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M.K.(Mike) Kissinger
M. K. (Mike) Kissinger
Realtor Associate
    Years of Experience: 30+

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Coldwell Banker Morris
2825 Tamiami Trail
Punta Gorda, FL 33950
941-637-1090


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Foreclosures

Foreclosed Punta Gorda Owners Waiting 676 Days for the Auction!

Friday, November 11th, 2011

 

    A new report from LPS Applied Analytics found that 56% of Florida’s foreclosed homeowners are 24 months or more behind in payments, compared to a national average of 39%, with 84% showing delinquencies over 18 months.  LPS Senior V.P., Herb Blecher estimates that the time from initial filing to actual auction in Florida is about 676 days.  In contrast, in January of 2010 there were only 19% of the foreclosed Florida homeowners behind over 24 months.

     Florida’s court system is bogged down with approximately 350,000 foreclosures, brought on by the infamous “robo-signing” scandal.  “The longer the homes are out there and the borrower isn’t paying, the more properties will tend to deteriorate,” Blecher said.  ” It’s on the high end in Florida because inventories are bigger and the foreclosure proecssing  is slower.”

     Surprisingly, last month BOA ( Bank of America) quietly began a Florida-only campaign that gives the homeowners up to $20,000 for a short sale rather than letting their homes linger.  Wells Fargo and J.P. Morgan Chase initated similar programs, sometimes called ” cash for keys.”

     Mr. Jack McCabe, CEO of McCabe Research and Consulting in Deerfield Beach said, “he knows a women that was told by Chase it would give her $35,000 for a short sale after she was only 60 days behind on her payments.  I think the banks are finally starting to see that foreclosures are a very long and dragged-out process and it’s to their advantage to do a short sale.”  ” They don’t want to incur the expense of a vacant home. They are cutting their losses.” 

Data Source:  ©2011 The Palm Beach Post, West Palm Beach, FL, McClatchy-Tribune News.  Distributed by MCT Information Services.

For the “What it’s Worth File.”    The Foreclosure Landscape is changing constantly.  You, as an affected homeowner need to keep on top of what is going on in this arena.  Just because you are frustrated by what you have already faced, don’t presume that there isn’t another option out there that might just worik for you.  Do yourself a favor and dedicate some time to acquainting yourself with the current offerings that you may qualify for.  If you are understandably intimidated, search out professional help and utilize their resources.  Remember, if you need  a Realtor® where you live or need one where you are moving – just call me.  I will help you find a “Good” one!  M.K. (Mike) Kissinger – #941-979-1455.

    

 

Punta Gorda Foreclosure Victims watching Supreme Court for Ruling!

Friday, February 25th, 2011

 

Case Involving Alleged Foreclosure Fraud Headed To Florida Supreme Court

 

Feb. 03—A South Florida home owner who is fighting a mortgage foreclosure could end up reshaping state law.

An appeals court on Wednesday asked the Florida Supreme Court to consider Roman Pino’s case as a matter of “great public importance,” a move legal experts say could result in reforms in foreclosure cases where there is evidence of fraud in the way documents were handled by lenders, mortgage servicers, and law firms.

The decision by the 4th District Court of Appeal in West Palm Beach to send the case to the state Supreme Court was unusual, because neither the home owner nor the bank seeking to foreclose on Pino’s home had asked for such a review.

“We conclude that this is a question of great public importance, as many, many mortgage foreclosures appear tainted with suspect documents,” the appeals court wrote.

If the case is taken up by the Supreme Court and results in a decision in favor of the home owner, legal experts who specialize in foreclosure law say the case has the potential to affect thousands of foreclosures across the state where there are allegations of document fraud.

“There is this huge problem that is evident across the state. The District Court of Appeal is handing this up to the Supreme Court because of the importance of this bigger problem,” said South Florida attorney Margery Golant, who works with The Florida Bar to educate attorneys about proper document handling in foreclosure cases.

Pino paid $203,000 for a Greenacres home in July 2006 and took out a $162,400 mortgage, land records show. He fell behind on his payments, and Bank of New York Mellon moved to foreclose in October 2008.

