Willamette Week
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Fix It Yourself
BY NIGEL JAQUISS | njaquiss at
wweek.com
Heather Brown is stuck with a $282,000 mortgage she cannot afford and cannot
refinance without hefty prepayment penalties.
Brown, a 33-year-old account manager for a design firm, is just one of thousands
of Oregonians trapped in subprime mortgages.
A college graduate on her fifth mortgage, she’s no dupe. But Brown is the first
to admit she erred when she signed last August for a $352,300 home in Southwest
Portland.
Like every prospective borrower in Oregon, however, Brown was operating without
basic protections enjoyed by residents of many other states at a time when the
Mortgage Bankers Association reports the highest foreclosure rate ever. CEOs at
Merrill Lynch and Citigroup have been fired over the national mortgage meltdown,
and the country’s largest mortgage provider, Countrywide, agreed last week to be
bought rather than go bust.
You might think that dismal backdrop would prompt Democratic leaders, including
Gov. Ted Kulongoski, Senate President Peter Courtney and House Speaker Jeff
Merkley, to jump over each other to curb abuses by mortgage brokers and lenders.
States such as North Carolina, Maine, Minnesota and Ohio have passed
consumer-friendly measures since the crisis began to stop such basic abuses as
the prepayment penalties Brown faces. And the powerful labor unions that funded
successful campaigns for Oregon’s three Democratic leaders want reform.
“We strongly support addressing the front end, where unscrupulous lenders are
taking advantage of people,” says SEIU lobbyist Arthur Towers. “It’s a very high
priority for us.”.
So what are the three powerful Democrats offering in the first scheduled
even-year session starting Feb. 1? At a press conference Jan. 7 in which top
Dems said the session would “address critical needs,” they rolled out such
priorities as 24-hour state police coverage, “quality home care” for seniors,
“Putting Kids First” and some minor fixes to foreclosure rules.
They ignored a mortgage bill that state Sen. Ben Westlund (D-Tumalo) is putting
together with three consumer advocacy groups—AARP Oregon, OSPIRG and Our Oregon.
Westlund’s bill would limit prepayment penalties, which discourage borrowers
from refinancing, and would require lenders to determine that borrowers can
actually afford the loans they are being offered. The measure also would
eliminate “credit-spread kickbacks” that provide an incentive for brokers to
present lenders with higher-interest loans rather than the lowest rate for which
they qualify.
“There are more protections in this state for used-car [buyers] than for home
buyers,” says Westlund, who’s running in the Democratic primary for state
treasurer.
But Democratic leaders prioritized only those bills backed by all their members.
They point to proposed measures that would make foreclosure slightly less
complicated and unpleasant, but such changes are small. Think of the Legislature
as a lifeguard: Instead of stopping people who don’t know how to swim from
jumping in the water, leadership would throw life-preservers to those who have
already drowned.
Westlund, a former bull-semen salesman, offers a farm metaphor: “My guiding
principle is that the most important part of the process is what happens prior
to and on the day of signing a mortgage,” he says. “What I’m trying to get at is
catch the horse before it gets out of the barn.”
Senate and House leaders have made it clear that the more substantive fixes
Westlund wants are not a priority in this session. Courtney has emphasized he
wants a “smooth session” that will help rebuild public confidence in the
Legislature.
Merkley has been AWOL on home borrower protections both as a legislator and a
candidate for U.S. Senate. “February is more for adjusting the budget and
dealing with issues that have come up since the 2007 session,” says Merkley
spokesman Russ Kelley.
Rick Bennett, an AARP lobbyist, finds legislative leadership’s lack of response
troubling.“If you’re going to have a special February session to deal with
important issues, how could this not be one of them?” Bennett says.
AARP, OSPIRG and Our Oregon, a union-backed advocacy group, earlier found the
governor equally unhelpful. In November, Kulongoski convened a task force of
lending industry officials and consumer advocates to seek solutions to Oregon’s
slice of the national disaster. OSPIRG’s Matt Wallace says the governor’s
requirement that only proposals agreed upon by all members would get introduced
gave the lending industry a veto on any real reforms.
After the first meeting, the three groups quit, expressing “deep disappointment”
in a Nov. 15 letter that the guv set up a process so easily “subverted.”
Kulongoski’s response read as if it were penned by the mortgage industry. He
blamed borrowers for their irresponsibility, while noting that foreclosure is a
headache for lenders. “I find it particularly troubling that over half of those
who face foreclosure never take the simple step of contacting their lenders—even
though foreclosure is rarely in a lender’s best interest,” he wrote.
While Kulongoski, Merkley and Courtney see no urgency in helping borrowers, the
man Merkley hopes to unseat in the U.S. Senate does. On Dec. 20, President Bush
signed a law written by Sen. Gordon Smith (R-Ore.) that made mortgage insurance
tax-deductible for people making less than $106,000 annually—which amounts to
millions of homeowners and about 90 percent of Oregonians.
Brown calls it “ironic” that it’s Smith who’s more helpful, and wishes the
Democrats who control Oregon would do more. “I’m just disappointed the laws
offer so few protections for borrowers,” she says.
Fact: The number of foreclosures attributable to subprime lending in Oregon in 2006—7,249—was more than five times the total in either 2001 or 2002, according to the Center for Responsible Lending. Currently, 10.28 percent of Oregon subprime borrowers are delinquent, compared to a national average of 16.31 percent, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.
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