HAMP (Home Affordability Modification Program) Disastrous!

What a shock!

The Administration’s signature program to help homeowners is not working.

The banks get a 700 billion dollar bailout with no questions asked and the homeowner goes through mountains of paperwork and winds up getting nailed for late payments and fees they didn’t even incur!

From the article

The Obama administration’s signature anti-foreclosure effort, unveiled in 2009 with the promise of helping three to four million homeowners modify their mortgages, is such a failure that it now risks “generating public anger and mistrust,” according to a federal audit released Monday.

Far from helping at-risk homeowners, the Home Affordable Modification Program has actually made some homeowners worse off, according to the Special Inspector General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program — also known as the Wall Street bailout. The Treasury Department set aside $50 billion from TARP, plus another $25 billion from taxpayer-owned Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, to give mortgage servicers thousand-dollar incentives to reduce monthly mortgage payments by modifying eligible homeowners’ loans. But more people have been bounced from the program than have been helped by it.

People who apply for modifications via HAMP sometimes “end up unnecessarily depleting their dwindling savings in an ultimately futile effort to obtain the sustainable relief promised by the program guidelines,” the report notes, putting the imprimatur of the federal government on a claim long made by housing experts and homeowner advocates. “Others, who may have somehow found ways to continue to make their mortgage payments, have been drawn into failed trial modifications that have left them with more principal outstanding on their loans, less home equity (or a position further ‘underwater’), and worse credit scores.

“Perhaps worst of all,” it continues, “even in circumstances where they never missed a payment, they may face back payments, penalties, and even late fees that suddenly become due on their ‘modified’ mortgages and that they are unable to pay, thus resulting in the very loss of their homes that HAMP is meant to prevent.”

But don’t worry. The administration has a defense.

Treasury officials are adamant that not only is the program helping those homeowners who remain in it, but it also has helped those homeowners who have been bounced. In fact, those homeowners who ultimately fell out of the program benefited from the equivalent of a “free tax cut” while they were in the program because over that period, they were paying less on their mortgage than was otherwise required. And, officials say, this came without cost to the taxpayer.

That’s right. Even if it didn’t work out for you and we threw you out of the program like yesterday’s garbage (You still lose your home.), you got a “free tax cut.” That makes it all better.

Let’s be clear. There is no amount of evidence, no lack of effectiveness or intelligence, that the current administration does not believe cannot be washed away by good public relations.

I don’t get it. Why even bother to create this program? It’s about ten percent of what the banks got. So, already you knew immediately, average Americans are at best an afterthought.

I supposed it’s better to demonstrate over time you generally loath the American people, than to tell them immediately?

“Oh, you say,” James, “You’re overreacting, the President is constrained from helping these people. It’s the political system.”

No, it’s not. These people are the real victims of an orgy of speculation and they only thing they’ve been getting for two years, is a continuous, mile thick, wall of lectures on personal responsibility.

The President has within in his authority, dozens, hundreds of actions he could take to help these people out, and those things are not being done. At the very least, the mortgage industry could have been held to the simple legal procedures necessary for a proper foreclosure and this administration was not only unable to do that, they see no crisis now.

Where are out political choices?

James Pilant

3 thoughts on “HAMP (Home Affordability Modification Program) Disastrous!

  1. Pingback: Housing-Today. com

  2. Andrew's avatar Andrew

    Part of the reason I didnt vote for Obama is because he is a good orator, but I dont think he understood any of what he was actually saying.

    Its not the “political system”. Its the inexperience and incompetence of the president that is causing this.

    I think part of the problem is that our government is so complicated that the average layman cannot take the time to fully understand how it even works. This creates a smokescreen that allows these politicians to do as they please. Its easier to snatch cookies out of the cookie jar when noone can see you, right?

    The financial industry is the same way. Worse if you ask me. There is so much red tape and smoke being blown that it seems like most banks EXPECT the average working man to not have a clue as to how banks and financing work. A perfect example of this was when I applied for the mortgage on my home. The loan officer was going through the paperwork with me (she was a very nice lady, by the way). When we got to the interest rate, I stopped her and asked her “Is this number here (pointing to the sheet of paper) the nominal or effective interest rate?” She seemed utterly astonished at this! She said in the 8 years that she has been a loan officer, she has never run across anyone else, who did not work in the banking industry, who understood that distinction. That suprised me.

    If the American people dont even understand the problem, then how can we effectively judge how well the administration is doing to actually fix the problem. This creates an environment so that the President can attend to his own agenda and, like you said, let good PR cover up the fact that he doesnt seem interested in actually fixing the problem.

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