Pino hired Royal Palm Beach attorney Thomas Ice, whose law firm has been at the forefront of uncovering forged and fraudulent foreclosure documents.

The bank alleged in its foreclosure complaint that it was the owner of the mortgage note through an assignment from another lender, but didn’t include the assignment as part of the foreclosure complaint, according to the appellate decision. Ice’s attorneys moved to dismiss the complaint, arguing that the bank needed the assignment in order to foreclose.

Then the bank’s attorney, from the law offices of David J. Stern in Plantation, filed an amended complaint and attached an assignment that had not been recorded in land records and “which happened to be dated just before the original pleading was filed,” the appeals court wrote.

Ice wanted to try to prove Pino was the victim of fraud, but the judge would not allow him to go forward because the bank voluntarily dropped the foreclosure action. The appeals court agreed with the judge, but because of the importance of the issue, sent the case to the state’s highest court in Tallahassee. One appellate judge, Gary Farmer, disagreed, saying he thought the trial judge could have kept the case open so Ice could pursue his claim of fraud.

Ice said Wednesday that the bank dismissed the foreclosure just as his attorneys were set to take depositions of Stern employees to discover how the assignment was created. Stern’s firm is one of four foreclosure law firms in the state under investigation by the Florida Attorney General’s Office for document fabrication.

The case illustrates a problem that is playing out in cases around the state, where problematic documents are discovered, and the foreclosure is dismissed only to be later refiled with different documents, Ice said.

That is what happened to Pino. The bank refiled the foreclosure in August 2009, and that case is now going forward. “This seems to be a prevalent problem in foreclosures,” Ice said. “That is why [the appellate judges] want the Florida Supreme Court to rule on it. This is going to be significant to thousands of cases across the state.”

Three attorneys for the bank could not be reached for comment despite phone calls and e-mails seeking comment.
–—

Source:  February 3, 2011    By Peter Franceschina, Sun Sentinel, Fort Lauderdale, Fla.   Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.  Read more: http://www.houselogic.com/  Copyright(c) 2011, Sun Sentinel, Fort Lauderdale, Fla.    Copyright (c) 2011, Sun Sentinel, Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

For the “What it’s Worth File”.   There are occasionally some glimmers of light at the end of the proverbial tunnel.   This could be a significant step in the right direction for any and all victims of foreclosure who were mistreated and financially abused by the lending institutions over the last three years.  This is a good one to keep your eye on!  Remember, if you need a Realtor® where you live or need one where you are moving – call me.  I will gladly help you find a “Good” one!

Foreclosure Victims in Punta Gorda say” GOOD RIDDANCE”!

Saturday, February 12th, 2011

 

Florida’s foreclosure king – an inside look!

 

FORT LAUDERDALE – During the housing crash, it was good to be a foreclosure king. David Stern was Florida’s top foreclosure lawyer, and he lived like an oil sheik. He piled up a collection of trophy properties, glided through town in a fleet of six-figure sports cars and, with his bombshell wife, partied on an ocean cruiser the size of a small hotel.

This undated photo shows David Stern, a Florida foreclosure lawyer who became one of the nation’s top foreclosure lawyers. The worse things got for homeowners, the better they got for Stern. That is, until last fall, when the nation’s foreclosure machine blew apart and Stern’s gilded world came undone.

 When homeowners fell behind on their mortgages, the banks flocked to “foreclosure mills” like Stern’s to push foreclosures through the courts on their behalf. To his megabank clients — Bank of America, Goldman Sachs, GMAC, Citibank and Wells Fargo — Stern was the ultimate Repo Man.

At industry gatherings, Stern bragged in his boyish voice of taking mortgages from the “cradle to the grave.” Of the federal government’s disastrous homeowner relief plan, which was supposed to keep people from getting evicted, he quipped: “Fortunately, it’s failing.” The worse things got for homeowners, the better they got for Stern.

That is, until last fall, when the nation’s foreclosure machine blew apart and Stern’s gilded world came undone. Within a few months, Stern went from being the subject of a gushing magazine profile to being the subject of a Florida investigation, class-action lawsuits and blogger Schadenfreude that, at last long, the “foreclosure king” was dead.

