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The Foreclosure Crisis: Not everyone is suited for homeownership
Cleveland Dealer ^

Posted on 01/22/2008 10:03:19 PM PST by bshomoic

The Foreclosure Crisis: Not everyone is suited for homeownership

Posted by Phillip Morris January 23, 2008 00:01AM

Darnellas Caldwell, a 39-year-old grandmother of five, never thought she would be moving back home to live with her mother. She never envisioned not owning the tan and green house at 20724 Donnybrook Drive in Maple Heights.

She never envisioned being homeless.

But she is.

Few falls from homeownership have been more spectacular. Few stories are more tragic and pathetic. Few stories better illustrate that all homeowners are not prepared to be homeowners.

After owning her home outright, paid for in cash, Caldwell has nothing to show for it. She has nothing to show for the $105,000 in equity that she purchased in one fell swoop. She has nothing to show for the two-story structure that she called a living monument to her deceased son, Dontrae.

The house was bought and furnished in the wake of his tragic death. But six years later, it stands dark and empty.

Her windfall, her dream, now just as dead as the boy.

It's the saddest housing story I have yet to encounter.

Last November, Caldwell pulled a rental truck to the side of the house, emptied her home, and headed south on Interstate 77. In doing so, she joined the thousands of other Greater Clevelanders who have lost their grip on a dream.

The question that must be considered, however, is whether her housing loss could have been prevented? Or is it just possible that Caldwell never belonged in the cute little house in Maple Heights?

AFTER YEARS of bouncing from one cheap rental to another, after years of moving her three sons around so much they were never certain of their apartment address, Caldwell bought her home a few months after the death of her youngest son.

Dontrae, 10, drowned in a swimming accident at a church-sponsored camp. She sued. The church settled out of court for $500,000, and Caldwell, who had never had a credit card, went on a gifting and spending spree.

She gave away tens of thousands of dollars to family members, including the paternal grandparents of her sons. She was also quite generous with friends who sought a piece of her small fortune.

She had never had money. And it showed.

She junked her 18-year-old Hyundai and bought a $46,000, fully loaded Infiniti SUV. "I always wanted that car," she said.

But more importantly to her family's future, the ninth-grade dropout decided to buy a home.

The Akron native, who had long wanted to leave her hometown, found a three-bedroom split-level in Maple Heights. It was love at first sight.

The owner was asking $110,000. Caldwell offered $105,000. He accepted, and the following month she moved into her "dream house."

For the first two years, life was good. The neighbors were mostly friendly and welcoming. She and the boys got used to living without the sound of gunfire and late-night street loiterers.

The nursing home attendant was living out her dream with her live-in fiance, her two surviving sons, and a growing number of grandchildren.

Then a bad hailstorm hit the area in the winter of 2003 and her house began to fall apart. The aluminum siding started to peel. The roof buckled. Repairs were desperately needed.

All of a sudden, she needed money.

"I had spent all of the money from the settlement. I didn't have any savings. But the house had to be fixed. That's when my fiance said, 'Let's get a loan.' "

But Caldwell had never taken out a loan. She didn't even know how to shop for one.

She said her fiance steered her to a local lender, who is no longer in business.

That lender said he would give them a $48,000 home-repair loan, but only if she transferred ownership of the home to her fiance.

"They told me that I had 'good equity' in the home, but said they couldn't give me the loan because of my credit score and my work history.

"I asked them what they meant by equity, I didn't know what the word meant. They said that they knew that the home was paid off, but they thought my fiance should get the loan because he had a better [credit] score and better work history.

"I was so naive. I didn't have any coaching. I didn't understand the [lending] process. I didn't know that I was giving away my house."

So she signed over the home in order to save the roof.

Things quickly deteriorated from there. She lost her job. Then the fiance began to run into financial difficulties, as well. Caldwell said he had problems paying the weekly household expenses, as well as the monthly installments on the house-repair loan.

The house was soon threatened with foreclosure, so the fiance refinanced the house -- now his house -- for the second time in two years. She said he obtained a loan worth slightly more than $60,000.

