Can't refinance? Try your congressman

ByABC News
June 5, 2009, 5:36 PM

WASHINGTON -- Can't afford your mortgage payment? If the bank won't take your call, your member of Congress just might.

Several lawmakers whose districts are drowning in foreclosures are taking unprecedented steps to help people stay in their homes, including picking up the phone themselves to negotiate with banks on behalf of their constituents.

The pain of being put on hold for an eternity can be an educating experience for a member of Congress.

As a body, Congress has failed to come up with a broad fix for the foreclosure crisis. So some lawmakers are helping homeowners one at a time and seeking creative ways to make a difference in their districts.

Rep. Elijah Cummings, a Maryland Democrat whose Baltimore district has been walloped by unemployment, arranged for 19 banks to set up shop at Morgan State University on Saturday to work with homeowners struggling to pay their mortgages.

Cummings is asking people to come to his anti-foreclosure fair with recent pay stubs, tax returns, their monthly budget and any late notices or foreclosure threats they've received from their banks. He predicted 500 people would show up, a turnout he hopes will help convince the White House that federal money is needed to bailout homeowners directly.

"We may very well be reaching the point of a tsunami of foreclosures," he said.

While Maryland has been hit hard, with more than 390 foreclosure fillings in Baltimore alone in April, California is in the worst shape. Across the country, some 342,000 properties fell into foreclosure in April. Some 96,500 of those filings more than one in four were in California, according to RealtyTrac, a Web-based company that compiles data for most U.S. counties.

Rep. Maxine Waters, who represents Los Angeles, has called mortgage lenders directly to seek lower payments for her constituents.

Waters said it's frustrating. She's spent more than an hour on hold before, listening to music and getting transferred to different departments.

She said the process can be worse for homeowners who are only slightly behind in their mortgage payment. A grossly delinquent homeowner might get a specialist on the line who can modify the loan, Waters said. Other cases are handled by someone who merely threatens homeowners to pay up.