Foreclosure-Prevention
Bill
U.S. Senators Agree on
Foreclosure-Prevention Bill By
Alison Vekshin
April 2 (Bloomberg) -- U.S.
Senate leaders agreed on legislation aimed at curbing home
foreclosures, dropping a provision that would have allowed judges to
alter mortgages for borrowers in bankruptcy proceedings.
The plan includes funds for foreclosure-prevention counseling,
tax credits for people who buy foreclosed homes and clearer loan
disclosures for consumers buying a home, according to an outline of the
proposal released today by Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd
and the panel's top Republican, Richard Shelby.
``We're trying to provide some real assistance for people out
there who are struggling to hold on to their homes, as well as to deal
with properties that could end up being foreclosed,'' Dodd, a
Connecticut Democrat, said today at a news conference in Washington.
Dodd said the senators couldn't agree on how to handle the
bankruptcy provision. Senate Republicans have blocked previous efforts
to advance the idea, saying the bankruptcy changes would have forced
lenders to recoup court losses by raising interest rates on other
borrowers.
Senator Richard Durbin,
a lead supporter of the bankruptcy court idea, said he will offer the
provision as an amendment ``as soon as this bill is brought to the
floor.''
``The mortgage bankers have been working overtime to try to
kill'' the provision, Durbin, an Illinois Democrat, said in an
interview with Bloomberg Television.
Tax Credit
Dodd and Shelby's plan would offer a $7,000 tax credit for
people who buy homes in foreclosure to be claimed over two years, $10
billion in federal tax-exempt, private-activity bonds for refinancing
subprime loans, and $100 million for housing counseling to help
homeowners avoid foreclosure.
It would also reform the Federal Housing Administration, a
Washington-based agency that insures mortgages for low-income
borrowers, and offer $4 billion in grants to communities to buy and
rehabilitate foreclosed homes.
Shelby, of Alabama, said the senators will bring the measure
to the Senate floor tomorrow.
``This is a solid, bipartisan start to keeping families facing
foreclosure in their homes, helping other families avoid foreclosures
in the future and helping communities already harmed by foreclosure to
recover,'' Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, a
Nevada Democrat, and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell,
a Kentucky Republican, said today in a statement.
Congress is seeking legislative fixes to stem foreclosures and
bolster the economy amid increased concern the U.S. is in a recession.
Foreclosures jumped 60 percent in February after reaching a record rate
in the fourth quarter of 2007.
Second Time
The Senate yesterday voted to move forward on the measure
after Democrats and Republicans agreed to write the compromise plan.
Dodd and Shelby were assigned to write the substitute proposal.
This week's vote was the second time the Senate took up the
bankruptcy measure this year. In February, Democrats failed to get the
60 votes needed to trigger debate on the measure after the White House
threatened a veto. Democrats control the Senate with 51 votes.
Reid said yesterday the legislation will still be subject to
amendment on the Senate floor, and the chamber will probably vote on
the bankruptcy provision.
``On principle, the package is a good first step to help many
Americans avoid foreclosure,'' said Drew Hammill, a
spokesman for House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a
California Democrat. ``But we will need to review the details and
fine-tune any specific provisions that need to be stronger.''
White House spokesman Tony Fratto said
the administration has ``serious concerns'' about the tax-credit
provision and the funding for communities to buy foreclosed homes.
``We're pleased that there is finally movement on the
president's initiatives -- FHA modernization and mortgage- revenue
bonds,'' Fratto said. ``We'll want to see details of these elements of
the package before we could support them.''
To contact the reporter on this story: Alison Vekshin
in Washington at avekshin@bloomberg.net.
Last Updated: April 2, 2008 19:44 EDT

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