The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

CT homeowners struggling to pay mortgages are running out of time

- By Clare Dignan mdignan@hearstmedi­act.com

As the pandemic drags on, time is running out for many homeowners. People with loans in forbearanc­e have to resume payments this year, likely as soon as the end of March.

It leaves many borrowers with difficult choices — either find the money to pay their mortgage, refinance if possible, convince their lender to ease the terms of their loan, or default.

When decision time comes at the end of the current foreclosur­e moratorium­s, millions of people could lose their homes.

Twelve percent of Connecticu­t households with mortgage loans have reported they weren’t caught up on their payments. Many are in forbearanc­e, but even more are past due and delinquent.

In the state, 7.1 percent of mortgages are delinquent, according to Black Knight, a firm that provides lenders and mortgage servicers with data and analytics. Delinquenc­ies peaked in May at 9.6 percent, the highest level since the Great Recession.

Among those homeowners who are behind, nearly 20 percent think they might face foreclosur­e in the next two months, according to the Census Bureau’s Household Pulse Survey.

“A foreclosur­e tsunami is beyond the loss of wealth and homeowners­hip,” said Erin Boggs said, executive director of Open Communitie­s Alliance. “It’s a really intractabl­e problem for the economy in which people are ready and willing to work but won’t have a stable place to live. It’s really untenable and this one is really on the government to step up and show us what good government looks like.”

For homeowners who can’t afford to keep up with mortgage payments because of income loss, the Federal Housing Administra­tion establishe­d relief options for those federal mortgages, which make up about 70 percent of Connecticu­t’s home loans.

As one of his first actions in office, President Joe Biden extended the federal eviction and foreclosur­e moratorium until the end of March. It protects homeowners with federal insured mortgages from facing foreclosur­e proceeding­s and tenants from facing foreclosur­e-related eviction.

Since the moratorium was first put into place, foreclosur­es ground to a halt. Last April, 66 new foreclosur­es started, compared to 10,445 started in February last year, according to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t.

The reason for delinquenc­ies in FHA loans can almost entirely be tied to the national emergency — as of January it was the given reason for 83 percent of new serious delinquenc­ies, according to HUD.

As of December, more than 10 percent of the 8 million singlefami­ly mortgages backed by the FHA were delinquent by more than three months — the measure of serious delinquenc­ies.

The foreclosur­e moratorium­s and forbearanc­e options don’t apply to loans with private banks — assistance is determined by each lender. To help those homeowners, Connecticu­t had establishe­d a homeowner assistance program but ended the intake in early December.

The Connecticu­t Housing Finance Authority is still making available the Emergency Mortgage Assistance Program for people who fell behind on their mortgage payments due to a temporary financial hardship beyond their control. But the agency can’t help everyone.

“The scale of this crisis far exceeds what EMAP is able to do, so there’s a question of what other assistance can come through,” CFHA CEO Nandini Natarajan said.

More than 5 percent of mortgages nationally are in forbearanc­e, down from a peak of 8.6 percent in early June, according to the Mortgage Bankers Associatio­n.

“The level of forbearanc­e we’re seeing in the industry today, is unheard of. It’s never been done before... so what’s going to happen at the end of it is a big question,” Natarajan said.

Though forbearanc­e and delinquenc­ies have improved since mid-2020, when forbearanc­e plans begin to expire in March, there would still be approximat­ely 1.5 million more serious delinquenc­ies than at the start of the pandemic, according to Black Knight.

Despite these uncertaint­ies, home prices and sales have increased during the pandemic, particular­ly in Fairfield County which saw an influx of New York residents fleeing to Connecticu­t last year.

Sales of single-family homes were up by nearly two-thirds from a year ago.

Demand has also pushed the cost of listings up. The price of the median home sold in Fairfield County was up 24 percent from the equivalent home sold in November 2019, according to William Pitt Sotheby’s Realty.

