Experts Offer Tips on Avoiding Home Foreclosure
by James Parks
The mortgage foreclosure crisis, fueled by years of unchecked predatory lending practices and a speculative bubble in real estate prices, has resulted in a disaster for millions of America’s homeowners. Not since the Depression of the 1930s have so many U.S. homeowners owed more on their mortgages than their homes are worth.
Defaulting on the Dream, a new reportby the Pew Charitable Trusts, projects that one in 33 current U.S. homeowners may be headed toward foreclosure in the coming years because of subprime loans. But the crisis affects not just homeowners. Communities suffer as families move out, decreasing the tax base that funds vital local services. And there are the silent victims. The Brookings Institution projects that over the next two years, an estimated 2 million children will be directly impacted by the mortgage crisis as their families lose their homes due to foreclosures. These children are not just losing their homes and their friends, but their education is being disrupted as well. While Congress, state governments and organizations such as the AFL-CIO work to find long-term answers to the crisis, many homeowners need help right now in avoiding foreclosure and keeping their homes. Millions of others need to know how to avoid taking out a loan that will become a problem later. We have collected some of the top tips you can use to keep from losing your home. These tips come from experts such as the federal Housing and Urban Development Department (HUD), the AFL-CIO Union Privilege program and Freddie Mac, the federally chartered housing finance corporation. The most important first step, these experts say, is not to ignore the problem. Recognize you have a problem, and that you need to deal with it. They suggest you start by contacting your lender immediately. The farther behind you fall, the harder it will be to set things right. Lenders do not want your house. They have options to help borrowers through difficult financial times. Here’s what else the experts say you should do: Describing the rash of mortgage foreclosures as threatening the American Dream, the AFL-CIO Executive Council in March outlined the steps needed to solve the mortgage crisis. In a statement, the Executive Council called for a six- to 12-month moratorium on mortgage foreclosures. The Executive Council also urged Congress to pass the Homeownership Preservation and Protection Act of 2007 (S. 2452) to establish new consumer protections and allow state attorneys general to enforce the provisions of the law, the Emergency Home Ownership and Mortgage Equity Protection Act (H.R. 3609) and the Helping Families Save Their Homes in Bankruptcy Act of 2007 (S. 2136), which will prevent hundreds of thousands of Americans from losing their homes by allowing them access to bankruptcy relief. The Executive Council also called for a change in bankruptcy laws to allow mortgages to be modified so families can keep their homes and strong new rules for the mortgage and financial markets that hold the industry accountable.
Tags: Mortgage Crisis , Foreclosures , Housing And Urban Develop , Union Privilege , Pew Charitable Trusts , Brookings Institution , Freddie Mac , Union , Unions , Labor