“What Stern represents is an industry that was completely unrestrained, unchecked, unpunished and unsupervised,” says Florida defense attorney Matt Weidner. “This was business gone wild.”

The rise and fall of Stern, now 50, provides an inside look at how the foreclosure industry worked in the last decade — and how it fell apart. It also shows how banks, together with their law firms, built a quick-and-dirty foreclosure machine that was designed to take as many houses as quickly as possible.

Not long ago, the world of back-office bank procedures was of little interest to the public. But revelations last fall about robo-signers powering through hundreds of foreclosure affidavits a day, without verifying a single sentence, changed all that. Today the banking industry’s eviction juggernaut is under intense scrutiny as allegations of systemic foreclosure fraud mount.

The 50 state attorneys general are conducting a foreclosure industry probe. So are state and federal regulators. Class-action lawsuits are gathering force, and, with increasing frequency, state judges are tossing out foreclosure suits in favor of homeowners. The developments are prolonging the housing market depression, casting doubt on mortgage ownership and calling into question whether mortgage-backed securities are, in fact, backed by nothing at all.

The Florida attorney general’s economic crimes division is investigating three law firms, including Stern’s, over allegations that they created fraudulent legal documents, gouged homeowners with inflated fees, steered business to companies they owned and filed foreclosures without proving the bank actually had a legal interest in the loan. Florida authorities characterize the foreclosure process at these law firms as a “virtual morass” of “fake documents” and depicted Stern’s operations as something akin to the TV show “Lost” — only instead of people that went missing, it was paperwork. Stern’s employees churned out bogus mortgage assignments, faked signatures, falsified notarizations and foreclosed on people without verifying their identities, the amounts they owed or who owned their loans, according to employee testimony. The attorney general is also looking at whether Stern paid kickbacks to big banks.

“There’s a David Stern in every state, sometimes more than one,” says Jacksonville Legal Aid attorney April Charney, who has successfully stopped foreclosure for hundreds of Florida families.

Stern denied repeated requests for comment. He did not answer inquiries at his office or at his main residence in Fort Lauderdale. Stern’s lawyer, Jeffrey Tew, agreed to an interview in late December at his Miami office, then canceled it the night before without further comment.

Stern’s story, starting with his law degree in 1986 from the South Texas College of Law, can be pieced together through thousands of pages of court documents, myriad depositions and scores of interviews.

After working at a law firm for mortgage lenders, Stern started his own practice in Fort Lauderdale in 1994. Four years later, he got a massive break: the mortgage giant Fannie Mae, a government-backed agency that provides market stability for mortgage lenders, named Stern to its exclusive attorney network. That meant Fannie directed banks to use Stern’s firm when foreclosing in Florida. Fannie also named Stern Attorney of the Year in 1998 and 1999. Employees from that era remember an office that liked to party together. Stern enjoyed dressing up for his office bashes. One time he sauntered on stage turned out like Michael Jackson.

Almost from the beginning, Stern faced trouble. In 1998, he was named in a class-action lawsuit alleging that he padded fees on foreclosed homeowners. Stern settled for $2.2 million. According to legal testimony at the time from a Fannie Mae official, Fannie was warned about troubles at the Stern firm. But Fannie continued referring cases to Stern. Fannie Mae spokeswoman Amy Bonitatibus says, “At all times, Fannie Mae has had a reasonable expectation that our servicers and the law firms adhere to proper procedures and conduct under the law. In instances where we learn that servicers or law firms are not adhering to our requirements or applicable law, we immediately engage and take appropriate action, which may include termination.”

Soon after, Stern was sued again, this time for sexual harassment. A former paralegal alleged that Stern created a “sexually-laden” atmosphere in which he routinely “touched and grabbed and subjected to simulated intercourse” his employees. Stern settled that suit in 2000 for an undisclosed amount.

By this time, lawyers and homeowner activists were also warning lenders, federal regulators and the Florida Bar about Stern. In 2002, the Florida Supreme Court reprimanded Stern for submitting “potentially misleading” fee affidavits.

