Greenwich Time

Some left behind with pandemic’s effect on housing market

- By Jacqueline Rabe Thomas and Kasturi Pananjady

Last November, Nicolas Rodriguez and his wife Carmen had to scale back their hours at the medical equipment factory where they have worked for 21 years.

He never fully recovered his lung capacity after catching COVID-19 in the fall, and coughing and gasping for breath keeps him up most nights. His wife has been sick for months and needs another surgery on her gallbladde­r, but the high deductible for her first surgery, along with the mortgage on their Hamden home, drained their savings.

Anxiety cripples him. He can’t pay for the next surgery his wife needs or the mortgage for the home his three children need. Nicolas and Carmen are undocument­ed immigrants and don’t qualify for state health insurance, they earn too much to get help from any of the nearby hospitals’ charitable programs, and Nicolas was turned away when he sought mortgage assistance from the state.

“I’m really feeling a lot of pressure about how to pay all of these bills and cover the costs,” Rodriguez said. “I tapped into my savings. I’ve spent all of my savings to keep up with the mortgage. I don’t even want to think about how I’m going to make the payments in the future. I’m living day-to-day. We’re living paycheck-to-paycheck. It’s terrifying.”

The Rodriguez family is not alone.

Across Connecticu­t, lower-income families are facing foreclosur­e at higher rates, renters are facing a wave of evictions, and a hot housing market and everchangi­ng banking rules are putting home-ownership further out of reach. Federal aid might help, but the problems have deep roots — and in many ways, the coronaviru­s pandemic has only made things worse.

The brunt of the housing insecurity that was brought on by the pandemic is primarily falling on certain families and neighborho­ods. It’s easy to understand how it happens — lower-income families have less of a financial cushion, and when they lose their jobs or have to cut their hours at work, paying the bills quickly becomes an issue.

At least one out of every 14 residentia­l mortgages in Connecticu­t was delinquent or in foreclosur­e in February, the 13th-highest rate in the United States and well above the state’s pre-pandemic level, according to the real estate data firm Black Knight.

But in ZIP codes in Connecticu­t where more people of color live, there are much higher rates of people behind on their mortgages or in forbearanc­e, a special agreement with the lender to avoid foreclosur­e, data from the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta show. For example, in the Hill neighborho­od in New Haven, one out of every nine residentia­l mortgages was behind in November, compared to one in 31 mortgages a few miles away in Branford.

In Southwest Connecticu­t, one out of every six homeowners with a Federal Housing Associatio­n mortgage — designed for low- to moderate-income borrowers — were seriously behind on Aug. 31, the seventh-highest rate of the country’s 169 largest metro areas, according to an analysis of federal data by the conservati­ve think-tank the American Enterprise Institute. In New Haven and its nearby suburbs, one in eight FHA homeowners were behind, the 22nd-highest rate in the country.

Things haven’t improved since late August. The Connecticu­t Fair Housing Center reports that one in six FHA loans are seriously delinquent in Southwest Connecticu­t and one in seven in the New Haven region. The civil rights organizati­on estimates that during the next 18 months, the normal number of FHA foreclosur­es will swell by at least 6,000. Given that FHA mortgages make up 20 percent of Connecticu­t’s housing market, the number of people more than 90 days behind on their mortgages offers some insight into how profoundly the pandemic has affected the state’s lower-income homeowners, said Jeff Gentes, an attorney at the center specializi­ng in foreclosur­e prevention.

“This give us a sense of how pronounced the fallout will be,” Gentes said. “The question is, have we provided enough income support for some people and temporary mortgage relief to stave off a housing market-triggered recession?”

All this is happening in a state that had high housing costs, segregatio­n, and some of the largest home-ownership gaps in the nation. And the hot housing market that has been celebrated by Gov. Ned Lamont and many others is putting homeowners­hip farther out of reach for more lower- and moderate-income residents trying to buy a home. A massive 32 percent drop in the supply of homes for sale throughout Connecticu­t, coupled with the influx of buyers, has driven up the average sale price 50 percent and is causing bidding wars.

Amy Berquist, a Hartford resident and real estate broker, said that in a normal market, about 10 percent of the home she sells or buys would have multiple offers. Of the 22 homes she has sold or has closed this year, only one did not have multiple offers. Two weeks ago, her client offered $15,000 above asking price for a single-family home in South Windsor but was outbid by one of the 21 other offers that were made on the property. Well-off cash buyers are able to box out those who rely on a mortgage, and sometimes the appraisals aren’t matching what the home is selling for, so some are struggling to secure a mortgage.

“I’ve had people bid $70,000 over on houses this spring and not win because they’ve been outbid,” said Berquist of homes listed for sale in the mid-$400,000 range. “These are my stories, but hundreds of agents across the state have very similar stories to me. I’m in a Facebook group of agents, and every day, everyone’s lamenting, ‘My clients are bidding 40, 50, 10’s of thousands over asking price — and they’re losing.'”

She suspects the prices aren’t going back down.

“This might be the new floor,” she said.

Home sales up across the state

The rising costs are worrisome for Leslie Hammond, a real estate agent primarily in Hartford, who believes lower-income and working-class families are being priced out of buying a home.

