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NACA’s 5 Day DC Event Offers Help, And A Way Forward
WASHINGTON, JULY 21: Forty-five years ago this summer I spent a day Marching on Washington. Everyone remembers it as just four words of the many uttered by Dr. Martin Luther King: “I have a dream.” After that march for justice (and jobs), the organizers led by Bayard Rustin returned to the Statler Hilton Hotel, now the Capital Hilton, which was the event’s headquarters. Dr. King was there, and Malcolm X even dropped by for a press conference of his own to warn that non-violence was unlikely to lead to change.
It was August 28, l963, a day which is still memorialized in the hotel’s lobby. I was a civil rights worker then, and a small fry organizer of that historic mobilization. That night, I crashed in a hotel room rented for SNCC, the Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee.
Within five years, violence would claim the lives of both Malcolm and Martin, and today, Dr. King’s children are, sadly, suing each other, in part over how best to monetize his legacy.
Today, I am back in that very same hotel, although the name Hilton is better known now for the antics of Baron Hilton’s granddaughter Paris. Over this past weekend, the hotel, just a few blocks from the White House, was once again playing host to a human rights battle, this time the fight against foreclosures.
America’s largest and most militant homeownership organization, NACA, The Neighborhood Assistance Corporation hired out the grand hotel for five days, and brought 460 staffers from 38 offices to Washington for a five day event to demonstrate that their approach to stopping foreclosures is superior to everything that is being done elsewhere or proposed in Congress. They reference “the dream” too, 45 years ago activists wanted to claim it. Today, they fight to save it.
NACA believes that making mortgages affordable is the only way to stabilize at-risk homeowners. They call on banks to restructure mortgages, lower interest rates and replace adjustable mortgages and ARMS with low fixed rates for the long term.
To make its point, and serve the community, NACA publicized an offer of free counseling and advice for homeowners that included creating modified and restructured loan proposals and aggressively persuading lenders to accept them.
A solicitation was made in radio ads and through direct mail. People with mortgage problems were advised to make appointments on the NACA.com website and bring their mortgage documents with them. The event was a big and audacious gamble by NACA’s feisty CEO Bruce Marks.
Something amazing happened. Some homeowners started arriving at 6:30 AM. Soon lines stretched around the block. It was a march of the We Don’t Want To Be Homeless, “wearing their troubles on their faces,” as one NACA staffer later observed. A million families face foreclosure this year and many are trying to do something before their lives go on the auction block. The statistics are hard to wrap your head around; a parade of real people can’t be ignored.
By day’s end, thousands of homeowners had trekked through the NACA process which included an orientation, the scanning of their documents into the organization’s proprietary mortgage software and then one on one counseling in a ballroom which had been transformed into a vast arena of small tables, each with a HUD certified counselor and a computer. The counselors help the homeowners assess the affordability of their mortgages and the prospects of their losing their homes. They then draft sustainable budgets and a plan.
With personal financial data in place, backed by bank statements, mortgage paper and pay stubs, they proposed affordable “solutions” to mortgage servicers and banks. These call for cutting interest rates and restructuring the mortgages at fixed rate for 30 years. NACA negotiators emailed the proposals to the finance companies and then advocated for their new members.
Soon, emails started coming back from lenders with letters accepting some of the proposals. I spoke to some ectstatic homeowners who were leaving after a frustrating day of waiting for new deal that would allow them to save money and their homes.
Officials from some banks and agencies dropped by and marveled over this well organized, business like and passionate first of a kind event. It clearly showed the enormity of the foreclosure crisis and the anger among so many homeowners who feel victimized by the subprime ponzi scheme. It also showed that there is a solution within reach if lenders are willing to compromise. NACA may take it on the road.
These people - old and young, some with children, others in wheel chairs - came from as far away as Ohio, North Carolina and Florida. They were dignified and quiet, perhaps also frightened. Many told me they have had trouble sleeping because of worries about whether they could keep their families together.
The event did rate some press attention, but, as is often the case, drug related murders the night before were, predictably, of more interest to most local TV outlets. The CBS Evening News and Fox News showed up. (Afterwards, the Fox cameraman told me he was coming back with his own mortgage documents.)
A Washington Post columnist had praised the event the day before it happened writing:
“The Neighborhood Assistance Corporation of America is doing something that should have been done a long time ago.
Homeowners won’t have to wait weeks for a callback from their loan servicers. They won’t have to fret and fuss — and in some cases cuss — to get a mortgage servicing company to listen to their pleas to save their homes from foreclosure.”
But when the event unfolded, exceeding organizer’s expectations, the Post did not bother to send a reporter. The newspaper is right next door to the hotel. Only a few of the media outlets contacted bothered to show up.
