Showing posts with label Foreclosure. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Foreclosure. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Making Home Affordable Plans Nashville Event to Help Struggling Tennessee Homeowners Keep their Homes

Reposted from Treasury Notes
By: Andrea Risotto,10/19/2012

Are you a Tennessee homeowner struggling with your mortgage payments?  Would you like to understand the options available to you based on your particular circumstances?  Do you need help working with your mortgage company to apply for assistance?  If so, then we encourage you to attend the free Helpfor Homeowners Community Event at the Nashville Convention Center on Wednesday, October 24. 
At next week’s event, which is co-sponsored with the HOPE NOW Alliance, homeowners in the Nashville area will be able to meet face-to-face with 15 of the nation’s largest mortgage servicers to discuss options to make their mortgage payments more affordable. Every homeowner who attends will leave with a clearer idea of their eligibility for help and next steps.
We encourage you to attend even if you have tried unsuccessfully to work with your mortgage company in the past, particularly if you have had a change in circumstances.  Local HUD-approved housing counselors will be on-site to meet with homeowners and offer free guidance. And there are more options for assistance available today than ever before, including new opportunities for mortgage modifications, refinances and unemployment assistance.  
One of the newer programs available to homeowners in the Volunteer State is Keep My Tennessee Home.  Funded by Treasury’s HardestHit Fund, Keep My Tennessee Home offers assistance to homeowners struggling to keep up with their mortgage payments due to unemployment or a reduction in wages. This program makes payments to a homeowner’s mortgage company for up to 18 months while he or she looks for work. 
Far too often, struggling families in Tennessee and across the country tell us they were unaware of their options or too scared to reach out.  But remember that—every month—hundreds of additional Tennessee families are getting help to make their mortgage payments more affordable.  Keep My Tennessee Home is an example of one such program where agencies across the state are working together to help homeowners.
As the administrator of Keep My Tennessee Home, the Tennessee Housing Development Authority (THDA), told us, “We recently attended an outreach event in a community southeast of Nashville.  Toward the end of the evening, an adult couple timidly approached us and subsequently thanked us for helping them keep their home.  This couple was accompanied by their teenage son and daughter.  When their son realized who we were, he stuck out his hand and, shaking vigorously, thanked us very sincerely for helping his family stay in their home. All it takes is one experience like this to remind us of what this program is all about.”
Since 2009, the U.S. Department of the Treasury and the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) have sponsored 77 free outreach events for struggling homeowners across the country.  Additional events are already planned for 2012 in Orlando,Florida and Ontario,California.  More information about these events and other free resources for homeowners is available on MakingHomeAffordable.gov. (end)


You can skip this outreach event and call me and I will screen you over the phone and if you qualify I will serve you.  You will save a lot of your time.  I am a HUD-approved housing counselor. There is no cost for our services.
Rod Williams 615-850-3453

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

From the Desk of HUD Secretary Donovan: A Proven Tool to Fight Foreclosures




http://hudatwork.hud.gov/inhouse/images/photos/donovan.jpg
As every member of the HUD family knows, over the last three years we've come a long way in pushing back against the foreclosure crisis.

Foreclosure notices have been cut in half since President Obama took office - and nearly 6 million families have received mortgage modifications that have helped them stay in their homes.
I'm proud of the progress we've been able to make so far for those families. And I know that it would not have been possible without the dedication and expertise of housing counselors we fund in communities across the country.

Over the last three years, HUD-approved housing counselors have assisted 8 million families - one reason last month, the Obama Administration honored our nation's housing counselors in Los Angeles as part of the White House Champions of Change initiative.

And the results these men and women have achieved is undeniable. Indeed, a recent study found that 9-in-10 families who received foreclosure counseling from HUD-approved counselors continued to live in their homes 18 months later.

As impressive as those results are, we shouldn't be surprised. Distressed homeowners are nearly twice as likely to receive a modification on their mortgage if they are working with a housing counselor. And as the Urban Institute recently demonstrated, borrowers in foreclosure were 70 percent more likely to get up to date on payments if they received counseling.

Quite simply, housing counseling works.

With our extraordinary record of success, like many of you, I was disappointed when Congress eliminated funding for HUD's housing counseling grants in Fiscal Year 2011. But we didn't sit on our hands - instead, we built a case that HUD-funded housing counseling is a critical tool in our work to not only fight foreclosures, but support the recovery of our housing market more broadly.

Indeed, while the National Foreclosure Mitigation Counseling funds administered by our partners at NeighborWorks America are essential to our ability to assist homeowners in acute distress, HUD funds support the entire range of counseling and training necessary to ensure people make good, responsible choices that work for families in their communities - whether it's buying or renting, improving financial literacy, protecting families' rights against discrimination, or even preventing homelessness.

That's the case we made to Congress - and because we did, last month HUD was able to announce more than $42 million in housing counseling grants to 468 organizations in communities across the country that prevent foreclosures and help families find decent housing.

I'm proud we were able to partially restore our housing counseling funding. But I'm even prouder that we were able to cut the time it took to get these funds on the street by nearly 70 percent compared to 2010. And I expect that progress to continue once Congress approves our plan to establish the Office of Housing Counseling within HUD.