None of the accusations stalled the firm’s steroidal growth. After the economy crashed in the fall of 2008 and ravaged the housing market, Florida, along with Nevada, Arizona and California, became foreclosure central. Stern’s caseload rose from 15,000 foreclosures in 2006 to 70,400 in 2009. His staff tripled to more than 1,200. To keep up with demand, Stern set up offices in the Philippines. When the U.S. staff responsible for entering bank data in the foreclosure files logged off, the offshore workers logged on.

Revenue swelled from $41 million in 2006 to $260 million in 2009, according to an SEC filing. The firm moved into a plush, marble-floored headquarters near Miami that was all glass and fountains. By now Stern was driving a Bugatti and had bought at least $60 million in property, including a 16,000-square-foot island compound that sits behind two security gates.

But all the paperwork Stern’s firm was cranking out to make this fortune would soon come back to haunt him. The foreclosure business is a volume game. Banks typically pay law firms like Stern’s about $1,400 for each successful foreclosure. But the banks can pay a lot less if the firm doesn’t successfully foreclose within a certain time frame, usually around six months.

With so many foreclosures flooding in, Stern’s firm could not keep up. Stern took shortcuts by hiring the young and cheap. “The girls would come out on the floor not knowing what they were doing,” says Tammie Lou Kapusta, who worked in Stern’s foreclosure department in 2008 and 2009. “Mortgages would get placed in different files. They would get thrown out. There was just no real organization when it came to original documents.”

Employee depositions paint a picture of a firm under constant pressure from the banks to move faster. The longer it took to foreclose, the more money the banks stood to lose. Like so many in the industry, Stern had a strategy to cope with all the volume and velocity: robo-signing. One employee testified that Stern’s chief lieutenant, a one-time file clerk named Cheryl Samons who rose to become the firm’s chief operating officer, signed as many as 1,000 foreclosure affidavits a day without reading a single word. The employee said Samons’ hand got so tired that she told three other employees to forge her signature. Samons also signed numerous mortgage assignments with a notary stamp that did not even exist at the time of signing. Notary stamps are only valid for four years. The only way Samons could have signed mortgage assignments at the time they were supposedly notarized was if she had been capable of time travel.

Stern rewarded Samons with a new BMW SUV every year, paid all her bills and took care of the mortgage payment on her home, according to testimony from two employees. Samons did not respond to request for comment.

Kapusta testified that she received 100 phone calls a day from people who never received their foreclosure notices or who wanted loan modifications but could not get through to the banks. If she talked too long on the phone, Kapusta testified, Samons would yell at her. “Everything was about getting the judgment entered because we had to report to the banks,” Kapusta said.

Stern battled to keep the chaos inside his firm a secret. In 2008 and 2009, whenever the Fannie Mae auditors were about to touch down in Miami for their routine monitoring, Stern’s employees sometimes toiled through the night, ripping the stickers and client codes off of Fannie files and replacing them with those of a different lender. Then, as an extra precaution, they hauled the disguised files to a remote back room.

Stern then gave Fannie officials the white-glove treatment, with catered meals and chauffeuring. The incomplete files stayed hidden until the auditors left town.

Fannie Mae’s Bonitatibus says that, “To our knowledge, no one at Fannie Mae has had their expenses paid by the Stern Law firm.”

Early 2010 brought Stern’s biggest coup. He spun off a chunk of his business called DJSP that performed mortgage process services like title searches and lien monitoring and took it public. The deal reportedly made Stern $146 million, including $55 million cash.

DJSP stock started trading in January at about $10 a share. Within months, battered by rumors of indiscretions at Stern’s firm, it was worth half. On July 20, two investors filed a securities-fraud class action alleging that Stern knowingly misled them by failing to disclose the problems within the business. “DJSP was a scam,” says Bill Warner, a Sarasota private eye who successfully defended himself against a foreclosure suit brought by Stern.

At the end of July, Florida attorney Kenneth Trent, who had blocked Stern from foreclosing on a homeowner who was current on his mortgage, filed a federal lawsuit against Stern’s firm under a statute normally reserved for gangsters, the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act. Days later, the Florida attorney general launched an investigation against Stern’s firm and three other foreclosure mills. The AG’s arguments were similar to those brought in Trent’s class action.

