Lodi News-Sentinel

Cleaning up your credit isn’t easy but it can open doors

- By Tim Grant

PITTSBURGH — The Great Recession took a heavy toll on Jackie Horvath while she was living in Tampa, Fla.

Business dried up to the point where she had to shut down a once-thriving venture. She lost her home and had to file for bankruptcy. She said that by the time she decided to pack up and move back to Pittsburgh in 2007, her credit score had tumbled to around 400, which is about as bad as a credit score can get.

It took about two years for her life to stabilize. She gave birth to her son and found a job that allowed her and her husband to establish a budget and live within their means. Then she met with credit counselors at CureMyScor­e, who helped her clean up errors on her credit report and showed her how to build her credit. Within six months, her FICO score jumped to 760.

Today, Horvath, 50, lives in a $300,000 home outside Pittsburgh that she and her husband built. She works as a real estate agent at Coldwell Banker and often refers potential homebuyers with credit problems to the counselors she worked with.

Cindy Shipley also had to take time to repair her credit. She had a mortgage applicatio­n denied in 2012 because of problems on her credit report.

She found a private party lender who took control of the three-bedroom home and worked out a deal with her to make payments under a rent-to-own contract until she could fix her credit and qualify to purchase it.

Six months after she started working with credit counselors at MyCreditTe­am, she qualified to purchase the $175,000 house with an inground swimming pool that she had been renting. With a 10 percent down payment, her lender approved her for a 30-year mortgage at 3.25 percent interest.

“I was ecstatic,” said Shipley, 43. “I actually almost couldn’t believe it.”

Credit can be a deciding factor in getting a loan and it can affect many other aspects of life, such as job promotions, the rate that insurance companies charge for auto coverage and how much lenders charge borrowers for credit.

FICO scores range from a low of 300 to 850, the highest score. The scores use five factors to determine a person’s creditwort­hiness: payment history, current level of indebtedne­ss, types of credit used, length of credit history and new credit accounts.

Often bad credit is the result of poor debt management, but it can also be caused by errors on a credit report or by identity theft. Many consumers who have had to deal with credit reporting agencies to fix errors have brought in profession­al credit repair profession­als to help resolve issues.

A new study by New Yorkbased SmartAsset, a personal finance technology company, delved into 2016 data from the federal Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and found incorrect credit report issues dominate financial issues complained about in each state.

Incorrect informatio­n on credit reports ranked as the No. 1 issue in 43 states. In fact, SmartAsset found nearly 17 percent of all CFPB complaints are about trying to correct a credit report. The only one that came close was problems processing mortgage payments, which accounted for 8.9 percent.

 ?? TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? Jackie Horvath of Oakdale meets with her attorney Matt Herron, left, and Chris McConville of CureMyScor­e at her attorney's office.
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Jackie Horvath of Oakdale meets with her attorney Matt Herron, left, and Chris McConville of CureMyScor­e at her attorney's office.

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