,” she
said.
Del Rio said that even when income taken out of the evaluation, the pattern still remains the same.
“This is not just an income issue. This is clearly a civil rights issue,” Del Rio said.
“So
many of the mortgages we saw were not based on the homeowner’s ability
to repay the loan, but rather just based on the equity in a person’s
home and the [overall] rise in home prices,” she noted.
Over
the last few decades, longtime homeowners have seen the value of their
properties skyrocket, and these businesses capitalized, “sapping the
equity form these homes.”
“It’s win-win, really. Either they get the high fees, or they refinance and eventually foreclose,” Del Rio said.
NEDAP,
is a founding member of New Yorkers for Responsible Lending, a
statewide coalition that in 2002 helped get passed an anti-predatory
lending law.
Del Rio said that the next few years will show more of the fallout her group has already observed.
Already,
she said, compared to prior years, the rates of foreclosure for the
first few months of 2007 are almost 50 percent higher than the
comparable period last year, Del Rio said.
More work needs to be done.
“We have to find newer strategies,” Del Rio said.
Meghan
Faux, an attorney with the Court Street-based South Brooklyn Legal
Services Foreclosure Prevention Project said she sees firsthand how the
dream of homeownership can turn into a nightmare.
Over the past few years, she’s seen a higher volume of foreclosure cases.
Low
income borrowers and seniors are most often the targets of exotic
mortgages that can be confusing, “completely unsuitable” for their
needs, Faux said.
The impact, she said, has been devastating.
“Some people have had their homes for 30 years or more and are now at risk of losing them,” she said.
In
some instances, there have been multiple foreclosures on the same
block, she noted. “It effects the entire community and prevents it from
stabilizing,” Faux said.
Before settling on a loan or a mortgage, reach out to a consumer advocate, Faux recommended.
Call
311 and ask to be put in touch with the Preserve Assets and Community
Equity Program, which can offer guidance and assistance. Her group’s
foreclosure prevention hotline is 718-246-3279.
Article Source http://www.bayridgecourier.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=18182170&BRD=2384&PAG=461&dept_id=560112&rfi=6
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