Housing News
- Philadelphia Fighting Foreclosures Head-On
July 31, 2008 - Provisions of housing-mortgage relief bill
July 30, 2008 - Who qualifies for mortgage help and how to get it
July 29, 2008 - Resets Peaking on Subprime Loans
July 1, 2008 - Philadelphians Getting Update On Foreclosure Diversion Plan
June 25, 2008 - Cities fight foreclosures with unusual tactics
June 16,2008 - US foreclosure filings surge 48 percent in May
June 13, 2008 - Homeowners offered relief in Philadelphia program
June 11, 2008 - City to help owners keep their homes
June 5, 2008 - Saving the house
May 12, 2008 - As mortgage noose tightened, these 3 slipped its grip
May 12, 2008 - Ahead: More rate hikes, more foreclosures
May 12, 2008 - New Hope on Foreclosures
4/29/2008 - The Subprime Crisis and Philadelphia
4/21/2008 - Advocacy key to Philadelphia foreclosure plan
4/17/2008 - First Judicial District Court of Common Pleas Residential Mortgage Foreclosure Diversion Pilot Program (pdf)
4/16/2008 - Philadelphia devises program to stem foreclosures
4/16/2008 - Foreclosure Crisis: Now I Know why There Is One
4/14/2008 - Phila. plan would spare homeowners facing foreclosure
4/9/2008 - Judge Jones sees help coming for homeowners
4/9/2008 - Statement of Pamela Kennebrew, Philadelphia Unemployment Project
4/8/2008 - Philadelphia Works on Plan
To Help Avoid Foreclosures
4/8/2008 - Hope Now provides no hope for homeowners
4/2/2008 - 3 On Your Side: Mortgage Help
4/2/2008 - Distressed Owners Are Frustrated by Aid Group
4/2/2008 - Philadelphia Foreclosures
4/1/2008 - Homeowners Protest 'False' Hope Now Alliance Homeownership
Preservation Forum Call for Foreclosure Moratorium
3/31/2008 - Phila. sheriff's home sales suspended
3/28/2008 - Mortgage relief plan falling short
3/13/2008 - Fed chief urges foreclosure aid
3/5/2008 - More-closure solutions
2/26/2008 - Testimony of John Dodds before City Council (pdf)
2/20/2008 - 3 On Your Side: Mortgage Mess Rescue
2/12/2008 - Local Expert Tells Why Some Face Foreclosures
2/10/2008 - Foreclosures, Lenders' Preferred Fix
1/18/2008 - Bringing bankruptcy home
1/18/2008 - Phila. groups helping late borrowers
1/12/2008 - Subprime Q&A: What does plan mean? Whom does it help?
12/9/2007 - Helping borrowers will help neighborhoods
12/5/2007 - Sweating as resets of mortgage rates near
12/05/2007 - Countrywide mortgages
10/30/2007 - Fix Rates to Save Loans
10/19/2007 - Foreclosure fees draw protest rally
5/4/2007 - MBIA agrees to plan to avert foreclosures
9/30/2006 - Phila. offers a tax deal to delinquents
1/13/2006 - New city tax collector stirs fuss
5/9/2005 - Pa. plan targeting foreclosures
3/17/2005 - Sheriff
to cut foreclosure fees
8/30/2004 - A record 1,092 on sheriff's sale list
2/3/2004
Foreclosure fees draw protest rally
By MARK McDONALD
Published: May 4, 2007
There were campaign posters and bullhorns, contentious activists confronting other contentious activists as police civil-affairs officers kept a close watch.

It was all about the May 15 primary, and yet it had little to do with any of that. On paper, the rally, outside the sheriff's office on Broad Street near Walnut, was called by the Philadelphia Unemployment Project, an advocacy group for the poor.
John Dodds, PUP leader, said Sheriff John Green has kept the home-foreclosure filing fee artificially high at $1,700 when it could be reduced to $800.
And part of each filing fee, Dodds said, ends up with Reach Communications, a contractor who handles advertising for the sheriff's office and is owned by one of Green's political allies.
The fee, which largely covers the cost of advertising three times before a property goes to sheriff's sale, must be paid up front if the hapless homeowner has any hope of staving off foreclosure, Dodds said.
Also working the crowd was Michael Untermeyer, one of Green's two challengers for the Democratic nomination. Unter-meyer, a former prosecutor and now a developer, said he'd lower the fees. He also criticized Green for his use of no-bid contracts.
J. Whyatt Mondesire, head of the local NAACP and publisher of the Philadelphia Sunday Sun, said the entire event was "a stunt and it's pathetic."
He said if Untermeyer cared about the poor, he'd pay for their mortgages. But Dodds said Untermeyer had nothing to do with the event and that Mondesire's paper, like the Daily News and the Inquirer, are beneficiaries of inflated advertising costs.

Irwin Trauss, an attorney at Philadelphia Legal Assistance, which represents PUP, said that a March 2006 order by Common Pleas Court had reduced the number of words required in each ad by 30 percent. But the cost had not gone down," he said.
But Catherine Hicks, Green's spokeswoman, said Green, responding to a recommendation from the Mortgage Foreclosure Steering Committee in August, will reduce fees to $1,500 as a result of the smaller ads. She also accused Dodds of politicking, noting that he was at the committee meeting when Green pledged to lower the fees. *

related links: foreclosure campaigns | The Money Pit for Homeowners in Foreclosure | foreclosure prevention

