Fund
Designed to Counter
Predatory Loans
By Loura Gilbert
A St. Louis group is working to help victims of predatory lenders
reduce their debt and regain good credit ratings. The group is
also developing a media campaign
to alert the community to predatory lending practices.
The project is the work of the St. Louis Coalition to Promote Reputable Lending,
which is an organization of bankers, nonprofit counseling agencies, governments
and others interested in combating predatory lending.
A focal point of the project will be the Loan Rescue Fund, which will be used
to assist victims of predatory lenders. The coalition plans to set up a hot line
and to offer referral services and counseling for homeowners whose debt is out
of control.
After the homeowner undergoes counseling, there will be a legal review
of the loan and an attempt to persuade the lender to reduce the balance. The
coalition will then seek a conventional, market-rate loan to replace the predatory
loan. If a conventional loan cannot be found, the Loan Rescue Fund managers will
consider making a direct loan to the homeowner. The loan eventually will be sold
to a conventional
lender.
Beyond Housing/Neighborhood Housing Services, a local nonprofit housing organization,
hopes to initially raise $1 million for the Loan Rescue Fund through its Community
Lending Corp. (CLC). The funds would be secured by 15-, 20- and 30-year fixed-rate
first mortgages. Lenders would earn a market rate, and borrowers would pay a
slight premium to cover program costs. The CLC will service the loans for up
to two years with a goal of selling performing loans to participating lenders.
The coalition is proposing that governments in the targeted counties (St. Louis
and St. Charles counties in Missouri and Madison and St. Clair counties in Illinois)
and the city of St. Louis participate by providing loan loss reserves to minimize
risk for lenders.
Although details need to be finalized, the pilot program is designed to help
those who had good credit prior to the predatory situation or who would have
significant value in their properties after the predatory loan is eliminated.
The elderly and victims of home improvement contractor schemes will also be accommodated.
The project is an outgrowth of work by Gateway to Financial Fitness, a collaboration
of Beyond Housing/Neighborhood Housing Services, the Catholic Commission on Housing
and the University of Missouri
Extension Service. All these organizations have offered home buyers training
for a number of years and have identified the need for basic financial education
as a precursor to the home-buying process.
Interested banks should contact Kate Reese at Beyond Housing/NHS (314) 533-0600.
Loura Gilbert oversees the CRA and Community Development activities for Commerce
Bank's St. Louis region. She serves as chair of the Loan Rescue Committee
of the Coalition to Promote Reputable Lending.
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