Showing posts with label MN Peoples Bailout. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MN Peoples Bailout. Show all posts

Sunday, October 11, 2009

What's Wrong with a Peoples (Sic) Bailout Part 2 of 2


Guest post and photo by the Hawthorne Hawkman
(Editorial note: The above photo is an illegally-placed sign that is a SCAM, and the Hawkman took down this sign. DO NOT call the number, but seek counseling if you are at risk of foreclosure)

As promised, here is the follow-up to the first part of the Peoples (sic) Bailout plan. Their strategies are too poorly contrived to fit in just one post. Readers be warned, it's time to flex those mortgage muscles because we're about to get technical...

Proponents of the Peoples (sic) Bailout kept on bringing up a statistic that only 16% of foreclosures received any kind of help from foreclosure prevention counseling. This figure is misleading because it doesn't take into account the massive fraud in the mortgage industry in Minnesota (such as straw buyers, flipping, identity theft, etc.). And although the Peoples (sic) Bailout plan for a moratorium calls for it to only apply to owner-occupied properties (well, first they said ALL foreclosures and then after I chewed them another one they said only owner-occupied, so who really knows?) the 16% is calculated using all foreclosures.

So that's a meaningless number for the sake of this argument. They are only using it because it's such a low number that it would make most people say "Yeah! We can do better than 16%!" A better measuring stick is that according to Twin Cities Habitat for Humanity, 58% of their clients received loan modifications. Individual banks such as Wells Fargo, are pitiful in their loan mod statistics, and we certainly want to do better than 58%. As Bob Dylan would put it, "When all of your advisers heap their plastic, at your feet to convince you of their pain, trying to prove that your conclusions should be more drastic, won't you come see me Queen Jane?"

These folks also like to rail against the TARP (Troubled Asset Relief Program) without having any real idea of what the money was used for. Let's get one thing straight: There was a LOT wrong with how that program was set up, how some financially sound banks were forced to take money, how poorly the use of money was monitored, and whether it had any real effect. But the Peoples (sic) Bailout people say this money "was meant to bail out homeowners." WRONG. The TARP money was intended to shore up funds in struggling or potentially struggling banks so they could go out and make more loans to consumers and grease the wheels of a credit-driven economy.

Which brings me to another fundamental flaw in their simplistic outlook. "Just give the money to the people in foreclosure," seems to be the best summary of their strategies. There still has to be some way of determining if the money is well-spent. The toughest stories I hear at forums or while doorknocking to get people into counseling are the ones of good, hard-working folks who just want a job. Admittedly, there isn't much to be done for them unless we fulfill the mantra that the best social service program is a job.

Minnesota has a fairly long foreclosure process, and thanks go out to Rep. Joe Mullery. For the past few years has authored extraordinarily technical bills that have real effects on people's everyday lives. When I ran into him at the Harvest Festival on Saturday, he asked, "Do you like my bill?" I had to respond, "Which one?" He is truly a legislator that a mortgage geek can get behind.

The bill in question, though, allows for the sheriff's sale to be postponed until very close to the end of the redemption period in order to give the borrower more time before foreclosure and the loss of a home are unpreventable. However, you HAVE TO SEE A COUNSELOR to make this happen. Eat that, you sixteen-percenters.

Back to the folks without a job, though. This bill can hopefully buy more time in such scenarios. This is hard to say without sounding callous, but somebody has to say it. The foreclosure process in Minnesota can take close to a year to go through. If you don't have a job in that length of time, then what is a mortgage company supposed to do? Mortgages are set up so that if you do not or can not make your payments, then at some point the mortgage company has the right to collect the collateral instead. True, we need more jobs and we need banks to do a better job modifying loans. But there comes a time when a lender must legitimately move forward with a foreclosure.

I will end this two-part rant with a story of my first encounter with the Peoples (sic) Bailout people. I was asked to speak as a panelist at a forum in south Minneapolis that they'd put on, and I hadn't heard of them before. I said some rather populist statements (which I still adhere to) about holding predatory lenders accountable. I was asked afterward if I would join them in a protest against US Bank, since the company received some TARP money.

