Foreclosure Resources

Below is a list of programs developed by federal and state agencies and nonprofit organizations to help homeowners who are having trouble with their home loans. I hope this information is helpful to you.

Making Home Affordable
Government program to stabilize the housing market and help up to 7 to 9 million Americans reduce their monthly mortgage payments to more affordable levels. MakingHomeAffordable.gov provides detailed information about the program along with self-assessment tools and calculators to help borrowers determine if they are eligible for a modification or a refinance under the program. Through this website, borrowers can also connect with free counseling resources to help with outstanding questions; locate homeowner events in their communities; find a handy checklist of key documents and materials to have ready when making that important call to their servicer as well as FAQs from borrowers in similar circumstances; and much more.

U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)
HUD provides a variety of resources for homeowners at risk of foreclosure. The Department funds free housing counseling services throughout the country. HUD-approved counselors can help homeowners understand the law and their options, organize their finances, and represent borrowers in negotiations with their lenders if this assistance is needed.
Telephone: 1-800-569-4287
Find HUD-Approved Housing Counseling Agencies in California
Additional HUD resources for avoiding foreclosure

California Attorney General
Homeowners who suspect that they have been a victim of fraud, misleading information, or other deceptive practices, should contact their state Attorney General’s office. These offices investigate complaints and sue lenders and other mortgage originators for alleged illegal behavior. In addition, several state Attorneys General have been instrumental is setting up multi-agency foreclosure prevention task forces that provide financial resources and proactive intervention for homeowners facing or at risk of foreclosure.

California Housing Finance Agency
State Housing Finance Agencies administer a wide range of affordable housing and community development programs. A number of state HFAs have partnered with other entities (including nonprofit counseling agencies, local governments, state housing departments and lenders) to provide comprehensive foreclosure prevention and mitigation strategies.

NeighborWorks
NeighborWorks is a national network of more than 240 community-based nonprofit organizations (located in 50 states) created by Congress to provide financial support, technical assistance, and training for community revitalization efforts. NeighborWorks provides a variety of resources for preserving homeownership in the face of rising foreclosure rates including HOPE for Homeowners, a toll-free national hotline that offers free foreclosure prevention and counseling advice from a third party, HUD-certified, not-for-profit network of counseling agencies dedicated to helping homeowners avoid foreclosure. NeighborWorks has teamed up with the Homeownership Preservation Foundation and the Financial Services Roundtable to provide this service.
HOPE for Homeownership Hotline (in English and Spanish): 1-888-995-HOPE
Find a HUD-certified NeighborWorks organization
Information on the Center for Foreclosure Solutions

National Community Reinvestment Coalition (NCRC)
NCRC is a national coalition of more than 800 non-profit organizations that seek to increase the flow of private capital into underserved communities. NCRC’s Consumer Rescue Fund works with victims of predatory lending to provide mediation, refinancing or renegotiation of mortgages. Refinancing services are currently available in California.
NCRC’s Information and CRF Services line: 202-628-8866

National Council of LaRaza (NCLR)
NCLR is the largest national Hispanic civil rights and advocacy organization in the United States. NCLR’s Homeownership Network of 42 community-based organizations provide home ownership counseling and can intervene between borrowers facing financial crisis and the lenders and/or mortgage servicer. Contact NCLR’s: 202-785-1670

Government Sponsored Enterprise Resources
GSEs also provide excellent resources for Congressional offices seeking to aid constituents facing or at risk of foreclosure:

Fannie Mae
Fannie Mae’s HomeStay Initiative provides flexible mortgage products that help homeowners with blemish credit histories refinance as well as counseling and foreclosure prevention services. In addition, Fannie Mae has worked with three state housing finance agencies (Massachusetts, New York, and Ohio) to develop refinancing programs to assist homeowners who are facing foreclosure or have a mortgage product that may no longer be suitable to their financial situation. Fannie has designed a product that allows eligible at-risk homeowners to refinance into 30-year fixed rate mortgage loan.
Information on HomeStay Initiative

Freddie Mac
Freddie Mac helped to develop and fund Don’t Borrow Trouble, a comprehensive consumer awareness and foreclosure prevention campaign. In addition, Freddie Mac has partnered with national non-profit organizations, counseling agencies and several lenders on a foreclosure-avoidance initiative designed to reach out to delinquent borrowers early on and provide appropriate counseling through trusted intermediaries to help avoid foreclosure.
Information on Don’t Borrow Trouble

Legal Resources
In addition to the resources above, some homeowners may want to retain an attorney to help them navigate the legal system:

National Association of Consumer Advocates
The National Association of Consumer Advocates (NACA) is a nationwide organization of more than 1000 attorneys who represent and have represented hundreds of thousands of consumers victimized by fraudulent, abusive and predatory business practices. NACA attorneys have represented thousands of victims of predatory lending practices. The legal services are provided by legal service lawyers and private practice attorneys who provide free or low-cost legal representation.
Contact NACA: 202-452-1989
Find an attorney: http://members.naca.net/findanattorney.php