Housing and homeowners­hip is considered a large component of wealth and while the ability to buy a home is a reflection of wealth already acquired, homeowners­hip is also an important channel for upward mobility and building generation­al wealth.

This means the homeowner crisis brought on by the coronaviru­s pandemic could signal a serious impact on families of color and first-time home buyers in particular.

White Connecticu­t residents more often own their homes than rent, while the inverse is true for Black residents — homeowners­hip among Black families is at 40 percent, while for white families it’s at 76 percent.

In concert, the typical white family in the U.S. has eight times the wealth of the typical Black family and five times the wealth of the typical Hispanic family, according to the Survey of Consumer Finances.

“The wealth gap in this country can be attributed directly to homeowners­hip,” said Boggs, of the Open Communitie­s Alliance.

Amid this crisis, Boggs expects to see Black and Hispanic homeowners once again bearing a disproport­ionate struggle.

“Just like the burst in housing bubble not so long ago, Black and Latino families, who on average have lower incomes and less wealth, are being hit harder by this crisis and having additional cushions of wealth or added income are the kind of resources you need to get through tough economic times,” Boggs said.

WASHINGTON — Donald Trump took in the win at Mara-Lago, surrounded by friends and family. His lawyers celebrated with hugs and smiles. One joked, “We’re going to Disney World!”

Now acquitted in his second Senate impeachmen­t trial, Trump is preparing for the next phase of his post-presidency life. Feeling emboldened by the trial’s outcome, he is expected to reemerge from a self-imposed hibernatio­n at his club in Palm Beach, Fla., and is eyeing ways to reassert his power.

But after being barred from Twitter, the former president lacks the social media bullhorn that fueled his political rise. And he’s confrontin­g a Republican Party deeply divided over the legacy of his jarring final days in office, culminatin­g in the Jan. 6 storming of the Capitol. Searing video images of the day played on loop during his impeachmen­t trial, which ended Saturday.

Trump remains popular among the GOP base, but many Republican­s in Washington have cooled to him. Never before have so many members of a president’s party — seven GOP senators — voted for his removal in a Senate trial.

Some may work to counter efforts by Trump to support extreme candidates in next year’s congressio­nal primaries.

Undeterred, friends and allies expect Trump to resume friendly media interviews after weeks of silence. He has met with political aides to discuss efforts to help Republican­s try to take control of the House and Senate in the 2022 midterms elections. He remains fixated on exacting revenge on Republican­s who supported his impeachmen­t or resisted his efforts to overturn the results of the November election won by Democrat Joe Biden.

“I imagine you’ll probably be hearing a lot more from him in the coming days,” senior adviser Jason Miller said.

In a statement after the vote, Trump offered few clues, but was defiant as he told supporters their movement “has only just begun.”

“In the months ahead I have much to share with you, and I look forward to continuing our incredible journey together to achieve American greatness for all of our people,” he said.

Sen. Lindsey Graham, who spoke with Trump on Saturday night, acknowledg­ed that Trump is “mad at some folks,” but also “ready to move on and rebuild the Republican Party” and “excited about 2022.“

In their conversati­ons, Graham has stressed to Trump, who has threatened to start his own party to punish disloyal Republican­s, that the GOP needs him to win.At his Palm Beach club on Saturday night, Trump was in a joyous mood as he enjoyed dinner on a patio packed with people. After a mellow last several weeks, one member described a party atmosphere not felt since before the election.

Still, Trump isn’t in the clear yet. No longer protected by a Justice Department opinion against the prosecutio­n of sitting presidents, he now faces multiple, ongoing criminal investigat­ions.

In Georgia, the Fulton County district attorney has opened a criminal investigat­ion into “attempts to influence” the election, including Trump’s call to Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger demanding that the official find enough votes to overturn Biden’s victory.

In New York, Attorney General Letitia James is investigat­ing whether Trump and his company improperly inflated the value of his assets on annual financial statements in order to secure loans and obtain tax benefits. Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. continues his own investigat­ion, which has included grand jury testimony.

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