| WASHINGTON - President Bush on Wednesday
7/30/2008 signed a massive housing bill intended to provide mortgage
relief for 400,000 struggling homeowners and stabilize financial
markets. |
Bush signed the bill without any
fanfare or signing
ceremony, affixing his signature to the measure he once
threatened to
veto, in the Oval Office
in the early morning
hours. He was surrounded by top administration officials, including Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson
and Housing Secretary
Steve Preston.
"We look forward to put in place new authorities to improve
confidence
and stability in markets," White
House spokesman
Tony Fratto said. He
said that the Federal Housing
Administration would begin right away
to implement new policies "intended to keep more deserving American families in their
homes."
The measure, regarded as the most significant housing
legislation in
decades, lets homeowners who cannot afford their payments refinance
into more
affordable government-backed loans rather than losing their homes.
It offers a temporary financial lifeline to troubled mortgage
companies
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and tightens controls over the two
government-sponsored businesses.
The House passed the bill a week ago; the Senate voted
Saturday to send it
to the president.
Bush didn't like the version emerging from Congress, and
initially said he
would veto it, particularly over a provision containing $3.9 billion in
neighborhood grants. He contended the money would benefit lenders who
helped
cause the mortgage meltdown, encouraging them to foreclose rather than
work
with borrowers.
But he withdrew that threat early last week, saying hurting
homeowners could
not wait — and even blaming the Democratic Congress' delays in action
for
forcing an imperfect solution.
Meanwhile, many Republicans, particularly those from areas hit
hardest by
housing woes, were eager to get behind a housing rescue as they looked
ahead to
tough re-election contests. Paulson's request for the emergency power
to rescue
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac helped push through the measure. So did the
creation
of a regulator with stronger reins on the government-sponsored
companies, as
Republicans long have sought.
Democrats won cherished priorities in the bargain: the aid for
homeowners, a
permanent affordable housing fund
financed by
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and the neighborhood grants.
The bill takes several approaches to curing the ailing housing
market.
It aims to spare an estimated 400,000 debt-strapped
homeowners, many of whom
owe more their houses are worth, from foreclosure by allowing them to
get more
affordable mortgages backed by the Federal
Housing
Administration.
The FHA could insure $300 billion in such mortgages, which
would be
available to homeowners who showed they could afford a new loan. Banks
would first
have to agree to take a large loss on the existing loans in exchange
for
avoiding an often-costly foreclosure.
The plan also is designed to relieve a broader credit
crunch that has taken hold because of rising defaults and falling home values. To free
up safer and more
affordable mortgage credit, the bill permanently would increase to
$625,000 the
size of home loans that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac can buy and the FHA
can
insure. They also could buy and back mortgages 15 percent higher than
the
median home price in certain areas.
It goes far beyond addressing the current crisis, however.
The legislation overhauls the Depression-era FHA. It requires
lenders to
show how high a borrower's payment could get under the terms of his
mortgage.
It provides $180 million in pre-foreclosure counseling for struggling
homeowners.
The Treasury Department
gains unlimited power,
until the end of 2009, to lend money to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac or
buy their
stock should they need it. The Federal
Reserve
takes on a new "consultative" role overseeing the companies.
The measure includes $15 billion in tax cuts, including a
significant
expansion of the low-income
housing tax credit
and a credit of up to $7,500 for first-time
home buyers
for houses purchased between April 9, 2008, and July 1, 2009.
Democratic leaders, recognizing that the measure could be one
of the last
items to become law during what's left of their abbreviated
election-year
schedule, tacked on an $800 billion increase, to $10.6 trillion, in the
statutory limit on the national debt.
Conservative Republicans were vehemently opposed to the bill,
particularly
the help for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Critics charge the companies
enjoy
lavish profits in good times and wield their outsized political clout
to resist
regulation while depending on the government to bail them out should
they
falter.