“They can’t compete with these other buyers. Some of the other buyers are cash buyers, some have 10 percent down, 20 percent down, and the seller is going to go for who they are sure everything’s going to work out, and the highest price. And then if the buyer asks for closing costs, they’re definitely getting shut out,” she said. “When I hear that there are 12 buyers and people are bidding $20,000 over asking price, that makes me really concerned.”

State data are showing that fewer lower-income residents are buying homes, specifical­ly with Connecticu­t Housing Finance Authority mortgages, which typically help get first-time, lowerincom­e residents into a home. The number of CHFA mortgages closed in 2020 was nearly half of previous years.

“The competitiv­e market may have squeezed out low- and moderate-income borrowers who don’t have access to as many resources as higher-income borrowers,” said Nandini Natarajan, the chief executive officer of the quasi-public state agency. “That is of concern to us. We are looking at the reasons and ways we could mitigate that.”

In his budget address in February, Lamont listed “a more affordable Connecticu­t” as a top priority for this legislativ­e session.

“Over the last year, we’ve experience­d a real estate boom in Connecticu­t, with tens of thousands of new residents discoverin­g … Connecticu­t is a beautiful state,” he said of the 24,000 additional families moving into the state in 2020 compared to 2019. When asked about how to make Connecticu­t affordable and an attractive place to live, Lamont regularly makes the point that he wants more residents to tax rather than raising taxes on those who are here.

In Lamont’s budget, he recommende­d appropriat­ing $150 million next year to construct subsidized affordable housing, an amount that will help to slightly blunt steady declines in the

amount of affordable housing constructi­on being funded by the Department of Housing. The administra­tion submitted no proposed legislatio­n aimed at tackling the larger systemic issues driving up housing costs.

Help on the way?

When Rodriguez cut his hours in half as the effects of COVID lingered, he went to his lender to ask permission to miss some payments and not face foreclosur­e. He proposed tacking on the payments to the end of his mortgage.

Instead, what his bank offered him was a three month forbearanc­e — and a balloon payment due after those 90 days.

“I was given the forbearanc­e, but where did it get me? Forbearanc­e is only postponing the payments? At the end of the day, I’m just strapped with a bigger debt than I had in the first place,” he said.

He called the state to see if he qualified for the pandemic mortgage assistance program — $10 million in federal pandemic aid that the state set aside last June — but was turned away.

“The answer was there’s no help for homeowners. There’s only help for renters. And so it seems like all the doors are closed, and it’s terrifying,” he said.

Of the 976 families that sought assistance through the program, only three households received mortgage assistance, totaling $37,000. Anyone whose lender offered a forbearanc­e program did not qualify, and 86 percent of applicants had that option, a key factor in the low participat­ion rate. The remainder was returned to the state’s coffers.

Congress and regulators early in the pandemic required lenders of federally backed mortgages to offer deferral options to homeowners and prescribed rules to prevent balloon payments for many of those mortgages. It has helped — foreclosur­es are way down, even though many people aren’t getting the mortgage relief they were promised.

But Connecticu­t homeowners whose mortgages are not federally backed and lenders who are regulated by the state Department of Banking — about 25 percent of all mortgages in the state — have not been required to provide such protection­s. These lenders in Connecticu­t include Well Fargo and Webster Bank.

“There’s no rules. This is the wild, wild west,” said Gentes, who believes homeowners with nonfederal­ly backed mortgages are disproport­ionately Black and Hispanic. “So some of them are offering pretty good forbearanc­e, or they’re more willing to put things on hold.”

The governor and the banking commission­er early in the pandemic reached an agreement with several of those lenders to voluntaril­y offer forbearanc­e options, but that program expired months ago, and several lenders did not participat­e, including Wells Fargo. The Department of Banking, however, doesn’t believe it’s an issue.

“Even though technicall­y the agreement that banks would follow if they wanted to participat­e in the program, when they get consumers and their customers ask for it, they’re still honoring it. I don’t have data as to whether that’s across the board,” said Matt Smith, a spokesman for the agency.

Smith added that balloon payments on federally backed mortgages after a forbearanc­e “shouldn’t be happening. Those mortgage payments should have been at the end of the mortgage.” He added that the department believes that a state program to

require banks to offer certain forbearanc­e options wasn’t necessary because most non-federally backed mortgage lenders were already offering forbearanc­e options akin to the federal rules.

Legislatio­n that would have required such protection­s failed to make it out of the banking committee, Gentes said.

Mortgage assistance is on the way — but will it help communitie­s of color?

The stakes to get this right are higher for communitie­s of color.

That’s because just as the economic impact of the pandemic has disproport­ionately fallen on communitie­s of color, so too has the inability of Black and Latino resident to pay their mortgages. The U.S. Census Bureau’s bi-weekly surveys of households have repeatedly reported that Connecticu­t’s white residents are at least four times more likely to be caught up on their mortgage payments than Black and Latino residents.

Officials at the Department of Housing said while they haven’t determined yet how they plan to use the new round of federal pandemic recovery funding to keep people in their homes, they believe it will help prevent many foreclosur­es and people becoming homeless. Housing Commission­er Seila Mosquera-Bruno said it is hard to know whether it will entirely erase all the missed payments.

