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Homeowners 

Mary M. LeDoux Lake Charles, LA

Saxon reduced my interest and increased my principle by over $10,000. I had to agree to the "Modification" or lose my ...

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Lloyd D Knoxville Tn

OOPS the bank could've been making that rent money for 2 years,instead they make me lose everythig ecept my ...

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Jason L. - TN

I never really thought of myself as anyone other than someone who would make his monthly mortgage payments until the ...

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Joy Carter Minor, Moss Point, MS

Early January 2011, I received a call that my home was being entered by people without my permission. The ...

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Rocky & Brenda C. Cave Creek Arizona

As we seek legal counsel (we're pleading for Terry Goddard's help – he only stepped down from his AG post ...

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Michael H. Quay Pahoa, HI

I am still in shock and it seems like a nightmare! ONLY THREE PAYMENTS behind and I also had ...

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Andrea Allan 254 Lyons Plains Rd. Weston, CT.

  I've lost my business, my home, and am in debt.  Also PHH sent in negative 9 times to Experian ...

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Larry Bradshaw, Fort Myers, Florida

  This appears to be clear and convincing evidence of a “conspiracy to commit fraud” (cover up), a fraudulent act ...

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Melissa Ramont, La Mesa, CA

Ok, so my situation is not as devastating as some of the other stories I've seen and heard.  But it ...

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Bob Cape Coral, FL

I called and complained and a week later I had keys sent to me for the new locks.  They ...

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Ron B. - Penn

The whole 8 months of this was just a circus of lost papers, noone at BAC working from the ...

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Each month, the Treasury Department releases new information about how homeowners in its mortgage modification program are faring. And each month, the numbers get bleaker.

Take a look at our graphical rundown of the numbers, broken down by each bank or mortgage servicer participating in the program [1].

Here's a quick summary: About 1.3 million homeowners have received a trial modification, a temporary reduction in payments designed to make sure they can keep up with the lower monthly bill. It is supposed to last three or four months. For most, it has lasted longer than that, and for over a quarter of a million homeowners [2], it has lasted longer than six months.

About a million homeowners have received a final answer from their mortgage servicers. For nearly 60 percent of them, the answer was that they did not qualify for the program, even though most did not miss a trial payment. For those who remained current, the most common reasons for disqualifications were homeowners' not meeting the program's income requirements or not sending in the required documents, according to the Treasury. (Meanwhile, homeowners routinely complain [3] that their documents are lost when they send them in to the servicer.)

Despite all those denials, there's still a large backlog of homeowners in limbo: About 118,000 have  been in a trial for more than six months. Back in May, Treasury officials said mortgage servicers had promised them [2] this backlog would be cleared by the end of June. That didn't happen. [4] On Friday, Herb Allison, the Treasury official in charge of the TARP, said servicers had made a new promise: They will reach decisions on those loans "over the next month or so."

This lack of accountability has been a recurring feature of the program. Several times [5], Treasury has threatened [4] to penalize servicers for breaking the program's rules, but has never followed through. Recently, nearly 400 homeowners responded to a ProPublica questionnaire, and most said their servicers had broken the program's rules [3]. Our profiles of five homeowners [6] who've tried to get a modification through the program also show the errors and delays that have been common.

Allison put a positive spin on the fact that hundreds of thousands of homeowners have waited for several months for a final answer from their servicers. Homeowners in the trials have "benefited from lower payments ... for many months" and from "having time to obtain other solutions to their needs," he said. And that relief has come "at no cost to taxpayers." (Servicers in the program are paid incentives only for completed, permanent modifications, which accounts for the fact that very little of the $75 billion once earmarked for the program has actually been spent [7].)...

http://www.propublica.org/article/for-govt-mortgage-mod-program-new-numbers-show-old-problems



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