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Public
Employee Press Municipal Employees
Housing Program Foreclosure crisis
Union
saves members homes
DC 37 housing program now
includes refinancing By
DIANE S. WILLIAMS
Annette Baird owned her two-family St. Albans, Queens,
home for 11 years. In 2005 she refinanced through a local mortgage broker with
an interest-only loan that converted to an adjustable-rate loan. This year her
monthly mortgage payments soared to $3,500 from $1,200, while her household income
was less than $5,000 a month.
I thought I would lose my house and
be put out on the street, said Baird, a member of Hospital Employees Local
420. The brokerage also recommended the contractor to whom Baird unknowingly signed
over her hard-earned home equity check of $35,000 for repairs to the roof, kitchen
and windows. He never finished the job. And her bank ignored her requests to refinance
at a fixed rate.
Annette Baird was the victim of a classical case of predatory
lending. I had nowhere to turn until a co-worker suggested I contact the
union, she said.
On Staten Island, Board of Education Local 372 member
Rosalind Rizzo had been applying for a loan to refinance her mortgage for two
years. Like Baird, Rizzo wanted to use equity to make home improvements. She also
had a few bad debts that hurt her credit rating.
It was a Catch-22.
The bank wanted us to clear up our debt before theyd refinance, while we
were looking for the refinance to clear up our debt, Rizzo said. A co-worker
showed her the Municipal Employees Housing Program at DC 37 in the PEP.
Baird
and Rizzo are both victims of the subprime loan crisis that has socked Wall Street
and other lenders with billions of dollars in losses, plunged the housing market
into near recession and left more than 2 million homeowners behind on their mortgage
payments. The bubble has burst, and foreclosures at alarming rates are sweeping
across the country, with communities of color being hit the hardest.
A
growing number of homeowners with adjustable rate mortgages are seeing their payments
rise by hundreds of dollars a month or more. Some struggle and sacrifice to keep
paying the bank; others cant make the payments and face being turned out
of their homes.
Help for homeowners Under
growing pressure to take action, President Bush announced in December a too-little,
too-late voluntary plan for banks to freeze low teaser rates for five years to
prevent foreclosures. Mortgage experts estimate that the Bush plan laden
with limitations at therequest of Wall Street and mortgage firms would
help only 12 percent of all sub-prime borrowers and only 5 percent of minority
homeowners.
The AFL-CIO has called for a nationwide moratorium on subprime
foreclosures and strict regulation of lenders to end unscrupulous practices.
DC
37s housing program has implemented an FHASecure initiative a temporary
programdesigned by the federal Housing and Urban Development Dept. to help borrowers
before they lose their homes to foreclosure, said Henry Garrido, assistant
associateadministrator of DC 37.
The new initiative gives borrowers who
became delinquent after their interest rates increased the chance to refinance
their adjustable-rate mortgages to fixed-rate loans through GMAC Mortgage, LLC,
with backing from the Federal Housing Administration.
Using MEHP
was a smooth ride from our first call, Rizzo said. We contacted the
union on Friday and on Monday they had a fixed-rate mortgage for us. DC 37 did
in one weekend what our bank had not done for two years.
Baird also
got speedy, professional service from MEHP. Refinancing in September and making
her first mortgage payment in November gave her some breathing room, she said.
The situation is still hard to talk about, but I am grateful to my union.
My new fixed-rate mortgage is much more comfortable.
To qualify for
MEHP refinancing,applicants must have paid their mortgage on time before their
ARM increased and they must have at least 3 percent equity in the home. In some
cases, borrowers mayinclude past-due mortgage payments in the new fixed-rate FHA
loan.
For more information, call MEHP counselors Tracy Lewis or Jorge Ortiz
at 212-815-1814. DC 37 members who may be victims of predatory lending should
also contact MELS 212-815-1800 for legal counsel. | |