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Families bear brunt of US housing
crisis
Rob Reynolds.
September 7, 2012 - 01:51
On
a quiet, tree-lined street in Charlotte, there’s a
modest wood-frame house that the Sanchez family
calls home.
In many ways the
Sanchez’s are a real American success story. Gonzalo
and Sylvia Sanchez came to the US two decades ago
from San Luis Potosi, Mexico. Gonzalo worked hard in
the construction industry. Sylvia cleaned houses to
earn some extra money. They have five children, and
their eldest daughter is attending medical school,
hoping to be a pediatrician.
One day recently, just
before the Democratic Convention came to town, I sat
down with Sylvia Sanchez and her daughter Jessica at
the family dining table. Three-year old Isaac
quietly watch cartoons on TV and 11-year-old Gonzalo
Junior tromped in from school, then ran out to kick
around a soccer ball.
Jessica is a bright and
frequently smiling 17-year-old. She was born with
multiple birth defects and is often ill with kidney
and other infections. Still, the teenager seems to
get around just fine in her wheelchair. “I can’t
walk, I can’t feel from my waist down,” Jessica
says. “I have spina bifida and a shunt in my head”
to control hydrocephalus.
The Sanchez’s bought it
12 years ago for $78,000, with a mortgage held by
Bank of America. They modified the house to make it
accessible for Jessica. “They worked a lot, day and
night,” Jessica says.
Sylvia Sanchez says she
and her husband had never owned a house before. The
system of loans, fees and interest rates was a bit
confusing for them. “We had a lot of confidence in
the bank, because we didn’t exactly understand how
the process worked,” Sylvia said in Spanish, through
an interpreter. “So we put our faith in the bank.
As long as Gonzalo
found plenty of work in the building trade, things
went well. But then the recession hit. Charlotte was
hit harder than most cities. The construction trade
dried up almost completely.
“He was only able to
find small jobs here and there, one or two days a
week,” Sylvia said. The family income last year was
only about $15,000, she said—far below the official
poverty level.
As she took out loan
documents and correspondence from a thick folder,
Sylvia explained how they fell behind on their
payments. She showed me a notice from the bank,
saying it had made a mistake in the original
paperwork. Because of the error, Bank of America
said, the Sanchez’s would have to pay a higher rate
of interest. Their interest rate went from 5.8 to
6.8 per cent.
“We were distraught,”
Sylvia said, “because we didn't have the money to
make the payments. Jessica was ill and her medicines
cost so much and we had to choose between paying for
Jessica's medical needs or for our mortgage.”
Bank of America, which
is based in a soaring high-rise building a few
kilometres from the Sanchez home, is the United
States’ second largest financial institution. The
bank made $2.5bn in the second quarter of this year.
Altogether, US banks
profited to the tune of $34.5bn in that period - one
of the best quarters for banks since the recession
hit.
The Sanchez family says
Bank of America has told them that unless they come
up with $20,000 by September 14th, the bank will
start foreclosure. Sylvia says so far, she’s raised
$400.
A spokeswoman from Bank
of America emailed a statement to Al Jazeera,
saying: “Due to privacy laws, I cannot provide you
any information about the customer’s financial
status but I can say that we have and will continue
to reach out to them so that we can help them retain
their home ... We continue to work with customers
throughout the foreclosure process and can always
cancel foreclosure proceedings at any time during
the process if we are able to identify a permanent
solution.”
Since the housing
bubble burst in 2006, roughly 4 million families
have lost their homes to foreclosure. In July of
this year alone, 58,000 homes were foreclosed on.
Analysts say one of the
Obama administrations biggest failures was not
acting more aggressively to help homeowners save
their homes.
“They did too little”,
said Kathleen Day, director of the Center for
Responsible Lending in Washington DC. “They did more
than the previous administration, but like the
previous administration they too greatly
underestimate the significance and how deep and how
bad this was. Their response was inadequate. They
know that. Obama has said that.”
The failure to solve
the housing crisis is a major issue in the
Presidential campaign. But the Sanchez family has a
more immediate problem — coming up with $20,000 in a
couple of weeks. Jessica says the strain is hard to
bear. I asked her how she was feeling. “Depressed.
Sad. Kinda confused.”
Then Jessica burst into
tears. Her mother rubbed her shoulder to comfort
her, but the girl couldn’t stop sobbing. “I just
don't want to lose my home.”
A child's pain, and a family’s desperate dilemma —
multiplied by the millions, in modest houses on
quiet tree-lined streets all over America, as banks
profits soar.
Please
visit the source:
Rob
Reynolds is Al Jazeera's award-winning senior
Washington correspondent.
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