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As I learn more about this industry & profession I have joined with my colleagues here on AR, the more encouraging it is to see how many programs & offers of assistance are available to our clients.  The Nehemiah Program is one of those programs available to lower to middle income buyers looking for down payment assistance.

From its website, The Nehemiah Program:

"...serves as a catalyst for economic empowerment and wealth creation by expanding opportunities for responsible homeownership, affordable housing and community revitalization.

To fulfill its Mission and Vision, Nehemiah Corporation of America has developed a number of programs and affiliate organizations to serve not just the immediate needs solved by homeownership, but the longer term needs of urban areas, low- and middle-income families, and their surrounding neighborhoods. These programs include The Nehemiah Program®, Nehemiah Community Reinvestment FundTM, Inc. (NCRF), Nehemiah Community FoundationTM, Inc. (NCF) and Nehemiah Urban Ministry Initiatives (NUMI)."

Then, I learn the powers that be (read HUD & the federal government) are looking to eliminate a privately run DPA program.  Does this make any sense to you???  Why eliminate a program that uses private funds & instead depend on tax dollars (read you & me & your 1040) to fund public DPA programs.  This is absolute nonsense.

Help save a good program, whether you use this program or not with your clients.  This program has helped hundreds of thousands of buyers who would not have had the money to close on their homes.  Link here to find out more on what you can do!

 
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5 Comments on Nehemiah....Getting the Boot???

I do use this program and find it helpful on alot of my clients. Especially the first time buyers. They are the real beneficiaries of this program. Im in.

07/21/2008 07:47 AM by Laura Jefferson..Lexington's Realtor (Asset Realty)


It is amazing that we would screw with something that works when there is SO MUCH to screw with that doesn't work !!!

07/21/2008 07:50 AM by Charlie Ragonesi Big Canoe homes, Jasper ,Ball Ground,Benttree,Dahlonega (All Mountain Realty)


Laura,

This is a terrific program.  Why does the gov't want to use pubic money only for dpa's??

 

Charlie,

That's the problem, they screw with the things that work & then they want you to thank them for it!

07/21/2008 07:58 AM by David Ellis (Infinity Home Mortgage Company, Inc.)


I've never seen the word "gift" placed in quotation marks as often as it is when discussing this subject.

The real estate industry has always had a bad reputation when it comes to honesty and ethics (see historical annual Gallup Poll rankings on honesty and ethics in professions surveys).

A program where buyers are told they are getting a gift and then have to pay for that gift in the form of a higher price and inflated mortgage balance is simply not honest.

Now I often see how some argue that prices are raised when sellers pay for recurring and non-recurring closing costs and that those are built into the price of the home also; so what's the difference? The difference is that there is no certification of a gift with those concessions. There is no representation to the home buyer that he/she will be given the closing cost assistance free and without charge. That's not the same as the "gift" programs. They are certified to be free.

Also, you see the "nonprofits" argue that the "appraisal comes in" so that makes it okay. What they don't tell you is that appraisals are not exact by their very nature. Appraisals are opinions of market value defined as "estimates" in HUD handbooks.

Existing anti-flipping regulations and more recently, a 2008 FHA Mortgagee Letter state that under certain circumstances, such as the quick resale of a home at an increased price, the underwriting of an FHA loan requires that a second appraisal be obtained to verify the property value. As long as the second appraisal is not more than 5% below the first appraisal, the first appraisal is acceptable. Effectively, HUD has declared that the permissible tolerance between two appraisals is 5%.

The "gift" programs distort sales prices by the 3% down payment requirement plus the "gift" fee charged by the "charity." Now you can see that the sales price inflation can live like a virus within the acceptable range between two appraisals. Like a computer virus, just because it can find a place to hide in the system, doesn't make it legal.

The problem is not with the appraisers. How can HUD discipline an appraiser for an "error" of less than 5% when HUD itself has committed to 5% as an acceptable tolerance? So when the "charities" send you after a red herring that "the appraisal comes in" so all is well - think twice. The problem is that there are two different prices on the home. The appraisal issue is a distraction designed to get you off the subject of price inflation.

Let me suggest a mental exercise to see if you think making someone pay for their gift is honorable or ethical. Let's say it's your birthday party, and some character shows up that you have never met before. Strangely, this character has brought with him a $4,000 gift (big screen, vacation package, fill in the blank of what $4,000 gift you would like for your birthday) and makes a "big todoo" about it. Kind of odd since not even your parents or other family members, people who actually know you, gave such a gift. After all the fanfare, and the OMG thank you so muchs, the stranger leaves ... and leaves you wondering who was that man who gave me so much and why would he?

A little time goes by and one day, after work, you go home get the mail and are stunned to see that that nice man had charged that "gift" to your credit card. But it doesn't end there, he also charged you a $750 fee for getting you the gift! Now what do you think of him? Now you know why he crashes every birthday party in town with his "gift." Welcome to Nehemiah. Welcome to fraud.

I have to stop typing now because I ran out of quotation marks.

08/23/2008 02:37 PM by Thomas Paine


Thank you, Thomas, for your exquisite response.  I also loved your essay, Common Sense!  You are a true revolutionary.

09/13/2008 08:27 PM by Patrick Scott (OConnor Title Guaranty, Inc.)


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Loan Officer: David Ellis (Infinity Home Mortgage Company, Inc.)
David Ellis
Ardmore, PA
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