PHILADELPHIA, July 31, 2008

Philadelphia Fighting Foreclosures Head-On

Forbidding Sale Of Foreclosed Homes; Forcing Lenders, Homeowners To Seek Compromise

  • Play CBS Video Video Philly Fights Foreclosures

    The housing bill President Bush signed is designed to stabilize the weak housing market, but the city of Philadelphia is already a step ahead of the federal government. Priya David reports.

  • Yajaira Cruz-Rivera, left, shows Priya David around Rivera-Cruz's home Photo

    Yajaira Cruz-Rivera, left, shows Priya David around Rivera-Cruz's home  (CBS/EARLY SHOW)

  • News Tools Foreclosure Rates

    A state-by-state look at foreclosure rates, which were up 81 percent nationwide in 2008.

  • News Tools Hope for Homeowners Act

    Do you qualify for a more affordable government-backed mortgage? Get facts on the new mortgage relief plan.

(CBS)  After years of saving to buy her first home, Yajaira Cruz-Rivera thought she was choosing a responsible mortgage.

But, reports CBS News correspondent Priya David, just days after her family moved in, trouble arrived, too.

Rivera-Cruz thought she was getting a fixed-rate mortgage with payments of $920 a month.

Instead, she suddenly started receiving letters claiming a mix-up.

In just weeks, her payments grew twice, settling at nearly $1,700.

Rivera-Cruz fought with her loan company, saying her new payment was unfair and unaffordable.

"I have an obligation to my family and my home," she explained to David. "And I was determined to do whatever I needed to do to, to prove my standing to save my home."

That's when she saw an ad on TV for ACORN

Their call to action got the attention of Philadelphia officials, who enacted a series of groundbreaking initiatives.

First, they stopped the sale of all foreclosed properties, eliminating an incentive to force struggling homeowners out. And now, the city's playing dealmaker, insisting that homeowners and lenders meet in courts in City Hall, to broker settlements.

The first weeklong session convened recently with more than 600 cases on the docket.

"My stuff got postponed," one homeowner says. "My mortgage company's working with me. They give me lawyers for free. This is a great program!"

"This," says Court of Common Pleas Judge Annette Rizzo, "was a very unique group of cases. These are the ones that were literally going to be at sheriff sale with the gavel coming down in April and May."

At the heart of the conciliation program -- two judges who were convinced that helping both sides strike a deal was best for their city.

"As a matter of law, we did not have to act," points out C. Darnell Jones, the presiding judge of the Court of Common Pleas. "Nevertheless, we have consciences, and we think that this is one of the best and most affective ways to deal with it."

Lenders say they were surprised, and pleased.

"I've always been told that you know a good settlement (when) both parties walk away unhappy. But that's not the case in this case. ... In that respect, this program is very novel," observes a lawyer representing mortgage lenders, Lorraine Gazzara Doyle.

Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter has allocated $2 million for an outreach program that includes public service announcements, a telephone hotline, even having volunteers going door to door, to let homeowners know they have options, before they reach foreclosure.

Says Nutter, "You just can't lose sight of the human side of all this. ... These are real people, real families. In many instances, with children. These are real lives that could be devastated but for this kind of activity."

Rivera-Cruz was able to renegotiate with her lender, and now pays a fixed-rate loan she can afford.

Oh -- and she left her job as a registered nurse to work full-time at ACORN, helping others like her.

The city plans a new round of hearings later this month.

Copyright MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Video and Galleries from The Early Show

Add a Comment
by arnldmartin July 31, 2008 12:18 PM PDT
Good for you Philly,Yes these are human families, not some statistic to be logged away in a book somewhere.It is time for campassion,America.These are hard working Americans who just want the American dream.Isn''t that what you want!
Reply to this comment
by frankbowers July 31, 2008 3:04 PM PDT
how sad the anchor kids parents came here broke the laws and their children are just as ignorant, now they want a free horse so as to speak, they went to the same scholl as I did and I would not never have signed a document like that allowing my premium to go up they thought they had a good deal and pay little, now the fact is their illegal alien parents and the illegal aline who got them into the house got their commission and they could care less now the real tax payers are having to bail the illegal alien anchor kids out, the politicians are at fault the neo cons and dim wit democrats who have got their retirement sacked away and are laughing at the illegal aliens who are getting their true desert and the pour tax payer who will end up paying for it out or their retirement.
Frank Bowers
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by darnedsocks July 31, 2008 4:21 PM PDT
SOUNDS LIKE THIS IDIOT GOT AN ADJUSTABLE RATE.
Reply to this comment
by tomanyt August 1, 2008 1:01 PM PDT
SOUNDS LIKE THIS IDIOT GOT AN ADJUSTABLE RATE.

Posted by darnedsocks
Did you read this article?
Reply to this comment
by tomanyt August 1, 2008 1:02 PM PDT
getoffmine...Wow. Sure hope you never need a program like this.
Reply to this comment
by August 1, 2008 7:33 PM PDT
I enjoyed your segment with Lt. Andy Baldwin MD.on Friday on the Early Morning Show. He did a commentary discussing what to do when there is an earthquake and the rations to have on hand. It was very informative. I find that he is a natural in front of the cameras and enjoy listening to him. I would like to see him appear more often discussing health and fitness issues.
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