Just Cause: Six years to do the right thing


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This house, behind DARE, has been foreclosed on by Wells Fargo.

Governor Chafee signed the Just Cause bill, which requires banks and credit unions to allow tenants in foreclosed building to continue to pay rent and live there under the terms of the lease they had with their landlord. Further, the bill requires lenders who foreclose to maintain the building, effecting repairs and keeping the property from becoming a boarded up eyesore. This bill is good for tenants, good for communities throughout Rhode Island, and even good for the banks themselves, because maintaining the properties and the neighborhoods increases the chance that the property will retain its value and be purchased sometime.

Getting it passed was no easy task. DARE activists and other groups in the Just Cause coalition have worked for six years to get this bill to a place where the Governor could sign it. The battle is not done yet either, because after the bill is passed comes the difficulty of enforcing it: making sure the banks follow the law and bringing enough legal pressure to bear to make sure following this law becomes the standard, not the exception.

The press conference, held at DARE HQ in South Providence, was emceed by DARE activist Malcus Mills, who joyously announced, “We have finally made it with the Governor’s signature.”

Sergio Perez spoke next of the difficulties of dealing with a bank foreclosing on the house in which you are paying rent. Perez wants to stay in the house he’s living in, not pull his kids out of school, and keep getting to work on time. The Just Cause bill will allow him to do just that.

Senator Harold Metts sees the bills passage as an example of advocacy and persistence, adding, that bridges were built to create justice and meet the needs of the people.

“My landlord just up and left,” said Rawlene Burgess, “He came and got his rent and then he left us.” Burgess and her grandson were evicted, and she had trouble finding a two bedroom home in her price range. Had this law been in effect, she would have been able to pay her rent to the bank, and avoided this ridiculous and unexpected tumult in her life.

This issue is not just a problem for inner city communities. Representative Jay Edwards, who lives in Tiverton, had this happen to a family living two houses away from him. The family was thrown out of their home. As a result, Edwards became the chief advocate for this bill in the Rhode Island House. The bankers told Edwards that the Just cause law “flies in the face of six hundred years of common law.” If that’s the case, says Edwards, then “common law is wrong.”

“It shouldn’t take six years to do the right thing!” said the Reverend Don Anderson, “Every single person should have a safe, affordable place to call home.”

Steve Fischbach, the lawyer for DARE who has worked for years on this issue, was obviously very happy with the outcome. “Victory is sweet,” said Fischbach.

In a legislative season that seemed to favor the monied interests over the lives of working people, this bill stood out as one of the few positive highlights. More concentration of the lives of those who exist at the margins of society and less worry about what happens to a millionaire’s money after death would reap enormous dividends for our state, both socially and economically.

You can watch the entire Press Conference uninterrupted here:

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Providence Sen. Harold Metts and Rev. Don Anderson.
Rep. Jay Edwards, D- Tiverton, Portsmouth, and DARE activist Chris Rotondo.
Rep. Frank Ferri, D-Warwick and LeeAnne Byrne.
Malcus Mills, DARE
Malcus Mills
Sergio Perez
Harold Metts
Rawlene Burgess

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Jorge Elorza
Rep Grace Diaz
All photos and video (cc) 2014 Steve Ahlquist, please distribute far and wide

Will Mattiello act to prevent blight and homelessness?


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Group bannerFor the past five years, a group of dedicated residents, most of whom are currently fighting foreclosure and eviction from their homes, have campaigned to make banks accountable to Rhode Island Landlord-Tenant law. Currently, banks that take over property make it a practice to evict the tenants who are living there, regardless of whether there is any “just cause” to do so. The RI Landlord-Tenant Act does not permit any other landlords to conduct these “no-fault” evictions, which lead to increased homelessness, blight, and economic stagnation in our state.

So, why have banks been allowed to get away with this for so long? Why are our neighborhoods strewn with abandoned, dangerous, burned-out shells of former homes, while so many sleep in the streets or overcrowded shelters?

It’s time to ask the leadership of the General Assembly why they’ve allowed this travesty to persist, especially when the solution has been presented to them for five years running. The Just Cause bill (H7449, S2659) is going to be heard in the House Judiciary Committee Wednesday, April 30th. The bill would prevent banks from evicting tenants in foreclosed buildings unless there is “just cause” to do so, just like any other landlord. Before the hearing, we need to make clear to the Committee Chair and the Speaker of the House that this bill must pass this year. It’s time for policy-makers to act on the initiative and needs of the people instead of their own self-interest.