But soon he defaulted on that loan, and collection agents began to bombard the house with calls demanding payment. They made threats at all hours of the day and night.

"That's when I found out that I didn't own the home," Caldwell said. "They would call and ask for the homeowner, and I would say I am the owner, and they would say no, we need to speak to the man who owns the home."

"That's when I realized how bad my situation was. A house that I owned outright was no longer even in my name. I couldn't even negotiate to keep it, because it wasn't mine."

TO CALL CALDWELL shockingly and painfully irresponsible is an understatement. But it doesn't detract from her horrendous experience in the pursuit of homeownership. The ruthless exploitation of her naivete shows the dark underside of the hawking of the American dream.

The public is constantly told that homeownership is the first step into the American mainstream, a necessary step in wealth creation. But not everyone is prepared to own a house.

Not everyone is suited for homeownership.

In far too many cases, unprepared homeowners quickly find themselves financially and emotionally compromised by houses they cannot afford. Too many subprime borrowers unwittingly find themselves locked in unconscionable predatory loans.

Better credit counseling is needed to help prepare would-be owners. Lenders and community groups must work to help young or first-time home buyers fully understand the responsibility they assume with homeownership.

Limited efforts are already under way with a handful of banks and community development groups in Cleveland. The WECO Fund Inc. works nonstop to increase the financial literacy of low- and moderate-income people who aspire to own homes or start businesses.

In some cases, the fund generously contributes to the down payments of low-income buyers who complete a course on financial management. But increased efforts are needed if the goal of homeownership is to remain a viable pursuit for untold numbers of people in Greater Cleveland.

Such exposure may well have spared Caldwell her devastating loss and her swift return to poverty.

"I feel like I'm stuck in a nightmare," she said as she helped load up a moving van.

"It's hard for me to walk away from this house. Because I owned it. It was mine. And now I have nothing to show for it."


TOPICS: Extended News; News/Current Events
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1 posted on 01/22/2008 10:03:20 PM PST by bshomoic
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I just shake my head when I read stories about idiots like this... but then I get angry when I hear about gubment plans to bail out these fools.


2 posted on 01/22/2008 10:05:29 PM PST by bshomoic
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To: bshomoic

“I just shake my head when I read stories about idiots like this... but then I get angry when I hear about gubment plans to bail out these fools”

You should be angry.

The government isn’t bailing them out.

WE ARE.

No more “compassionate” conservatives.


3 posted on 01/22/2008 10:07:52 PM PST by GovernmentIsTheProblem (We are not to expect to be translated from despotism to liberty in a featherbed. - Thomas Jefferson)
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To: bshomoic

Man... how stupid can a person be and still live?


4 posted on 01/22/2008 10:10:24 PM PST by B-Chan (Catholic. Monarchist. Texan. Any questions?)
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To: bshomoic

This one should be made into a country/western song. It would top the charts.


5 posted on 01/22/2008 10:10:59 PM PST by politicket
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To: bshomoic

Sad story about her son. But some people are too stupid to own a house. I bet dollars to donuts she *knew* she was signing the house over to her (cough) fiancee. It just adds to the drama by saying she didn’t know. Victim mentality.


6 posted on 01/22/2008 10:14:51 PM PST by Dasaji (The U.S.A. is the Land of Opportunity and you've got 50 states to do it in!)
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To: bshomoic

This reads like my sister’s life. Has about as much sense as a sack of hammers.


7 posted on 01/22/2008 10:15:59 PM PST by SatinDoll (Fredhead and proud of it!)
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To: bshomoic

Wow to her story. This is the type of person though that could win millions of dollars in the lottery and in the end have nothing to show for it. Maybe Oprah and Dr. Phil can pitch in to get her a new house. Better yet President Obama, Clinton, or Edwards will have us all pitch in to get her a new one.


