28 July 2010
[addressee and account information redacted for web publication]
Dear Ms. XXXX
I purchased my home the afternoon of October 31st, 1999. Its condition was worse than the worst of “Hoarders” but it was structurally sound. And at least, as of Halloween 1999, it was empty of everything but my desire for a home. So I went out that afternoon and quickly purchased a few decorations, luminaries, candles, and a small truckload of candy. I managed to get everything in place before the first trick-or-treaters toddled up my driveway, and over the course of that evening I met my neighbors. They had no idea the place had sold. They were thrilled, and I discovered that while I purchased a house, I had indeed found my heart’s desire—a home.
I made that purchase entirely on my own with money I earned and saved. Since then, as you know, our country has experienced one the biggest housing market crashes in history. This, combined with unemployment and rising costs has affected my ability to pay my bills on time.
I am a poster child for this economic recession in every way. With this letter and the enclosures, I’ll share the details. In short, I am now 47, I’ve never married, I have no children, and my only remaining family is a sister near Chicago. I want you to know that my home is my foundation—my underpinning—and as such has a place of significance in my life that I do not want to lose.
In the past two years, I have pulled out of foreclosure twice. My mortgage was current in December. I will do it again, and it will hold. I am fighting every day to recover in every way. It is my absolute intention to save and keep my home. The only missing ingredient is immediate money. It will come back, and I look to every day as the day of turnaround.
Thank you for this opportunity to re-present my financial situation to PHH. My past attempts were fruitless. Last fall, when I was working in a hotel laundry room, I didn’t make enough to qualify for loan modification. By the time that job ended, I became unemployed and re-applied for the PHH unemployment forbearance program, the program had. I wish I were in a position to say something significant has changed, and I remain hopeful that tomorrow will be the day.
Ms. XXXX, I don’t know what all of the options or topics are right now. I do know that if you want to secure your investment value in this house—my home—your best bet is me. Your forms and my financial details are enclosed with this letter. I truly appreciate any effort you can make to help me get to the other side of this situation with my home intact.
Sincerely,
[PII redacted for blog publication]
Attachment: Financial and Related Considerations: [PII redacted for blog publication]
Second Mortgage, aka my experience with Chase’s home lending scheme (they call it sales): When I refinanced a number of years ago with PHH, my home equity line balance was zero. I was required to go into the bank to fully close the account. The loan officer very kindly suggested that I leave it open, since it provided $25K in credit which was great for my credit score and handy for emergencies. I declined, since I had recently left regular employment to start a micro-business as “time off” from corporate life. She then strongly encouraged me to keep the credit line open, since my income would be dropping sharply and I might not be able to get it later if I needed it. I informed her that my income might reach $20K that year if I was lucky, and I had other savings to draw on if the need arose. She was persuasive, so I agreed to leave the account open. She then encouraged me to increase the credit line, just in case, and reminded me that there was no cost for having the credit available. I left that afternoon with the potential for $50K in debt instead of a closed account. I am accountable; she was doing her job, no question. Still, I’d love to get my hands on the neck of Chase bank.
Insurance: I’m not sure what to say about Florida insurance rates. I can say that as a direct result my foreclosure status my home insurance costs have increased by more than 50%. I know and understand that abandoned, empty homes are an insurance risk. And I understand that fiscal irresponsibility creates a higher risk profile for insurers. Neither of these considerations is true for my situation. I am living in and maintaining my home. I am a well educated, experienced professional. As an employee, my highest rank was Director of a Fortune 500. As an independent consultant, as recently as 2008, I earned up to $10K per month. Still, because of the “foreclosure” stamp my insurance costs have skyrocketed.
Home Value: At this moment, a house that sold for $325K is on the market for $175K. My home was at one time appraised for $235K, and now I have no real idea. On a good day, maybe $130K, but given that there are short sales all over my neighborhood it’s hard to say. I’d be interested to know what your experts say.
Employment: My last self-employment was $10K per month on a 5-month project that ended December 2008. Since then, I worked for five months in a hotel laundry room and recently enjoyed a temp job with the US Census. It has enabled me to keep lights on, water running and the phone ringing.
Other Sources of Revenue: In 2007, I did secure a great house-sharing tenant. He moved on early ‘09 and I have not yet found a replacement that lasts longer than a few weeks and/or is able to pay. If you want to hear a great story, ask me to tell you about the “Craig’s List Nightmare.’ I am still looking, relying on my interpersonal network.
Other Benefits as Revenue: I am fully unemployed; I did/do not qualify for unemployment benefits. I do receive $200 per month in food stamps. I am both looking for work and working on creating my own work. Whatever work works works for me.
Heath Care: One good thing about foreclosure status is that I recently qualified to receive 60 days health care from the Sarasota County Health Department, which allowed me to see a doctor for the first time in three years. Fortunately, my general health is excellent and I learned that there are no signs of my major concern, hereditary atrial fibrillation which started with 3 immediate family members at age 47. Whew (for now)! I was able to get my antidepressant prescription re-written, and am holding steady. Clinical Depression is a gift I did inherit. While it has been a factor most of my life, the past four years (possibly because of hormone and or life changes) it has been a critical struggle. I can provide details on how depression impacted my lifecycle, finances and other responsibilities upon request.
Taxes: The bad news is that my state of mind/mental health led to a multi-year backlog of IRS filing and payment. The good news is that filing is current, and my only remaining task is to prepare and file amended prior year returns after reviewing business expenses for qualified itemizations. The enclosed 2009 1040X shows a significant refund amount due. The IRS will apply my 2009 refund and unpaid stimulus checks (2) toward payment of prior year income taxes. As of yesterday afternoon, the IRS had not yet received the 1040X form. I need to go into the local tax office and give them a copy. At that point I will get some sort of receipt. Note: Quicken waived the charge for my 2009 tax prep software, after I called, explained hardship and asked for help. Wasn’t that nice?
One question for you: This weekend, your photographer (who did not have a card or any identity to leave me, could only show me a logo taped to the back of his clipboard) took several pictures of one garden area that looked positively awful because it recently been treated with weed killer. Can you tell my why? I’m hoping that the close-ups he shot are intended to show drought-tolerant garden care, not neglect.
- If yes, you’ll notice the care I took to treat the weeds surrounding the two succulent varieties that I have been nurturing for 6 months (front of garden plot) and 3 months (back of garden plot), respectively. It takes 5-7 days for the weed killer to fully work, so he certainly did catch that plot on a bad day!
- If no, and his photos were instead meant to show property distress, I hope he balanced the bad with the good. For example, the Crepe Myrtle is putting on a brilliant show of deep magenta blooms this year. The bougainvillea has come back from an unusually hot and dry spring, not to mention the damage I did when I cut out the oak saplings that had grown out of a stump cut last fall. The two Dragon Trees (endangered plant species!) have grown from a cutting (little more than a rooted leaf!) to healthy toddlers, and my beach sunflowers have finally taken hold in the emerging butterfly garden. The Beach Sunflower cuttings, the Porterweed and Passion Vine were the only butterfly garden plants to survive this past winter. Fortunately last year’s Moss Roses re-seeded themselves all over the place and are beginning to form into a ground cover. I intended for the Beach Sunflowers to provide ground cover…I think I’ll let the sunflowers and roses battle it own on their own.
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