[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 79 (Monday, May 24, 2010)]
[House]
[Pages H3728-H3729]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
RIGHT TO RENT ACT, H.R. 5028
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under a previous order of the House, the
gentlewoman from Ohio (Ms. Kaptur) is recognized for 5 minutes.
Ms. KAPTUR. Mr. Speaker, in each of the last 14 years, Ohio has set a
record for the number of foreclosures, and this year is on track to be
no exception. Every year a new record. That is hard to imagine, and not
what I want to say about my home State.
Over the last 2 years, Congress has passed what I call hollow
legislation that looks like it might stem the tide of foreclosures, but
clearly the programs were not intended to work. Then, next, Treasury
decided to make homes affordable, they say, by using some of the TARP
bailout money, the Troubled Asset Relief Program that was passed back
in the fall of 2008 to bail out the Wall Street speculative banks.
According to The Wall Street Journal last week, of the handful of
homeowners who have now been so-called ``helped'' by Treasury out of
the millions and millions that are in trouble, even Treasury's reported
that only one in four of the few helped to try to get their mortgage
payment to be affordable have now been even more weeded out of that
program. This is like the great shrinking blimp. You sort of promise
them everything, but give them nothing, and the gas just drains right
out of the balloon.
The overall program in fact is voluntary and aimed to protect the
investor, not the homeowner. People today who are in the program and
trying to save their homes are depleting their savings so when they get
kicked out of the administration's programs, they are more poor and
assured of losing their homes and with little, if anything, to survive
on. People are still losing their homes. We are not stemming the tide
of foreclosures. You think somebody here in Washington would notice
that.
That's why I joined with my esteemed colleague, Representative Raul
Grijalva, and introduced the Right to Rent Act of 2010, H.R. 5028. And
we invite our colleagues to join us. This bill creates a right to rent
for homeowners facing foreclosure. The bill is going to help a good
portion of those 6 million delinquent homeowners transition from
foreclosure to renting a home. And if communities are wise and adopt
the old turnkey program, kind of resurrect that, then after 5 years if
your payments are good you can end up owning your home, help to save
our neighborhoods, save our communities by saving the families who
don't deserve to be thrown out.
Right to Rent would allow families to stay in their home and keep
their family stable, while lowering the family's monthly housing costs
by extending the term. In the meantime, the mortgage holder receives a
fair market rent on their property. Keeping both families and mortgages
stable strengthens communities rather than leaving homes barren and
families on the street.
In some communities in Ohio, entire neighborhoods are now vacant. Who
does that help? Aiming relief directly at middle income homeowners, not
speculators or people living in unaffordable mansions, the Right to
Rent Act of 2010 allows homeowners facing foreclosure to stay in their
homes at a fair market rent for 5 years.
Specifically, to be eligible, the home must be a single-family
property, a condominium with an undivided interest in common areas, or
a similar dwelling in a multi-unit project that has been occupied for
at least 2 years. The mortgage must have been originated before July 1,
2007. Furthermore, the home must have been purchased at or below a
median purchase price for the local metropolitan area as measured by
the National Association of Realtors.
The homeowner, upon receiving notice of foreclosure on an eligible
property, has 25 business days to petition the court to exercise his or
her right to rent the home for up to 5 years at a fair market rate as
determined by a court-appointed independent appraiser. The bill does
not change existing State foreclosure laws or landlord-tenant laws.
In addition, the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development will
monitor compliance with the program. In addition, this right to rent
sunsets 5 years after date of enactment. It's not meant to be around
forever.
{time} 1945
Judges can transition middle-income family home foreclosures to
rental agreements in a manner consistent with common sense and justice.
Right to Rent is but one tool, a workable one, to address our
Nation's housing crisis and help stabilize not only our community but
also our Nation's mortgage economy.
The Right to Rent provides a strong incentive for lenders to modify
mortgages, including principal write-downs, to avoid becoming
landlords. If the lender chooses to pursue foreclosure, the family can
go to court to rent their home, thus preventing the spiral of vacancy,
social problems, crime, and lower property values in neighborhoods that
follow mass vacancies.
Right to Rent is backed by real world results. A model similar to
H.R. 5028 is currently used on a limited basis by Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac.
Mr. Speaker, I urge my colleagues to join me and Raul Grijalva in
cosponsoring H.R. 5028 to stem the tide of foreclosures still sweeping
across this country.
[From the Wall Street Journal, May 18, 2010]
Loan Aid Leaves Some Worse Off
One in Four in Government's Mortgage Program Is Dropped; Tales of
Exhausted Savings
(By James R. Hagerty)
The government's mortgage-modification program has left
some struggling homeowners worse off than they were before.
