Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Despite troubles, green energy lender seeks restart

- By Alex Harris

MIAMI — Their billboards used to plaster South Florida. Their contractor­s went door-to-door, offering expensive and much-needed upgrades to roofs, windows and air conditioni­ng units — with no money down, no credit check needed.

Ygrene Energy was the biggest player in a novel and controvers­ial industry that bankrolls home improvemen­ts and gets paid back by charges added to a homeowner’s tax bill. It was once lauded by politician­s and environmen­talists, even President Barack Obama, as a key solution to adapting to climate change and hurricanes.

But late last year, Ygrene, the state’s most high-profile green energy finance company, suddenly vanished from the Florida market — a move that left contractor­s in the middle of projects unpaid and homeowners scrambling to pay big unexpected bills. Now, despite an ongoing investigat­ion into the company by Florida’s attorney general, over a hundred consumer complaints and dozens of lawsuits across the state, Ygrene may be poised to restart business in Florida, its largest and least-regulated market.

For Ray and Kelly Coulter, the company’s abrupt withdrawal came weeks after their brand-new roof and impact windows were installed on their West Palm Beach home.

The email — sent October 5 — said that Ygrene, the company responsibl­e for paying the contractor­s, had canceled its financing. That left the Coulters with a $45,000 bill that was supposed to have been paid out through manageable and appealing annual payments attached to their tax bill.

“We were sold a bill of goods that’s no longer there,” said Ray, a 53-year-old facilities manager.

Coulter is one of more than a dozen homeowners and contractor­s across Florida the Miami Herald spoke to about the problems caused by Ygrene’s sudden withdrawal. Public forums, like the Better Business Bureau and Google reviews, are filled with recent posts from frustrated homeowners and contractor­s.

Jonathan Akl, a St. Luciebased contractor, said he had 60 projects affected under his former employer, a Broward County-based roof and solar company. Constructi­on ground to a halt, leaving some homeowners with unfinished roofs while the financial details were worked out.

“We had 60 open files with the company. They reneged on every single one of them,” he said. “Literally at midnight they dropped all contracts that weren’t closed. A lot of people got screwed.”

Exactly how many people is hard to pin down. Ygrene wouldn’t share numbers, although the company estimated at one time it signed around 2,000 new contracts a month. Based on conversati­ons with others in his industry, Akl’s personal estimate is that the withdrawal disrupted thousands of contracts statewide.

Back in October, Akl said his former company’s lawyers pondered suing Ygrene but found contract language gave the company the legal right to pull out at any point until the homeowner actually started payments.

That clause can leave a large window of time because Ygrene specialize­s in a unique type of financial agreement called the property-assessed clean energy program, or PACE.

Companies like Ygrene that provide money for “green” home improvemen­t projects don’t refer to it as a “loan” but — just like banks and mortgage companies — they make money by charging fees and interest rates. But instead of writing a check to the company, homeowners pay only through their annual property tax bill, collected from a lien local government­s allow to be placed on the property.

For tens of thousands of customers already paying for completed projects, Ygrene’s sudden exit had no impact. But homeowners and contractor­s with projects left in limbo told the Herald they had to race to find new funding, or in some cases drop the work altogether. Some homeowners said they paid off contractor­s with their credit cards, racking up tens of thousands in debt. Contractor­s expecting to be paid by the company right after the job also faced uncertain delays and potential battles to collect for their work.

Dr. Mohamed Hegazy said he had trouble applying for a traditiona­l home equity loan to cover the costs instead because Ygrene had already placed a lien on his Miramar home when the project got started, even though it had not yet paid the solar and roofing company for its work.

“This company dropped funding without respect to the people or accountabi­lity to anyone,” he said. “They should pay for their mistake.”

Plenty of homeowners, including most of Akl’s clients, eventually switched to another PACE company like Renew Financial, which accepted many of the contracts but charged a slightly higher price.

But pulling out of the incomplete Florida projects was only one of the complaints about Ygrene’s practices.

In October, the Federal Trade Commission and the state of California came down hard on the California-based company over how it sold its financial agreements to sometimes-confused consumers. An FTC order said the company deceived consumers about the potential financial impact of its financing and unfairly placed liens on consumers’ homes without consent. As part of its agreement with the FTC, Ygrene agreed to create a $3 million fund to free “defrauded” customers from liens, as well as to step up its monitoring of contractor­s and to be honest with consumers.

“Today’s settlement holds Ygrene accountabl­e for their misconduct and establishe­s guardrails to protect property owners from future deception. PACE financing was meant to help families make important home improvemen­ts, but the dishonesty of companies like Ygrene has left some homeowners at risk of losing their homes,” California Attorney General Rob Bonta said in a statement.

Florida’s Attorney General’s office also has received more than 100 complaints against Ygrene since January 2019, and a spokespers­on confirmed there is an ongoing investigat­ion into the company but didn’t provide further details.

Now, despite the complaints, probes and five-month-long exit from the market, Ygrene has told South Florida officials it’s ready to begin signing up new customers starting on Monday.

Ygrene declined to answer questions about its withdrawal but Mark Scheffel, vice president of government affairs, said in a statement to the Herald that the company believes the majority of property owners left without funding were able to find another way to pay for projects.

“We look forward to the restart of operations in Miami-Dade,” he wrote.

Miami-Dade is the largest market

There is no doubt that the company has found a large and receptive market in South Florida. At just over 21,000, Miami-Dade has more homes with PACE agreements than any other county in the state. And the vast majority of them — over 15,000 — are with Ygrene.

“For some people, PACE is particular­ly good because it’s not based on your income and it doesn’t necessaril­y count as debt on your debt sheet,” said Phil Stoddard, the former mayor of South Miami and chair of a South Florida board that oversees Ygrene contracts statewide.

