Archive for the 'FHA Counseling' Category

FHA Counseling Clarification

Wednesday, November 21st, 2007

FHA Home Equity Conversion Mortgage (HECM) Counseling Services:  To clarify the previous message sent on 11/20/07 regarding HECM counseling, prospective HECM borrowers may not pay for HECM counseling services until FHA issues guidance.  Lenders may continue to pay for these services, either on a case-by-case basis or through a lump sum contribution to a HUD-approved housing counseling agency.

Find out more about FHA’s HECM program by visiting: fha.gov/reverse/index.cfm 

For more information on Housing Counseling please visit: hud.gov/offices/hsg/sfh/hcc/hcc_home.cfm

FHA Notice on Housing Counseling Fees

Wednesday, November 21st, 2007

On September 28, 2007, a Final Rule was published in the Federal Register at 72 FR 55638 and codified at 24 CFR Part 214 establishing new regulations for the Department of Housing and Urban Development’s (HUD) Housing Counseling Program.  Included in the final rule is a provision authorizing housing counseling agencies to charge fees for counseling and education.

HUD is in the process of finalizing a mortgagee letter to clarify HUD policy regarding reverse mortgage counseling fees in light of these regulations.  Until the mortgagee letter is published, agencies must not charge fees for reverse mortgage counseling.

Agencies may charge fees for pre-purchase, non-delinquency post-purchase, and rental counseling and education, provided they conform to the criteria in the final rule. 

However, no fees may be charged for clients needing homeless counseling or default counseling.

If you have any questions please call your GTR or staff representative at the Homeownership Center in your jurisdiction. You can find a directory of states that are serviced by the four FHA Homeownership Centers (HOC) on the web at: hud.gov/offices/hsg/sfh/hoc/hsghocs.cfm

Housing Counseling Grants

Thursday, October 4th, 2007

BUSH ADMINISTRATION ANNOUNCES $44.1 MILLION IN HOUSING COUNSELING GRANTS TO NEARLY 400 NATIONAL, STATE AND LOCAL AGENCIES

Approximately 700,000 families will have a greater opportunity to find housing or keep the homes they have because of more than $44 million in housing counseling and counseling training grants announced 10/04/07 by Housing and Urban Development Secretary Alphonso Jackson. Housing counseling grants will assist families in becoming first-time homeowners and remaining homeowners after their purchase. Renters and homeless individuals and families will also benefit from the counseling offered by the grants. These grants, totaling over $41 million, were awarded to 19 national and regional organizations and nearly 370 state and local housing counseling agencies…

New FHA Final Rule Housing Counseling Program & Client Management System (CMS) Requirements for Housing Counseling Agencies

Friday, September 28th, 2007

DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
24 CFR Part 214 [Docket No. FR-4798-F-02] RIN 2502-AH99
TITLE: Housing Counseling Program
AGENCY: Office of the Assistant Secretary for Housing–Federal Housing Commissioner, HUD.
ACTION: Final rule.
 
SUMMARY: This rule establishes regulations for HUD’s Housing Counseling program, as authorized by the Housing and Urban Development Act of 1968, and for which, for the past several years, notices of funding availability have been issued on an annual basis. This final rule follows publication of a December 23, 2004, proposed rule that adopted and augmented the Housing Counseling program requirements with which grantees and housing counseling agencies are already familiar. This final rule takes into consideration the public comments that were received in response to the proposed rule and makes several changes to the proposed regulatory text at this final rule stage.
 
DATES: Effective Date: October 29, 2007.
 
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ruth Roman, Director, Office of Program Support, Office of Housing, Department of Housing and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street, SW., Room 9274, Washington, DC 20410- 8000, telephone, (202) 708-0317. (This is not a toll-free number.) Individuals with hearing or speech impairments may access this number through TTY by calling the toll-free Federal Information Relay Service at: (800) 877-8339.
 
AND
 
Client Management System (CMS) Requirements:
 
The deadline for Client Management System (CMS) compliance, October 1, 2007, is almost here and HUD’s final regulation mandating the use of a CMS was published in the Federal Register today.  The final rule is attached and should be opened in Adobe Reader.  However, while a few CMS vendors are now offering fully functional products that interface with HUD, we understand that most are still putting the finishing touches on their systems. 
 