Please sign our petition before the 30th! We need your support to make this bill the priority it ought to be in the statehouse this year!

https://www.change.org/petitions/cale-keable-and-nicholas-mattiello-and-john-edwards-put-just-cause-bill-h7449-to-a-vote#

Lilia Abbatematteo continues her fight against Fannie Mae


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100_2613Accompanied by her children and grandchildren, Lilia Abbatematteo protested the Federal National Mortgage Agency’s (Fannie Mae) attempt to evict them from their home on Chapin Ave. in Providence.

When her mother, Maria Amaral, passed away, Ms. Abbatematteo inherited the house in which she’d lived for the past 40 years, along with the mortgage, at the time owned by Chase Bank. Despite many efforts to modify the loan and make affordable payments, Chase insisted they could not communicate with Ms. Abbatematteo about permanently modifying the loan. The bank was, however, willing to take three trial modification payments from Ms. Abbatematteo after she hired a private attorney to advocate on her behalf.

In search of support the week before the foreclosure auction in September 2013, Ms. Abbatematteo responded to outreach from the Tenant and Homeowner Association (THA), a committee of DARE (Direct Action for Rights and Equality), a 27-year old social justice organization based in South Providence. The THA, made up of owners and tenants who have faced foreclosure and eviction, agreed to support Ms. Abbatematteo and organized an auction protest. The protest successfully deterred private investors, in search of quick profit, from purchasing the home, though it changed hands from Chase Bank to Fannie Mae.

When Fannie Mae’s representative approached Ms. Abbatematteo, she told them that she, along with the tenants renting the third floor, would like to stay and pay rent. Fannie Mae has a program called “Tenant-in-Place,” by which the quasi-governmental agency maintains renters in its REO (foreclosed) properties. Ms. Abbatematteo applied to rent from Fannie under this program, which was offered to her by Fannie’s real estate representative. By the end of the year, however, no answer was forthcoming. Fannie recently began eviction proceedings against Ms. Abbatematteo and her tenants, without a formal response to their request for “tenant-in-place.”

“We wouldn’t be in this place if Chase had worked with me before the foreclosure. We wouldn’t be in a position where two families were facing homelessness, and this neighborhood was going to be burdened with another foreclosed and abandoned property like the one down the street,” explained Ms. Abbatematteo.

Two dozen people arrived at 129-131 Chapin Ave. at 10:00 am Wednesday morning. The protesters carried signs reading, “Housing is a Human Right,” and “Don’t Evict, Negotiate!” Ms. Abbatematteo addressed the crowd using a bullhorn. She explained why the house was important to her and her family. “This house is where I was raised. My children were raised here and my grandchildren are being raised here. My granddaughter says, ‘I don’t want to move.’ This is heart-wrenching. My work commute is only around seven minutes. I like my neighbors and I love it here. I’ve lived here for forty years.”

DARE member and leader in the THA Malchus Mills deplored the devastation being caused by the foreclosure crisis in Providence and RI, citing a Fannie Mae foreclosure around the corner at 198 Althea Street, which was foreclosed in 2011 and recently burned down. The organization plans to continue to protest Fannie’s attempts to evict these families, encouraging the crowd to return and protest if an eviction order is granted in court.

Please sign Lilia’s national petition to Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) director Mel Watt, encouraging him to call off this unjust eviction!

Help Lilia Abbatematteo keep her home today


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Click on the photo to sign the petition.
Click on the photo to sign the petition.

Lilia Abbatematteo is still fighting off a wrongfully foreclosure. And tomorrow you can help her do so.

On Wednesday, 10 am, Direct Action for Rights and Equality activists with join Abbatematteo in front of her home at 129-131 Chapin Ave in Providence.

“DARE and the Tenant and Homeowner Association seek a resolution that keeps Ms. Abbatematteo, her family and tenants in their home,” according to a press release about the action. There will be “dozens of people, including local homeowners and tenants, holding signs and chanting to pressure Fannie Mae to negotiate a rental agreement for the residents of the property. Signs and banners reading ‘Stop Foreclosures and Evictions’ and ‘Don’t Evict, Negotiate.'”

Abbatematteo is being foreclosed because an administrative error on the bank’s part. She explains what happened here:

“In 2002 I co-signed a second mortgage with my mother and her then live-in partner, to help out a troubled family member. Through the years the mortgage was transferred between various banks. It ended up with Chase Bank for a while, but my name was no longer on the loan. This was traumatizing and made it impossible to get a modification after my mother’s death. I’ve tried to resolve the issue through phone call after phone call after phone call. I’ve even paid a law firm to get help. But the bank always refused to work with me.”