The Treasury reported Monday that nearly one in four
homeowners who were offered lower payments under the Obama
administration's 15-month-old effort have been weeded out of
the program. Many people were removed from the trials because
they failed to make payments, didn't provide all the
financial documents needed to qualify or were found to be
ineligible.
Homeowners are first offered trial modifications under the
program, which provides incentive payments to loan servicers,
investors and the homeowners. If borrowers make the payments
and satisfy other criteria, those trials are made permanent,
ensuring a cut in payments for five years.
While awaiting answers, some borrowers keep making
payments, exhausting their savings in what may be a futile
effort to save their homes. They also incur fees from the
banks and delay taking action that might give them a fresh
start in a more affordable home.
Some borrowers had unrealistic expectations about loan-
relief programs, which were never designed to prevent all
foreclosures. Another big problem is that banks often take
six to 12 months to determine whether applicants are
eligible.
``I had to learn the hard way and deplete my savings doing
it,'' said Mia Parry, a manager at a mortgage brokerage in
Scottsdale, Ariz., who has spent nearly two years seeking a
loan modification. She now wishes she had put her home on the
market.
Most struggling borrowers do benefit from seeking help,
said Aaron Horvath, a senior vice president at Springboard
Inc., a nonprofit counseling service based in Riverside,
Calif.
Some win modifications, cutting monthly payments by
hundreds of dollars. Others who ultimately can't get
modifications at least are allowed to stay in their homes for
[[Page H3729]]
months, making either no payments or reduced payments.
But ``if you're draining your savings'' in a vain effort to
hang onto a home, he said, you may end up worse off.
Eager for quick results, the Obama administration last year
prodded banks to start people on trials without first
obtaining documents proving they were eligible. That has led
to many crushed hopes. The Treasury earlier this year changed
its rules and told banks to start trials only after getting
documents that proved borrowers qualified.
The Treasury said in a monthly report on the government's
$50 billion Home Affordable Modification Program, or HAMP,
that about 1.2 million trial modifications had been started
under the plan, and about 281,000 borrowers had washed out by
the end of April.
Only about 30 percent of borrowers who seek help from the
main foreclosure-prevention counseling program at
Neighborhood Housing Services of South Florida end up with
modifications, said LeeAnn Robinson, chief operating officer
of the Miami-based nonprofit Many borrowers don't have enough
income to support even reduced loan payments; others give up
before completing the paperwork.
On average, it takes seven months to resolve a borrower's
situation, up from four months a year ago, Ms. Robinson said.
Banks and other loan servicers can't keep up with the demand
for help, she said.
Ms. Parry bought a home in Phoenix in 2005 for $535,000,
but she believes it now would sell for around $250,000. She
has been seeking a modification from a unit of Citigroup
Inc., the servicer of her two mortgage loans, since June
2008.
Ms. Parry's application was turned down in late 2008, but
President Obama's announcement of HAMP in February 2009
rekindled her hopes. Ms. Parry decided to keep making
payments on her loans because she expected to qualify for
this new program.
Citigroup started her on a HAMP trial in June 2009, and she
made three payments. Then Citigroup told her there had been a
mistake and she would need to go through another three-month
trial.
At the end of that second trial, Ms. Parry said, Citigroup
told her the investor that owned her first mortgage wasn't
participating in HAMP, so she couldn't get a modification
under that plan. During her trial period, Citigroup charged
her more than $1,300 of ``late charges'' and ``delinquency
expenses,'' she said.
Ms. Parry said Citigroup should have been able to determine
that the investor wasn't participating before she went
through the trial. Citigroup recently offered her another
type of modification that she said fell short of the HAMP
formula and wouldn't lower her costs enough to make keeping
the home worthwhile. Unless Citigroup improves the offer, she
will try to sell the home.
A Citigroup spokesman said: ``We have worked diligently
with the borrower and the investor in an effort to find a
solution that meets both the borrower's needs and the
investor's requirements.''
Martha Wright, a marketing executive whose income has
dropped in recent years, has been trying since February 2009
to work out a deal with J.P. Morgan Chase & Co., the bank
that services the $1.1 million mortgage on her Avalon, N.J.
home.
The bank denied her request last summer, but Ms. Wright
said she kept trying because the responses from the bank were
unclear and inconsistent, and she believed she still might
qualify. Meanwhile, she said, by continuing to make payments,
she cut her nonretirement savings to about $500 from $63,000
in early 2009.
A spokesman for J.P. Morgan said the bank told Ms. Wright
on three occasions that she didn't qualify for a
modification. ``Modifying the loan would produce less value
to the loan's owner than foreclosing,'' he said.
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