| 911 - HUD Mail Delay Consideration ML 2001-24 |
| Monday, 05 November 2001 | |
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U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN
DEVELOPMENT WASHINGTON, DC
20410 MORTGAGEE LETTER 2001-24 TO: ALL APPROVED MORTGAGEES ATTENTION: Single Family Servicing Managers SUBJECT: Consideration For Mail Delays Following the Terrorist Attacks In response to the events of September 11, 2001, the Department issued Mortgagee Letter 2001-21 , Relief Options for Borrowers Affected by the Events of September 11, 2001. Included in that mortgagee letter were specific servicing requirements to be followed for those FHA borrowers who were identified as being affected by the terrorist attacks. The initial response from the public has been favorable in that
lenders appear to have positively responded to borrowers who have
identified themselves as being directly affected. However, the
Department has also learned that hundreds of thousands of In addition to the damaged Church Street Station and the resulting lost or delayed mail from that facility, every U.S. resident may have been impacted on some level by mail delays. Immediately following September 11, 2001, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) grounded air travel. Mail which had previously been shipped via air had to be forwarded via ground transportation. Although the FAA is again allowing mail to be transported via air cargo, mail delays occurred throughout the nation in September 2001 and will probably continue at least for the short term. Lenders are encouraged to give the benefit of the doubt to
borrowers whose September or October 2001, installments arrive
late, especially if the borrower has an established pattern of
remitting payments timely. This includes waiving or reversing late
charges already assessed as well as withholding the reporting of
late payments to the credit bureaus. In many situations, lenders
have automated systems which allow no input Please direct any questions on this letter or other servicing issues to the Department's National Servicing Center in Oklahoma City, at (888) 297-8685 (this is a toll-free number).
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