Four milllion homeowners eligible for foreclosure review

hvactec

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Jan 17, 2010
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WASHINGTON -- About 4 million homeowners who may have been improperly foreclosed upon in 2009 and 2010 are getting an opportunity to have their cases reviewed. Whether they will be reimbursed is up to the same lenders who are accused of moving too swiftly to seize their homes.

The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency said Monday that mortgage services will begin sending out letters this month that ask borrowers if they want their case reviewed.

The nation's 14 largest mortgage servicers -- including Citibank, Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo -- were ordered to offer to review cases after the government found that some rushed the foreclosure process without carefully reviewing documents.

The orders require the lenders pay homeowners when a "borrower suffered financial injury." There is no minimum or maximum dollar amount identified.

Critics, including congressional Democrats, say the orders were too lenient on the banks and that it was inappropriate for the lenders to review their own potential mistakes.

"Servicers have a poor performance track record in effectively engaging with borrowers, and, in the claims process, have a natural disincentive to reach the households their practices have harmed," wrote Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Calif., in a letter to regulators.

Regulators say independent consultants will also review the cases and that those reviews would likely take several months. If a consultant finds that a lender erred, it will conduct follow-up reviews on other cases to see if the lender is trying to dodge blame.

"The challenge is substantial, but the steps we have required the servicers to take are vitally important to resolving these issues in a way that respects the rights of those who have been harmed and helps to restore confidence in the system," said John Walsh, acting Comptroller of the Currency.

read more Four milllion homeowners eligible for foreclosure review - Business - ReviewJournal.com
 
Kinda late fer the ones already lost their homes, don't ya think?...
:eusa_eh:
Obama Calls for More Support for US Homeowners
May 11, 2013 - U.S. President Barack Obama says the U.S. housing market is healing, seven years after the real estate "bubble" burst, but he adds there is still more work to do to help homeowners save money and stay in their homes.
Obama said in his weekly address Saturday that home sales are up and foreclosures are down, construction is expanding, and 1.7 million families are no longer behind on their mortgages. He said his housing plan has helped more than two million people refinance their mortgages and save an average of $3,000 a year.

But he said there are other U.S. homeowners who have not been allowed to refinance, or have done everything right but still owe more on their homes than their homes are worth. Obama called on Congress to support the effort to give all homeowners a chance to refinance.

He also called on members of Congress to support his nominee, North Carolina lawmaker Mel Watt, to take over leadership of the U.S. Federal Housing Agency.

Obama Calls for More Support for US Homeowners
 

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