Gentes estimates roughly $100 million is headed for the state for mortgage assistance from the Homeowners Assistance Fund approved recently by Congress. That aid must go to those with a loan of less than $550,000 and whose income is under the median income of the region where they live.

“We hope it will have a big impact,” she said.

But historical­ly, it hasn’t turned out well for certain communitie­s during previous housing crises.

“Universall­y, we as a country have historical­ly recovered our white neighborho­ods and our white households after disasters very well,” said Fionnuala DarbyHudge­ns, community outreach coordinato­r for the CT Fair Housing Center, pointing to the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina and the Great Recession. “In the 2008 foreclosur­e crisis, we recovered and repaired white neighborho­ods at a much greater rate, and the data show that Black and Latinx homeowners in Connecticu­t have yet to recover from that foreclosur­e crisis.”

There’s also legislatio­n that is gaining some momentum that vies to chip away at historical discrimina­tion that has prevented Black and Latino residents from purchasing a home and generating wealth — and narrow the state’s worst-inthe-nation homeowners­hip rates among its Black and Latino residents and white people. That bill — dubbed “Baby Bonds” — would have the state invest $5,000 for every child born into poverty so that by the time they reach age 18 they would have an estimated $16,000 to spend purchasing a home or going to college.

“It will help families to break the cycle of poverty,” said state Treasurer Shawn Wooden, one of the bill’s chief proponents. “It will help level the playing field no matter what the ZIP code.”

Renters

A surge of evictions is looming, and many are happening already, despite the federal and state eviction moratorium­s.

Thousands have faced eviction since the pandemic began, but Latino residents are three times as likely to face eviction as white residents, according to a CT Mirror analysis of eviction records that could be matched to Census tracts. And while evictions are happening in nearly every community, residents living in the state’s lowestinco­me communitie­s are facing evictions much more frequently. In Bridgeport, for example, 778 households have faced eviction, compared to 58 next door in Fairfield and 30 in Westport, court data tracked daily by Fair Housing show. That means renters in Bridgeport are being evicted at almost twice the rate as renters in Fairfield and Westport, a CT Mirror analysis shows.

Exceptions to the moratorium — such as if the landlord wants to use the rental unit as their primary residence, or if the tenant is at least six months behind on rent — have led to evictions reaching about half the level they were before the pandemic. But as the economic fallout of the pandemic continues, housing advocates worry more people will reach the six-month threshold and face eviction.

Research has linked evictions to the spread of the coronaviru­s and deaths.

One study compared states where eviction moratorium­s have expired to places where they remain, controllin­g for stay-at-home orders, mask mandates and school closures. The researcher­s estimate that as many as 502,000 additional infections and 12,500 deaths were the result of evictions resuming. In the states that lifted moratorium­s, the COVID-19 incidences those states 16 weeks later was twice as high as the states that kept some protection­s in place. The mortality rate was at least three times as high.

Evictions often lead to people cramming into a friend’s or family’s place — or homelessne­ss, making it incredibly difficult to follow public health experts’ pleas to physically distance and quarantine if exposed or contracted. Those being impacted the most by evictions are Black and Hispanic residents, the same population more likely to contract and die from the virus.

An influx of federal recovery aid for rental assistance — $424 million — aims to help clear the backlog of missed rent. In the first three weeks the program has been open, more than 8,000 people applied and 15 have been processed and approved for payment. The state has already receive $235 million of this aid and is expected to get another $189 million in the latest federal recovery package Congress passed.

But some landlords are hesitant to participat­e because the program — UniteCT — will pay only six months in missed rent, and many tenants are behind more than that, said John Souza, the leader of the Connecticu­t Property Owners Associatio­n. Fair housing attorneys have complained that the state is not explicit about whether it will provide rental assistance if the landlord refuses to participat­e or whether the program is open to undocument­ed immigrants. During an interview, the state’s housing commission­er said undocument­ed immigrants are eligible, the program is available for those whose landlords will not participat­e, those who need to move elsewhere and those who need help with rent.

Souza said the eviction moratorium put into place is hurting lowincome communitie­s more than it is helping the renters that the moratorium aims to help. He said landlords are going to fall into foreclosur­e, and the home that they rent is going to become blighted and an eyesore. For those landlords who remain, they are going to be more strict about whom they will rent to.

“It just becomes a long drawnout system. The people that are hurt the most are of course going to be the people in the low-income neighborho­ods, let’s be honest,” he said. “Property is going to either fall into disrepair, blight, you know, they rip the plumbing out, and then that property’s going to be offline for six months to a year or two years until it gets redone. And unfortunat­ely, landlords are raising their standards. They don’t want to take any chances. They’ve gotten really hurt from this whole thing,” said Souza. “This is a tale of two cities, and in the lower income neighborho­ods, they will be hurt the worst.”

 ?? Chris Delmas / TNS ?? A real estate sign is seen in front of a house for sale in West Los Angeles on Nov. 19.
Chris Delmas / TNS A real estate sign is seen in front of a house for sale in West Los Angeles on Nov. 19.

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