At first, Stern railed against the media, saying he would defend the company and its reputation against the allegations. Then, in September, he dropped out of sight. Equally elusive is Cheryl Samons, who is no longer with the firm. She left no contact information.

In October, one by one, the megabanks started to withdraw their cases from Stern’s firm. Fannie fired Stern on Oct. 22. Stern’s staff of 1,200 has dwindled to 200. DJSP’s stock, worth as much as $13 in April, now trades for pennies.

The firm’s fall has spawn-ed more chaos in Florida’s circus-like foreclosure courts. A slew of homes Stern foreclosed on that sold for $240,000 each during the credit bubble sold at auction as orphaned cases for $200. Recently, even the most infamous “rocket docket,” in Lee County, where judges were reported to have signed off on a foreclosure every 30 seconds, ground to a virtual standstill as the Stern firm withdrew from case after case. Some of Stern’s remaining lawyers show up in court with greasy hair, fleece jackets and food-stained clothing. As for Stern, if federal and state prosecutors file criminal charges, he could end up in prison.

Meanwhile, Stern’s payment on his $12 million line of credit with Bank of America is late. So is the rent on his headquarters.

He is now in default.

Source:   By MICHELLE CONLIN   The Associated Press,  Published: Tuesday, February 8, 2011 at 1:00 a.m.

For the “What it’s Worth File”.    I want to apologize the length of this post.  I felt that is was important  to deliver the whole story.  It’s encouragfing the see that sometimes “what goes around actualy does come around!”

Is there LIFE AFTER FORECLOSURE in Punta Gorda?

Wednesday, January 12th, 2011

 

The foreclosure market  is booming right now, and a lot of people are finding themselves put out of their homes after falling behind on their mortgages. If your home was one of the foreclosure properties that have popped up over the last several years, you may feel like you’ll never be able to buy another home again. It’s important to know that there is hope you can go on to buy another house. Here are some tips to get started:

 

 Increase your savings.    Most financial advisors suggest keeping at least three to six months worth of living expenses in the bank, the funds should be easy to access when you need them. You need to be able to show lenders that after your foreclosure, you have enough money to pay your mortgage, even if you lose your job.

Search out a steady job.     If lack of a steady job is the reason your house was a foreclosure, it’s a fairly simple fix. Once you find a job, stay with it unless you’re changing jobs because you have another one that pays more. Lenders check for a solid work history before handing out home loans, so make sure you’ve got one.

Work at getting your credit score up.      A foreclosure can drop your credit score by 150 points or more, and repairing your credit can take a lot of time and effort. Still, it’s one of the most important steps to becoming a homeowner again.

Try to reduce your waiting time for a new mortgage.     Fannie Mae normally requires that you wait a minimum of seven years after your  foreclosure before you can qualify for a new loan. That said, if you can prove that there were extending circumstances surrounding your  foreclosure, you could be able to cut that waiting time down to three years. These rules change regularly, so make sure you stay up to date on any new developments.

For the “What it’s Worth File”.   All is not lost – don’t allow yourself to be over-run by pessimism and frustration.  There is Life after Foreclosure, if you take a positive approach and pay attention to the necessary regulations and options that are being offered.  If you need a Realtor® where you live or where you are moving  -  call me.  I will gladly help you find a “good” one.

Author Resource:- Founded in 1995, Sandra Wilken Luxury Properties was first recognized for representing major Luxury Homes Scottsdale, including Red Rock and Gainey Ranch. She is one of the top real estate agents in Scottsdale. In recent years S.W.L.P. has grown to service Arizona’s most prestigious communities in the Scottsdale, Paradise Valley and Biltmore area of Phoenix.    Article From Real Estate Pro Articles. Submitted 2010-12-30

SOME PUNTA GORDA HOME OWNER’S ARE CONFUSED !!

Friday, November 5th, 2010

 

Home Owners in Foreclosure: Who’s Helping Them?

Organizations all over the country are pitching in to help solve the foreclosure crisis. They use different strategies, but they share a common goal: helping home owners in financial distress keep their homes.

