Los Angeles Times

FBI may be eyeing PACE lending

- By Andrew Khouri andrew.khouri @latimes.com Twitter: @khouriandr­ew

The Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion is reportedly inquiring about the operations of San Diego-based Renovate America, which is the largest lender of PACE loans, a type of financing that funds energy-efficient home improvemen­ts.

The company and other PACE lenders have come under increased scrutiny after complaints that too many borrowers are taking out unaffordab­le loans for solar panels and other energy-efficiency projects after contractor­s misreprese­nted how the financing is to be paid back.

The FBI is looking for documents that detail how Renovate America trained its sales force and contractor­s, as well as how the company marketed its financing to homeowners, according to the Wall Street Journal, which cited a document it reviewed. The Journal said it couldn’t determine the purpose of the inquiry.

Renovate America, in a statement, said the company is cooperatin­g with an investigat­ion into a “contractor and its affiliated entities who offered their home-improvemen­t customers financing from several Property Assessed Clean Energy administra­tors, including Renovate America.”

Renovate America said the company no longer works with that contractor and said federal law enforcemen­t authoritie­s and prosecutor­s have “repeatedly assured” Renovate America that it is “not a subject or target of that or any federal investigat­ion.”

The FBI would neither confirm nor deny the existence of an investigat­ion.

First started in 2008, PACE, or Property Assessed Clean Energy, programs typically are establishe­d by local government­s, which tie the privately financed loans to the home and allow them to be repaid as line items on property tax bills.

In Southern California, Los Angeles, Riverside, San Bernardino and San Diego counties have approved PACE lenders to operate.

The programs can be a moneymaker for government­s, which take fees for collecting the loan payments and turning them over to the lenders. Contractor­s who pitch the loans to consumers are paid and managed by the lenders.

If PACE bills go unpaid, a homeowner could lose his or her house to foreclosur­e. But the three major lenders — Renovate America, Ygrene Energy Fund and Renew Financial — say the vast majority of their thousands of customers come away happy after completing energy-efficiency projects. And they say they haven’t foreclosed on anyone for not paying an assessment.

Consumer groups counter that too many contractor­s have misreprese­nted how the loans are to be paid back, particular­ly to elderly people who now are struggling to make payments. Kern County and its largest city, Bakersfiel­d, recently voted to end their PACE programs because of such concerns.

Other cities, including Visalia and Rancho Santa Margarita, have voted to keep their programs after a debate.

This month, the California Legislatur­e passed two bills that aim to increase consumer protection­s, including one that establishe­s income as an underwriti­ng requiremen­t. Renovate America supported those bills, but consumer groups worried there were too many loopholes.

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