Even still, we know the housing market is still fragile, and that homeowners need all the help they can get. That's why the $2.6 billion provided to states as part of the recent $25 billion mortgage servicing settlement with the five largest servicers is so important. These dollars can be used for foreclosure prevention efforts that include housing counseling - and already, we've seen state attorneys general from both parties commit to using these funds to help homeowners. Indeed, while needs and requirements vary from state to state, at meetings with stakeholders and attorneys general around the country, I am encouraging our state attorneys general to direct settlement funds towards helping homeowners.
At a time when our economy is growing and our housing market is showing signs of strength, we know there is no better way of accelerating that progress than speeding help to homeowners. That's what housing counseling is about - and ensuring it helps as many families as possible, in as many communities as possible, is our shared challenge in the months ahead.

Call me. I can help you save your home. No charge for my services. 
Rod Williams
Senior Housing Counselor
Woodbine Community Organization
Work phone #: 615-850-3453
FAX: 615-833-9727
web site: Woodbinecommunity.org


How Harest hit saves Phyllis Qualls-Brooks home

by Marcus Washington, News Channel 5


NASHVILLE, Tenn. - In a huge settlement against major banks, Tennessee stands to get $141 million  to help save thousands of homes from foreclosure.

Phyllis Qualls-Brooks walks the path many Tennesseans have traveled in this rocky economic downturn.
"Because of budget cuts my position was eliminated," said Qualls-Brooks.

Without a job she could not pay her mortgage, so she turned to a program she heard about through the Tennessee Housing Development Agency, THDA, called the "Hardest Hit Fund."
"I finished the application process; I was approved. That day was a wonderful day in my life," said Qualls-Brooks. (link)


I was Phyllis Qualls-Brooks housing counselor and helped her get qualified for the Hardest Hit Fund. Call me, I may be able to help you. There is no charge for my service.


Rod Williams
Senior Housing Counselor
Woodbine Community Organization
Work phone #: 615-850-3453
FAX: 615-833-9727
web site: Woodbinecommunity.org

Monday, January 30, 2012

Don't Lose your Home due to Delinquent Taxes

by Rod Williams

Often people who are behind on their mortgage are also behind on paying their taxes if the taxes are not escrowed. You do not want to lose your home due to unpaid taxes. Here is how the payment of property taxes works.

Taxes are due in arrears. That means, you are not paying your taxes for the upcoming year but for the year just past. The tax year is the calendar year. The tax bill for 20011 is mailed out in October 20011 and are due by February 29, 2012. After that date a penalty of 1 ½ % interests is added. The Trustee’s office holds the tax bills until March 1, 2013. Up until that time, the taxpayer, may go to the Trustees office and pay the taxes and the accumulated interest. After that March 1 date the tax delinquency is referred to Chancery Court. The Clerk and Masters office handles the taxes at this point. Metro will have filed a legal action to sell the property for back taxes prior to that March 1 date.

On March 1st, the Clerk and Masters Office will send out a notice to delinquent property owners saying they have 30 days to pay the delinquent tax lien or it will be sold. THE TAXPAYER MAY PAY THE AMOUNT OWED anytime before the sale and the lawsuit will be dismissed. (Cashier's Check). After the March 1 2013 date, additional court cost and legal fees are added. There is a title search that has to be done and other legal procedures prior to the Sale. So the first time it would be sold is June, 2013, but it could be later. There is usually one sale per month from June to December. The sales are advertised in our daily paper, THE TENNESSEAN, approximately twenty (20) days prior to the auction.

The owner may redeem the property up to a year after it is sold for back taxes but there is an additional fee of 10% per year to redeem it. Also, the person redeeming his home may have to make payments to the buyer for cost incurred.

The tax lien is the first place lien on a property, meaning the city gets their money before any goes to a mortgage company, so if a client is late on their taxes, the mortgage company would rather pay the taxes than let the property get sold in a tax sale. If a property is foreclosed upon, the mortgage company would have to pay the taxes anyway. If there is a mortgage on the property and it is sold at a tax sale, the mortgage company is the likely buyer, but the owner would have a year to redeem it. So, the mortgage company would rather pay the taxes for the homeowner, which they may do, and then foreclose rather than purchase it at the tax sale.

Few people who have a mortgage on a property lose the property due to a tax sale. The situation as described above is what usually happens.

I know of no agency that will help you pay your property tax bill. One of the requirements for the Hardest Hit Fund in Tennessee is that taxes and insurance be escrowed. However, if one otherwise qualifies, it is often possible to set up an escrow account at the Hardest Hit closing.

For more information call me, Rod Williams, 850-3453. There is never a cost for my services.

Don't watch this video



This is a video about short sells. Sometimes short sells are an option for avoiding foreclosure but they are the last option, not the first option. There is no need to watch this video or even consider a short sell unless you have explored all of your other option.

There is a great program funded by the the US government and administered by the Tennessee Housing and Development Agency (THDA) called "Hardest Hit Fund."  The agency I work for is a partnering agency with THDA and I am the agencies Senior Housing Counselor. This program can pay your arrearage and make your payments for a period of time. This program may give you up to $20000- money that never has to be paid back. You do not pay any fee for my services or any application fees. This is a free program.

To learn more, Call Me 
Rod Williams (615) 850-3453