Published: October 28, 2009
Combined Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco and FHA Programs Expand Homeownership Opportunities for Lower-Income Families
SAN FRANCISCO - (BUSINESS WIRE) - The Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco's matching grant first-time
homebuyer programs can be used in conjunction with the FHA
Streamlined Section 203(k) rehabilitation program to purchase and
rehabilitate affordable homes. While single-family housing inventory is
high and prices remain low, the compatibility of the Bank's Workforce
Initiative Subsidy for Homeownership (WISH)
and Individual Development and Empowerment Account (IDEA)
grants with FHA's Streamlined rehab program can expand homeownership
opportunities for eligible lower-income families and help to stabilize
communities hard hit by the foreclosure crisis.
The Bank's WISH and IDEA grant programs both offer eligible low-to
moderate-income households grants of up to $15,000 that can be used for
downpayment and closing costs, matching $3 for every dollar contributed
by the homebuyer. WISH grants are targeted to working families and
individuals who are ready to make the transition from renting to owning.
The IDEA program is directed at homebuyers who have been saving for the
purchase of their first home through an Individual Development Account
(IDA) or participating in their local housing authority's Family
Self-Sufficiency (FSS) homeownership program.
Designed to assist potential homeowners with less complicated and costly
rehabilitation projects than its Standard 203(k) loan program, the FHA
Streamlined 203(k) program allows for minor upgrades and repairs up to
$35,000. Homebuyers are able to get just one mortgage loan, at a
long-term affordable fixed or adjustable rate, to finance both the
acquisition and rehabilitation of the property. Escrow can close before
the rehab is complete, simplifying the purchase process for both the
first-time homebuyer and the lender.
"The FHA Streamlined 203(k) program is being used by many state and
local housing agencies and nonprofits to put the current inventory of
REO units and older homes to use as affordable housing," said Marietta
Núnez, Vice President, Community Lending, FHLBank San Francisco. "For a
first-time homebuyer receiving downpayment assistance through one of the
Bank's matching grant programs, being able to also bundle repair costs
into the purchase price with an FHA rehab loan really expands the
possibilities of affordable homeownership." These benefits to the buyer
and participating lender are magnified, Núnez added, by the positive
impact these programs can have on neighborhoods destabilized by the
foreclosure crisis.
For 2009, the Bank awarded $10 million in WISH and IDEA grants to member
financial institutions to help eligible first-time homebuyers achieve
homeownership. Details about these programs, including a listing of
members currently participating in the WISH
and IDEA
programs, are available on the Bank's website.
The Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco
Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco delivers low-cost funding and
other services that help member financial institutions make home
mortgages to people of all income levels and provide credit that
supports neighborhoods and communities. The Bank also funds community
investment programs that help members create affordable housing and
promote community economic development. The Bank's members-its
shareholders and customers-are commercial banks, credit unions, savings
institutions, thrift and loans, and insurance companies headquartered in
Arizona, California, and Nevada.
Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco
Mary Long, 415-616-2556
longm@fhlbsf.com
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