Senate Passes Leahy-Sanders Formula
That Would Net Nearly $20 M. For Vermont
To Help Stem Mortgage Crisis
WASHINGTON (Thursday, April 10) – The
U.S. Senate has passed legislation authored by Vermont’s two U.S.
Senators – Patrick Leahy (D) and Bernie Sanders (I) – that would
bring nearly $20 million in emergency relief to Vermont’s
neighborhoods and communities, to quickly redevelop and resell or
rent abandoned and foreclosed homes and help stabilize home values,
rents and local economies.
The Senate-passed Foreclosure
Prevention Act includes $3.92 billion for communities to use in
buying and rehabilitating vacant foreclosed homes, as well as $13
billion in new tax incentives to help spur the sagging housing
market. The rehab funds will be allocated through the Community
Development Block Grant (CDBG) Program. Leahy and Sanders added a
formula to distribute the CDBG funds under an all-state minimum that
would assure a minimum allocation of .5 percent to each state,
ensuring that funds reach small states like Vermont, as well as
larger states. The Senate by unanimous consent Wednesday night
added the Leahy-Sanders all-state minimum amendment to the housing
bill, which then passed the Senate Thursday in a vote of 84 to 12.
The bill will go to conference with a counterpart House bill, which
is also on a legislative fast track.
Leahy and Sanders said Vermont stands
to receive at least $19.6 million in CDBG funds under their formula,
to help communities prevent foreclosures and redevelop abandoned and
foreclosed homes. Rehabilitated homes, purchased at a discount,
would be used to stabilize neighborhoods and stem the significant
losses in home values.
Leahy said, “So far Vermont has not
been hurt as badly as other states, but even our rates are rising,
and time is not on our side. The sluggish national economy and the
rising cost of housing in Vermont is a one-two punch that is pushing
affordable housing out of the reach of many Vermont families. The
sooner we can step up our efforts to minimize the withering effects
of the mortgage crisis on our neighborhoods and communities, the
better off we will be and the sooner we all can pull out of this
downturn. Our legislation would make sure that Vermont and other
small states get the same kind of emergency help that larger states
would get.”
Sanders said, “While the overall bill
was certainly not everything we wanted, this $20 million will help
Vermont deal with the foreclosure crisis that is sweeping the
country. With this funding, it is my hope that Vermont’s cities and
towns will be able to provide immediate assistance to the struggling
middle class trying to hold onto their homes and improve communities
hit hard by foreclosures. Clearly, we must do everything we can to
prevent the American dream of homeownership from turning into the
American nightmare of foreclosure that too many American families
are experiencing.”
Though the mortgage crisis is worse in
other regions of the country, foreclosure rates also continue to
rise in Vermont, particularly in the Northeast Kingdom and
Southeastern Vermont. According to Vermont’s Department of Banking,
Insurance, Securities and Health Care Administration, for the first
quarter of 2008, more than 400 new foreclosures have been filed in
Vermont, a 30 percent increase over those filed for the same quarter
last year. If that pattern holds, Vermont this year could be facing
about 1600 foreclosures. Subprime mortgage-related foreclosures
will cost Vermont $74.5 million over the second half of 2007 through
the end of 2009, according to Congress’s Joint Economic Committee,
which also says the losses nationwide will reach nearly $104
billion.
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