If you can’t make it tomorrow, please sign this petition.

Tell Fannie Mae: Don’t evict Providence resident!


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Lilia Abbatematteo, a 40-year Providence resident, is facing eviction by Fannie Mae following a foreclosure that took place in September. Lilia recently wrote a post on RI Future about her struggle. Now, after more than a year of giving her the run-around with the loan she inherited from her mother, Fannie Mae is trying to evict her and her family, including children and grandchildren, from her childhood home.

DARE – Direct Action for Rights and Equality – along with Lilia’s friends and neighbors, won’t let an agency, technically owned by the government, funded with our tax dollars, and that makes billions in profits, evict one of our community members!

Please sign the national petition to demand that FHFA director Mel Watt call off the eviction of Lilia and offer her an option to rent until she is able to purchase the home back at current value!

Click on the photo to sign the petition.
Click on the photo to sign the petition.

For Lilia Abbatematteo, foreclosure crisis is still an issue


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What follows is Lilia Abbatematteo’s story about her foreclosure in her own words.

Lilia Abbatematteo
Lilia Abbatematteo, center

Back in December, I attended a Fannie Mae event hosted at the Rhode Island Coalition for the Homeless. I attended this event because on September 6th 2013 my house was foreclosed on and Fannie Mae became the owner of the home I have lived in for over 40 years.

On the date of my auction, my friends and supporters from Direct Action for Rights & Equality (DARE) and the Tenant and Homeowner Association (THA) helped me protest the auction, and we informed all three potential investors who showed up that day that it would be a bad idea to buy the property because it would mean displacing residents (my family) who want to stay and get the home back. On the day of the protest, this felt like a victory, but since then, things have been really hard.

I have received letters saying that I could be evicted. The Fannie Mae event was supposed to be for people who have not yet been foreclosed on, but I decided to go anyway, to see if anyone would help me. Ever since the day of the foreclosure auction I have been worrying. What am I going to do? How can I buy my house back? What will my children be left with if we don’t have this house?
My husband and I live at 129 Chapin Avenue with our four grown children, plus our three grandchildren.

This is a house I inherited from my parents, Portuguese immigrants who came to this country and worked hard for years. My mom always worked two jobs and my father worked 12 hour days. In fact, the house was completely paid off by 1984. In 2002 I co-signed a second mortgage with my mother and her then live-in partner, to help out a troubled family member. Through the years the mortgage was transferred between various banks. It ended up with Chase Bank for a while, but my name was no longer on the loan. This was traumatizing and made it impossible to get a modification after my mother’s death. I’ve tried to resolve the issue through phone call after phone call after phone call. I’ve even paid a law firm to get help. But the bank always refused to work with me.

I’ve worked my whole life, and even when we fell behind on the mortgage, I was working. In 2008 my son-in-law decided to self-deport back to Guatemala. He made this decision because the constant stress and fear of worrying that Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE) was going to come and take him away was too much. For this reason, my daughter and her kids moved back in with us. At the same time, in 2008 I took at 7% pay cut at work, and have not seen a pay raise in seven years. These changes combined really started to strain our budget and that’s why we fell behind on our mortgage.

My next-door neighbor (also a member of DARE and the THA) came along with me to the Fannie Mae event last week for support. We drove to Pawtucket and found a parking spot. I brought with me a letter I wrote asking that Fannie Mae look into the possibility of selling the home back to me. We walked into the brick building and went to the second floor where Fannie Mae apparently has an office – I had no idea!

It seemed like we were the first ones there, at 9 am on the dot. Someone asked us to fill out some initial paperwork, and told us someone would be with us shortly. A woman named Kate, from Fannie Mae came out and talked to us. She asked if I had ever received a “Know Your Options” package from Fannie Mae in the mail. I had not. I told her a bit of the complicated story of my house, and she said in order for Fannie Mae to investigate my case, I needed to write a narrative of all my communication with Fannie Mae and about the house, with a date, a name, and the topic of conversation when we’d talked. The trouble with this request is that I haven’t kept detailed records of all the people I’ve talked to over the past few years, especially not over the phone! I’ve made so many phone calls! In the end, I felt like Kate was trying her best to be nice to me, but I’m worried that she won’t be able to help me. When my neighbor and I left the event an hour later – we saw only one other person there!

