LANSING – With home foreclosures skyrocketing to Depression-era levels, House Democrats today approved the Michigan Home Loan Protection Act, co-sponsored by State Representative Coleman Young II (D-Detroit). Young's bill, HB 5307, will crack down on predatory mortgage-lending practices and strengthen consumer protections in the face of the collapsing subprime mortgage market.
"Just about every day we hear about the housing market and the negative impact that subprime mortgages are having on Michigan's economy," Young said "We have one of the highest foreclosure rates in the country and part of the blame can be put on predatory lenders. This package will protect consumers and homeowners from the reckless lending practices that line mortgage lenders' pockets and lead to foreclosures in our neighborhoods."
The Michigan Home Loan Protection Act will:
- Ban predatory lending practices, such as making loans without requiring a borrower to prove their ability to repay the loan, encouraging a borrower to default, charging excessive late fees and charging fees for a payoff statement.
- Protect homeowners' equity by prohibiting home refinancing to generate fees for the lender unless there is a tangible net benefit to the borrower.
- Protect consumers from being steered toward high-cost loans when they would otherwise qualify for a traditional loan.
- Require vulnerable borrowers to receive independent counseling from a certified third-party, non-profit counselor.
- Give injured and aggrieved homeowners legal recourse so they can independently enforce these consumer protections against unscrupulous lenders.
According to the latest figures from RealtyTrac, an Irvine, Calif.-based online foreclosure firm, Michigan ranks fifth in the nation in foreclosures, with 12,792 foreclosure filings in May 2008. More than half of the country's foreclosure activity last month took place in just four states: California, Florida, Arizona and Michigan, according to RealtyTrac.
According to federal data, subprime borrowers are often steered by brokers into signing Adjustable Rate Mortgages (ARMs) and are not given the option of fixed-rate loans, nor informed of the inherent risks of ARMs. Some lenders and brokers write loans they know borrowers cannot afford just to collect the fees and commissions. Federal home-loan agencies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac estimate that 30 to 50 percent of all borrowers with subprime loans could have qualified for more affordable mortgages.
The Michigan Home Loan Protection Act is a key component of a comprehensive strategy to combat the rising tide of foreclosures currently devastating Michigan. Other pieces of this strategy include Save the Dream, mortgage loan officer regulation, combating appraisal fraud and streamlining tax foreclosure law.
"Foreclosures don't just hurt the families who are forced to leave their home, they hurt entire neighborhoods and communities," Young said. "Abandoned buildings and low property values only add to the blight we are already experiencing. This package will give our residents real protection and will ensure own homeowners are no longer taken advantage of by dishonest lenders."





