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Mortgage crisis inflicts collateral damage

Marriages, families, tax revenues fall victim to wave of foreclosures

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By Alex Johnson
Reporter
msnbc.com
updated 6:31 p.m. ET Dec. 13, 2007

The national surge in mortgage defaults is claiming more victims than just the thousands of subprime borrowers facing the prospect of losing their homes.

Social service agencies say homeless rates are on the rise not only as families lose their own homes to foreclosure but also as renters are evicted after their landlords default. Financial analysts warn that state and local governments will soon feel the pinch of sharply reduced property tax revenue. And counselors say divorces and reports of abuse are rising as families burdened by impending foreclosure take their stress out on one another.

The ripple effect illustrates the wide-ranging impact the subprime mortgage crash has had not only on the U.S. economy but on society at large, said Robert Reich, who was labor secretary during the Clinton administration.

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“Understand that houses are the most important assets most Americans have, and they are seeing those assets disappear,” Reich said.

Little recourse for renters
Especially hard hit are families that rent their homes from landlords facing foreclosure. RealtyTrac, a national real estate network that specializes in foreclosed properties, estimates that more than 20 percent of foreclosures involve investment properties; when landlords lose those properties, their tenants lose a roof over their heads with little warning.

Mona Hoeft, a rental assistance technician with the Olmsted County Housing and Redevelopment Authority in Rochester, Minn., said her agency was being swamped with calls for help from families who were being tossed out on the street.

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Scams among foreclosure fallout
TODAY’s Janice Lieberman reports on a company that is telling people it will save their homes from foreclosure but doesn’t.

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“Unfortunately, there’s not much a tenant can do other than move,” Hoeft said. “There really is no protection for the tenant.”

Congress is considering a measure to require landlords to give tenants 90 days’ notice before they can be evicted. But even if it passes, it will not be in time to help thousands of renters like Sharron Shagonaby, 67, who was never late on the $900-a-month rent she paid on a house in Holland, Mich. She was forced out two weeks ago when her landlord defaulted on his loan.

“I just can’t see how people are so cold that they would actually put me out on the street when I didn’t buy the house,” said Shagonaby, who uses an oxygen tank and is debilitated by diabetes.

“I didn’t forfeit my payment," said Shagonaby, but she fears that she will have trouble finding a new place to live.

“People that you apply to for a house won’t believe that,” she said. “They won’t even look at if you were really evicted — [they think] you’re just making up some story.”

Shelters feel the stress
Darryl Bartlett, executive director of the Holland Rescue Mission for Women, called Shagonaby an example of “a new kind of homeless — those that are the innocent victims.”

“We did not plan for large numbers of people who are being foreclosed on becoming homeless,” Bartlett said. “That was not in our plan.”

Eugene and Kathleen Pobol were packing up their rental home this week in Bakersfield, Calif., after getting an eviction notice.

“We’re between a rock and a hard place, and basically we’re up the creek without a paddle,” Eugene Pobol said.

“Here we are, tenants, paid our rent on time, went through credit checks and everything else, and now, all of a sudden, the landlord’s going bad on a mortgage,” he said.

Officials at the Bakersfield homeless shelter said they were at capacity but that more families wanted in. The shelter took in seven families in one day this week, said Louis Gill, the shelter’s executive director.

“I’m definitely concerned now that we’re receiving phone calls from people going through foreclosure,” Gill said. “We’ll have to see what kind of additional burden that puts on the emergency systems.”


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