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Frank floats loan plan for unemployed homeowners

By MICHELLE R. SMITH
,
AP
posted: 85 DAYS 16 HOURS AGO
Text SizeAAA
FALL RIVER, Mass. -Rep. Barney Frank said Monday he is pushing a proposal to use some of the interest the government collects from the financial industry bailout to give loans to unemployed homeowners struggling to pay the mortgage.
The lack of aid to jobless homeowners has been identified as a big weakness in the Obama administration's plan to tackle the mortgage crisis. A report by a congressional oversight panel said last month that the $50 billion program "was not designed to address foreclosures caused by unemployment," which are now the main cause of default.
Frank, chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, said in Fall River and New Bedford at appearances with Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan that he favors providing government help in the form of federal loans to homeowners who have lost their jobs until they get another job.
"These are people who are very responsible, very thoughtful. They got a home, it's above water, they've got equity, but they're unemployed, and you can't afford mortgage payments on unemployment," said Frank, D-Mass.
Frank said the program would be funded using interest banks pay on the $700 billion Wall Street bailout, known as the Troubled Asset Relief Program.
Frank spokesman Steve Adamske said the program was actually developed by Congress in the 1970s but never funded. The proposal is now part of legislation introduced in September, called the Main Street TARP bill.
It would provide $2 billion in TARP money for low-interest loans to homeowners who have lost their jobs but who have good prospects for being able to resume mortgage payments in the future. The emergency loans would be provided for up to 12 months with the possibility of extending them for another year.
A Treasury Department spokeswoman declined to comment on Monday when asked about Frank's proposal.
On Capitol Hill, many lawmakers have complained about the slow pace of loan modifications. Sen. Jack Reed, D-R.I., said in an interview last week that his staff has been considering ways to make mortgage companies do more loan modifications.
Reed said the Obama administration's foreclosure assistance program hasn't been working fast enough for his home state. Thirteen percent of Rhode Island homeowners were delinquent or in foreclosure as of June 30, the same as the number nationally, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.
The foreclosure crisis is increasingly tied to joblessness, Reed said, as more borrowers with good credit lose their jobs and their ability to make monthly payments.
Lenders, meanwhile, have modest programs to aid the unemployed. Citigroup, for instance, has been reducing payments to an average of $500 for three months for some customers who have recently lost their jobs. Other banks give homeowners a break from payments for as long as six months.
AP Business Writers Alan Zibel and Daniel Wagner contributed to this report from Washington.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
2009-11-16 16:21:47
COMMENTS ( 5 )
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RoRo6655
11:13AM Nov 29 2009 
people getting good govt money either working or retired are not in the same boat as others,with little,alot are overpaid and sometimes leave the area they worked to escape taxes which paid them handsomely,i have read and agree the are ruining the local govts with the contracts not in tune with the economy.as school people in nyc who get paid when they are on hold somewhere,its easy to brag in this position .and complain about others,even transit and railroad jobs are so overp
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RLMKnowlton
5:12PM Nov 16 2009 
Oh, one more thing......I really don't want any loan from the government. If they lend you money, they fel they have the right to stick their as in every aspect of your life. NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Thanks!!!
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RLMKnowlton
5:07PM Nov 16 2009 
JJ3755 .............................All great advice, but I'm not in any trouble, mortgage or otherwise. My gripe is with the greed of the very banks that took bailout money, then jacked up our credit rates. As a matter of fact, I pay double the minimum due on any of my credit cards with any balance on them. The real point is that the credit card reform act was not thought out too well. Another question that I forgot to ask before is, why give these banks until Feb, 2010? That just gave them all the rope they needed to hang US with. So, my anger with these banks and DC I feel is well placed anger, considering I always paid them on time, double the minimum due. It is the people around me I see struggling because of wall street greed and DC screw ups. My wife and I both collect police pensions. Our bills are paid before we ever have to lift ourselves out of the bed. Point is, many Americans are victimized by wall street and DC, and i'm sick of looking at them both. That, my friend, might include you, but I hope not. Everywhere I look, I see nothing but injustice, which you need not look too far for. It wouldn't surprise me if you were suffering from wall street greediness or DC injustices, and that is why I complain. I'm fine, most around me are not and that doesn't make me happy. Thanks for the advice just the same.
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JJ3755
4:08PM Nov 16 2009 
RL, Why did you charge more than you could pay? I agree that we need a STRONGER dollar so that gold and oil will be brought back to reasonable levels and that the interest rate should be below the usuary rate that credit cards are charging. If you are in trouble with your mortgage check out this blog site:
http://www.consumerwarningnetwork.com/2008/06/19/produce-the-note-how-to/

Also, check your county records to insure that the company that is listed as the mortgage holder in your county records is ACTUALLY to who/whom you make your payments. If not, you may want to contact your county commission as the county is losing tax dollars (doc stamps for recording). Plus, call your county attorney as these institutions are cheating the county out of tax monies. This is LOST tax dollars so the county MAY NOT want to raise your taxes.
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RLMKnowlton
3:57PM Nov 16 2009 
"Frank floats loan plan for unemployed homeowners'..................................Or, how about stopping the credit companies from what they're doing? Or, how about stopping the excessive greed on wall street, where they want oil back to or past last years levels? All of this government's actions have done absolutely nothing for those who are struggling right now. Why, WHY would you not cap interest rates on a credit card reform bill? How about stop spending money like a ghetto dweller that hit the lottery. You want to spend trillions of tax dollars just to result in harder times for us. How about floating me a loan so I can pay these f*cking credit scumbags off?
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