Project Lifeline has been formally announced, and it's being touted as another way for homeowners to avoid foreclosure.  Like it's counterpart, Hope Now, Project Lifeline is another "relief" program designed to soften the economic impact of the sub-prime mortgage crisis.

    Here's what was announced on the AP News Wire:Foreclosuresign

Homeowners threatened with foreclosure would in some instances get a 30-day reprieve under an initiative the Bush administration announced Tuesday.

Dubbed "Project Lifeline," the program will be available to people who have taken out all types of mortgages, not just the high-cost sub-prime loans that have been the focus of previous relief efforts.

The program was put together by six of the nation's largest financial institutions, which service almost 50 percent of the nation's mortgages.

These lenders say they will contact homeowners who are 90 or more days overdue on their monthly mortgage payments. The homeowners will be given the opportunity to put the foreclosure process on pause for 30 days while the lenders try to work out a way to make the mortgage more affordable to homeowners.

"Project Lifeline is a valuable response, literally a lifeline, for people on the brink of the final steps in foreclosure," Housing and Urban Development Secretary Alphonso Jackson said at a joint news conference with Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson.

In coming days, lenders will begin sending letters to homeowners who might qualify for the new program. Homeowners won't qualify if they have entered bankruptcy, if they already have a foreclosure date within 30 days, or if the home loan was taken out to cover an investment property or a vacation home.

     Ah, there it is.... the stipulations!  Remember the issues with "Hope Now"?  Well, we've got the same problems here.  Are you less than 30 days behind?  Don't bother calling, you're not in enough trouble yet as far as they're concerned. 

    Is your foreclosure date less than 30 days away?  OOPS, tough luck for you, too!  If the home is Vacant, Secondary, or Investment, you can't use this program, either.  Oh, and it's only a partnership with 6 different financial institutions, so what happens if they're not the ones holding the note?

    So let's say you do meet the criteria, what the heck can this program actually do for you?!?  Well, it gives them the chance to "freeze" the foreclosure for 30 days while you try to work with the lender to make the mortgage more affordable.

    Let's see here.....  You're 90+ days late on your mortgage, you credit score is getting tanked by the lender, and they're going to hold off on taking your home for 30 days to help you refinance into an affordable note?!?  It seems to me that anyone in this situation is going to have a tough time trying to refi because the foreclosure is beating up their credit score and debt to income ratio (DTI)!

    It sounds to me like this is another crappy plan with a very limited scope.  It feels like lenders and the government are rolling out initiatives like this one and Hope Now to improve their poor public image.  If you want to help consumers, great, but DO IT!  Don't keep rolling out plans that are so limited and complicated that makes the plan so difficult to use. 

    I don't like the idea of spending time and money to craft complicated programs that won't make a significant impact.  That money could be far better spent help people avoid falling behind in the first place, but nobody's managed to roll out that plan yet.  On second thought, if a plan were to be developed to help prevent delinquency, the eligibility requirements would probably be just as limited as the current plans.  Maybe the next plan should be for Red-headed lefties between 5'10" and 6'2" and a slight lisp!  You might just be able to get more people to qualify that way!

~Jonathan Benya
Century 21 New Millennium
9405-A Chesapeake St
La Plata, MD 20646
301-609-9000
301-653-8116
Waldorf and Southern Maryland Real Estate
Southern Maryland Real Estate Blog

 

3 Comments on PROJECT LIFELINE- A Viable Mortgage Relief Solution, Or Another Government Gimmick?

FEB
12
2008
284,684 Points 4 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor Outside Blog

I agree it will be hard if not impossible for barrows to get back in the game but what it does offer is 30 days to breath and maybe get things cleared up. In Ga from NOD to sale can be less them 6 months  heck it can be in as little as 120 days. So at least this give barrows a chance to list with an agent and work out a short sale.. Something I am very good at .. if there is enough time on the clock.

the 2nd benefit will be it gives lenders a chance to catch up on the mounds of file in loss mitigation and to reduce inventory in some markets

4:46pm • #1
4 Featured Posts

Eric- I don't see this making any sort of realistic positive impact.  re-finance is a virtual non-option if you're 90+ days behind on payments because of the credit damage, and there's not promise that the lender will give you the extra 30 days.  They're rolling out a "major" initiative that less than half of all lenders are participating in anyways. 

It may give them 30 days more to list and sell it, but with as slow as the real estate market is these days, I don't think it's going to help "save" any significant number of homeowners.  It's more wasted breath than real solution, which is an incredibly poor excuse for a "solution"

4:52pm • #2
FEB
13
2008
Localism Sponsor Hit Router
I have a feeling that this new announcment is not going to much!  It will help a very small percentage of people.  As you pointed out, it is too bad that someone has to be 90 days past due.......long enough to damage the persons credit, before the lenders will help.  Once the persons credit is damaged due to a mortgage being late- they can forget about buying a car or getting a credit card for many years!
6:05am • #3

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Southern Maryland Real Estate~ Jonathan Benya

Waldorf, MD

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Century 21 New Millennium

Address: 9405-A Chesapeake St., La Plata, MD, 20646

Office Phone: (301) 609-9000

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