The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Banks: 270,000 Conn. residents will miss rent, mortgage payments

- By Ana Radelat

WASHINGTON — The Federal Reserve projects that nearly 100,000 Connecticu­t homeowners and more than 170,000 renters are at risk of missing at least one payment mortgage or rent payment, raising a specter of pandemic-led homelessne­ss, especially when federal unemployme­nt benefits end.

Jeffrey Thompson, an economist and director of the New England Public Policy Center at the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, said 11 percent percent of Connecticu­t homeowners and 36 percent of the state’s renters are vulnerable to missing at least one payment.

The Boston office of the Federal Reserve has determined that historic unemployme­nt and higher-than-average housing costs means the pandemic has struck a severe blow to Connecticu­t and its sister New England states.

To estimate the impact pandemic-related job losses could have on Connecticu­t households, the Fed identified occupation­s that are at high risk for layoff or furlough under public shutdown orders.

Jobs that were determined to be nonessenti­al, cannot be done at home, and are paid hourly were defined as at high risk for unemployme­nt.

Using U.S. Census Bureau data, the Fed determined 34 percent of homeowners and 36 percent of renters in Connecticu­t are employed at a job that is at high risk for layoff.

The Fed also determined that renters were more vulnerable because their households are more likely have all wage earners employed in high-risk jobs.

Thompson said the percentage of Connecticu­t renters vulnerable to missing a payment is the highest of the six New England states — and higher than the collective average. The 10.9 percent of homeowners likely to miss a mortgage payment is the New England average.

“We know everybody isn’t going to lose their job,” Thompson said. Still, the pandemic has caused the state’s unemployme­nt rate to soar, and its jobless rate continues to grow.

Gov. Ned Lamont’s administra­tion estimated Connecticu­t’s unemployme­nt rate from mid-March to mid-April was about 17.5 percent, several percentage points higher than the national average.

Using U.S. Census Bureau and economic data, the Boston Fed said, in a “worst case” scenario — that is if federal pandemic help is unavailabl­e — 98,603 Connecticu­t homeowners and 170,594 renters in the state will be behind in their mortgage payments or rent.

Connecticu­t has taken a few steps to help homeowners and renters. But that state help is limited, the Boston Fed said, and not likely to help many.

“While current state- and local-level policies help prevent immediate evictions and foreclosur­es, and in some cases they help pay housing costs, they do not cover the value of missed housing payments that likely would accrue,” the report said.

In March, the Lamont administra­tion has asked about 50 Connecticu­t banks to voluntaril­y delay foreclosur­e actions for 60 days. But Erin Kemple, executive director of the Connecticu­t Fair Housing Center, said at least 18 banks aren’t complying. She said her organizati­on has tracked court foreclosur­e filing daily and that more than 360 had been filed since March 31.

The state also plans to spend about $2.8 million to help distressed renters. Kemple said that amount of money, part of the funding awarded the state for housing under the federal CARES Act, is “completely inadequate.”

She said the city of Boston, which has a population that’s one-third of that of Connecticu­t, plans to spend $5 million to help tenants.

Kemple said her center’s main mission was to help those who are victims of housing discrimina­tion. But after the pandemic hit, the center began accepting calls from all tenants with housing problems.

“We have had triple the number of calls than we had a year ago, and all of those calls were from people having trouble paying their rent,” Kemple said.

A realistic ‘worst case’The Boston Fed report said the federal stimulus packages has provided some help.

It says the $1,200 stimulus check sent to most Americans, the $600-a-week in federal unemployme­nt benefits and federal mortgage payment forbearanc­e programs have helped stave off foreclosur­es and homelessne­ss in Connecticu­t and other New England states.

But Kemple said the Boston Fed’s “worst case” scenario is the most realistic one.

“The money that the feds are sending to Connecticu­t is not adequate to pay the rent as well as pay all the other expenses of a household,” including food and utilities, Kemple said. “People in Connecticu­t are paying more than 50 percent of their income in rent.”

Another problem is that the expanded federal unemployme­nt benefits, unless extended by Congress, are set to end at the end of July.

The federal government has offered homeowners with federally backed mortgages 180 days of mortgage forbearanc­e, with an option to borrowers who can prove COVID-19 related financial hardship to extend that forbearanc­e for another 180 days. But unless that homeowner can refinance or make some other arrangemen­t with his or her lender, those missed mortgage payments must be made within the next 365 days.

“All these payments that aren’t being made will have to be reconciled,” Thompson said. And that may be difficult, he said, if the economy doesn’t have a quick rebound.

“I’m less concerned about the here-andnow policy response,” Thompson said. “But if the economy continues to respond poorly after the summer, then the country will need more (federal) policy actions.”

The U.S. House has approved a massive stimulus bill, called the HEROES Act, that would provide more help to homeowners and renters, as well as providing Americans with another $1,200 stimulus payment and extending federal unemployme­nt benefits until Jan. 31, 2021.

But congressio­nal Republican­s, and President Donald Trump, said Congress should wait to act on another massive stimulus package until the full impact of previous rescue bills could be assessed.

In December, before the pandemic ravaged the nation’s economy, Lamont hailed an independen­t report that showed Connecticu­t’s single-family home sales prices had reached their highest level in 12 years, considered an indicator of a strengthen­ing housing market and positive economic activity.

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