Deadline for Foreclosure Settlement Claims if Friday, January 18, 2013

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Housing Counseling Update
January 14, 2013

Deadline for Foreclosure Settlement Claims is Friday, January 18: Attorney General Urges Eligible Illinois Borrowers to Submit Claim Forms to Receive Funds Under National Settlement

Attorney General Lisa Madigan today reminded eligible Illinois borrowers that the deadline to file a claim form to receive a payment under the National Mortgage Foreclosure Settlement is Friday, January 18.

Approximately 64,000 Illinois borrowers who lost their home to foreclosure between January 1, 2008 and December 31, 2011 may be eligible to receive a payment under the national settlement but only if they file a claim. Eligible borrowers had mortgages serviced by Ally/GMAC, Bank of America, Citi, JPMorgan Chase or Wells Fargo, the nation’s five largest mortgage servicers that agreed to the settlement with the federal government and attorneys general for 49 states and the District of Columbia.

The 2012 settlement earmarked approximately $1.5 billion in payments for approximately 2 million borrowers nationwide who lost their homes to foreclosure during 2008 to 2011 and had their loan serviced by one of the five settling servicers. The exact payment each borrower receives will depend upon the total number of borrowers who participate by filing a claim.

The national settlement administrator sent the initial claim form packets to Illinois borrowers between September 24 and October 12, 2012. On December 26, 2012, the settlement administrator mailed reminder claim form packets to all eligible borrowers who had not yet submitted a claim form.

Attorney General Madigan urged eligible Illinois borrowers to complete their claim forms and return them as soon as possible in the envelope provided, or file them online atwww.nationalmortgagesettlement.com by the Jan. 18 deadline. Payment checks are expected to be mailed in mid-2013.

Madigan said borrowers who have questions or need help filing their claim should contact the settlement administrator at 1-866-430-8358, or send questions by email toadministrator@nationalmortgagesettlement.com. The information line is staffed Monday through Friday from (7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Central). Spanish-speaking representatives are available. All borrowers—regardless of which bank serviced their mortgage—should contact the settlement administrator through these channels.

Madigan said eligible borrowers do not need to prove financial harm to receive a payment, nor do they give up their rights to pursue a lawsuit against their mortgage servicer or to participate in the Independent Foreclosure Review Process being conducted by federal bank regulators. Eligible borrowers may get a payment from this settlement even if they participate in another foreclosure claims process. However, any payment received may reduce payments borrowers may be eligible to receive in any other foreclosure claim process or legal proceeding.

Madigan also warned borrowers to be on the lookout for potential scams connected to the foreclosure settlement. She instructed consumers to ignore any solicitations for upfront payments, and not to provide personal information to anyone who calls or emails claiming that they are providing settlement-related assistance. If you believe someone is conducting a settlement-related scam, contact Attorney General Madigan’s Homeowner Helpline at 1-866-544-7151 to report the incident.

The settlement addressed allegations of the five banks’ widespread “robo-signing” of foreclosure documents and other fraudulent practices while servicing loans of struggling homeowners. It is the second largest settlement ever obtained through joint action of state attorneys general. In addition to providing more than $1 billion in relief to assist Illinois residents who have lost their homes, are underwater or at imminent risk of defaulting on their mortgages, the settlement also set new, more stringent mortgage servicing standards to prevent abuses by lenders that many consumers have faced while trying to save their homes and during the foreclosure process.


For more information contact Bob Palmer, Housing Action Illinois, 312-939-6074 x. 206 orbob@housingactionil.org.

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Home Modification Funding Announcement from Housing Action Illinois

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June  2010 Illinois Housing Counselors  

 

 

Home Modification Program

Funding Announcement


 

Home Modification Program Funding Announcement:

The Illinois Housing Development Authority (the Authority) is now accepting applications under the Authority’s Home Modification Program. The Home Modification program is a joint effort of the Authority, the Illinois Department of Human Services, and the Illinois Department on Aging.

Program Description

The Illinois Housing Development Authority (“IHDA”) will make funds available through its Affordable Housing Trust Fund to eligible applicant organizations for providing home modification repairs and improvements to housing owned or occupied by income-eligible elderly persons and persons with disabilities. The overall goals of this program are:

To prioritize use of such funds to:
- Prevent unnecessary institutionalization of senior citizens and persons with disabilities by funding such repairs in existing housing, thereby allowing clients to age or remain in place by making their existing housing more accessible;
- End unnecessary institutionalization of senior citizens and persons with disabilities by funding repairs in existing housing that is owned, rented, or will be rented by a person seeking to leave an institutional setting. Home Modification Grantees are encouraged to combine Home Modification funds with funding from community reintegration, home service, enhanced transition and community care programs;
-To encourage partnerships of housing and service agencies to affect a more viable and accessible living environment for the elderly and persons with disabilities;
- To make such assistance available to clients through a broader geographic distribution than provided by existing programs;

The application deadline is July 21, 2010 at 5:00 pm.

IHDA, IDHS and IDoA will host one webinar for potential applicants prior to the application deadline. The webinar will provide an opportunity to learn more about the application process. The webinar will be held on June 30, 2010. Log-in information will be distributed prior to the training. If you wish to participate in the webinar, please register with Jan van der Woerd by email at jvanderwoerd@ihda.org no later than June 28, 2010. The webinar replaces the application workshops held under previous Home Modification program years and utilizes both a computer and phone conference line.

To print out the 2010 Home Modification Application click here:www.housingactionil.org/downloads/2010_Home_Mod_Application.doc

For 2010 Program Income Limits click here:www.housingactionil.org/downloads/Income_Limits_2010_Final.xls
Under the announcements section of the IHDA website, www.ihda.org  is similar information about the application.