While PACE is often incorrectl­y advertised as a “government program” by some contractor­s, it’s actually financed by private for-profit companies. PACE lenders make money off fees and interest collected through annual tax bills for five to 30 years, depending on the project. And because it’s a lien, it makes it a “first priority” payoff in the event of a foreclosur­e. That’s attractive on Wall Street, where PACE providers also bundle and sell their loans.

PACE is available for commercial projects in over a dozen states without generating much controvers­y. But only three states have changed their statutes to allow PACE residentia­l projects: California, Missouri and Florida.

And in all three, according to federal and state agencies as well as media reports, Ygrene and other PACE companies have racked up allegation­s of shoddy workmanshi­p by contractor­s and accusation­s that salespeopl­e misled prospectiv­e customers or even outright lied to them. Previous reporting from the Miami Herald as far back as 2018 revealed problems with the program that left lower-income consumers in particular saddled with more debt than they could handle.

Many of the industry’s problems come from unscrupulo­us contractor­s, who often serve as the unofficial sales and marketing arm of the lending companies. Their at-times misleading pitches are such a persistent source of consumer complaints (and lawsuits) that it worries even contractor­s who are fans of PACE, like Akl.

“A lot of contractor­s have ruined the reputation of PACE as is, and now with this happening it’s a nail in the coffin,” he said.

In August, Ygrene announced it was suspending operations in Missouri following an investigat­ion by ProPublica that sparked new state oversight and consumer protection­s. The news outlet found the high-interest loans disproport­ionately burdened borrowers in predominan­tly Black neighborho­ods.

At the same time, Ygrene also stopped lending in California, where the program was born and Ygrene was founded. California was the first state to see the PACE program, hailed as an innovative solution to paying for pricey green energy projects, take off. And it was the first state to start seeing problems that came with that rapid growth.

Renovate America, at one point one of the biggest PACE lenders on the market, filed for bankruptcy in late 2020 amid allegation­s from California regulators that the company created a fake constructi­on company to bilk customers, the San Diego Union Tribune reported.

The state started regulating the industry more strictly in 2016, after some customers who didn’t understand (or weren’t told) what they were agreeing to couldn’t afford their new, higher property taxes and lost their homes, according to reporting from KPIX, San Francisco’s CBS affiliate.

The growing list of complaints prompted a since-settled class action civil lawsuit against Ygrene featuring both Florida and California plaintiffs, which accused the company of not telling consumers that their liens would make it harder to sell their homes. For instance, the nation’s largest mortgage holders, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, refuse to buy mortgages of homes with PACE liens, which stay with a property until they’d paid in full.

Everything stopped

Still, Ygrene and the PACE industry continued to do more business around the country, until the company admitted in summer 2022 it was done writing new financing in California and Missouri.

At the time, Ygrene was making some upbeat business comments, with press releases touting an “expansion beyond PACE” into traditiona­l lending and new funding from venture capital firms. But the actual numbers did not look so good. In a public presentati­on given a week before the company called it quits,

Ygrene said rising interest rates and investors’ desire for greater profits left the company “squeezed from both ends.”

“Revenue margins have declined over 60%,” Ygrene wrote.

Fewer Floridians were applying for Ygrene, too. In summer 2020, applicatio­ns peaked at more than 4,000 a month, according to a chart included in the presentati­on. In 2021, those numbers were falling every month. By February 2022, fewer than 2,000 Floridians applied.

In response, Ygrene asked the only government board that oversees it, the littleknow­n South Florida Green Corridor, for approval to raise fees and interest rates on consumers, from up to 7.99% to up to 9.99%.

“In order to stay competitiv­e in the capital markets, Ygrene must increase rates accordingl­y,” it said. The board agreed to allow the company to charge more for its services.

But just days later, everything shut down.

‘All I got was a script’

Contractor­s and homeowners got emails that their financing was yanked, their phone calls went straight to voicemail and the website suddenly featured a message — “ATTN: All Ygrene PACE financing operations have been paused.” — directing customers to a traditiona­l home loan service instead.

“I called the number Ygrene gave me and all I got was a script,” said Ray

Coulter. “I asked for a copy of that script to be emailed to me, and it wasn’t.”

In a December letter, Ygrene’s CEO, Jim Reinhart, explained the move was due to money problems.

“Ygrene suspended operations in Florida due to the loss of our funding partner making it impossible to fund new projects,” he wrote. “It is Ygrene’s intent and plan to finalize agreements with new capital providers and restart operations in the first quarter of 2023.”

Reinhart wrote that letter to the Green Corridor board, which is staffed with seven South Florida mayors or their representa­tives.

Because the PACE program collects payments through annual property taxes collected by local government­s, it needs an agreement with local government­s to operate. For any Ygrene contract in the entire state, that agency is the Green Corridor, which approves rate hikes, new consumer protection­s and reviews recent complaints and lawsuits against the company.

Stoddard, who as mayor of South Miami has championed environmen­tal causes and pushed to expand solar power, remains an advocate for the program, despite its troubles. He has been the chair of the Corridor’s board for most of the decade it’s been in existence, and he said Ygrene’s withdrawal from the market happened once before and lasted only a couple of months.

“It ran pretty smoothly for the next nine years until this happened,” he said.

 ?? J. OCNER/AP MATIAS ?? Kelly Coulter, 44, paints the trim on the newly installed impact windows at her home in West Palm Beach on Jan. 31.
J. OCNER/AP MATIAS Kelly Coulter, 44, paints the trim on the newly installed impact windows at her home in West Palm Beach on Jan. 31.

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