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Dallas to Use Federal Aid to Put Families Into Foreclosed Homes Program to help stabilize neighborhoods with high number of foreclosures

By  KEN KALTHOFF

Updated 11:20 PM CDT, Wed, Nov 19, 2008

 

Dallas is receiving nearly $8 million from the federal government for a neighborhood stabilization program aimed at putting families in foreclosed homes.

Dallas to Use Federal Aid to Put Families Into Foreclosed Homes

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Federal money is flowing to North Texas to help stabilize neighborhoods that have been hardest hit by foreclosures.

The money will be used to buy and rehabilitate foreclosed homes and then sell them to new owners at low, fixed interest rates.

As lawmakers in Washington debate other bailout plans, the money for the program was approved in an earlier federal assistance package.

"This is actually something that’s being done," said Jerry Killingsworth, director of the Dallas Housing Department. "We’re doing it now, and it’s right down at the consumer level."

The Dallas City Council approved participation in the program Wednesday.

City officials forecast as many as 4,000 foreclosures this year. City leaders expect to buy only several hundred of those homes with the federal money.

They said they will focus on the neighborhoods with the most foreclosures.

"Having this money will help us stimulate the market," Councilwoman Carolyn Davis said.

City officials said the houses might otherwise sit vacant, attracting crime and blight.

Nonprofit groups and private investors will be asked to help the city buy and sell the properties. 

Davis said people who have been recently foreclosed on may be eligible to participate.

"Hopefully they can go back through credit counseling, understand what they didn’t do right and perhaps try to get back into this market," she said.

Officials expect to have the program running by January.

"We’re not talking about the large corporations here, we’re talking about the individuals that have been most devastated by this challenge," Killingsworth said.

Several other North Texas cities are also receiving grants for the program.

Comments (3)

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  • AG Friday, Nov 21 at 10:22 AM FLAG COMMENT We were victims of the Sub-prime market, in addition to being taxed on improved property for three years at one time, then the ARM hit. Our payment went from 1900 to 4000 a month. There was no way we could pay that. We want to buy again and can afford a house, plus have a 650 with the foreclosure- we still have to wait three years before we can get a mortgage. I hope that three-year wait is lifted- SOON,
  • Cognac Thursday, Nov 20 at 1:26 AM FLAG COMMENT I think this is great, but what about those of us who solicited, and paid for help from Home Counselors to keep from losing and were evicted anyway? Is all hope lost for these people
  • Pam Wednesday, Nov 19 at 10:30 PM FLAG COMMENT Hey I think that is a great idea. I am a family of foreclosure and I fell behind due to my husband and I breaking up. Up to that point ALL my payments where on TIME. That didn't seem to matter to Wells Fargo(The bank who has taken away a large amount of homes around the US) If given the opportunity to own again I will never finance through them. I learned all we have to do is talk for ourselves and not let others make arrange ... MORE >

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