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HUD To Sell Homes For $1 - 3/6/2000 - Real Estate Home House Condo

HUD To Sell Homes For $1

by Lew Sichelman

In a major change in policy, the Department of Housing and Urban Development has decided to sell thousands of government-owned homes to local governments for $1 a throw. The homes can then be sold or rented to first-time buyers or to groups that will use them to provide such services as child care or job training centers.

The idea for is local communities to use the houses as catalysts for neighborhood revitalization by attracting new residents and business to their areas. But a year ago, HUD opposed legislation to create a similar giveaway program on the grounds that it would cost the Federal Housing Administration $3 billion in lost revenues.

Now, though, HUD says the initiative won't cost taxpayers a dime because the FHA returns about $1.5 billion a year to the U.S. Treasury. And while it is true that the giveaway could even save the agency money by cutting carrying costs, HUD's new "Good Neighbor Policy" will cost something because the government actually incurs a loss on every property it can't resell at a price high enough to recover its investment.

No reason was given for HUD's change of heart. But Sec. Andrew Cuomo said the program "will build better futures for hundreds of communities and thousands of families across the nation."

"It will help reverse decades of decline in our cities by revitalizing neighborhoods, attracting new residents and promoting home ownership," he said.

Under the Good Neighbor Policy, single-family houses acquired in foreclosure by the FHA will be eligible for sale if, after six months of trying, the government has been unable to unload them at or near market prices. In cases where it is not feasible to rehabilitate houses that are in extremely deteriorated condition, the houses will be demolished and the vacant lots also will be sold for a buck.

The first property to be sold, a three-bedroom house, will go to Columbus, Ohio, the home district of Rep. John Kasich, R-Ohio, who Cuomo credited with coming up with the idea for the plan.

"I hope there can be more instances when Members of Congress and officials from the Executive Branch can work together to develop and implement ideas like this one that achieve a common ground," said Kasich, who is chairman of the House Budget Committee.

HUD currently has about 3,000 houses in inventory that meet the program's criteria, and additional dwellings will be made available every month. But the vast majority of FHA foreclosures are resold within the allotted six-month holding period. Over the last six months, for example, the FHA has sold about 39,000 houses.

The agency currently insures about 6.7 million mortgages, promising to pay off lenders in the event that borrowers can't or won't pay them back as promised.

When someone fails to make his payments, lenders, on behalf of the FHA, first try to keep them in their homes and avoid foreclosure. But if forbearance and other alternatives don't work, the lender forecloses and conveys the house back to the FHA in exchange for a payment equaling the loan's balance.


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