I told my neighbor that I think the reason more people weren’t at the event is because once people think their home is up for foreclosure, it’s like the Berlin Wall goes up. It’s the end of the road. It can feel like there is no hope. Still, even though I’m skeptical that this narrative will help, I’ve done my best to write out a very detailed narrative that tells the story of my house and what’s going on with it – to the best of my ability.

Sometimes I feel like there’s no hope. My dream is that Fannie Mae will come to the table and offer me the possibility of setting up a rent-to-own scheme. My children were raised here and my grandchildren are being raised here. My granddaughter says, “I don’t want to move.” This is heart-wrenching. I like my neighborhood. From the diversity of ethnicities, to the fruit trees and grape vines planted by my father in our backyard, this home is my world. If Fannie Mae evicts us, where will we go?

Occupy Goes Home: Making Me Love OWS at NN12


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People crowded around to talk to the panel when it concluded

I hadn’t meant to attend this discussion, but I’m glad I did. Occupy Goes Home: The Occupy Movement and the Foreclosure Crisis was hands down the best thing I attended on Thursday, and blew the rest out of the water. Moderated by Sarah Jaffe (Labor Editor at AlterNet), it featured Matt Browner-Hamlin (from Occupy Our Homes), Nick Espinosa (of Occupy Homes Minnesota and the activist who famously glitter-bombed Newt Gingrich), and Rachel Falcone (of Housing is a Human Right and Organizing for Occupation).

This was perhaps the best argument for what Occupy needs to be, and the panel was really tight in relaying a strong message about the nature of the financial system effecting regular people and the seriousness and impact of debt. They pointed out that nearly the entire room was carrying some level of debt (myself included), whether it was on student loans or on mortgages. They pointed out that nearly all foreclosures during the crisis have been fraudulent or used fraudulent documents (a Nevada law that forbade robo-signing and punished people for filing foreclosures with fraudulent documents dropped foreclosures by 93% according to the panel, just to give you an idea of the rampant fraud).

I was overjoyed to hear that Guilford County, North Carolina was leading the way against foreclosures under the leadership of its Register of Deeds, Jeff Thigpen (I graduated from Guilford College). I really heard echoes of that early democratic finance movement in American history after the Revolution, especially in the actual resistance to creditors by various means. The idea of debt being something we’re all very ashamed of, but also a very universal experience in America is a powerful concept. And to tie it into this fraud-based foreclosure, well, a panelist made the point that this undercut nearly 500 years of jurisprudence in the Anglo-American tradition.

Ultimately, in terms of electrifying discussions, this was it. There was a very real, personal edge to this: Mr. Espinosa’s mother is facing foreclosure herself. I think also, it was a glimmer of success and a very powerful issue that Occupy touched on during its long months away. The question moving forward is whether it can return itself to prominence on a whole host of new issues in America, or whether the 2012 elections and the looming debt ceiling showdown (part 2!) will prevent it from being much an issue.

This was also a panel that provided actual solutions. Perhaps because it wasn’t so high up in the clouds, it really provided a sense of what needs to be accomplished. There are laws that can be advocated for, or passed by those in government (one person was a member of a county government and asked whether there was legislation to help prevent abuse by banks). Yes, they had criticisms of the whole system (the failure of the federal government to hold the banks accountable loomed largest). But they never failed to have a response to a question; even one about media coverage. The solution? Create your own media. And they’re right, because a sort of counter-media (to coin a phrase) is developing around this country; one of live-streamers, bloggers, and social media.

The final proof for me? When the panel ended, a mass of people surged forward to shake the hands of the speakers.

Feb 25: Housing Resource Fair in East Providence


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Congressman David Cicilline is hosting a housing resource fair on Saturday, February 25th from 9am to 2pm at East Providence High School, 2000 Pawtucket Avenue, East Providence, RI.

If you are having trouble paying your rent, staying current on your mortgage, are in foreclosure proceedings or want to learn about housing resources, you should go to this event, where you will have the opportunity to meet with loan counselors from banks and housing counseling agencies and learn whether there are and services available for you to save your home. You can RSVP here.

One of the better programs is the year old Hardest Hit Fund RI.  With foreclosures, unemployment, underemployment, and the deep recession still wreaking havoc on the state, there may be options so you can keep your home. If you are in trouble, the most important thing you can do is make sure you seek help immediately. The sooner you try and resolve the issue, the more options you will have.