Los Angeles Times

L.A. County ends home loan program that stirs furor

PACE effort enabled predatory lending and put people at risk of foreclosur­e, critics say.

- BY ANDREW KHOURI

Los Angeles County has ended its controvers­ial PACE home improvemen­t loan program, a decision that follows years of criticism that the county enabled predatory lending and put people at risk of losing their homes.

County officials — who launched the PACE program in 2015 to fund energyand water-efficient home improvemen­ts — said they made the decision after determinin­g the program lacked adequate consumer protection­s.

Homeowners repeatedly alleged the private home improvemen­t contractor­s who signed them up for PACE misreprese­nted how the financing would work, saddling them with loans they could not understand or afford.

The county also faced lawsuits that alleged government authoritie­s failed to properly oversee the private lenders it partnered with to issue loans that if unpaid could lead to foreclosur­e.

The criticisms mirror complaints directed at other Property Assessed Clean Energy, or PACE, programs across California that fund environmen­tally friendly home improvemen­ts such as solar panels, heat-blocking roofs and low-flush toilets.

In response to widespread concern, both the county and state instituted reforms in recent years, including requiring that an ability-to-repay analysis be conducted and phones calls be made with homeowners to ensure they understood the financing.

Complaints over fraud, however, continued, including instances in which homeowners alleged contractor­s forged their signatures.

In explaining the county’s decision to end the program, L.A. County Treasurer and Tax Collector Keith Knox said in an email that despite recent reforms “the county could not be certain there were sufficient protection­s for consumers.”

Knox said the county let its contracts with lenders Renovate America and Renew Financial expire in April. This month, it ended its contract with its third lender partner, PACE Funding Group.

Bob Giles, chief executive of PACE Funding Group, said in an email that the company had worked with the county to create consumer protection­s Giles called “among the strongest in the country.”

Olivia White, vice president of government affairs at Renew Financial, said in an email that the company stopped originatin­g new financing through the county’s program in 2018 “for operationa­l reasons” and that Renew Financial, which still works with other government authoritie­s, “has added extensive consumer protection­s in recent years.”

Renovate America did not immediatel­y responded to a request for comment.

Consumer advocates heralded the county’s decision.

“In ending its program, the County of Los Angeles confirmed what advocates and victims have been saying for years: that the county ‘cannot be certain’ that the PACE program can ‘provide sufficient protection for all consumers,’ ” a coalition of advocates, including Bet Tzedek and the Alliance of California­ns for Community Empowermen­t, said in a statement.

The decision doesn’t mean PACE totally ceases to exist within L.A. County. Homeowners with existing loans taken out through the county’s program must still pay back what they owe.

Knox said that the county “remains committed to servicing existing PACE program participan­ts” and that the Department of Consumer and Business Affairs will continue to assist PACE borrowers who have problems.

The decision also doesn’t mean it’s impossible for homeowners in the county to take out a new PACE loan. Some cities, including Los Angeles, not only took part in the county’s program, but also partnered with statewide PACE programs to offer additional financing within their cities.

Consumer groups said they hoped the county’s decision would inspire other government­s to reevaluate their programs. And they urged the county to do more to help people with existing loans that were unaffordab­le even before the COVID-19 pandemic tanked the economy.

“While we welcome this decision, it does nothing to help the low-income homeowners stuck with these oppressive loans, many of whom are barreling toward foreclosur­e and could easily end up homeless,” said Stephanie Carroll, a senior staff attorney at Public Counsel, which along with Bet Tzedek sued the county over its program.

Though PACE will be available to some extent in the county, the decision of California’s most-populous county to end its program marks a significan­t setback for the so-called PACE industry.

The industry offers a unique type of financing that is repaid as a line item on a homeowner’s property tax bill and thus requires a partnershi­p with public authoritie­s. The amount of new loans issued statewide has fallen sharply since 2018, when new consumer protection­s, including an abilityto-repay analysis, became law.

Knox said declining usage of the county’s program also played a role in the decision to end it because less revenue would be available to cover the county’s administra­tive costs, raising the prospect the county would need to raise fees it charges homeowners with PACE.

Giles of PACE Funding said he believed declining usage was a “key factor” in why his company is no longer working with the county because “with fewer and fewer projects, it becomes increasing­ly difficult for any local government to justify the administra­tive costs of running its own program.”

As of July, more than 20,000 parcels had an outstandin­g PACE assessment through the county program, according to a report from the county’s Internal Services Department.

Government­s retain oversight of PACE programs but most have partnered with private lenders, such as the three Los Angeles County used, to operate them. To fund the loans, public agencies typically issue bonds, which are purchased by PACE lenders, who turn around and sell them on Wall Street.

The private lenders rely on home improvemen­t contractor­s to pitch their products and sign people up. Some homeowners allege contractor­s have hoodwinked them into taking out loans they didn’t understand.

Some major PACE lenders note they have supported increased regulation­s and say they’ve worked to sever ties with contractor­s found to misreprese­nt the financing. They also say foreclosur­es are rare and most people come away happy.

According to the recent Internal Services Department report, more than 35,000 projects have been completed through the county’s program, which over the lifetime of the home improvemen­ts would be equal to taking nearly 630,000 cars off the road.

Knox said that investors in PACE loans haven’t foreclosed on anyone who signed up through the county’s program and that a county reserve fund would have to be exhausted before the investors could do so.

The county has taken some steps recently to ease financial hardships for PACE borrowers as the economy turned south.

Last week, the county Board of Supervisor­s approved a motion authored by Supervisor Hilda Solis that requires the treasurer and tax collector to report back within 45 days on the possibilit­y of allowing PACE borrowers to defer payments to the end of their contract term.

 ?? Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ?? OSSIE HILL, 86, faced foreclosur­e in 2017. She said a contractor misreprese­nted how PACE loans work.
Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times OSSIE HILL, 86, faced foreclosur­e in 2017. She said a contractor misreprese­nted how PACE loans work.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States