 Phone a foreclosure counselor

Awake in the middle of the night because you’re worried about losing your home to foreclosure?  The Homeownership Preservation Foundation, Minneapolis, takes calls 24/7 at its HOPE™ Hotline at 888/995-HOPE. It can hook you up with a U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development-certified counselor. Because it’s tied to an industry alliance of counselors and mortgage companies, the HOPE™ Hotline has great connections with bank staffers around the country who have the power to help you avoid foreclosure.

 

Go online for foreclosure help

For those who prefer to type rather than talk, several groups offer online foreclosure prevention. Try the Consumer Credit Counseling Agency of Atlanta’s CredAbility live chat program, which helps borrowers anywhere in the United States. 

Another option: HOPE NOW has an online calculator that checks your eligibility for federal government loan modification programs.

 

Walk in to get foreclosure help

The Neighborhood Assistance Corp. of America, a Boston-based nonprofit community advocacy and home ownership organization, runs foreclosure counseling events that look more like rock concerts or gospel revivals.

Mortgage bankers and mortgage servicers send representatives to NACA’s - foreclosure prevention events so you can sit down and talk face-to-face with a human being. If your mortgage lender sends staff to the event (and most large lenders do), you may even be able to get your case resolved on the spot.

The biggest foreclosure events draw thousands of people, so be prepared to wait all day for your turn, and don’t bring the kids–they’ll just go nuts from the boredom. 

 

Foreclosure help right in your neighborhood

Neighborhood organizations like those in the NeighborWorks® America alliance work to improve communities. Most alliance members offer foreclosure counseling workshops, one-on-one counseling sessions, and other home ownership services designed to help you buy a home or keep the home you have despite financial challenges.

 

Get foreclosure help from your mortgage insurer

If you put down less than 20% when you bought your house, chances are you have mortgage insurance. That mortgage insurance pays a claim to your lender if you stop paying your mortgage. To collect, your mortgage lender has to do what the insurer says.

Since getting you to pay some of your mortgage means paying a smaller claim than having you pay none of your mortgage, mortgage insurance companies like United Guaranty in Greensboro, N.C., will work with you.

Your mortgage insurance company may work out a deal with your lender to give you extra time to catch up on missed payments, to reduce or even suspend your monthly payment for up to a year, to cut your interest rate, or to extend the length of your loan. To find out if you have mortgage insurance, look at your settlement statement (if you still have it) or call your mortgage lender.

Syndicated housing columnist Lew Sichelman is a longtime home owner who feels absolutely blessed he’s never found himself in the situations he often writes about.

For the “What it’s Worth File”    If you are confused about just what to do or even what options are available to you – PLEASE take the above advice and get educated.  Don’t wait until it is too late to acquire help and not have any choices left.  If you need a realtor where you are or need one where you are moving – give me a call, I will help you find a good one!

Source:     By: Lew Sichelman    Published: October 18, 2010

Will a Loan Modification to my Punta Gorda Property Screw up my Credit Rating?

Monday, September 13th, 2010

 

The credit score is one of the most important measures of a person’s credit worthiness. It is something that can show how well a person works with credit. A number of different types of financial services can impact one’s credit score. This is something that anyone who is interested in working with a loan modification specialist like 1st Foreclosure Prevention should consider.

The main thing that a loan modification for foreclosure prevention can do is that it will work to make one’s mortgage current. This is vital in that a current mortgage is going to be better on one’s credit score than that of a mortgage that is in default.

The main reason as to why the loan will be read as current comes from how the late payments will be included in the principal that is owed on a loan. A loan modification specialist will work to get a person’s mortgage to be current by eliminating all of one’s late fees and moving all arrears into the principal. This is because of how a lender will see these expenses as optional ones that may not be necessary for every single homebuyer.

Another part of this service comes from how a loan modification service from 1st Foreclosure Prevention will work to ensure that it will be easier to pay off a mortgage. This is thanks to how monthly payments for a mortgage loan will be reduced when the terms on the mortgage have been changed. This is vital because of how this will impact one’s credit score.

