Akron
Beacon Journal...
Avoidance
behavior
October 6, 2011
Good
news on the foreclosure crisis
has been hard to come by the past few years. With the number of
foreclosures
rising across Ohio and the nation during the past decade, it has proved
a continuing
challenge to put together policies and resources that can help
thousands of
struggling families keep their homes.
Especially
disheartening, federal
programs that were projected to help millions of borrowers modify or
refinance
loans have been largely insignificant in driving down foreclosure
rates. Worse
still, foreclosure filings are trending up again nationwide as mortgage
banks
resume proceedings, confident they have addressed documentation
problems that
forced them to suspend action last year.
In
the face of the persisting
problems, it is encouraging that Ohio is recording positive results in
foreclosure prevention. The Ohio Housing Financing Agency reported last
week
that with assistance from a year-old state initiative, nearly 3,000
homeowners
have avoided foreclosure.
The
projection is that the program,
Save the Dream Ohio, will help an additional 50,000 families through
2017 with
$570 million in funding awarded to the state from the federal Troubled
Asset
Relief Program.
The
key services offered through the
program include “home-rescue” payments, free legal assistance prior to
foreclosure, transitional assistance for borrowers who are losing their
homes
and free housing counseling. They target at-risk homeowners whose
difficulties are
triggered by a sudden, temporary loss of income, such as a job loss, a
serious
illness or divorce. The short-term home-rescue loan maintains up
mortgage
payments, enabling homeowners who show the capacity to make future
payments the
critical time to find their feet.
Keep
in mind, despite the good news,
the foreclosure picture remains grim, an estimated one out of every 12
Ohio
borrowers at least 90 days behind on their payments.
Read
it at the Akron Beacon Journal
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