Lodi News-Sentinel

LA County homeowners to receive millions in settlement

- Andrew Khouri

Los Angeles County has agreed to a $12-million settlement to resolve allegation­s that its home improvemen­t lending program wrecked the finances of many borrowers and left them vulnerable to foreclosur­e.

The settlement, granted preliminar­y approval Monday by an L.A. County Superior Court judge, comes six years after some homeowners sued the county in twin suits alleging that local officials knew, or should have known, the program would harm vulnerable homeowners and then looked the other way as problems piled up.

The county did not admit wrongdoing as part of the settlement and continued to deny the allegation­s. It said it settled to avoid further litigation costs.

“Without this, I think people would stand to get absolutely nothing,” said Stephanie Carroll, an attorney with Public Counsel, which along with Bet Tzedek and Hogan Lovells represente­d homeowners in the two lawsuits. “Now they stand to get some compensati­on for what happened to them.”

Launched in 2015, the county’s Property Assessed Clean Energy, or PACE, program had the stated goal of enabling homeowners to finance energy- and water-efficient home improvemen­ts, including solar panels and lowflow toilets.

The program, a public-private partnershi­p, was overseen by the county but largely operated and funded by private finance companies, which in turn relied on home improvemen­t contractor­s to sign up borrowers.

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