Title
Urging the First Judicial District to maintain and expand its nationally renowned Mortgage Foreclosure Diversion Program.
Body
WHEREAS, Pennsylvania was one of only four states to see increases in foreclosures from January 2011 to January 2012, increasing by 23.6 percent, according to RealtyTrac; and
WHEREAS, February foreclosures in the Philadelphia region rose by 47.2% over February of 2011 and total defaults in Pennsylvania rose by 35% in February 2012 over February 2011; and
WHERAS, Experts suggest one explanation for the upswing in foreclosure activity is the settlement that the federal government and various state governments reached with the five largest mortgage lenders for the "robo-signing" scandal of 2010. Pennsylvania's share of the settlement is estimated to be as much as $266 million. But now that the banks have resolved the legal issues that had caused them to slow down foreclosures, they are free to resume foreclosure filings; and
WHEREAS, A study by the Reinvestment Fund, also attributes the sharp rise in foreclosures to Pennsylvania's elimination of the Homeowner's Emergency Mortgage Assistance Program (HEMAP) in June, 2011. The study showed that HEMAP prevented 6,163 foreclosures from 2008 to 2010, which means that the state's foreclosure rates would have been about 5 percent higher in those years without the program; and
WHEREAS, Philadelphia's Mortgage Foreclosure Diversion Program was established on a trial basis in April 2008, as the number of City foreclosure filings exceeded 8,000 and was made permanent in December 2009. The mandatory program, which has been copied around the country, requires a face-to-face conciliation conference for all new foreclosure actions. Eligible homeowners, with housing counselors or legal help, meet lenders attorneys to reach agreements to try to avert foreclosures; and
WHEREAS, An independent study of the Mortgage Foreclosure Diversion Program concluded that this program significantly impr...
Click here for full text