I responded that I know folks at the bank, and I could arrange for a sit-down meeting with some fairly high-ranking individuals there who would have the authority to implement real changes on behalf of our community. But the trick was that we'd have to have actual, realistic, attainable demands first. So did they want to have a rational discussion? No. They used my words (which was fair game since they were said in a public forum) in local media to express support for their protest, and went ahead without any attempt at dialogue.

The Poor People's Economic Human Rights Coalition, the Coalition for a Peoples (sic) Bailout, and many of their partners are too willing to grab a sign and chant until they're blue in the face. But real, rational discussions elude them.

Friday, October 9, 2009

What's Wrong with a Peoples Bailout (Besides a Missing Apostrophe) Part 1 of 2

Guest Editorial by the Hawthorne Hawkman. Photo from the Hawkman files.


On Tuesday, October 6, the Minnesota Coalition for a Peoples (sic) Bailout met at the Minneapolis Urban League. One flier stated that "Northside agencies and other resources will be on hand for those struggling presently with a foreclosure or in a housing crisis." Aside from one attorney with the Minnesota Tenants Union, there really didn't seem to be any northside agencies OR resources on hand.

Another flier said to "Come and hear from those who have come up with creative approaches to the crisis."

Yeah, I'LL say their approaches are creative...

The kind of creative ideas that come from putting on your tin foil hat, going outside in a lightning storm while holding a set of jumper cables in your hands, and hoping something good will strike you. THAT kind of creative.

Oh, where to start? My head was spinning from all the blatant misinformation flying around the room. If it seems like I'm rambling, well, there was a LOT to cover.

Let's start with the most obvious mistake: The tactics used with Rosemary Williams. Look, when the Johnny Northside blog and the Mpls Mirror BOTH agree that you were wrong, what does THAT tell you? This coalition and Rosemary used each other for publicity's sake. While they got swept up in themselves, the mortgage company made attempts (some good, others not) to strike a deal before finally foreclosing. They got what they wanted in terms of publicity, but they didn't save her house.

One woman spoke about her pending foreclosure and said that the redemption period will end in November but she will refuse to leave. I feel for her, I really do. But once the sheriff's sale happens there is almost no way to save a house. By adopting the same actions as Rosemary, she will probably wind up in the same spot: getting kicked out of her house while protesters rant, police stand by, and by this time it'll be old news so the only media to show up will be the guy from youtube.

(Man, it seems like he's EVERYWHERE!)

Where are the ideas grounded in reality, people? Not on their sign-up sheet for an action plan, which references a city resolution (that's resolution, not ordinance, so there's no legal teeth to it), a state moratorium on foreclosures, and protesting against banks so that people stay in their homes.

In a previous JNS post, the youtube guy filmed me expressing some doubts about a moratorium. Here are two more: In each of the past two legislative sessions, bills have been passed that would protect people from foreclosure. Pawlenty vetoed them both. This moratorium goes MUCH FARTHER than either of the previously vetoed bills. Pawlenty is effectively running for President by now, and he's acting even more conservative than ever. It is not realistic to think he would sign a moratorium into law. Getting a veto-proof super-majority is just as unrealistic.

The second reason hearkens back to some "the-sky-is-falling" rhetoric that mortgage companies use all the time. In this case, however, I would find it to be a legitimate concern. The logic goes like this: If we tinker with the rules too much, then mortgage companies will find lending in Minnesota to be too risky or simply unpalatable. Rates will rise or lenders will pull out entirely.

When this excuse was used to argue against curbs in predatory lending, my response was "GOOD! We don't WANT those kinds of lenders in the FIRST PLACE!" But if we pass a law that there will be NO FORECLOSURES for two years (yes, that's what some coalition members call for) I believe lenders WILL pull out or rates will increase drastically.

Based on the written and verbal rhetoric of this coalition, it seems as if they are looking for a blanket moratorium for everything and everyone. Even if it were to be targeted in scope, a two-year moratorium would cause sensible lenders to wonder what other ways mortgage contracts would be interfered with. And when the finance industry is working properly, higher risks equal higher rates, while too many variables lead to credit drying up entirely.

This editorial is in progress, and another post will be forthcoming. I TOLD you there was a lot wrong with the ideas these folks have.