Before she was evicted from her own home, Kendra Washington
took a walk around her Detroit neighborhood. She found an empty
home and decided to squat with her two children. “I refused to
get my kids put out on the street,” said the single mother who
moved into a vacant Housing and Urban Development
house.
After government officials came knocking at
Washington’s door, attorney Jerry Goldberg, a long-time civil
rights activist, persuaded them in court that it was in the
government’s interest to let Washington and her children stay.
He argued that Washington had made improvements to the house and
so maintained its value. Without her efforts, he explained, the
house would have been vandalized.
Washington got to
stay.
In the last year, Goldberg and his staff at
Moratorium NOW!, a coalition of activists and union and
religious leaders, have brought at least 50 cases to courts in
Detroit on behalf of homeowners. They have been fighting to save
homes literally one house at a time through picketing at the
banks and legal action. Some of the people impacted are senior
citizens with fixed incomes and also with medical conditions
that have drained their savings. The houses have belonged to
them for more than 20 years.
“We believe they have a
right to a home and we defend their right to stay,” Goldberg
said.
Some politicians agree. A new bill introduced in
Michigan’s state legislature would create a two-year moratorium
-- making it the lengthiest moratorium in the
nation.
According to Goldberg, in many of his cases,
people have been able to stay in their homes because he showed
that the foreclosure was violating federal law like the Housing
and Economic Recovery Act of 2008 (HERA), which was approved
last July. The law requires financial institutions to modify
default mortgages when this will result in a greater recovery of
their value than a foreclosure.
“We argued that the loan
modification would add a greater value to the property than the
foreclosure will,” he said.
In the cases of low-income
homes insured by the Federal Housing Administration, Goldberg
and his team have shown in court that the government hasn’t
played by its own rules.
Homeowners in danger of being
evicted are supposed to get the chance to stay in the house
through a lease agreement. But many homeowners are finding their
requests to stay in the home denied, said Goldberg. Instead, the
Federal Housing Administration has been paying the mortgage
companies the full value of the house after it foreclosed, he
added.
They don’t always win in court
though.
“When we don’t have good luck through the courts,
we have good luck through the streets,” said Goldberg.
On
at least six occasions, the coalition has picketed outside homes
or banks just before people were about to be evicted. This is
often the last resource when the actions can’t be fought in
court because there’s no legal basis, Goldberg said
On
one occasion, a 78-year-old woman was able to get a new loan to
stay in her home after the group picketed outside the bank
Countrywide. The new loan allows her to stay in her home of 42
years.
•••
Washington made payments on her home of
a decade for as long as she could after a foot surgery caused
her to lose her $40,000 a year job. The lender wasn’t willing to
lower her payment on the $150,000 mortgage. As her savings ran
out, Washington watched homes in the neighborhood being sold for
as little as $500.
Michigan has been hit by a severe
economic downturn for the last decade. It has lost half a
million, mostly union, industrial jobs in the last five years.
The crisis struck Detroit before it did the rest of the nation,
and the sub-prime market of predatory lending completed the job.
In Detroit, the average medium sales price for a home these days
is $6,237, according to data from Multiple Listing Services One
in every 137 homes in Michigan is facing
foreclosure.
“Our business is to sell foreclosed homes,”
said Carl Williams, chief executive of the Saturn Group. His
real state company has sold at least five houses for $1 with
buyers paying the realtor’s commission.
“When the
properties get evicted, the homes are immediately stripped and
vandalized, losing all their value, tearing down the fabric of
the community,” said Goldberg.
That’s exactly what
happened with Washington’s 1,625 square foot home when vandals
came in, took everything and set the house on fire. The brick
home had been remodeled, Washington said. She had put hardwood
floors in the kitchen, new cabinets and ceramic tile. “The sad
part about it is that [the bank] would have done better working
with me; now they’ve got nothing,” she said
•••
A
bill introduced in Michigan (SB 29) by State Sen. Hansen Clarke
would approve the longest moratorium in the nation, allowing
homeowners to remain in their house for two years while they
make a monthly payment set by a trial judge based on their
income.
“If you want to stabilize the markets you have to
slow down the foreclosure rate, keep people in their homes,
occupied and maintained,” said State Sen. Clarke. It’s a
more responsible approach than borrowing millions of tax dollars
to bail out financial institutions.”
There’s legal
precedent for this, too. In 1934, the Supreme Court ruled that a
moratorium on foreclosures was constitutional because of the
crisis faced by the nation. Twenty-five states were able to
institute them.
“In the 30s, there were organized
committees all over the country, block by block. The sheriff
would come and evict a family. After he left, they moved people
back in,” says Goldberg. “The moratorium was won on the
streets.”
California currently has a 90-day foreclosure
moratorium. Connecticut’s governor M. Jodi Rell supported a bill
in progress for a six-month forbearance with a mandatory 60-day
mediation period. Last April, Massachusetts passed a law that
put in place a 6-month moratorium on mortgage foreclosures if
people filed and claimed they were victims of unfair lending
practices. Several banks including Citigroup Inc, JPMorgan Chase
& Co. and Morgan Stanley placed a moratorium on some
foreclosures to give the Obama administration time to set into
motion a rescue plan for homeowners.
“There’s logic to
these efforts of saying: “Let’s hit the pause,” said attorney
Ellen Harnick, senior policy counsel on foreclosure issues at
the Center for Responsible Lending. “People close to the
crisis have been sounding the alarm for over two years, and
there’s an awful lot of sadness and disappointment with the fact
that so many homes could have been saved had solutions been
implemented earlier”.
Some analysts and advocates though
caution that a moratorium won’t work on its own.
“You’re
just postponing the inevitable if you don’t have the tools to
work on this,” said Jason Reece, senior researcher and expert on
regional housing for the Kirwan Institute for the Study of Race
& Ethnicity at Ohio State University.
Reece supports
similar efforts in Ohio were 80,000 homes went in to foreclosure
last year, and 40,000 others are at risk. But he contends a
moratorium needs to be tied to system reforms, direct assistance
to the communities that are most hit and the possibility of
having bankruptcy judges alter the terms of a loan.
Yet,
Sen. Clarke hopes the moratorium would prevent the need of
families to go into bankruptcy. “I don’t want it to get that bad
for a family that they have to go to bankruptcy court,” he
says.
While the administrations’ $75 billion modification
and assistance program has received a warm reception, housing
advocates believe it still has fallen short. Since only
banks that receive additional Troubled Asset Relief Program, or
TARP, funds are required to participate, there’s a concern on
how the government will enforce it
industry-wide.
“Why shouldn’t it be mandatory for
all the banks that already got the bail out money?” Goldberg
complained. He believes the people should come first and need to
organize from the grassroots to bring a change.
This is
exactly what Take Back the Land, a grassroots volunteer
organization in Miami, Florida is inviting people to do on
vacant government housing and foreclosed homes.
Max
Rameau, the group’s founder, helps homeless families relocate
into what he calls “liberated” houses. He makes sure the homes
have electricity and water before they move in. “It’s completely
illogical and inhumane that you have all these houses and
families are looking for homes,” said Rameu.
Those who
squat run the risk of getting arrested and charged with
trespassing. But Rameu thinks they face a greater danger living
in the streets.
“This is a solution coming from the community,” said Rameu.
“We value the human rights of housing over the right of a
corporation to make a profit.”
Valeria Fernández is an independent journalist in
Phoenix, Arizona.