Early next week, NACA will encourage its homeowners to descend on Congress to “encourage” their Senators and
Representatives to press bankers to restructure constituent’s loans.
They may be more successful with bankers who know that getting some payments is better than none, than with posturing members of Congress who seem paralyzed when it comes to helping people in need.
Last week, Bill Moyers featured journalist William Greider who discussed, as Graig Gingold reports, “the abject failure of the politicians in DC to do what was called for to protect the public from the predatory lenders.”
He cites as evidence a headline from the Washington Post: “Figures in Both Campaigns Have Deep Ties to Mortgage Giants”
The battle lines are being joined, NACA, a modern day David is taking on the mortgage goliath — and, so far, making progress. Hopefully the bloggers, gathered in their own convention in Austin Texas, and other activists will take notice and realize there is more to politics than electoral contests.
– News Dissector Danny Schechter made the film In Debt We Trust (InDebtWeTrust.com) and has just finished a new book investigating the crisis, Plunder (www.newsdissector.com/Plunder) to be published by Cosimo. Comments to dissector@mediachannel.org
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My last event living in New York was the March on Washington. I was there with Brooklyn CORE taking pictures for the West Side News.
The politicians don’t give a damned none of them Obama is dipping his hands in the blood bath and the youth units following him will soon be flinty eyed henchmen uncovering the latest in crowd control from Chertoff.
Home owners ought to be unelecting their Congress person as should pacifists and peace mongers. These useless hacks, pimps, torturers and war profiteers ought to be in prison not the halls of Congress posturing.
and war profiteers. Then the crowd should get a rope and go looking for the press, the Congress person’s accomplice in this great fleecing of a generation.
“As Things Go Now, this is a DOOMED society.” The essence of tragedy is the continuing committment to policies and axioms that are leading the society to doom. Everone accepts those “popular” opinions and a genius who challenges those axioms that are the cause of that society’s destruction is “chained to the rock,” by the Gods on Mount Olympus. That civilization goes straight to hell.
The “Prometheus” of Today is Lyndon H. LaRouche and his Homeowners and Banking Protection Act WILL solve the problem and the London/Wall Street oligarchical forces are very well aware of that and are FEARFUL in the extreme that you and others will overcome your media induced fear of Larouche and actually rally behind his FDR solutions NOW!!!!!
Go to www.larouchepac.com and enjoy being part of a changing the course of history. LaRouche will speak in DC on Tuesday, July 22nd and the speech will be broadcast live on www.larouchepac.com
I visited the NACA Atlanta office in Decatur and personally I was anything but impressed. The blind leading the helpless, they work for the lenders much like CCC’s works for the creditors both are worthless organizations that need their non-profit status pulle; I would recommend working with the lender yourself and file for BK before considering CCC’S bullshit and having poor credit for a lifetime.
HURRAY for NACA!! They have been fighting for good loans for all people for years. I am proud to be a referral real estate agent for NACA because I know my clients are getting the best mortgage possible. Check out the web site and see: www.NACA.com
Great that they can afford a “grand hotel” in DC for the weekend, top-notch community service there. Not to mention that they closed down the offices and left all the local homeowners waiting desperately for help alone because of the desire for media coverage.
From everything I have experienced with NACA, their service and regard for people is usually as low as the mortgage lenders that caused the trouble. They are slow, rude and uncaring and are out to get some media spotlight more than help anyone. Their employees are poorly trained (usually mortgage washouts that lost jobs in the downturn) and are now pretending to “save” the same people they got in trouble…. all to make the next check. If the market rebounds, no doubt they will go back to peddling cars or homes to the same people.
I appreciate that they help some, but making them paying members and indentured servents (they have to attend a certain number of “protests” every year when they get a NACA loan) is not always better. Some of these people went and got into the trouble hoping to be the next real estate guru or to live a lifestyle they can not afford… so don’t make them all look like victims.
My husband and I have a case open with them, I think people working their are very professional are organized. I also met a lot of people who’s been helped and their monthly payment went down big time. So, it won’t heart giving it a try… a small chance is better than no chance at all… so be positive and take a chance….and have a dream.. because all the good things start with a dream. GOOD LUCK for everyone!
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By Danny Schechter
As millions of homes are foreclosed upon, as unemployment grows and inflation mounts, it is time to understand the origins of the crisis and the need to fight for economic justice.
Written by veteran media critic and Emmy winner Rory O'Connor, Shock Jocks features unsparing profiles of the ten worst conservative radio talkers in America, including Michael Savage, Bill O' Reilly, Rush Limbaugh, Don Imus and the rest.