Foreclosure's Other Victims

You hear a lot these days about foreclosure and the trouble many homeowners face.
But there’s another group, largely ignored, who also know the despair and disruption foreclosure brings: renters.

AP Business Writer Adrian Sainz reveals that thousands of renters have become innocent victims of the mortgage crisis, forced to move because the owner of the property was in foreclosure, and never mentioned it. Some landlords continue to pocket rent long after they stop paying the mortgage, allowing a tenant to learn of the foreclosure only when a deputy knocks on the door to hand them a foreclosure notice.

The article points to Census data showing that 15 million renters, almost 40%, live in single-family homes, town homes, condos or duplexes which are owned by investors. “These types of rental properties have been vulnerable to foreclosure from the start, because they tend to be owned by small investors,” Sainz wrote .

Each state has its own rules about tenant’s rights and each state legislature can add protections for tenants if they choose. Colorado is one of them.
Recently, laws in a hand full of other states have also been passed or proposed to protect renters by requiring mortgage holders to provide sufficient notice for tenants living in foreclosed properties, but of course this comes as too little too late, for more than a few.

Apparently, The National Low Income Housing Coalition has tried to get the Federal Government to offer a small portion of the recent bailout legislation funds to help with relocation assistance for renters if they are evicted due to the owner’s foreclosure, but no cigar. The group intends to continue pursuing federal aide for foreclosure’s other victims.

Photo by pbo31, available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial license.

Holiday Shopping Wisecracks

Times are tight, the holidays are coming, and you’re tired of the budget. Boo hoo.
Seems you haven’t quite figured out that the best money-saving strategies are, more often than not, the simplest ones.
If you don’t need it, don’t buy it. Sage advice in these uncertain times.

Here are some more DO’s and Don’ts on Budget Basics:

  • DO recognize your bad spending habits. Your neighbors are never as impressed as they appear to be.
  • DON’T kid yourself. If you don’t have the money for a purchase when you hand over your credit card, chances are good you won’t have it when the bill arrives.
  • DO yourself a favor. Set goals for major purchases, and look for ways to reduce unnecessary spending while setting priorities.
  • DON’T blame anyone but yourself for financial chaos. Those designer shoes didn’t follow you out of the store on their own.

Budgeting and saving is hard work, and don’t let anyone tell you it isn’t, but with a little self-determination (no, make that a lot of self-determination) and planning,  you’ll sail through, especially when times are tight.

Banner photo by pbo31, available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial license.

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