The impact on the credit score from the lower monthly payments comes from how the score will improved. This is thanks to how a person will be less likely to deal with late payments. Late payments on a mortgage loan or any other type of loan can be harmful to a credit report. Late payments can make any type of lender believe that a person is not fully responsible with regards to what one owes.

The removal of late fees will make it easier for a credit score to improve. The lender will ask for all of these fees to be removed from the report. This can work in turn to improve one’s credit score.

It also helps to know that a loan modification can make it easier for a person to get a better credit score by successfully getting more of the value of the loan paid off. It can take a while to pay off a mortgage loan that has been modified. The long term benefits to one’s credit will still be beneficial. It will show that a borrower is going to be able to properly take care of the debts that one might have to deal with.

The impact that a loan modification agency can give to a person’s credit score will be a good impact. This is thanks not only to the short term benefits of one’s loan but also from the long term benefits of one’s credit score improving as more of a loan is paid off.

For the “What it’s Worth File”.   As an agent for Coldwell Banker Morris Realty in Punta Gorda, FL, I meet with people who are embarrassed and ashamed about their situation.  Don’t allow that to happen.  Get professional assistance and move on to a better place and time.

Source: istforeclosureprevention, 8-5-2010 – goarticles.com

Foreclosures Exposed in Punta Gorda!

Friday, June 25th, 2010

     Let’s Take a Serious Look at What Foreclosure Really Means.

Just because you are current on your mortgage doesn’t mean that your home’s value won’t be affected by other foreclosures in the neighborhood around you.  The primary culprits to be concerned about are lower property values overall, higher crime rates, lost services and bottom-feeding investors.  Here is the bad news.  If you think that the foreclosure issue in your neighborhood doesn’t impact you negatively, think about this.  The Center for Responsible Lending reports that foreclosures in any neighborhood lowers the property value of nearby homes by an national average of $7200.00

That figure  is a pretty difficult to ignore.  In 2009 there was a record high number of foreclosures totaling 2.8 Million properties.  The Center for Responsible Lending projects that we will see a total of 9 Million more foreclosures between 2009 and 2012.  That average $7200 in lost property value per household could just be the “tip of the iceberg”.   That figure doesn’t take into account the impact of short sales by banks, according to the Center for Responsible Lending, who also points out that there is another reality to deal with regarding the decline of home values brought on by the glut of new inventory across the country.

The top states showing foreclosure activity are California, Florida, Arizona and Illinois.   The increase in activity ranged from 21% in California, 32% in Illinois, 34% in Florida to 40% in Arizona.

Unfortunately, foreclosures do not get resolved overnight.  Quite to the contrary. There are instances where they frequently drag on for many months and even years in some cases.  The real problem comes when multiple homes in a neighborhood sit unoccupied for long periods of time.  Blight can and will in fact follow.  Home owners who are strapped are more worried about food than whether they have kept up 0n their home maintenance, banks who know that they are likely going to have this property for a long term are not interested in upkeep either, while the local government is cutting back as well and may not be up to date on code enforcement issues.  The result is ugly and creates an environment that is not conducive to residential sales activity.  Then to make matters worse,  according to the Urban Institute, when a home is vacant and it is obvious that no one is taking care of it, the property has a much greater chance of being targeted by squatters, vandals and thieves.  That can make for a very uncomfortable situation for the other homeowners in the neighborhood.  If that situation gets out of hand, it can lead to an exodus of residents in that area.  It can in fact turn into what’s called a “domino effect” and when that happens residential sales become almost non-existent.

So, what can you do to ward off the effects of the sprawling foreclosure scourge in your neighborhood?  Take control of what you can!  Get the concerned neighbors organized.  Establish a Neighborhood Watch.  Put together a rehabilitation project that includes mowing lawns that are being ignored, spruce up the homes that are showing deterioration, clean up trash and patrol the area with the cooperation of your local law enforcement.  Local businesses will cooperate with the materials for rehab and some organizations will actually donate funds for the cause.

It’s your home, your investment, and your personal safety that is at risk here!    Stand up and be counted!!!!  You can do It!!!

Source: Houselogic

M.K.(Mike) Kissinger’s Bio
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