Title: Foreclosure: The Crisis That Hits Home
1Foreclosure The Crisis That Hits HomeÂ
- 2009 Washington State
- Access to Justice Conference
- Justice Hope and Help in Hard Times
- john a. powell
- Executive Director, The Kirwan Institute for the
Study of Race Ethnicity and Williams Chair in
Civil Rights Civil Liberties, Moritz College of
Law
2The State of Washington
3(No Transcript)
4The Foreclosure Crisis
- Communities of color and low-income communities
were physically, socially and economically
segregated from prime credit markets
- People in these communities were subject to
sub-par lending from rent-to-own to payday
lenders to check cashing places that all charged
exorbitant interest rates - And finallysubprime home loans
5Foreclosures
- Nearly half of all subprime loans went to African
American and Latino borrowers --- even though
many qualified for prime loans - African American and Latino homeowners are
expected to lose between 164 - 213 BILLION in
assets due to the crisis
United for a Fair Economy, Foreclosed State of
the Dream 2008
6The Impact of Concentrated Foreclosures in a
neighborhood
- Foreclosures pull wealth/equity and assets out of
the neighborhood - Individuals strip personal savings (i.e. raid
their 401(K)s to try and save the home - Widespread displacement which disrupts the
neighborhoods social fabric and creates
instability for children - The growth of vacant property encourages crime,
disinvestment and public safety risks - Challenges which eventually ensnare all
neighborhood residents
7Reverse Redlining
- Reverse Redlining practice of targeting
residents in certain geographic areas for credit
on unfair terms due to the racial or ethnic
composition of the area. - Unlike redlining, which is denying prime credit
to those communities, reverse redlining is
targeting an area for deceptive, predatory, or
otherwise unfair lending practices. Reverse
redlining has repeatedly been held to violate the
Fair Housing Act. - Reverse redlining requires the condition of
residential segregation, often a product of
twentieth century federal government, mortgage
lender, and real estate industry practices.
8Ex Baltimore
- In Baltimore, the neighborhoods with 90 African
American populations are at the center of the
foreclosure crisis. This was a result of
predatory practices. - Two-Thirds of Wells Fargos foreclosures in 2005
to 2006 were in census tracts that were over 60
African-American, but only 15.6 were in tracts
that were 20 or less African-American. - Wells-Fargo loans in predominantly
African-American neighborhood were four times as
likely to result in foreclosures as a Wells Fargo
loan in a predominantly white neighborhood. - Wells-Fargo made high-cost loans to 65 of its
African-American mortgage customers in Baltimore,
but only to 15 of its white customers in
Baltimore. - An African-American borrower was 2.5 times more
likely to be subject to a high cost refinance
loan than a white borrower.
9Baltimore Foreclosure Race/Income
10Ex Institutionalized Disinvestment Redlining
Map of Philadelphia
11From Redlining to Reverse Redlining in
Philadelphia
12Connecticut
13Columbus, OH
14Housing is Most of Our Net Worth
In 2000, home equity accounted for 75 of the
assets held by the median U.S. household
15African American homeownership gains were
reversed after 2004 they have reverted to 2000
levels.
Austin, Algernon. Reversal of Fortune. EPI
Briefing Paper 220 18 Sept. 2008.
16The Miners Canary
- Nationwide, nearly 55 of all high cost loans
went to African American borrowers - Experts estimate that the loss in home equity to
African American and Latino homeowners will
exceed a quarter of trillion dollars - Direct asset loss (foreclosure) and loss in home
value due to the geographic concentration of
foreclosures in minority neighborhoods
17Capital Market Credit crunch
Banks, police and courts saddled with foreclosures
Families lose their homes, wealth and safety
SUBPRIME LENDING We didnt care about the
canary...
Affected neighborhoods are being reduced to
ghost towns
Reduced spending and retail flight
18An Uneven Recession
- Since the recession began in December 2007
- Latino unemployment up 4.7 percentage points, to
10.9 percent - Black unemployment up 4.5 points, to 13.4 percent
- Between November 2007 and March 2009, black men
experienced the highest rate of job loss among
any gender or racial/ethnic group. - White unemployment up 2.9 points, to 7.3 percent
Bureau of Labor Statistics http//www.msnbc.ms
n.com/id/29843053 Marlow, Ron, and Andrew Sum.
A Job Crisis for Young Black Men. The Boston
Globe 22 Apr 2009.
19The black-white median income ratio has dropped
below 1995 levels.
Austin, Algernon. What a Recession Means for
Black America. EPI Issue Brief 241. 18 Jan.
2008.