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Tue, Nov

California Deserves a Better Deal

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ANOTHER BAILOUT - A recent editorial in the Los Angeles Times, "California Should Make that Mortgage Deal," admonishes California Attorney General Kamala Harris for her insistence on ensuring that the big banks that caused the foreclosure crisis in our state pay their fair share to our homeowners. The editors urge Attorney General Harris to take the deal that's currently on the table, even though she knows -- and California's homeowners know -- that the deal isn't good enough.


In order to fully appreciate what is being asked of Ms. Harris, it's important to put the size of California's foreclosure crisis in perspective.

About one million foreclosures have hit our state since 2008. Moreover, 30 percent of current California homeowners owe more on their homes than they're worth, a rate that's higher than the national negative equity rate of 25 percent. With about 2 million underwater mortgages in our state, and assuming that each homeowner is $93,000 underwater -- an average calculated by CoreLogic -- then to address all the negative equity in California, the settlement would have to provide $214 billion to our state alone.

How big is the settlement currently on the table? $30 billion. And that's for the entire country. This isn't a settlement; it's a bailout for the banks.

It's another bailout because in exchange for getting off cheap with California's homeowners, the banks would be released from liability on the origination and servicing of trillions of dollars of mortgages.  

The release would come before any of the attorneys general, including our own, have been able to properly investigate allegations of foreclosure fraud. What anecdotal evidence we do have that says the wrongdoing potentially runs deep, with Delaware Attorney General Beau Biden, who has also abandoned the multi-state settlement, saying that a cursory examination of foreclosures in his state indicates that in one out of every four times a bank went to foreclose on a homeowner, they were foreclosing on behalf of an entity that did not own the underlying mortgage.  

By settling now, and for so little, the attorneys general could be leaving potentially hundreds of billions of dollars on the table. No wonder the banks want a deal so badly.

Moreover, the attorneys general need to learn from past mistakes and fight for not only a fair settlement, but strong enforcement mechanisms.  By most accounts, the terms of past settlements have been flouted by the banks.  

For example, in the case of the $8.4 billion Countrywide settlement with California and eleven other states in 2008, the lender, now owned by Bank of America, has failed to provide the loan modifications and reforms to their systems that were promised.  

The current settlement, which will reportedly use a "credit system" where banks agree to reduce a predetermined amount of principal owed on mortgages, may likely face the same enforcement pitfalls as previous efforts.

So before we can cut any deal, we first need to be assured that the wrongdoing that necessitated these settlements in the first place has stopped.  To date, we have no reason to believe that it has.  And then what we need is a robust and thorough investigation into what happened and who has been impacted -- from mortgage servicing fraud, to title and securitization issues, to the banks' use of MERS to avoid paying deed recordation fees to local governments.

Without the leverage that comes from knowing the full scope of wrongdoing, we will never be able to negotiate a settlement large enough to compensate for all the fraud in our mortgage securitization and servicing systems, and help prevent the 6 million foreclosures over the next 6 years that some housing analysts predict.

Attorney General Harris knows that the banks want a sweetheart deal like this. The banks hope that we'll see all the zeros and think that they've actually given us something.  But many of us, including California's attorney general, are not buying it.  Instead of pressuring Attorney General Harris to go with the flow, the rest of the attorneys general should follow her lead.

(Maxine Waters is Congresswoman from California’s 35th District. Follow her on Twitter:
www.twitter.com/Maxinewaters .  This article was posted first at huffingtonpost.com)
-cw

Tags: Maxine Waters, Kamala Harris, California Attorney General, foreclosures, homeowners, bailout, Bank of America






CityWatch
Vol 9 Issue 92
Pub: Nov 18, 2011

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