NPR: Governemnt 'HOPE' Program Failing Homeowners |
Posted at The Loan Modification Expert by Peter Collins
Apr. 16, 2009
Categorized in: Save My Home
Last summer, after several months of negotiations and debate, Congress passed a housing bill aimed at easing the mortgage foreclosure crisis. One part of the sweeping bill was designed to help homeowners who were having trouble with their high-rate mortgages refinance with lower-cost, government-backed loans.
But the program, called Hope for Homeowners, has gone largely unused, and a House committee on Tuesday holds a hearing to find out why.
The issue serves as a cautionary tale on the limits of government's ability to deal with the complex subprime lending crisis.
When the Senate began debating the Hope for Homeowners program last spring, Senate Banking Committee Chairman Chris Dodd (D-CT) was, well, full of hope for the program.
"This Hope for Homeowners Act, I believe, will give us a positive confidence-building measure that will allow people to remain in their homes where appropriate and, secondly, allow us to get to a bottom I hope and a floor where capital will flow again," Dodd said at the time.
By the time the measure was approved last summer, the expectations were already modest. Congressional analysts forecast that just 400,000 mortgage owners would be served by the program. But even those low expectations proved optimistic.
There have been only 451 applications, and only 25 loans have closed since the program started in October, says Meg Burns of the Federal Housing Administration, which is in charge of implementing the program.
There are several reasons that the numbers of participants are low. It's not a great deal for homeowners. Loan fees and interest rates are high. Borrowers have to provide two years' worth of financial records and certify they did not provide misleading information to bankers. And if the value of a house increases, homeowners have to share that equity with the government.
John Taylor heads the National Community Reinvestment Coalition, a housing advocacy group. "You have to give 50 percent of all you've earned even though you've paid off the loan at high rates to the federal government, so you can see why I say I think they sat down with Tony Soprano to design the original program," Taylor says.

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