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Elizabeth Warren

Elizabeth Warren

Posted: December 29, 2010 05:40 PM

No one has missed the headlines: Haphazard and possibly illegal practices at mortgage-servicing companies have called into question home foreclosures across the nation.

The latest disclosures are deeply troubling, but they should not come as a big surprise. For years, both individual homeowners and consumer advocates sounded alarms that foreclosure processes were riddled with problems.

While federal and state investigators are still examining exactly what has gone wrong and why, two things are clear.

First, several financial services companies have already admitted that they used "robo-signers," false declarations, and other workarounds to cut corners, creating a legal nightmare that will waste time and money that could have been better spent to help this economy recover. Mortgage lenders will spend millions of dollars retracing their steps, often with the same result that families who cannot pay will lose their homes.

Second, this mess might well have been avoided if the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau had been in place just a few years ago.

The new consumer agency is one of the signature accomplishments of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act signed into law by President Obama this summer.
The new agency will take on oversight responsibilities that had been scattered among several federal agencies, and it will be a new cop on the beat that will end big loopholes in the regulatory system.

For the first time, banks and non-bank lenders (such as payday lenders, check cashers and mortgage brokers) will be subject to the same federal oversight to ensure that they are all playing by the same rules-no more turning sideways and slipping through the regulatory cracks.

Lost in much of the back-and-forth over wrongful foreclosures is the question of whether the scandal could have been prevented. The answer is yes.

The practices now under investigation took root and grew because there was no single federal regulator with both the responsibility and the tools to look out for consumers.

Had it existed, the new consumer agency could have stopped these problems before they multiplied. Many of the failures already admitted were not sophisticated scams that had been carefully concealed. By enforcing existing laws and involving state authorities early on, the agency could have made sure that the law was respected. No one would need to wonder whether the world of borrowing and lending works only one way: Families have to follow the legal rules, but the rules are optional for big banks.

Once it is fully operational, the new consumer agency will have supervisory authority over all large mortgage servicers. It will be able to examine them on a regular basis to make sure they follow the rules. If those servicers decide it is cheaper or faster to circumvent federal law, the consumer agency will have the tools to hold them accountable.

No one will be allowed to break the rules without triggering a strong and prompt federal response.

Currently, the federal interagency foreclosure task force, including the members of the Financial Services Oversight Council, is working along with the state Attorneys General to get to the bottom of these problems. The implementation team for the new consumer agency is also working to assemble and coordinate teams to deal with servicing and other issues.
These efforts are critical, but there is more work to do: We must ensure this kind of scandal-or some close cousin-does not happen again.

A mortgage is the biggest financial commitment most Americans will make in a lifetime, and the toll on Florida has been especially heavy and the need for oversight particularly apparent. A few weeks ago, I watched proceedings in a Fort Lauderdale foreclosure court and saw firsthand the painful outcomes for numerous families.

Unfair servicing practices can worsen a family's already difficult economic situation, and the injury echoes from the family to the community and ultimately throughout the economy. Cops on the beat can stop problems before the damage spreads. If there ever was any doubt that the new consumer agency is necessary, the latest foreclosure developments should put that to rest.

This post originally appeared in the Miami Herald.

 
No one has missed the headlines: Haphazard and possibly illegal practices at mortgage-servicing companies have called into question home foreclosures across the nation. The latest disclosures are dee...
No one has missed the headlines: Haphazard and possibly illegal practices at mortgage-servicing companies have called into question home foreclosures across the nation. The latest disclosures are dee...
 
 
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groland
socially left, fiscally right
10:06 AM on 01/18/2011
Elizabeth Warren recently appeared on Real Time with Bill Maher. She was so much more convincing and passionate, compared to Obama. She had a way of explaining what has been going on and how the American middle class is being deconstructed.

