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Few in Ind. using state fund to avoid foreclosure

Few in Ind. using state fund intended to help homeowners avoid foreclosure

EVANSVILLE, Ind. (AP) -- A state program created to help Indiana residents avoid foreclosure by providing them with 10-year loans is seeing few takers even though the state's foreclosure rate is among the highest in the nation.

The Evansville Courier & Press reports (http://bit.ly/xuZczn) that the Hardest Hit Fund has enough money to help more than 13,000 Hoosier households, but only 651 homeowners had applied for help by the end of 2011. Of those applications, about 220 have been approved and another 300 are pending.

The Hardest Hit Fund provides eligible homeowners with forgivable 10-year loans through a grant from the U.S. Department of the Treasury.

Each loan is forgiven 20 percent per year over its last five years. Depending on how economically hard hit a county is, homeowners can receive up to $12,000 or $18,000.

The idea behind the loan program is to help unemployed homeowners make payments or recently unemployed homeowners catch up on delinquent payments after they get a new job so they can avoid foreclosing on their home.

Indiana has seen its foreclosure rate climb to seventh in America. And a lack of awareness of what help is available has contributed to that, said Emily Duncan, a spokeswoman for the Indiana Housing and Community Development Authority.

"There has to be a willingness to seek that assistance and ask for help," Duncan said.

Putnam County resident Bonnie Love got a boost from the Hardest Hit Fund in December after nearly losing her house when she lost a factory job in Brazil and her unemployment insurance payments ran out.

She was able to catch up when Congress extended unemployment benefits. Love then found three part-time jobs, but it wasn't enough and she eventually fell behind on her bills again.

When she saw advertisements for foreclosure-prevention counseling sponsored by the Community Action Program of Evansville, or CAPE, she took action and the agency helped her apply for a loan from the Hardest Hit Fund.

"I was able to catch up all my back payments and stay current," Love said.

Now self-employed as a massage therapist and provider of vegetarian cooking and wellness seminars, she's hoping she can maintain her payments on her mortgage.

Program applicants have to agree to pay a portion of their monthly income toward their mortgage, meet income eligibility requirements based on their county of residence. They must also be receiving unemployment insurance, according to the Indiana Foreclosure Prevention Network.

The Community Action Program of Evansville, or CAPE, provides foreclosure prevention services to 13 counties in the Evansville, Terre Haute and Jeffersonville areas in the form of counseling and negotiating repayment or new loan terms.

Tehiji Crenshaw, the program's director of housing programs, said about 500 households are currently receiving help from CAPE's four full-time housing counselors. She said many people often wait until the last minute to take action to avoid foreclosure.

"They become frightened and unable to communicate what is going on," Crenshaw said. "Many times lenders get irritated when someone is six or seven months behind. They say, 'If they had just picked up the phone and called us.'"

Once counselors from CAPE or the Indiana Foreclosure Prevention Network are able to document a homeowner's loss of income, they can help negotiate interest rate reductions, changes in terms, waiving of late fees and sometimes even a suspension of payments.

___

Information from: Evansville Courier & Press, http://www.courierpress.com

 

7 comments

  • FLOYD  •  Athens, Ohio  •  3 months ago
    good going INDY... That is one way to help the working class who have probs. getting to the
    right programs (GOVT) to receive the help that is so hard to come by -- being a working man
    CUDOS to the UNDERSTANDING AND CONCERN OF THE LAID OFF WORKERS IN THEIR TIME OF NEED...
  • broncosgodess  •  La Porte, Indiana  •  3 months ago
    at what point are there going to be programs for those who work hard, pay their bills and still struggle?
  • tom t  •  Bigfork, Montana  •  3 months ago
    lets be FAIR OBAMA many people work 2 jobs and still pay their bills not everyone works for the GOVERNMENT with 35-40 hr work weeks and 9 weeks paid vacation and early retirement!!!!
  • tom t  •  Bigfork, Montana  •  3 months ago
    stop the handouts unless you do it for everybody!!!!
  • Kathy  •  3 months ago
    Help for unemployed 'workers' despite not knowing if or when they'll find employment. Why can't the government see this situation the way workers/borrowers do?
  • FLOYD  •  Athens, Ohio  •  3 months ago
    I wonder if the neighboring state of OHIO will also consider this kind of HELP for the working
    man??? MAYBE they could listen to INDY
  • Dennis  •  Dodge City, Kansas  •  3 months ago
    Why dont us homeowners that have homes completely paid for, get a little help? They keep giving money to people that cant pay their payments in the first place. So they give them more chances. What about me? Thank you
 
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