HUD No. 02-021 | For
Release Wednesday July 17, 2002 |
BUSH ADMINISTRATION ANNOUNCES "APPRAISER WATCH" - NEW PROTECTIONS FOR HOMEOWNERS
Martinez To Hold Appraisers Accountable for Their Performance
WASHINGTON - The Department of Housing and Urban Development
said today it intends to expand its protection
of homeowners by
proposing standards that will hold appraisers accountable for their
performance. Faulty appraisals too often lead to default and foreclosure.
The new initiative, called Appraiser Watch, will be published soon
as an Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking in
the Federal Register.
Once implemented, the standards will cover some 25,000 individuals
who conduct appraisals
on Federal Housing Administration-insured
single-family homes.
"Faulty appraisals, whether intentional or not, contribute to the inability of homebuyers to make monthly mortgage payments and to the instability of neighborhoods," said HUD Secretary Mel Martinez. "The measure that we will be proposing is part of the Administration's on-going commitment to protect unsuspecting victims, who are often first-time homebuyers and minorities, from poor appraisals and unscrupulous appraisers."
Under the proposal, FHA will monitor appraisers' default and claim
rates and will levy sanctions - including removal
from its list
of approved appraisers - against those whose rates are excessive.
"Excessive default and claim rates represent an unacceptable
risk to taxpayers and to FHA," said Assistant
Secretary for
Housing - Federal Housing Commissioner John Weicher. "At
the same time, we recognize that high defaults and claims do not
by themselves prove wrongdoing. Some appraisers may experience them
through no
fault of their own, and these appraisers should not be
subject to sanctions." For example, Weicher said that
certain
geographical areas might have higher than average default and claim
rates because of local economic conditions, regardless of whether
the appraisal is faulty.
Under the terms of the proposal, FHA will notify appraisers before
removing them from its roster of approved appraisers. Any appraiser
who receives such notice may meet with HUD officials to present
evidence that factors beyond his or her control contributed to the
excessive rates. The proposal will also make provisions for appraisers
to be reinstated to the approved roster.
HUD will accept comments on the proposal from the public and other
interested parties for 60 days after it is
published in the Federal
Register. The Department is especially interested in comments
related to threshold levels
for evaluating appraiser performance,
age of the appraisals, mitigating circumstances that should be considered
and severity of sanctions levied. Those comments should be submitted
to: Regulations Division, Office of General Counsel, HUD, Room 10276,
471 7th Street SW, Washington, DC, 20410.
Other recent actions by the Bush Administration to protect homeowners and promote homeownership include:
- A proposal, currently available for public comment for 90 days,
to reform the regulatory requirements of the
Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA) that would make the process of buying and refinancing a
home significantly simpler, potentially less expensive and would protect consumers from unscrupulous lending practices. In addition, Martinez recently announced five major settlement agreements with mortgage lenders and service providers with payments of nearly $2.3 million. HUD will spend $1.5 million to investigate RESPA violations, a six-fold increase over current funding, and is more than doubling its investigative staff to further bolster its RESPA enforcement activities. HUD is also increasing its efforts to educate homebuyers in ways to avoid predatory lending practices in the first place.
- A goal to increase the number of minority homeowners by 5.5
million by the year 2010. To reach this goal the Administration
has proposed: the American Dream Downpayment Fund, aimed at helping
40,000 families each year with down payment cost, the most common
barrier to minority homeownership; and, a tax credit for builders
of single-family homes. The Administration has also proposed a
$15 million increase in the fiscal year 2003 HUD budget for housing
counseling, which would increase funding for consumer education
on many
topics, including predatory lending.
- The recently announced "Homebuyer Bill of Rights,"
which requires greater disclosure of costs associated
with buying a home, allows consumers more choices in choosing providers of closing services, limits
excessive settlement fees and encourages innovation and competition in the marketplace.
- Developing a rule to stop "flipping" - quickly
reselling properties at inflated values - of FHA insured loans.
The proposal would make properties that have been sold within a defined period of time ineligible for FHA insurance, effectively prohibiting resale of the property.
HUD is the nation's housing agency committed to increasing homeownership,
particularly among minorities, creating affordable housing opportunities
for low-income Americans, supporting the homeless, elderly, people
with disabilities and people living with AIDS. The Department also
promotes economic and community development as well as
enforces
the nation's fair housing laws. More information about HUD and its
programs is available on the Internet.
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