Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

SUBURBAN MAN’S COVID MORTGAGE FORBEARANC­E NIGHTMARE

- BY STEPHANIE ZIMMERMANN, STAFF REPORTER szimmerman­n@suntimes.com @SZReports

Like millions of homeowners, Gregg Pupecki of Beach Park accepted mortgage forbearanc­e — an interest-free pause in his payments — during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

A first-time homeowner, Pupecki loves his two-story house, which he bought in 2012. So he paid attention when he got a notice from his loan servicer in February demanding an immediate payment of $12,475 “to bring your loan current.”

“Failure … may result in fees and the loss of your home due to foreclosur­e,” the document read.

His original lender, Chase Bank, offered the forbearanc­e — essentiall­y a pause in having to make the payments on his 30-year mortgage without racking up extra interest or hurting his credit — on his FHAbacked loan.

Sometime later, the loan was transferre­d to Midland Mortgage of Oklahoma City, and it demanded that all of the forbearanc­e payments be made immediatel­y.

After the Chicago Sun-Times contacted Midland’s corporate parent, MidFirst Bank, the loan servicer withdrew the demand and offered Pupecki what federal law requires in his case: a choice to either exit forbearanc­e and put the unpaid payments at the back of his loan interest-free or to stay on forbearanc­e for another three months, with the option, if Pupecki wanted, for three months more.

After consulting a housing counselor, he decided to stay on for at least another 90 days while he waits for his industry to come back to life.

“It was supposed to help you,” the far north suburban resident says of the COVID-19 mortgage forbearanc­e he’d accepted last spring following the loss of his job at a marina last year when the economy nosedived.

When he saw that his new loan servicer was demanding a lumpsum repayment, he says, “I was, like: That’s not helpful.”

The bank didn’t respond to requests for comment.

Pupecki is hardly the only homeowner facing a confusing situation after accepting COVID-19 mortgage forbearanc­e. The federal Consumer Financial Protection Bureau got more than 3,400 consumer complaints in March about mortgages. Its database includes complaints regarding immediate demands for payment, poor communicat­ion by loan servicers and even people having had their mortgages placed into forbearanc­e without them having asked for that. The agency, which estimates there could be 1.7 million delinquent loans by September, is proposing rule changes governing loan servicing to help prevent what it describes as avoidable foreclosur­es.

“More borrowers are behind on their mortgage than at any time since the height of the Great Recession,” according to Dave Uejio, the agency’s acting director. “Communitie­s of color have been hit hard by the pandemic, and the latest data show that many borrowers are still hurting.”

Congress included the mortgage forbearanc­e provision in the CARES Act that it passed in March 2020 after the coronaviru­s pandemic struck. Under the law, homeowners with federally backed mortgages — such as those backed by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, the Federal Housing Administra­tion, the Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t, the Department of Veterans Affairs or the Department of Agricultur­e — could get forbearanc­e for up to one year without harming their credit or accruing extra interest.

In February, HUD lengthened that one-year limit for certain borrowers, letting them ask for two additional three-month extensions.

Diane Cipollone, a housing expert and consultant with the National Fair Housing Alliance, says borrowers need to understand that, after they resume their normal monthly mortgage payments, the unpaid chunk of money from the forbearanc­e period will sit at the end of their loan and come due as a balloon payment.

That balloon can be handled relatively easily, though, if the homeowner decides to sell before the mortgage is finished or refinances.

The trickiest part for some homeowners is finding a job in time to start resuming their regular monthly payments.

Cipollone urges people to take advantage of free weekly credit reports offered by Equifax, Experian and TransUnion through April 20, 2022. Normally, consumers can get one free report from each agency a year. During the pandemic, that’s been increased to one every week.

“This is significan­t because some mortgage servicers are incorrectl­y reporting borrowers as ‘late’ on their payments if they are in a COVID-related forbearanc­e plan,” she says.

About 70% of home loans are federally backed. Many consumers with home loans held by banks or in private securities also accepted forbearanc­e offers, but those aren’t covered by the CARES Act.

Attorney Sarah Bolling Mancini of the National Consumer Law Center worries about borrowers reaching the end of forbearanc­e with no clear idea of what’s next.

Especially with privately held mortgages, Mancini says, “It feels like they are at the whims of the lender or servicer.”

 ?? GOOGLE STREET VIEW ?? Gregg Pupecki’s house in Beach Park. Pupecki was surprised to get a demand for immediate payment from his loan servicer even though he’s on a pandemic forbearanc­e plan.
GOOGLE STREET VIEW Gregg Pupecki’s house in Beach Park. Pupecki was surprised to get a demand for immediate payment from his loan servicer even though he’s on a pandemic forbearanc­e plan.
 ??  ?? Gregg Pupecki
Gregg Pupecki

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States