If you or your CMS vendor has not completed the interface to HUD’s database, don’t worry.  You will not be terminated from the Housing Counseling Program if the CMS interface is not completed by October 1st.  In light of system development delays, HUD will require by October 1st only that you collect client level data:
 
1. Through a CMS vendor that has built an interface or is working to build an interface to HUD; or
2. Through your own CMS as long as you are working with HUD to build an interface with our database.
 
You will need to use a fully functional CMS that interfaces with HUD’s database by the time you submit your FY 2008 First Quarter Report to HUD in January, 2008. 
 
New Reporting Requirements
 
Reporting requirements have changed fundamentally.  Beginning in FY 2008, HUD is requiring that client level data must be submitted on a quarterly basis. Required agency profile data elements have also been expanded.   Client level and agency profile data submitted must include all required data fields in the Interface Control Document (ICD).  There is a separate set of client level data requirements for one-on-one counseling and group education.

House Passes Comprehensive FHA Reform

Tuesday, September 18th, 2007

Washington, DC - The U.S. House of Representatives today overwhelmingly passed H.R. 1852, the “Expanding American Homeownership Act of 2007,” which will revitalize the Federal Housing Administration (FHA), a federally insured loan program that for over 60 years has been a reliable source of affordable fixed rate mortgage loans, especially for first-time homebuyers.  The measure, originally introduced by Representative Maxine Waters, Chairwoman of the Subcommittee on Housing and Community Opportunity, and Barney Frank, Chairman of the Financial Services Committee, will enable FHA to serve more subprime borrowers at affordable rates and terms, recapture borrowers that have turned to predatory loans in recent years, and offer refinancing loan opportunities to borrowers struggling to meet their mortgage payments in the midst of the current turbulent mortgage markets.

“There is an affordable housing crisis in America.  In recent months, that crisis has exploded beyond the poorest renters and homeowners, to threaten the domestic economy.  H.R. 1852 is a necessary step in walking us back from the brink and in the direction of meeting the housing needs of all Americans,” said Chairwoman Waters.

“A revitalized FHA program will help future homeowners realize the dream of home ownership, and will prevent many first time and inexperienced home buyers from being pushed into loans that are unaffordable or difficult to understand,” said Chairman Frank.  “The bill we passed today will help people all across America because we have enacted provisions to allow the FHA to insure loans in high cost areas.”

Specifically, the bill includes the following important provisions:

Lower Down Payments.  Authorizes zero and lower down payment loans for borrowers that can afford mortgage payments, but lack the cash for a required down payment.

Housing Counseling.  Authorizes more than double the current funding level for housing counseling, to help subprime homebuyers and borrowers late on mortgage loan payments.

Subprime borrowers.  Directs FHA to provide mortgage loans to higher risk (but qualified) borrowers, without authorizing unnecessary fee hikes on such borrowers.

Reverse Mortgages.  Enhances the FHA reverse mortgage loan program to help seniors pay for health and other expenses, by removing the loan cap to avoid program shutdowns, raising loan limits, and by reducing the maximum fee lenders can charge for these loans.

Multifamily Loans. Raises FHA multifamily loan limits, so these loans can fully fund construction costs in high cost areas, and enhances sale of foreclosed FHA rental housing loans to localities, so that affordable housing can be maintained in local communities.

Affordable Housing Fund.  Authorizes up to $300 million a year from the bill’s excess profits for affordable housing, instead of returning such funds to the General Treasury.

Higher Loan Limits.  Adopts the Frank/Miller/Cardoza amendment that would raise FHA single family loan limits, which now bar loans above 95% of the median home price in each local area and shut FHA out of higher cost home markets.  The amendment raises the FHA loan limit in each area to the lower of (a) 125% of the local area median home price or (b) 175% of the national GSE conforming loan limit.  The amendment also retains the bill’s provision for a nationwide FHA loan floor of 65% of the GSE conforming loan limit, and gives HUD authority to raise these loan limit amounts by up to $100,000 “if market conditions warrant.”
 
In addition, the House adopted an amendment to the bill to direct FHA to make available refinancing loans to existing qualified homeowners who are in default or at risk of default due to rate resets or mortgage market conditions, and to authorize lower down payments for such purpose.  The amendment also includes provisions to address problems arising from inflated appraisals.

(source=house.gov/apps/list/press/ financialsvcs_dem/press0918072.shtml)