Foreclosure Prevention Program Saves Homes for Hundreds of D.C. Residents

As the District of Columbia Housing Finance Agency’s HomeSaver program winds down, DCHFA is highlighting the accomplishments of the program, which has helped residents in every ward avoid foreclosure. HomeSaver is a part of the U.S. Treasury’s Hardest-Hit Fund Initiative, which is designed to assist unemployed and under-employed homeowners in states and jurisdictions with above average unemployment rates – including the District of Columbia.

Shari-Ruth Goodwin was one of those homeowners. She used HomeSaver to keep her home in the Woodridge neighborhood. Goodwin was working as a librarian when she lost her job and she got behind on her mortgage.

“When I was laid off I was working on my second master’s degree,” Goodwin said. “Because of this program I was able to finish my master’s and get my next job.”

She added that if it were not for HomeSaver her son would not have been able to stay in college. Goodwin, a native Washingtonian, truly feels the program is an investment worth making in hard-working people who live in communities here in the nation’s capital but have dealt with setbacks from job loss.

Goodwin’s story shows the impact that HomeSaver has had on homeowners in the District. Hundreds of Washington families have their own HomeSaver success stories. Here are some statistics on the program.

HomeSaver, At a Glance

  • Approximately 750 households in Washington, D.C. will have been assisted by the conclusion of the program
  • 95 percent of homeowners retained their homes 24 months after receiving assistance
  • Washington, D.C. was 2nd among all states/jurisdictions to commit all available funds
  • Washington, D.C. was 2nd among all states/jurisdictions in approval ratio of program applicants

As the statistics show, the DCHFA has been one of the most successful agencies in the country in terms of committing funds to homeowners who are at risk of going into foreclosure. Due to this efficiency the DCHFA has reached its full program funding commitment and is no longer accepting new applications.

The DCHFA has been proud to partner with District government to strive for affordable homeownership, especially for those in need. HomeSaver and other DCHFA affordable homeownership initiatives have been supported by Mayor Vincent C. Gray.“We recently announced an unprecedented $187 million investment in affordable housing in the District of Columbia,” Mayor Gray said. “In addition to that investment, the DCHFA’s efforts through HomeSaver and other programs play a vital role in making homeownership more affordable in our city. My administration will continue to work together with partners like DCHFA to establish more groundbreaking initiatives that create and preserve affordable housing.”

Part of the DCHFA’s core mission is to stimulate and expand homeownership opportunities in Washington. As affordable homeownership has become scarce locally HomeSaver’s success has been vital in the lives of families throughout the nation’s capital.

“Helping homeowners in Washington avoid foreclosure has been one of our most monumental achievements at the DCHFA in recent years,” said Maria K. Day-Marshall, DCHFA Interim Executive Director. “Through HomeSaver we will have helped approximately 750 families, who were impacted by unemployment or under-employment, keep their homes. Going forward we remain committed to expanding affordable homeownership opportunities in Washington.”

All around the country, states and jurisdictions have been fighting to keep families from being impacted by foreclosure. Nationally and locally there have been fewer foreclosures in part because of programs like HomeSaver. The Treasury Department has commended the DCHFA on its success with this program.

“Through the Hardest-Hit Fund,” said Mark McArdle, Treasury Chief of Homeownership Preservation and Director of the Hardest-Hit Fund, “DCHFA has helped hundreds of families avoid foreclosure and the program has provided DCHFA an opportunity to partner with organizations throughout the District to reach families who can benefit from Hardest-Hit funds.”

Although HomeSaver is winding down the DCHFA has another program to boost affordable homeownership. DC Open Doors, an affordable mortgage program managed by the DCHFA, was launched in May 2013. It provides down payment assistance and mortgage financing. To learn more visit, www.dcopendoors.com.

HomeSaver Phase II – Tax Lien Extinguishment Program

HomeSaver, a Hardest Hit Fund (“HHF”) Initiative, is a federally-funded program. In September 2010, DCHFA was awarded over $20 million to help homeowners prevent foreclosures in the District of Columbia. The Agency has assisted nearly 700 households and 95 percent of homeowners keep their homes 24 months after receiving assistance. This achievement earned the Agency the distinction of having the second-highest rate of allocation nationwide among HHF program administrators.

Building on the success of this initiative, DCHFA worked with the U.S. Department of the Treasury and the District of Columbia Office of Tax and Revenue to create the HomeSaver Phase II-Tax Lien Extinguishment Program. The program provides one-time assistance to eligible District of Columbia homeowners at risk of foreclosure due to delinquent real property taxes.

Bonita Mims discovered HomeSaver in 2013 as her unemployment benefits ran out and she found herself unable to pay the mortgage for the first time on a house that has been in her family for five decades.

“My aunt first purchased the property back in the 1960s,” said Mims. “When I came here to go to school at Howard, I would visit as a student. I love the location and it was always a dream of mine to buy the house from my aunt.”

Mims — who took over the home in 2001 after her aunt passed away and spent years renovating it — didn’t want to lose the house her aunt had worked so hard to buy. But after being turned down for assistance from her credit union, she was unsure of how she could keep it.

Mims found HomeSaver online through the city’s employment services website. “I couldn’t believe this existed,” she recalled. “I immediately filled out an application. The last thing I wanted to do was sell my house … This program truly was a lifesaver for me.”

Mims was able to get the mortgage assistance she needed to pay for her house. She also soon found a job, but it didn’t pay enough to cover her property taxes. Again, she turned to HomeSaver – now in Phase II – for help, and was able to get assistance to cover her delinquent property taxes from 2014 and half of 2015.

“It gave me a little breathing room to pay my taxes in September,” Mims said. “There’s no way I would still have my house without this program.”

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