By Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, June 21, 2012 – New guidance
to mortgage servicers may help tens of thousands of military homeowners moving
to new duty stations, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau officials said
today.
The bureau, along with mortgage service
industry regulators, is issuing joint supervisory guidance to address mortgage
service practices that pose risks to military homeowners, Richard Cordray, the
bureau’s director, said at a news conference.
“We want to make sure that mortgage
servicers comply with the laws that prohibit unfair or abusive practices” when
service members have orders to move, he said.
Roughly a third of active-duty military
personnel move each year. Of these, about 185,000 are homeowners who have to
sell their houses and move to another community. Many find themselves owing far
more on their homes than they’re worth in the current market.
Service members cannot sit on a property
and wait for the market to recover: they must go to their new base, Cordray
noted. “They have to move, even if that means taking a big financial hit or
leaving their families behind to pay their bills,” he said.
“I have heard over and over from
military homeowners whose houses are underwater and they don’t know what to
do,” said Holly Petraeus, director of the bureau’s Officer of Service Member
Affairs. “They are terrified that a foreclosure will ruin their finances as
well as putting their security clearances at risk, and they are looking for
answers.”
But in too many cases, she said, mortgage
service providers have not given that help. In her travels to military bases,
Petraeus said, service members have told her of mortgage service providers
giving them inaccurate information and stringing them along.
“We’ve heard from service members that
they were told they had to be delinquent to qualify for help, and advised to
skip a couple of payments,” she said. “They’ve been asked to sign waivers of
their rights under the Service Members Civil Relief Act just to have their
cases evaluated. They’ve been stalled by repeated demands for their loan
documents and given a new loan official with each call, … and they have even
been listed as not responding to requests for documents during deployment
despite the fact that spouses had powers of attorney.”
Edward J. DiMarco, director of the
Federal Housing Finance Agency, spoke of the changes to policies to help
military homeowners. “These changes will make it easier for members of the
armed forces with mortgages owned or guaranteed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac to
honor their financial commitments when they are issued a permanent change of
station order,” he said. The agency classifies the order as a hardship, he
noted.
Homeowners with transfer orders will be
immediately eligible for a short sale, even if they are current in their
mortgages, DiMarco said. They also will be “exempt from deficiency judgments
from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac when receiving permission for a short sale and
relieved of any request or requirement for cash, contribution or promissory
note so long as the property was purchased on or before June 30, 2012.”
Robert L. Gordon III, assistant
secretary of defense for military community and family policy, said the Defense
Department welcomes the bureau’s leadership.
“The military lifestyle poses unique
challenges to our troops and their families,” he said. “Throughout frequent
moves, deployments and transitions they must remain resilient and strong in
order to be mission ready.”
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