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Reid Works To Help Nevada
Homeowners In Budget
In letter
to Sen. Conrad, Nevada Senator requests support for” underwater”
homeowners in budget resolution
Nevada Senator Harry Reid sent the following letter to Senator
Kent Conrad, the Chairman of the Committee on the Budget,
requesting a provision in the budget to support troubled
homeowners, including Nevadan homeowners with substantial
negative equity in their homes. Recent statistics indicate 58
percent of Nevada homeowners owe more on their mortgage than
their house is worth. Text of the letter follows:
The Honorable Kent Conrad
Chairman
Committee
on the Budget
United States
Senate
Washington, DC 20510
Dear Kent:
As you
develop the budget resolution for Fiscal Year 2010, I am writing
to request that you include a reserve fund for legislation to
provide assistance to homeowners who are struggling to avoid
foreclosure.
As you know,
the housing crisis is affecting the entire nation and is hitting
my own state of Nevada especially hard. The foreclosure rate in
Nevada is the highest in the nation, and threatens to go even
higher. Currently, according to the U.S. Department of Housing
and Urban Development, more than 58 percent of Nevada homeowners
suffer from negative equity – that is, they owe more on their
mortgage than their home is worth. By contrast, that figure
nationally is about 20 percent. Until homeowners in Nevada and
other states get some relief, our economy will continue to
struggle.
Given the
housing problems we face in Nevada and elsewhere, I was pleased
when the Obama Administration agreed to devote a significant
portion of funding under the Troubled Assets Relief Program for
a program designed to provide relief for homeowners.
Unfortunately, the refinancing program developed by the Treasury
Department, while very helpful in many parts of the country,
will leave out too many Nevadans because their loan-to-value
ratio is too high to qualify. Most of these Nevadans have done
nothing wrong. Yet now they find themselves in severe financial
distress with no assistance available, even while their tax
dollars are being used to bail out many of the financial
institutions that created this crisis. This is deeply unfair
and wrong.
In my view,
therefore, it is critically important that more be done to
provide assistance to struggling homeowners, including those
with substantial negative equity. For example, Congress needs
to give homeowners more leverage in their efforts to seek loan
modifications with lenders and loan servicers. That is why I
believe we must eliminate the perverse discrimination in current
law that allows owners of several luxury vacation homes to seek
relief in bankruptcy, but that denies the same relief to working
Americans who live in a single home. Ending this discrimination
would give homeowners at least some leverage in negotiating with
lenders, which could help produce results in many cases without
the need to file for bankruptcy.
It also is
important that we eliminate the threat of frivolous lawsuits,
which now is discouraging many loan servicers from renegotiating
mortgages. That is why I so strongly support legislation to
provide such servicers with a so-called “safe harbor,” to allow
them to modify a mortgage without fear of a lawsuit. In
addition, we need to take other steps, such as improving the
deeply flawed “Hope for Homeowners” Program, which for most
homeowners is providing neither hope nor help.
To
demonstrate our recognition of and support for addressing the
housing crisis and to accommodate these and other pro-homeowner
initiatives, I strongly urge you to include a housing reserve
fund in the budget resolution. This reserve fund should be
designed to accommodate a broad range of homeowner assistance
initiatives, including those discussed above. While I know you
and the other members face many competing demands this year, I
hope you agree that expanding assistance to homeowners deserves
to be a top priority. Not only because so many hard working
Americans badly need our help, but because our entire economy
depends on addressing the housing crisis, without which it will
be impossible to put our financial system back on track.
On behalf of
homeowners in Nevada and the rest of the country, thank you in
advance for your serious consideration of this request.
Sincerely,
Harry Reid
Reid Secures Help For Nevada
Homeowners In Budget
Nevada
Senator’s request for support for ”underwater” homeowners
included in Senate version of budget
The
housing reserve fund that Nevada Senator Harry Reid requested to
help underwater and other struggling homeowners is included in
the Senate version of the upcoming budget announced.
Reid last
week wrote to Senator Kent Conrad, the Chairman of the Budget
Committee, to ask for the creation of a housing reserve fund in
the budget to facilitate legislation that would address a number
of issues related to mortgage and foreclosure in Nevada. Reid
believes Nevada homeowners need more leverage in their efforts
to seek loan modifications with lenders and loan servicers. This
provision could be used to provide assistance to Nevada
homeowners struggling with their mortgages and to incentivize
mortgage providers to make these mortgages more affordable.
“We need to
support programs that help people doing all the right things to
keep their homes and maintain their good credit standing,” Reid
said. “Through no fault of their own, many Nevada homeowners owe
much more on their homes than they are currently worth.
Government efforts to date have not done enough to help many of
these homeowners. This simply isn’t fair, and we must work
every day to assist these Nevadans and bring some equity to our
overall economic relief efforts.”
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