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Detroit: second highest foreclosure rate in US
By Elisa Brehm
19 December 2007
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The US subprime mortgage crisis is hitting Detroit with particular
ferocity. The home foreclosure rate in the hard-hit industrial
city is now the second highest in the country, affecting one out
of every 21 homeownerseight times the national average.
During the 1950s when Detroits Big Three automakersGeneral
Motors, Ford and Chryslerproduced four out of five of the
worlds cars, the Motor City boasted the highest rate of
home ownership of any major city in the US, along with the highest
median income. Factory workers, many of whom had migrated from
impoverished rural and coal mining regions in the South and Appalachia,
were according to popular myth living the American Dream.
Over the course of the ensuing decades the auto companies drastically
downsized Detroits manufacturing base, reducing the city
to one of the poorest in the nation. Since 2000 alone, the metropolitan
area has lost 126,000 jobs. This has combined with the bursting
of the housing bubble to produce a social calamity.
In a few days, Mike Stone and his wife Melissa expect to be
thrown out of their home in Redford, a nearby Detroit suburb where
they have lived for 13 years. The precarious nature of life in
America is often demonstrated when an injury, accident, loss of
a job or a cut in pay almost immediately produces a catastrophe
for a worker and his family.

Melissa had a car accident last February and Mike lost his
job. His unemployment insurance has run out and he has been unable
to find another job. Melissa, who has been unable to work since
her accident, expressed a sentiment heard over and over: We
never expected anything like this would ever happen to us.
Shocked at the ordeal, she explained, Can you imagine, we
are in our fifties and going through this? We have health insurance,
so can you picture where we would be if we didnt even have
that? This is causing us so much stress and frustration.
In August alone, foreclosure notices were served on 260 homes
a day. A few weeks ago readers opening the Detroit Free Press
found a 121-page list of foreclosures published by
the Wayne County treasurers office. More than 70,000 homes
in metropolitan Detroit entered some phase of foreclosure between
January 2006 and September 2007, according to a Detroit News
analysis of foreclosure data. These figures represent a six-fold
increase to what was already a record set by January 2006. Even
this understates the real situation because those adjustable mortgages
that will reset to a higher ratecausing another wave of
foreclosures in March 2008are not included in the total.

The number of foreclosure filings in Wayne Countywhere
Detroit is locatedis 49,381. In neighboring Oakland County
and Macomb County, the filings are 11,023 and 10,284, respectively.
Behind these numbers stand as many as a quarter of a million people
who are affected with the prospect of losing their homes, and
with it everything for which they worked.
One thing is clear about the housing crisis. The housing meltdown
is impacting all sections of the working class population. For
example, in more affluent West Bloomfield Township located Oakland
County, where the median household income is $110,000 and the
median home value is $317,000, there are 487 homes facing foreclosure.
In other once-stable Detroit suburbs in Oakland Countysuch
as Southfield, Ferndale, Oak Park and Lathrup Village to name
a fewthe foreclosure predicament confronts thousands.
The statistics in Detroit provide a glimpse of the social crisis.
In the city as a whole the median household income is only $35,500
with median home values at $76,400. However, there are areas where
conditions resemble a third world country. In some neighborhoods,
1 in 7 homes received a foreclosure notice between January 2006
and September 2007.
Helen Street is on the east side of Detroit, once home to several
Chrysler plants. On that street alone there are 83 homes in the
process of foreclosure. In that particular housing tract, the
median household income is less than $25,000 and the homes are
valued at $36,000.
Behind these record-breaking numbers lies not a failing of
personal or individual responsibility, but an immense social catastrophe
brought about by the drive of the Wall Street banks and financial
institutions to make enormous profits at the expense of working
people.
From 2001 to 2005, lenders loosened their standards making
it easy to get a loan and encouraged mortgage brokers to sell
loans in which the amount of money borrowed far exceeded the borrowers
ability to repay it. Many homebuyers were sold more costly loans
by mortgage brokers who, very often, were rewarded with higher
commissions and fees.
This fueled the growth of the subprime mortgage sector and
also led to the proliferation of exotic (speculative)
loans to people who would otherwise qualify for conventional debt
instruments if the size of their mortgage were smaller. Subprime
mortgages account for about 55 percent of mortgages in the region.
Such loans are generally 3 percentage points higher than conventional
rates available to those with good credit.
Subprime mortgages include features that increase the
risk of foreclosure, noted a report produced by The Center
for Responsible Lending. The report noted an increasing share
of loan products in the subprime market that limit the amount
of equity a borrower builds. These loans also carry a high
risk of payment shock and may limit homeowners ability to
acquire the equity needed to refinance out of an unaffordable
loan.
Typical for many workers is the
situation facing Roz, an interior designer from Detroit. She paid
$7,000 in interest last year; but her principle has remained at
$62,000 after several refinances. Now she is delinquent on her
payments.
My first refinance, I took money out of the house to
buy a new furnace and make other repairs. I went into an adjustable
rate in 2002 and the interest went up 11 percent. We were forced
into bankruptcy.
To save her home she is currently working three jobs. There
used to be the rich, middle class and poor. But now the middle
class is becoming poor. It doesnt matter if youre
white or black. All working class people are going through the
same thing. Were all just one step from being on the corner
asking for food and money.
On December 13, state of Michigan officials held a forum on
Avoiding Foreclosure in order to respond to the growing
numbers who are at risk of losing their homes. More than 4,000
attended the all-day event in downtown Detroit where lenders were
present to meet with homeowners. Only a small number received
any relief. Many were lectured about cutting their family budgets
to make their house payments.
Many people who attended the event are substantially behind
on their mortgage payments because of increased property taxes.
When a home is sold to a new owner, property taxes generally increase.
Few first-time borrowers are aware of this and the mortgage lenders
do little to let them know.

