Across the South

HOPE Submits Comments to Ensure Struggling Homeowners Can Access Foreclosure Relief

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Deep South communities served by HOPE, especially people of color, are now teetering even more precariously on the brink of economic and social devastation than before the pandemic. In order to be effective in protecting those who face the greatest risk of losing their homes, federal protections must address the challenges faced by borrowers of color and low-income borrowers. As we saw during the aftermath of the previous foreclosure crisis, policy decisions made today will have far-reaching implications for not only the current housing market, but also for racial wealth and opportunity for many generations to come.

Importantly, HOPE accomplishes this impact through responsible mortgage lending, as reflected by a charge off rate of fifteen basis points in 2020.  COVID-10 has taken a toll on low-income homeowners in the Deep South.  As of December 2020, Mississippi and Louisiana had the two highest rates in the country of past due mortgage loans.

As the nation seeks to recover from COVID-19, Deep South communities, especially communities of color, are now even more precariously situated on the brink of economic and social devastation. This is particularly true as CARES Act and other COVID-relief protections against foreclosures are set to expire in the coming months, even as many families are still burdened by COVID’s economic devastation.  Policy decisions made today have the opportunity to break, rather than repeat and worsen this cycle of inequity.

Key among these decisions will be the protections afforded to people struggling to hold on to their homes, particularly borrowers of color and low-income borrowers who are among the hardest hit by COVID-19’s health and economic impacts. These are the same borrowers who have also been most likely bypassed for other types of relief that might help them stay afloat.

  1. Deep South people and places most economically vulnerable prior to the pandemic, were most heavily impacted by it, and most likely to be passed over by relief measures,
  2. Preventing unnecessary foreclosures is critical to preserving Black homeownership, and prevent widening of the racial wealth gap, and
  3. Proposed amendments to Regulation X are a helpful start and need clarity
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