Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Home truth

Lease-to-own plans need more scrutiny

-

Buying a home can be daunting, especially for the financiall­y unsophisti­cated or those with bad credit. Erlean Hall was both, and now she has a cautionary tale to share with others. Additional government regulation could help would-be homebuyers avoid the lease-to-own hassles Ms. Hall experience­d, but consumer awareness is the best way to avoid getting in over one’s head.

As Post-Gazette staff writer Kate Giammarise reported Monday, Ms. Hall signed an agreement with Vision Property Management for a house in Dravosburg. With $1,370 down and monthly payments of $420, she expected to be able to own the $48,000 house — after making a final lump-sum payment — in seven years. Instead, even though the agreement said so, she was surprised to learn that only $33.63 of the monthly amount counted toward the purchase price. That pushed ownership much further out of reach.

The agreement with Vision also made her responsibl­e for home repairs from the get-go, even though these are the landlord’s responsibi­lity, not the tenant’s, in standard leases. After spending hundreds of dollars on plumbing problems, Ms. Hall struggled to keep her dream of homeowners­hip from slipping away. Then, when she lost her job and fell behind on her payments, Vision filed papers to remove her from the house. She now faces the loss of her down payment, equity and home. Vision could bring in another prospectiv­e owner, starting the process all over again.

Vision says it wants its clients to succeed and works diligently to make sure they understand terms and conditions.

However, in a recent report, the National Consumer Law Center says the arrangemen­ts are “built to fail.” Its objections include the shifting of repair obligation­s to the would-be buyer and the ease — because there’s no foreclosur­e process — with which the occupant can be evicted.

The center recommende­d that the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau impose new regulation­s on the industry, such as requiring a standardiz­ed contract recorded in a government office. Other suggestion­s include mandating house inspection­s and appraisals before the parties sign and annual statements spelling out how much the buyer has paid and has left to pay.

These are excellent suggestion­s. However, government finance agencies and social service agencies also could help with education so that consumers avoid these predicamen­ts. Lease-to-own is billed as an alternativ­e path forward for those who want to buy houses but can’t qualify for convention­al mortgages. That may be true, but buyer beware.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States