Posted on 01/31/2008 12:11:12 AM PST by bshomoic
All Things Considered, January 30, 2008 · The booming city of Fontana, Calif., is a thick sprawl of closely packed subdivisions. People who couldn't afford a home in Los Angeles or San Diego could buy one here in San Bernardino County, about 50 miles east of Los Angeles.
But as housing values tumbled and subprime mortgages ballooned Fontana became one of the many epicenters of foreclosures in Southern California.
In San Bernardino County last year, more than 7,700 homeowners lost their homes to foreclosure a 719 percent increase in just one year.
Janice Rutherford is a city councilwoman in Fontana. Her neighbors lost their house to foreclosure. She figures they paid about $250,000 for the house.
By the time the bank repossessed it, the neighbors owed more than twice that amount: They had borrowed repeatedly against its inflated value, and when values slumped, they were "upside down" on their mortgage with negative equity.
Stories similar to this of people using their property like ATM machines are plentiful in this region of Southern California, known as the Inland Empire.
"I feel bad that people got themselves in over their heads. People in these houses borrowed against the future, spent money they didn't have. Our government does the same thing, so it's no surprise that people think, 'Hey, this is the way to do it,' " Rutherford says.
And when housing tanks and the economic forecast for the future looks gloomy everyone feels the pain, from car dealerships to housing contractors.
Marty Stout, chief operations officer for Mayer Roofing, says that at the peak of his company's business in 2005, it had 850 roofers working for it. Now, there are 200.
Betty Larkins, of Moreno Valley, Calif., is another homeowner who is feeling the pain of foreclosure. She fell victim to what she calls a "ridiculous re-fi," and her monthly mortgage payment soared to $3,000 from $1,700. With just her Social Security and pension income, she couldn't keep up.
Larkins fended off foreclosure for a while. But now, her house has sold at auction. She has to be out by next Wednesday.
Larkins says she recognizes her own story when she reads about foreclosures in the paper.
"I say, 'Gosh, here's another one of me. Gosh, what's happening with the world?' All of it is not necessary, that's my thought," she says.
And in 2008, people expect the foreclosure rate to spike again with another batch of adjustable mortgages due to reset at higher rates.
And we're now supposed to feel sorry for these idiots and bail them out?
Could this have been brought on by our education system? “Hey kids, you can have it all”.
NPR’s headline is trying to draw an analogy to wildfires.
Have they ever had an article headlined with Unabating Illegal Imigration Ravages Southern California???
Could this have been brought on by our education system? Hey kids, you can have it all.That attitude has far more to do with commercials and the other trappings of consumer society.
And John McCain OR Hillary Clinton (actually, both of them, because one will be President and one will remain a liberal, voting Senator), will give it to them.
God Help The Great United States Of America.
By the time the bank repossessed it, the neighbors owed more than twice that amount: They had borrowed repeatedly against its inflated value, and when values slumped, they were "upside down" on their mortgage with negative equity.
It is the folks who have borrowed irresponsibly who are at fault. This is a clear example. Buy more house than you can really afford, with a loan that you cannot afford, and continue to borrow the "equity" out of it if/when you actually see any (which there never was to begin with).
That is if they can qualify for a loan.
“...people using their property like ATM machines...”
Foreclosures in our county peaked in 2003 with a little over 1,700. Dropped steadily until 2006.
I forget the numbers but 2007 was only up 5% from 2006.
Of course a big chunk of our foreclosures have been Double Wide Manufactured homes.
Keating Five to the rescue!
California’s usual four seasons, fire, flood, earthquake, and drought.
Now adding foreclosure as a fifth season?
I guess the Rats are right. The dumb Sheeple DO need the mommy government to run their sorry lives.
Does anyone in Calif remember what happened when Klinton killed the aerospace industry in the LA area? Prices dropped like a stone. My parents bought into a retirement community in the mid 90s for about 150,000 guess how much it is worth today? Real estate always has ups and downs and people have short memories.
A family loots the value of their house to buy a $100,000 motor home for vacations. Can I get a ride ?
Hubby just heard on the radio of a business which helps thwart foreclosures by having folks ‘trade’ mortgages. Seems to be working ~ WITHOUT government intervention.
Good ol’ fashioned American capitalism. “;^)
Um, Bushs fault?
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