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Bankruptcy
Fraud
Foreclosures Prompt Calls
for Bankruptcy Overhaul

The
epidemic foreclosure rate across the country has consumer groups
calling on Congress to loosen the recent constraints on bankruptcy
to allow homeowners in foreclosure to file Chapter 13 to save
their homes from foreclosure

Groups
seek help for subprime borrowers
BY
ALAN ZIBEL
Associated Press
TwinCities.com-Pioneer Press
Article Last Updated:04/12/2007 09:32:17 PM CDT
WASHINGTON
- As the housing slump worsens, Congress needs to make it easier
for families facing foreclosure to file for bankruptcy and keep
their homes, consumer groups and a bankruptcy lawyers' organization
said Thursday.
Homeowners who file for bankruptcy can easily lose their homes
under current law because mortgage lenders have a higher priority
than almost all other creditors, the groups charged in a telephone
press briefing.
The law dates back to the late 1970s, when adjustable-rate mortgages
were uncommon and foreclosures were rarely the reason for a bankruptcy
filing, officials from the National Association of Consumer Bankruptcy
Attorneys said.
Eric Stein, senior vice president of the Center for Responsible
Lending, said lenders who made high-interest rate loans to borrowers
with weak credit are to blame for pushing homeowners into financial
peril.
The Durham, N.C.-based center projects that 2.2 million families
will lose their homes because of a growing crisis in the subprime
mortgage market of borrowers with the riskiest credits.
"Bankruptcy is not a great option," Stein said. "It's
a last option, but it needs to be an option."
Floyd
Stoner, executive director for congressional relations policy
at the American Bankers Association, agreed that bankruptcy should
be an option for those who need it.
He disagreed, though, that bankruptcy law changes are needed.
"The focus should be on working with borrowers in financial
distress, rather than focusing on changing bankruptcy (law) as
the first response to these concerns," Stoner said.
The NACBA countered that 80 percent of 640 bankruptcy lawyers
surveyed nationwide this month said 2005 bankruptcy law changes
are adding to the challenges borrowers facing foreclosure confront
in efforts to keep their homes.
"As bankruptcy lawyers in the trenches, we are seeing every
day the consequences of this crisis, and it's only going to get
worse," said Henry Sommer, a Philadelphia bankruptcy lawyer
and president of the NACBA, which has long criticized the 2005
bankruptcy code overhaul.
The Washington-based Consumer Federation of America joined the
NACBA in calling for Congress to take quick action Thursday as
several more lawmakers echoed calls made Wednesday for providing
hundreds of millions of dollars in federal aid to financially
troubled homeowners.
Chris Stinebert, chief executive of the American Financial Services
Association, said in a statement that rising foreclosure rates
can't be stanched by changing bankruptcy laws.
Laws that prevent mortgage terms from being changed in bankruptcy
gives lenders "the predictability and uniformity they need
to continue to make loans to deserving borrowers . . . The last
thing the real estate market needs right now is more uncertainty."
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