Contact Information:

For further information on this program announcement please contact Jan van der Woerd for questions.

jvanderwoerd@ihda.org or 312-836-5324 



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NeighborWorks America Receives $1 Million From Rockefeller Foundation

PND News Alert
May 31, 2010

The following article has been posted to Philanthropy News Digest:

NeighborWorks America Receives $1 Million From Rockefeller Foundation
The grant will be used to help strengthen and supplement the capacity of nonprofit housing counseling organizations and increase their efficiency and ability to help homeowners avoid foreclosure…. More»

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NeighborWorks America Finds that Over Half of Families Facing Foreclosure Are Affected By Job Loss

News Release
 

NeighborWorks America logo

May 28, 2010

Contact:
Erin Angell Collins, 202-220-6317, ecollins@nw.org
Doug Robinson, 202-220-2360, drobinson@nw.org

More than Half of Families Facing Foreclosure Affected by Job Loss,
According to New NeighborWorks America Report
Loss or Reduction in Income Reported by 58% of Homeowners Who Received Foreclosure Counseling through NFMC Program

Washington, D.C. — Today NeighborWorks America, the administrator of the National Foreclosure Mitigation Counseling (NFMC) Program, announced that 58 percent of homeowners who received foreclosure counseling through the NFMC Program reported the primary reason they were facing foreclosure was reduced or lost income. The news is found in NeighborWorks’ fifth Congressional report, which outlines NFMC Program activity through January 31, 2010.

Over the course of the NFMC program, which began January 1, 2008, the percentage of homeowners who cited reduced or lost income as the primary reason they were facing foreclosure has steadily increased. In the November 2009 Congressional report, 54 percent of NFMC-counseled homeowners reported reduced or lost income as the main reason for default; as did 49 percent, 45 percent, and 41 percent in the June 2009, February 2009, and October 2008 reports, respectively. These steady increases parallel the nation’s unemployment rate, which until the November 2009 employment report, had marched upward since October 2008.

 Reasons for Facing Foreclosure Reported by NFMC Clients

“With unemployment numbers not likely to dip below nine percent in 2010, our report proves what many already believed to be true.  Unemployment and reduced income are having a devastating effect on our nation’s homeowners,” said Ken Wade, CEO of NeighborWorks America.  “While Congress and state governments have stepped up and extended unemployment benefits to help families survive this tough economic climate, it’s time for mortgage servicers and investors to make meaningful accommodations for homeowners facing foreclosure.  If they don’t, we’ll see even more empty houses and devastated neighborhoods in our communities.”

The report also found that 62 percent of all NFMC clients held a fixed-rate mortgage. Forty-nine percent (49%) of clients held a fixed rate mortgage with an interest rate below 8 percent.

As of May 24, 2010, more than 967,000 families have received foreclosure counseling as a result of NFMC Program funding. In October 2009, NeighborWorks reported that NFMC Program clients in foreclosure were 60 percent more likely to avoid foreclosure than homeowners who did not receive foreclosure counseling.

National Foreclosure Mitigation Counseling Program
In December 2007, NeighborWorks America was named in the FY2008 Consolidated Appropriations Act (P.L. 110-161) to administer the first round of $180 million in grant funding through the National Foreclosure Mitigation Counseling Program. On July 30, 2008, Congress passed the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008 (P.L. 110-289), which appropriated an additional $180 million to this effort.

On March 11, 2009, President Obama signed the Omnibus Appropriations Act of 2009 (P.L. 111-8), which appropriated $50 million to NeighborWorks America to continue the National Foreclosure Mitigation Counseling Program. The third appropriation provided funds for foreclosure counseling, training for foreclosure counselors (up to $5 million), and administrative expenses (four percent) associated with running the NFMC program.

On December 16, 2009, the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2010 (P.L. 111-117) appropriated an additional $65 million to the program, including $59.4 million for counseling. This fourth appropriation also provided training for foreclosure counselors (up to $3 million), and administrative expenses (four percent) associated with running the NFMC program.

Homeowners who would like to receive foreclosure counseling from a NFMC Program-funded counseling organization in their community can visit www.findaforeclosurecounselor.org.  

For more information about the NFMC Program, visit www.nw.org/nfmc.

To download the full report, visit http://www.nw.org/network/nfmcp/documents/CongressionalReportandAppendices.pdf

About NeighborWorksAmerica
NeighborWorksAmerica creates opportunities for people to improve their lives and strengthen their communities by providing access to homeownership and to safe and affordable rental housing. Since 1991, we have assisted nearly 1.2 million low- to moderate-income families with their housing needs. Much of our success is achieved through our support of the NeighborWorks network ― more than 235 community development organizations working in more than 4,400 urban, suburban and rural communities in all 50 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico. In the last five years, NeighborWorks organizations have generated more than $15 billion in reinvestment in these communities. NeighborWorks America is the nation’s leading trainer of community development and affordable housing professionals.

 
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NR231el Stabilizing Neighborhoods in a Post-Foreclosure Environment

The following announcement is from the NeighborWorks America website.    
Stabilizing Neighborhoods in a Post-Foreclosure Environment is an online learning experience which provides timely information on analyzing regional and neighborhood markets and customizing intervention strategies to achieve stabilization outcomes in neighborhoods and communities. You will learn about outcomes and measures of success for stabilization, and be better equipped to understand, access, and use local data on housing markets and other indicators of foreclosure related neighborhood distress to design and implement interventions and advocate for policy and resource support. Ten categories of stabilization strategies will be presented and participants will evaluate a case study neighborhood and design an appropriate strategy mix and approach.

Click onto http://www.nw.org/network/training/courses/default.asp?course=ucrsdetailAll1.asp?course=NR231el to read the entire announcement and to download a 2010 catalog.

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