8 posted on 01/22/2008 10:17:43 PM PST by beaversmom
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To: politicket

Notice, it was her ‘fiance’ and his friend the lender that screwed this woman....What ‘they’ do to themselves is totally obscene when it comes to money dealings. There was a female lawyer in DC that was involved in getting homes from her clients, getting them condemned, her boyfriend would buy them up, they would remodel and sell for a hell of a profit....then all these storefront home improvement lenders, screwing the people in their own neighborhoods.
Yet WE get to bail the victims out and the ‘government’ wants the credit...

VOTE ALL INCUMBENTS OUT


9 posted on 01/22/2008 10:18:11 PM PST by xrmusn
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To: Dasaji
It just adds to the drama by saying she didn’t know.

It also adds to the dollars that will start flowing in from people after reading her story that feel sorry for her. I betcha she gets another house.

10 posted on 01/22/2008 10:20:21 PM PST by beaversmom
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To: bshomoic

Government education bearing its fruit...


11 posted on 01/22/2008 10:22:20 PM PST by DB
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To: bshomoic

9th grade dropout explains it. Missed out on the HS economics class that teaches people how to balance checkbooks, have a budget, and...

oh wait a minute, that was when I went to school...

well then again, she’s 39, so perhaps she would have gotten it...

...and...how to save/invest.


12 posted on 01/22/2008 10:23:45 PM PST by tpanther
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To: bshomoic
Darnellas Caldwell, a 39-year-old grandmother of five

This looks like a problem that began at least 20 years ago.

-ccm

13 posted on 01/22/2008 10:25:34 PM PST by ccmay (Too much Law; not enough Order.)
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To: bshomoic
There used to be a saying that: "a fool and his money are soon parted".

There is nothing surprising or unusual about this story.

Sad about her son: Dontrae, 10, drowned in a swimming accident at a church-sponsored camp.

What do you want to bet this was a church program for underprivileged kids, which is no longer in operation.

14 posted on 01/22/2008 10:39:34 PM PST by CurlyDave
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To: beaversmom

She is “not suited to home ownership”? But she IS suited to vote?

Reminds me of the Left’s claim that democracy isn’t for everybody.

Home ownership is for everyone. Unless they are living a nomadic existence. Paying monthly rent with no deduction for residence or established investment is a con in and of itself.

And states gouging home owners with higher and higher tax appraisals isn’t helping.

A man’s home is his castle.

A fool and his money are soon parted.

Just because a man is a fool does not mean that he should live as a slave in a shack on someone else’s plantation his whole life.


15 posted on 01/22/2008 10:50:07 PM PST by weegee (Those who surrender personal liberty to lower global temperatures will receive neither.)
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To: tpanther

Heard a newsbrief that the President is urging a new plan to teach Americans about investment and personal finance.

Sounds too much like trying to let them know about personal responsibility. With a safety net.

Meanwhile our latest “tax rebate” will be going to people who pay no taxes. Can I get a rebate from Ford when I never bought one of their cars?


16 posted on 01/22/2008 10:53:10 PM PST by weegee (Those who surrender personal liberty to lower global temperatures will receive neither.)
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To: bshomoic
What WAS this woman's problem????

Nookin fah Nub in all the wong pwaces.

17 posted on 01/22/2008 10:54:04 PM PST by Candor7 (Fascism? All it takes is for good men to say nothing.)
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To: bshomoic
Darnellas Caldwell, a 39-year-old grandmother of five, never thought she would be moving back home to live with her mother. She never envisioned not owning the tan and green house at 20724 Donnybrook Drive in Maple Heights.

She never envisioned being homeless.

I'm having problems envisioning a 39-year old grandmother of five.

18 posted on 01/22/2008 11:02:29 PM PST by GATOR NAVY
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To: ccmay

She was a teenage mom and so was her daughter. Apple never falls far from the tree when it comes to the cycle of irresponsibility and idiocy.


19 posted on 01/22/2008 11:12:15 PM PST by ProtectOurFreedom
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To: bshomoic

Maroon


20 posted on 01/22/2008 11:13:45 PM PST by Ben Chad
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