[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 21 (Thursday, February 11, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Page S553]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HOME FORECLOSURES
Mr. DURBIN. Madam President, I wish to say one last word about an
issue that affects my State and many others too. We received news today
that the foreclosures of houses in Illinois have increased dramatically
over last year--a 25-percent increase in foreclosures in Illinois over
the last year. The same thing is true of many other States. The States
hit the hardest are Nevada, Arizona, California, Florida, Utah, Idaho,
Michigan, Illinois, Oregon, and Georgia.
We have to do more. The current system we have to deal with
foreclosures is not working well. I met this morning with Treasury
Secretary Geithner and gave him some ideas. I hope my colleagues will
join me in coming up with approaches that will try to save people from
this terrible outcome of foreclosure. Many people have lost their jobs
and cannot pay their mortgages. Understandable. Maybe we can help them
stay in their houses as renters or some other circumstance. Some have
seen the value of their home start to decline to the point where the
value of the home is less than the outstanding mortgage and there is no
incentive to continue to sacrifice and make a mortgage payment for a
home that is worth a fraction of its original value.
Those are realities. But the reality of foreclosure is obvious. I was
with Congresswoman Jan Schakowsky in Evanston, IL, a few days ago. We
went down Gray Street and saw homes that had been good, solid, middle-
class homes now boarded up literally for years that have become a
blight on that neighborhood, dragging down the value of every other
home and threatening the safety of the neighborhood as they become drug
and crime havens. We are also seeing a phenomena like that in places
such as Marquette Park in Chicago where the depopulation of
neighborhoods is leading to commercial flight--food deserts in the city
of Chicago brought about by foreclosures.
These banks have not done enough, period. They have not stepped up to
their responsibility. I tried to change the Bankruptcy Code to give us
a fighting chance for a bankruptcy judge to rewrite a mortgage to avoid
foreclosure, and I was defeated by the banks. They have a powerful
lobby on Capitol Hill even to this day despite what we have gone
through.
This foreclosure situation has gone from bad to worse. I don't
believe America can truly recover economically until we address this
issue in a forthright manner. I look forward to working with the
Treasury Secretary and the administration to do that when we return
from the Presidents Day recess.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Alabama.
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