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Click here to visit the new home of Politics Daily!(March 26) -- The Obama administration is expanding a program aimed at preventing home foreclosures by giving "a second chance" to some struggling homeowners who are unemployed or now owe more than their homes are worth. Officials said today that some of the $50 billion allocated to foreclosure prevention in the Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP, would be used to help unemployed borrowers lower their mortgage payments for a minimum of three months and up to six months as they look for a new home. Separately, banks and other mortgage lenders would be given incentives to write down the ...
With continued high unemployment, fears are growing that jobless Americans won't be able to keep up with mortgage payments, leading to a new wave of home foreclosures. Those fears are compounded by the fact that a federal program aimed at keeping people in their houses hasn't been as effective as hoped, the Los Angeles Times reported. The goal of the $75 billion Home Affordable Modification Program, introduced last February, was to help banks make temporarily reduced mortgage payments permanent. But Obama administration officials concede the program has been slow to take off and they are ...
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