Friday, May 30, 2008

Tenant Foreclosure Evictions Make No Distinctions In Economic Status

CNN reports on the individual stories of Southern California two tenants, each on different ends of the economic spectrum, who both face eviction on homes they are renting. In each case, their respective landlords have been pocketing their rent while stiffing their mortgage lenders out of their mortgage payments, thereby allowing the homes to go into foreclosure.
  1. Charles Nelson has paid about $30,000 in rent since moving into a spacious four-bedroom home in August. He was stunned when a real estate agent knocked on his door recently and said the home was in foreclosure. His landlord had not paid the mortgage since he moved in and the bank is now demanding the house back. Nelson will also lose his $7,700 security deposit. [...] Nelson, the owner of PCH Auto Sales, lives in the upper-middle class enclave of Laguna Hills, south of Los Angeles, with his girlfriend and two sons from previous marriages.
  2. .
  3. More than 100 miles away in the working-class city of Palmdale, Fai Nomaaea -- a 35-year-old mother of eight -- can relate. The single mom was cleaning the yard when a man handed her a notice of foreclosure. Like Nelson, she had been paying her rent on time every month. She now lives in fear every day. "I don't know what's going to happen the next day," she said. "I don't know if they're going to come to the door and tell us that we have to move, and I don't have anywhere to go." For Nomaaea, getting booted from the home presents another hardship: She lives on a fixed income and can afford about $1,200 a month in rent. It also means finding a new school for her children.

For more, see Man pays $30K in rent, faces eviction.

For other posts involving the problems tenants face in homes in foreclosure, go here, go here, go here, go here, go here, and go here. equity skimming unwittingly digamma