Assistance for Unemployed Homeowners coming
Perhaps someone has been reading my posts about the impact of unemployment in the distressed markets. It may not be the direct help that is required (i.e. more employment) but it is assistance in the form of up to $1,500 to those who are unemployed and at risk of foreclosure. 42,000 of California’s unemployed may benefit.
California is earmarked to receive $476M to help the unemployed.
As with any Federal program, the particulars will be announced in the future, but it looks like November 1 is when the program is slated to go live.
www.keepyourhomecalifornia.com
Stay tuned……
Local tax collectors are permitting large banks to foreclose on homeowners.
As people still struggle with unemployment and the financial distress associated with such hardship, the prime beneficiaries of TARP (bank bailout program) continue to benefit and even thrive at the expense of tax payers who help fund the program to help them out of their difficult situation in the first place. As a San Jose Short Sale Agent, I see how lending institutions deal with its customers on a daily basis, yet I am continually amazed at the means by which these gargantuan lending instituations have benefitted during their time of need, yet when the individual home owner are struggling, rather than help, they pounce right on them and go for the jugular…..
Here is a ridiculous illustration of that point. During this economic morass we are all enduring, city and county governments also suffer as a result of the individual home owner not being able to pay their property taxes. Because we are treading on unchartered territories and local government is in desperate need of cash flow, some of them are now selling their delinquent tax bills to third party companies for cash. [By the way, this is what these large banks are doing with their HELOC (home equity line of credit) and why they are now starting to play hard ball and refusing to sign off on short sales unless they are given the right to settle said deficiency after the closing. They write off their loss, turn around and sell the right to collect to a collection agency for additional cash and walk away to let the collection agency deal with collecting the deficiency. It’s a win-win for the banks because they are squeezing as much as they can out of the borrower at the first bite level and letting someone else get a second bite at the borrower in exchange for a fee.]
These tax lien purchasing companies are not affiliated with, nor have any interest in the local communities, so they are pushing the local homeowners quicker into foreclosure by adding additional penalties and obscene interest rates, which the homeowners cannot afford, then forcing them into foreclosure to collect their debt from the proceeds of the sale. All of this suffering and devastation over a very small percentage of the value of the property.
Think about this: it is not the lender that is owed the mortgage, nor even the lender which owns the line of credit, it is the third party entity that bought the rights to the delinquent tax bills that is forcing a homeowner into foreclosure over a few thousand dollars, which was inflated due to their horrendous interest and penalty charges…… What’s wrong with that picture??!!
The largest of these entities which buys and sells property tax liens, the one which is devastating Lucas County, Ohio and the one discussed in the New York Times article is called Plymouth Park Tax Services. Guess who is the parent company of this little known company? JP Morgan Chase – perhaps the biggest beneficiary of TARP!
Thank God, Santa Clara County is not selling its tax liens to these companies.

