WASHINGTON (AP) —
The Obama administration's plan to combat the foreclosure crisis has
reached about 20 percent of troubled homeowners in the states most
affected by the housing meltdown, according to data being released
Tuesday.
In California, about 130,000 homeowners have been
enrolled in the "Making Home Affordable" loan modification plan, which
President Barack Obama unveiled in February. That works out to about 19
percent of homeowners who were either two payments behind or in
foreclosure at the end of last month, according to Treasury Department
data.
"We are reaching all the places that really got decimated,"
said Michael Barr, an assistant Treasury secretary. "The other basic
story is we're reaching borrowers at a scale that has not been done by
any other modification program."
Two other hard-hit states,
Arizona and Nevada had similar rates of assistance as California, at 22
percent and 18 percent respectively. Florida, however, was much lower,
at 12 percent, possibly because of high numbers of investor-owned
properties that don't qualify for the program.
The $50 billion
plan got off to a slow start, but government officials say they are
pressing the industry hard to improve their performance. Still, many
housing advocates have been disappointed with the plan's progress and
say that getting a loan modification is still a battle.
And economists doubt the Obama administration will reach its broad goal of helping 3 to 4 million borrowers within three years.
Most
of the borrowers enrolled so far have been signed up for preliminary
trial modifications for up to five months. To make the change
permanent, though, they must complete a big stack of paperwork. The
government expects to release details in the coming weeks on permanent
modifications.
"We're seeing some early indications that the servicers haven't done enough to get all the documents in," Barr said.
Traditionally
mortgage servicers were low-cost operations, with workers in
collections departments trying to wring payments from tardy borrowers.
Those workers, and thousands of new ones, are now engaged in a far
different job — figuring out whether thousands of borrowers qualify for
help or not.
Banks, for their part, have been slow to adapt to an unfamiliar climate of sinking home prices and soaring unemployment.
"Even
as foreclosures and delinquencies were soaring, everybody
underestimated how ugly the housing picture was," said Thomas Lawler,
an independent housing economist in Virginia.