New
Not-For-Profit Organization Will Expand Legal Assistance, Loan Remediation and
Education for At-Risk Homeowners
Mayor
Michael R. Bloomberg and City Council Speaker Christine Quinn today announced a
new not-for-profit organization, the Center for NYC Neighborhoods (CNYCN), to
assist homeowners at risk of mortgage foreclosure throughout the five
boroughs. The Center for NYC
Neighborhoods will be an independent entity that will fund a major expansion and
coordination of counseling and referral services, legal assistance, loan
remediation, preventive outreach and education, training, research and advocacy
around sub-prime lending and mortgage foreclosures. The initiative has a projected budget of
$5.3 million in the first year and will assist 18,000 New Yorkers annually. It will be the largest, most
comprehensive program of its kind in the nation. Funding in the first year will
include $1 million from the administration via the Department of Housing
Preservation and Development and $1.8 million from the City Council. In addition
to these significant public funding commitments, the City and the CNYCN planning
committee are actively seeking philanthropic support and expect to raise the
remainder of the funds from private and foundation sources. The Mayor was joined at the announcement
by Department of Housing Preservation and Development (HPD) Commissioner Shaun
Donovan; Councilmember Erik Martin Dilan; Councilmember Lewis Fidler; Open
Society Institute Trustee Herb Sturz, and Neighborhood Economic Development
Advocacy Project (NEDAP) Executive Director, Sarah
Ludwig.
“Thanks
to the Center for NYC Neighborhoods, many worried homeowners will sleep more
soundly because their most important asset will be protected,” said Mayor
Bloomberg. “Homeownership hasn’t
only been a path to building wealth and achieving the American dream, for cities
like ours, increased rates of homeownership have meant stronger, thriving
communities. By helping homeowners and potential homeowners navigate the world
of sub-prime loans, we are helping New
York to continue to grow and
prosper.”
“For over 14,000 families, the
devastating impact of the foreclosure crisis has hit literally too close to
home,” said Council Speaker Christine C. Quinn. “In creating the Center for NYC
Neighborhoods, we will set a new standard in prevention counseling and develop
best practices that will help people avoid financial trouble in the first
place. I want to thank Mayor
Bloomberg, HPD Commissioner Shaun Donovan, and Council Members Lewis Fidler and
Erik Martin-Dilan for coming together in the fight to save the City’s
neighborhoods.”
Although New York City’s
rate of foreclosures is lower than many other major US cities, the
citywide rates of sub-prime and high cost loans have increased steadily in
recent years, with about one in three loans originated in 2006 identified as
high cost. This has led to a significant increase in foreclosure filings,
particularly in certain neighborhoods such as Jamaica, Baychester, East
New York and the North Shore of Staten Island. Over the past eight months, HPD helped
convene a planning group consisting of private foundations, financial
institutions, federal banking agencies, community organizations and citywide
not-for-profits to develop a foreclosure prevention program that will help
thousands of troubled New York
City homeowners. The funding raised by the Center for NYC
Neighborhoods will significantly expand the counseling and legal assistance
available to home owners. The Center will serve as a clearinghouse for
foreclosure prevention best practices, conduct ongoing training to build
capacity of local groups, and implement quality controls to ensure that New
Yorkers are receiving first-rate counseling and legal services. Renters facing
eviction due to an owner’s foreclosure can also use the Center. The Center will not be providing bailouts
to lenders or homeowners, but the Center’s partners will help assess the
capacity of the borrower to pay for a home, and to identify best options for the
borrower to preserve their home equity, credit, and savings, and to avoid scams,
bankruptcy and foreclosure where possible.
“We are
extremely grateful to the City Council and our partners for their leadership on
this critical issue,” said HPD Commissioner Donovan. “We look forward to working
with foundations and philanthropic partners to raise the remaining critical
funds for the Center. This ground-breaking partnership between government,
non-profits, banks and philanthropic institutions will protect homeowners and
build stronger neighborhoods. Prevention counseling, legal services and
education can help keep families in their homes. A home is far too valuable an
asset for people to lose.”
“Our
city is in high emergency alert as more and more families across the City go
through foreclosure on their home loans,” said City Council Housing and
Buildings Chair Erik Martin-Dilan.
“We need a central organization, like the Center for NYC Neighborhoods
that will treat this crisis as we would a threat to our public safety. We need to protect our families and
neighborhoods from predatory loans by making people with knowledge in the field
available to all New Yorkers.”
“I am
gratified that the Administration has seen the merit of the Council's initiative
and is working to forge an even better network of assistance for homeowners in
crisis,” said Council Member Lewis A. Fidler. “Hundreds of New Yorkers were helped
because we had this safety net in place before the crisis hit. Now, with the
help of the Bloomberg Administration we will be able to meet the needs of many
thousands more.”
“We
face a foreclosure crisis in New York City, which is affecting not only tens of
thousands of New York homeowners but also entire neighborhoods where subprime
lending and foreclosures are most heavily concentrated,” said Sarah Ludwig,
Executive Director of the Neighborhood Economic Development Advocacy Project
(NEDAP), a member of the planning
group that designed the city-wide foreclosure prevention initiative. “The
funding commitments announced will help thousands of aggrieved New York City homeowners
avert foreclosure and avoid abusive subprime lending practices, and will help
protect the city’s neighborhoods and overall
economy.”
New
Yorkers will be able to access the services of the Center for NYC Neighborhoods
by dialing 311, the City’s customer service center, as well as through direct
walk-ins to participating community-based organizations. The Center will be governed by a Board
of Directors, consisting of representatives from government, philanthropic
institutions, the lending industry, academia, community based organizations and
community leaders.
The
initiative announced today builds on the success of a pilot anti-predatory
lending program, “Preserve Assets and Community Equity” (PACE) launched by the
Mayor in October, 2005, and the City Council Predatory Lending Initiative. During its first 18 months, the PACE
program provided comprehensive one-on-one counseling services to 1,052 clients,
and provided preventive information to thousands more through community forums
and education sessions. Through
this same time period, PACE helped 104 homeowners obtain or save an estimated
$26 million of home equity and new loans.
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