MINORITY
REAL ESTATE GROUPS MAKE RECOMMENDATIONS TO ADDRESS HOUSING CRISIS
The
combined 70,500 members and affiliates of the National Association of
Hispanic Real Estate Professionals, The Asian Real Estate Association of
America (AREAA) and the National Association of Real Estate Brokers (NAREB)
plan to share The Five Point Plan: Creating A Sustainable Path to
Minority Homeownership during their 2010 Multicultural Real Estate &
Policy Conference this week in Washington, D.C. Leaders from the three
national trade groups are appealing to lawmakers during Capitol Hill visits
to take actions that stabilize the market, expand consumer protections,
preserve
liquidity and stop
the spiral of losses in minority communities.
“Communities of color remain at great risk. We must take common sense
actions that stop the spiral of losses, keep homeowners in place and prevent
our neighborhoods from becoming renter communities,” said incoming NAHREP
Chairman Alex Chaparro. “Lawmakers are looking to the real estate industry
to collaborate on solutions that balance the role of government and private
enterprise. We believe this plan does that.”
The three
trade associations, which represent the most impacted communities, call for
support of a five-point plan that:
1.
Expands the scope of Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) functions to include
loan servicing,
2.
Mandates pre-purchase face-to-face homebuyer education and household budget
management training,
3.
Provides principal forgiveness for homeowners that are underwater on their
mortgage and have more than 10 percent negative equity
4.
Advocates the role of the GSE’s and FHA to expand the flow of stable capital
to the mortgage market
5.
Promotes the role of a consumer protection agency that puts consumer
interests first and is empowered to implement robust reforms that align
industry practices with values that serve the common good.
"Our Five
Point plan, when adopted, will set a new course for this Nation's housing
recovery, particularly within the minority community. The magnitude of our
crisis requires us to act boldly and a decisively to put us back on the
right track and restore consumer confidence in the real estate market,” said
AREAA Chairman John Fukuda.
“Communities and people we serve deserve this kind of comprehensive
approach."
Current
government programs, while well intended, have had limited impact especially
in minority neighborhoods where the incidence of expensive mortgages and
higher unemployment is greater. (At the peak of the , African Americans and
Latinos held high cost mortgages at two to nine times the frequency of
whites in some foreclosure regions.) According to a report from the Federal
Reserve, African American borrowers were 1.8 times as likely as white
borrowers to be in foreclosure and Latino and Asian borrowers were 1.4 and
1.3 times, respectively, to be in foreclosure.
“The
collaborative effort of African American, Hispanic and Asian American real
estate professionals signals a broad call to action. Our respective
communities have experienced previously unimaginable losses since the onset
of the mortgage loan debacle and the subsequent far-reaching economic
crisis,” said Vincent Wimbish, President and CEO of NAREB. “We firmly
believe that the five- point plan offers a solutions-based approach to
making homeownership, not only sustainable, but once again desirable for
communities of color as well as for all Americans.”
Homeownership among African Americans and Latinos varies by region. For
Latinos, the greatest proportion of homeowners is based in the West and
Midwest. Among African Americans, homeownership is most concentrated in the
Midwest and the South. One-third of the nation’s Asian population is based
in California. The foreclosure crisis has turned into a regional phenomenon.
Minorities reside in many of the states suffering the highest rates of
foreclosures and home devaluations including: Nevada, California, Arizona,
Florida, Illinois, Ohio and Michigan.
Leaders
from the Hispanic, Asian and African American trade groups plan to discuss
the tenets of the plan at a White House briefing during their policy summit
this week. The associations have collaborated on joint positions in the
past. This is the second time they have recommended a plan together. A copy
of The Five Point Plan: Creating A Sustainable Path to Minority
Homeownership is available at
www.nahrep.org,
www.areaa.org
or
www.nareb.com..