The Other Foreclosure Crisis Property Tax Lien Sales Report July 2012
Say you fall behind on your property taxes, or choose to make your
car payment instead of the water bill. It doesn't take much for some
municipalities to file a tax lien against a homeowner, often a debt of
only a few hundred dollars, says the NCLC.
Those liens are often sold to companies that tack on substantial
interest rates starting in the 18% range, and upwards of 50%. These lien
buyers also charge huge fees to redeem the liens and avoid foreclosure.
According to the NCLC, redemption penalties in Georgia, Iowa,
Mississippi, New Jersey, and Texas all exceed 20%.
Seeing a potential for huge profits, lien buying is a $15 billion
business in the U.S., and a number of state and local governments are
eager to sell off these liens to bidders. The NCLC reports that in 2009,
$1.8 billion of the $2 billion in Florida tax liens were auctioned off.
The NCLC report includes several stories of homeowners who lost their
homes -- or had to endure legal and bureaucratic battles -- because of
relatively small tax liens.
There is the Baltimore woman whose $362 water bill was sold off to a
lien buyer. Interest and fees caused the amount to balloon up to $3,600.
She couldn't pay and lost her house.
An 81-year-old woman in Rhode Island owed $474 on her sewer bill. The
tax lien buyer snatched up her lien for $836 and then made a huge
profit by selling her house for $85,000.
A big part of the problem, says the NCLC, is that the laws regarding
these sales are outdated and are not tied to current economic
conditions. So while a savings account can barely score you 1% interest,
tax liens provide disproportionately large returns on investment to
lien buyers.
The group has called on state and local legislators to revise these
laws, making it more affordable for people to redeem their liens and
less attractive to predatory speculators.
"The consequences of homeowners not understanding their rights or the
process of a tax lien sale is devastating for individuals, families,
and communities,” says the NCLC's John Rao. “To date, states have done
very little. Will legislators and policymakers now reform their laws to
help keep elderly and other homeowners from losing their homes due to a
small property tax delinquency? We certainly hope so and the sooner they
act to head off this swelling problem, the better."
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