Posted on Sun, Sep. 18, 2005
http://www.ohio.com/mld/beaconjournal/news/state/12680089.htmReport: Mortgage brokers, appraisers fueling foreclosure increases
Associated Press
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Aggressive mortgage brokers and appraisers are contributing to the rising foreclosure rate in Ohio, where mortgages fail more than any other state, The Columbus Dispatch reported Sunday in the first part of a four-part series.
More than 59,000 foreclosure notices were filed in Ohio last year. In the first half of 2005, 3.3 percent of state home loans were in foreclosure, more than triple the national average, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.
An analysis of federal data by The Dispatch shows that more Ohio residents are borrowing many times their annual income or taking interest-only loans with payments that increase sharply after a few years.
Brokers and appraisers who profit regardless of whether loans succeed or fail are laying the foundation for foreclosures, the newspaper reported. And consumer advocates say lax state oversight is only building on the problem...
http://www.thisweeknews.com/thisweek.php?edition=common&story=thisweeknews/090805/Clintonville/News/090805-News-5627.htmlGuest column
Home foreclosures are on the rise
Thursday, September 8, 2005
Richard Cordray
For many Americans, homeownership lies at the core of our American Dream. The last U.S. Census found that 66 percent of Americans and 69 percent of Ohioans own their own homes.
Clearly, one of life's most disturbing events is the loss of one's home through foreclosure. Having worked so hard to reach this goal, it can be devastating to have it slip away.
This is the first of a series of three guest columns on this issue, which is becoming so critical to many of our families and all of our communities. For today, we focus on some of the primary reasons why home foreclosures occur.
Foreclosure is the legal means by which a lender can take a property due to default on the mortgage payments. (Tax collectors, like myself, can also foreclose on a property if the taxes go unpaid, but due to recent changes in how my office collects real estate taxes, we rarely file any tax foreclosure actions against homeowners in Franklin County now.)...