She should be the first women President; smarter and a better speaker than Hillary. Can we draft her?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Madagain
antirepublicanism
07:47 AM on 01/05/2011
Thank you to Elisabeth Warren. Thank you for your work, and for putting your wonderful talents and experiance to use, for the American citizens.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Aarontastic
"Mr. Cain instead decided to try to provide her wi
06:14 PM on 01/03/2011
We should all be thankful for her.
02:43 PM on 01/03/2011
It's curious how she throws in a mention of non-bank lenders in the middle there as if there is a correlation between payday loans and mortgages—there is not. Consumers can decide for themselves whether or not to take out a payday loan. But most of us will have no choice but to take out a mortgage if we are to buy a home: that is where we need this agency focused. Let us make our own decisions.
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groland
socially left, fiscally right
10:09 AM on 01/18/2011
There is a common theme here. Loans and fees that are nothing short of loan sharking. When you look at people who fall behind with credit cards, due to job losses or illness, the majority of what they end up owing is actually interest and fees, not the original principle. Same with payday loans, the fees and interest are enormous. These are your banks at work.
01:26 PM on 01/03/2011
Elizabeth Warren, you are a pillar of hope. Corporate America devolves into a state of pure monetary aggression without the presence of HONEST government oversight. We have had virtually no government or oversight on behalf of the average american for some time. How long can this Finance-ocide be allowed to continue?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
exmate
Life is about playing a poor hand well.
10:20 AM on 01/03/2011
The netherworld of financial institutions support the plutocracy that is eroding our democracy. Liz Warren is a ray of hope. She has come a long way from that small town in rural Oklahoma. I think that it is possible that she could make a difference.
Andrea Florence
your opinion of me is none of my business
10:17 AM on 01/03/2011
Elizabeth, you go girl!!!!!!!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
exmate
Life is about playing a poor hand well.
10:01 AM on 01/03/2011
There is an underworld in financial institutions that engaged in fleecing consumers.

It is supported by lawyers and laws and government support.

It will take the sophistcation of a Harvard Law Professor and the street smarts of a feisty 61 year old lady who has pulled herself up by her own bootstraps from a small town in Oklahoma to untangle some of this mess.
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EcnelisDoogod
B the change you want 2C
10:35 PM on 01/02/2011
Thank you, Elizabeth Warren, for your principled integrity. May I suggest that the housing market was orchestrated to fall just like the WTC buildings several years earlier? It's a very complicated and evolving plan, but the goal remains the same.

An attempted coup d'état took place in the 1930s, and it is similar to what is happening today. Instead of the 'Tea Party', there was the 'Veterans Organization'. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Business_Plot

Todays methods are more sophisticated and systemic. Congress and our judicial system has been compromised. The meek are the majority but we need to be unified in our dissent. Please lead us to justice.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
deadfed
09:44 PM on 01/02/2011
The last thing needed is another federal gov't agency..none of the federal agencies that were regulating when the last house bubble inflated did a damn thing. Get the federal gov't and wall street out of home loans...and stop the fed from continually printing money...

http://deadfed.com/
10:15 PM on 01/02/2011
The regulating agencies didn't do anything because Bush put people in charge who didn't want them to do anything.
jjayes
repub noses keep growing
09:23 PM on 01/02/2011
Republicans say that the system has been abused and their answer is less regulation. That makes as much sense as their saying that the Bush tax cuts are needed to create jobs and then they turn around and say they see no end to near double digit unemployment in the forseeable future. I don't understand why the msm never challenges people making these illogical statements.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bloodhound41
09:04 PM on 01/02/2011
Let's just hope it lives beyond the Repug takeover.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Brandon1990
08:43 PM on 01/02/2011
and to think that republicans are against this agency to help protect consumers
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Soulsurfer
Solar Electrician,Longtime Surfin'Fool
09:44 PM on 01/02/2011
Yes, they've vowed to keep a sharp eye on it for "fraud and waste", if you can believe it. Funny how they don't share the same enthusiasm for doing the same with the Pentagon.
10:17 PM on 01/02/2011
Yes, the government must not waste or have fraud, but the private sector can because that'
s the free market, and the free market is holy among greedy people.
07:52 PM on 01/02/2011
And it will function until unbridled corporate influence in government gets businessmen appointed in charge of that agency, at which point they will take it apart from the inside.

The influence of businesses in government is _always_ bad.
07:05 PM on 01/02/2011
I am overwhelmed by the negative attitutde towards Wall Street and its government enablers..please remember theses plain folk are merely doing God's Work!!!!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mik McAllister
08:09 PM on 01/02/2011
No, Jehovah promised no more great calamities like the Flood.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
exmate
Life is about playing a poor hand well.
01:46 PM on 01/03/2011
The money changers need to be run out of the termple. Lately, they have contributed little or nothing to the value chain of goods and services. They just take.