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House panel's bill would end foreclosure program


WestVirginiaRebel

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WestVirginiaRebel
general-us-congress-foreclosures_8324423.html
Forbes:

WASHINGTON -- A House committee plans to write legislation next week ending the Obama administration's flagship effort for helping struggling homeowners avoid foreclosure and abolishing three other housing assistance programs.

At its meeting next Thursday, the highest-profile target of the Republican-run House Financial Services Committee will be the Home Affordable Modification Program. The Treasury Department has acknowledged the program won't meet its original goal of preventing 3 million to 4 million foreclosures, and last month a federal inspector general said it has been a failure.

The bill comes at a time when Republicans are proposing deep spending cuts across the federal budget. They have already pushed legislation through the House cutting this year's spending by $61 billion, despite opposition by President Barack Obama and congressional Democrats.

The committee will also vote on GOP plans to terminate programs that help state and local governments buy foreclosed properties and sell or rent them, provide loans to unemployed people who have fallen behind in their mortgage payments, and help restructure mortgages for people who owe more than their homes are worth.

Democrats signaled that they will oppose the proposals.

"As we continue to respond to the victims of the foreclosure crisis in a responsible way, we will make the case that there are better ways for the federal government to cut spending than by attacking these programs," said Rep. Barney Frank of Massachusetts, top Democrat on the committee.

Financial Services Chairman Spencer Bachus, R-Ala., who announced his committee's meeting on Thursday, said the targeted programs have had little impact, have increased some homeowners' debts and may have led to additional foreclosures.

"In an era of record-breaking deficits, it's time to pull the plug on these programs that are actually doing more harm than good for struggling homeowners," Bachus said in a written statement.
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If you're unemployed and can no longer afford payments that might be one thing, but subsidizing people who should have known better hasn't worked out so well.
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