Rickey Hussey, a 32-year-old from St Clair Shores, is the father
of four children, ages 1, 4, 13 and 15. He has lived in his home
for a year and a half and saw his payments rise from $1,308 per
month to $1,500 due to an increase in property taxes.
I lost my job as a chef which I had for 10 years, and
I cannot pay my mortgage. My unemployment compensation begins
tomorrow, but it does not seem to be enough.
There are a number of factors driving the foreclosing of subprime
mortgage loans. Most common are the adjustable rate mortgages
(ARMs), which lured buyers in with teaser incentives but included
built-in steep rate and payment increases. These loans are sometimes
called exploding ARMs because of the sharp increases
that hit unsuspecting borrowers.
One in four Michigan borrowers with a subprime
ARM is in default
With a fall in home prices between 10 and 20 percent combined
with a loss in income, many find it no longer possible to refinance,
which was an option in the past to prevent foreclosure. Daniel,
51, drove from Memphis, Michigan to the forum looking for assistance.
He returned from Iraq six months ago where he served in the Air
Force. My income is now half of what I was making before
I left. My property value is down $65,000about 25 percent.
My lender is Washington Mutual. I cannot tell you how many times
I have called them only to be switched from person to person,
from state to state. I was told that it would be better to be
90 days in arrears and then they would talk to me. Meanwhile all
kinds of late fees are now involved. And I cannot refinance.
I am working two jobs and starting a third to try to
keep my home. Six years ago I got an ARM, which I was told was
the next best thing to sliced bread. This situation is very distressing.
What are we supposed to do? I cannot eat the bricks and the mortar.
Many people also relied on refinancing to get money out of
their homes in order to cover rising living costs, particularly
as wages and salaries either stagnated or decreased. In the end,
while the Wall Street banks and wealthy investors made a windfall,
workers were left with crushing levels of personal debt.
Previously many workers found it difficult to get bank loans
due to the uncertainty of their job status, inadequate income,
or a poor credit history. But all that changed as the Federal
Reserve dropped interest rates and banks loosened credit restrictions.
Predatory lenders came on the scene offering deals that required
no down payments or serious income documentation. Liar loans
is the term often used for such loans. Borrowers were seduced
into taking on ever larger amounts of debt with the unstated promise
that real estate values would continue to rise and homeowners
saw the equity in their homes rise, even though they
paid little or nothing towards the principle on their loans.
Thelma Curtis faces foreclosure
on a home she has lived in for 35 years. The lenders came
into my neighborhood pushing these balloon mortgages.
They said your house might be worth $85,000 but we can get it
appraised for $120,000. Without actually paying down the principle
you owed this made it look like you had increased your equity
in the house. They even told me they would make a W-2 (income
statement) up in order for me to qualify for a loan.
I took money out, all of the equity in the houselike
so many othersto help my grandson. With all the money out
of the house and the bank foreclosing on uswhat is to become
of us?
The chickens are coming home to roost with this subprime
mortgage scam. This was not secretive; you could see an atrocity
was coming but it got a lot of people sucked in.
There should be a moratorium on payments to the banks
to save peoples homes. We are suffering through an economic
tsunami and there are not enough park benches in the state to
accommodate all the homeless people that are being created.
See Also:
Collapse of Californias housing
market reveals underlying social inequality
[7 December 2007]
On eve of Thanksgiving
holiday
Food banks running out of supplies in Detroit
[20 November 2007]
Stock market gyrations fueled
by credit, housing market crises
[3 November 2007]
Foreclosures soar, layoffs
mount in US mortgage industry crisis
[22 August 2007]
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