Irish Independent

n the surface of it, the Mortgage-toRent (MTR) scheme seemed an ideal solution to the home-owners in arrears crisis; repossessi­on only puts a family out on the street, adding to the homeless problem. Better to stay put, have the bank take the property and

Revamped scheme to help home-owners in arrears might just work, says Sinead Ryan

- How it Works What’s in it for the bank? How is it funded? Will it Work? Where can I find out more?

OIt should have worked, but of the 3,575 eligible cases over the course of the five-year pilot, just 217 went ahead.

Why? Well it was ridiculous­ly complicate­d, had far too much red tape and the eligibilit­y criteria made it virtually impossible to qualify.

With a stubborn 30,000 mortgages more than two years in arrears, these ‘basket case’ loans are the hardest to sort. It’s not enough to extend the mortgage term or drop the interest rate. These are the people that shouldn’t be home-owners any more but tenants under an affordable scheme. But why would they when the debt will simply follow them around for life?

The new improved MTR has now been announced, and this time it might actually work. Mortgage campaigner David Hall has set up one of the approved housing agencies managing it, with AIB funding, and he says the difference is that while there are strict criteria, it’s a lot easier than before and the ball is in the borrower’s court, not the bank’s.

Most importantl­y, the debt gets written off.

● The house must be valued under a certain amount. For Dublin, it’s €365,000 and €280,000 in Cork, for instance. Your income cannot exceed a set amount — €42,000 for Dubliners, less elsewhere and you can’t have more than €20,000 in other assets (including the house equity).

The house must be ‘suitable’ for your family needs. This means a family of three doesn’t get to keep a five-bed mansion.

● You contact the housing agency (whether it’s iCare or the others coming on stream, such as Arizun or Merrion Capital) and are assigned someone to complete a financial statement and agree the amount of rent to be paid.

● You voluntaril­y give up your home to the bank, who in turn, sells it at a discounted rate to the housing body. Your rent is means-tested based on your income as a local authority tenant based on a 28 year lease. Your residual debt is written off.

● If you recover financiall­y, you can buy back your home under strict conditions. Banks aren’t charities, so why would they agree? Well, they don’t want to be landlords either and chasing hopeless debt is fruitless and expensive. If a property is in negative equity, selling it also presents a cost, but this way it’s a controlled sale to a known entity. Plus, it’s better PR than having a vulture fund turf a customer out.

iCare is non-profit, with €100m in funding, buying the eligible properties at a

heavy discount via ordinary commercial lending, Government-funded aid at low interest rates, with the local authority stumping up to 92pc of the rent stream via its normal housing support system.

It might. Hall is

enthusiast­ic,

but realistic. “The biggest risk is a rise in house prices,” he says. This is because of the maximum house value of €365,000. In Dublin, that’s not much. If the house is worth €400,000 through no fault of the borrower, they automatica­lly make themselves ineligible. However, if the housing

agency does a haircut deal to buy for €365,000, then it can go ahead. The table shows a worked example and gives some links to sites offering informatio­n. Talk to your bank first.

 ??  ?? Home comforts: A family’s debt is now written off under the new scheme
Home comforts: A family’s debt is now written off under the new scheme
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