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Cities battle default wave

Officials, fearing effect on communities, try to arrange help for strained homeowners.

By Jim Wasserman - jwasserman@sacbee.com

Last Updated 12:04 am PST Tuesday, November 6, 2007
Story appeared in MAIN NEWS section, Page A1

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Scared by growing numbers of bank-owned houses and for-sale signs in their neighborhoods, a handful of local cities are launching moves to help homeowners threatened with foreclosure.

Their initiatives so far are limited to offering advice. Nobody's opening up the checkbook to bail out homeowners. But with city officials worried that homeowners aren't seeking help after receiving notices of default – the first step in the formal foreclosure process – the moves have taken on a keen sense of urgency.

• Citrus Heights, which since the first of the year has seen 270 foreclosures, has struck a deal with Neighborworks Homeownership Center, a nonprofit credit counseling agency based in Sacramento. The group is mailing letters to city residents who have received default notices – issued after a homeowner misses two or three consecutive monthly mortgage payments – urging them to seek help. Citrus Heights will then pay Neighborworks $150 for every resident it helps.

"We don't know how far this is going to go," says Jim Lynch, community enhancement manager in Citrus Heights. "We've had housing setbacks over my 35 years, but I've never seen this many bank-owned properties and so many foreclosures."

• Rancho Cordova, home to 175 foreclosures since January, plans a December workshop looking at solutions for homeowners in default. The city also is exploring a partnership with Neighborworks, and tonight, Mayor David Sander's weekly pizza event for residents will, for the first time, include an information booth for troubled borrowers.

• Folsom officials also have begun talking with Neighborworks. The city has seen 90 foreclosures since the start of the year, according to Foreclosures.com., a Fair Oaks Web site that tracks statistics.

• Sacramento, with 1,740 foreclosures since Jan. 1, has ramped up code enforcement efforts to deal with vacant housing. Its housing subsidiary, the Sacramento Housing and Redevelopment Agency, helps fund the Home Loan Counseling Center of Sacramento, which advises troubled borrowers. The agency also touts a Web page with default and foreclosure advice.

The local cities join a growing list of municipalities nationwide – from Jacksonville, Fla., to Chicago to San Diego – taking steps to confront growing trouble in their communities.

Nationally, the congressional Joint Economic Committee cites the potential for 2 million foreclosures through the end of 2008. Experts blame a tidal wave of risky home loans used in recent years to fuel a housing boom that has long run out of steam.

Many borrowers with high-cost subprime loans obtained with low "teaser" rates and no money down are seeing their adjustable rate mortgages reset and soar beyond the power of their paychecks. Worse, most can't refinance because their homes have lost value and lenders have tightened credit standards.

More than 6,500 homeowners have lost houses this year to foreclosure in Amador, El Dorado, Nevada, Placer, Sacramento, Sutter, Yolo and Yuba counties, according to La Jolla-based researcher DataQuick Information Systems. Three of every four are in Sacramento County.

Citrus Heights is seeing foreclosures throughout its older neighborhoods. Rancho Cordova officials say they're seeing the most problems so far in the city's new Sunrise Douglas development known as Anatolia.

"If your neighborhoods are constantly churning over and home ownership converts to rentals and then converts to foreclosure, the dynamics (of a city) start to weaken," said Reed Flory, Rancho Cordova's housing services administrator.

The nation's cities are taking numerous approaches as the foreclosure problem rolls from East to West. Jacksonville is offering no-interest $5,000 loans to help people with short-term mortgage problems. Chicago and Baltimore advertise a "311" telephone number for people behind on mortgage payments to call. Cleveland's suburban officials are fixing broken windows, mowing lawns and installing alarms in empty houses to keep neighborhoods stable.

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FINDING HELP

Trouble with your mortgage? These groups might be able to help.

• Neighborworks Homeownership Center, Sacramento Region: (916) 452-5356; www.nwsac.org

• NeighborWorks America and Home Ownership Preservation Foundation national hotline: (888) 995-HOPE (4673).

• Home Loan Counseling Center of Sacramento: (916) 646-2005; www.hlcc.net.

• ByDesign Financial Solutions, Sacramento (formerly Consumer Credit Counseling Service): (800) 750-2227; www.bydesignsolutions.org.

• Sacramento Mutual Housing Association: (916) 453-8400, Ext. 43. (Staffers can accommodate those who speak Russian, Hmong, Vietnamese and Mien.)

WHAT CITIES ARE DOING

• Citrus Heights: Working with a credit counseling group to contact homeowners in default, advising troubled borrowers how to seek help. Information: (916) 725-2448

• Rancho Cordova: Planning communitywide meeting in early December on preventing foreclosure. Information: (916) 851-8700

• Sacramento and Folsom: Looking at ways to help troubled borrowers.


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