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Wednesday, July 18, 2012
WSJ - tax liens triggering foreclosures
A report released this week by the National Consumer Law Center
(NCLC), says the number of foreclosures tied to delinquent tax
payments is climbing. The NCLC, an advocacy group, estimates that
$15 billion of tax-lien foreclosures happened in 2010, the latest
year for which data are available. Rising tax-lien problems stem
from two overlapping trends associated with the weak economy: To
close budget deficits, some local governments are increasing
proxy taxes to raise additional revenue. But a growing number of
homeowners, many unemployed or living on fixed incomes, are
finding those tax bills—even before rate increases—a strain.
When homeowners fail to pay, municipalities have the legal
authority to foreclose or auction off the tax lien to debt
collectors, who can charge interest rates as high as 50% on the
outstanding balances. If the homeowner doesn't pay—the
deadlines to do so vary across the nation—many states allow the
tax-lien holders to take ownership of the properties and resell
them.
While the sales are causing distress for some homeowners, they
reflect hard fiscal realities at the state and municipal level.
"Cities and towns are facing their own budget problems and of
course need homeowners to make prompt tax payments," says John
Rao, an NCLC attorney who wrote the report. Homeowners are
slipping on tax payments for the same reasons they are falling
behind on mortgage payments, Mr. Rao said: "They're unemployed,
or underemployed, expenses have gone up, and you don't have
enough money." Advocates for the elderly and the unemployed, the
groups most at risk of losing their homes, say it isn't uncommon
for consumers with homes valued at hundreds of thousands of
dollars to lose the properties after failing to pay a few
thousand dollars in taxes. "The system is really
counterintuitive," said Laura Newland, an attorney with AARP, an
advocacy group for people age 50 and older. "Some of the
properties that are most vulnerable are the ones without a
mortgage." (Local taxes on homes with a mortgage are often paid
by the mortgage lender, which collects taxes from homeowners in
their monthly payments.) Frank Alexander, a professor who
specializes in tax-law foreclosures at Emory University's law
school, said municipal governments selling tax liens are being
shortsighted. "It creates short-term cash, but generates
long-term problems," he said, pointing out that tax-lien sales
and tax foreclosures often spark legal challenges that can last
for years and prove costly for homeowners and municipal
governments.
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