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02-23-2007, 04:50 PM #1
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Effort to bar tax ID for loans draws Latino fire
http://www.baltimoresun.com/business/re ... eadlines-1
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From the Baltimore Sun
Effort to bar tax ID for loans draws Latino fire
February 23, 2007
New legislation on Capitol Hill seeks to curb an increasingly popular mortgage concept: providing home loans to applicants using their individual taxpayer identification number (ITIN), in lieu of a Social Security number.
ITINs are issued by the Internal Revenue Service to assist immigrant workers who do not qualify for a Social Security number - but do have taxable income - to report their income and pay federal taxes.
Dozens of banks around the country have begun offering home mortgages to undocumented immigrants using ITINs, but their programs generally have been low-key and small in volume.
Bank of America stirred controversy this month when it announced a pilot program in Los Angeles to provide credit cards to resident-alien customers who lack Social Security numbers but have ITINs.
Some critics charged that the bank was seeking to profit by helping illegal immigrants who should be deported or prosecuted, not extended consumer credit. Bank of America said its program is legal and may be rolled out nationwide if the pilot is successful.
Now a bill has been introduced in Congress that would prohibit financial institutions from providing home mortgages to anyone who lacks a Social Security number. The bill (H.R. 480), introduced by Rep. John T. Doolittle, would amend the Truth in Lending Act to make ITIN mortgage lending illegal.
The California Republican's office released a statement that said in part: "The government should not be in the business of creating incentives to encourage illegal behavior. Nor should companies be permitted to reward those individuals in clear violation of our laws."
Proponents of ITIN-based lending to homebuyers say Doolittle has it all wrong. Tim Sandos, president and chief executive of the National Association of Hispanic Real Estate Professionals, said Doolittle's bill would be "extremely disruptive," and affect far more people than the illegal immigrants the measure purports to target.
Sandos estimates that there are as many as 7 million to 8 million resident aliens in the United States who do not have Social Security cards, but are in some phase of the immigration process leading to citizenship.
That process can take years - often more than eight years - and "meanwhile these individuals are working here, earning incomes, paying taxes, contributing to the economy."
They "are not illegal," said Sandos. "They are undocumented. The government knows exactly who they are and where they are." Doolittle's bill, he added, "is the equivalent of trying to drive a tack with a sledgehammer."
Sandos' group, which is made up of Latino and non-Latino representatives of banks, real estate firms, developers, homebuilders and real estate service providers, conducted a study that concluded that if mortgage companies made greater use of ITINs to extend home loans to qualified buyers, $44 billion in new mortgages - primarily to first-time buyers - could be originated.
Geoffrey F. Cooper, director of emerging markets for MGIC Investment Corp., a major private mortgage insurance firm, said lenders in about 40 states are making mortgages to customers using ITINs. MGIC's role is to provide insurance against losses to lenders in the event borrowers default or go to foreclosure.
Cooper said his company's program was initiated at the request of community banks and other local lending institutions that found that many of their customers who lacked Social Security numbers - but had ITINs for tax purposes - earned solid incomes, had stable employment histories and excellent payment histories on debt obligations.
Under MGIC's program, underwriting standards are strict, with mandatory documentation of income, assets, residency and other criteria - stricter standards, in fact, than many lenders impose on applicants who have Social Security cards.
Homebuyers with ITIN mortgages "perform like 'A' credit borrowers," said Cooper, and they qualify for MGIC's favorable "A-premium" insurance rates because they are so dependable.
Janis Bowdler, senior housing policy analyst for the National Council of La Raza, an Hispanic advocacy group, said the homebuyers who use ITIN mortgages should be seen as "hardworking, taxpaying families who want to participate in the American dream," even if they do not yet have Social Security numbers because of their immigration status.
Sandos noted that making Social Security numbers mandatory to obtain a mortgage also could affect the ability of Asian, European, South American and other foreign investors who simply want to buy a house or condo in the United States for periodic visits, but not full-time residency.
That, in turn, could prompt foreign governments to impose restrictions on the ability of American citizens to buy real estate abroad.
kenharney@earthlink.net
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02-23-2007, 05:03 PM #2
I think this is a step in the right direction and long overdue!!
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02-23-2007, 05:52 PM #3
So, if there are folks who don't reside in US and want to buy
a house in the US, without an SS card, then pay cash, or take
a loan out in your own country. Buying a house in US and
getting a mortgage in US are two different things.
Many Americans, who buy houses in other countries, don't take
out mortgages in that country.
The illegals who were "granted" during the last amnesty
now have green cards (although they may be pink now). It is
my understanding that they, then, were issued social security
numbers. They have purchased homes. Why should illegals
be able to purchase homes?
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02-23-2007, 11:05 PM #4Sandos estimates that there are as many as 7 million to 8 million resident aliens in the United States who do not have Social Security cards, but are in some phase of the immigration process leading to citizenship.
That process can take years - often more than eight years - and "meanwhile these individuals are working here, earning incomes, paying taxes, contributing to the economy."
They "are not illegal," said Sandos. "They are undocumented. The government knows exactly who they are and where they are." Doolittle's bill, he added, "is the equivalent of trying to drive a tack with a sledgehammer.""The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing" ** Edmund Burke**
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02-24-2007, 02:01 AM #5Sandos noted that making Social Security numbers mandatory to obtain a mortgage also could affect the ability of Asian, European, South American and other foreign investors who simply want to buy a house or condo in the United States for periodic visits, but not full-time residency.
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02-24-2007, 08:44 AM #6
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Bank of America stirred controversy this month when it announced a pilot program in Los Angeles to provide credit cards to resident-alien customers who lack Social Security numbers but have ITINs.
In my work, I've NEVER come across a resident-alien who didn't have a social security number.Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)
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02-24-2007, 12:01 PM #7In my work, I've NEVER come across a resident-alien who didn't have a social security number.
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02-24-2007, 01:53 PM #8
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02-24-2007, 03:35 PM #9
Re: mortgages for illegal alien criminals...
in SOME cases...these criminals get an American citizen, NOT an anchor baby, but a REAL American citizen, or a LEGAL permanent resident with a green card, who has a REAL, VALID social security number in their own name, which is their REAL, LEGAL NAME, to put the mortgage and house in the legal person's name while the illegal alien criminal pays the mortgage by the job-thief's illegal work in a job that they stole from an American citizen.
That is how some of these illegal alien criminals do it.
Trust me. I have 20+ years experience with these criminals...seeing HOW these criminals do things like this.
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02-24-2007, 06:57 PM #10
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mortgages for illegals etc
This is bigger then illegals with credit cards or mortgages. It is a way to "send money home". Once you have a account with BOA you can get many other credit cards with different names applied to the same account. I'm sure we have all done this. I got my daughter a C.C on my Visa account through BOA. She does not have my last name and the bank asked no questions. The only thing they asked was "how do you spell her name." SOOOO illegals get multiple cards, send them "home" and whammo no more "Western Union" and no more trips over the boarder to deliver money etc. How about funding terrorism? Where is the money trail.
P.S I closed all my accounts at BOA. I went with a small local credit union.
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