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Hurricane
Wilma Hurricane
Wilma did not cause the level of devastation and damages seen by
Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. The servicers on the call have
been addressing borrower concerns with standard Natural Disaster
processes in place. Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, VA, and HUD
encouraged forbearance and do not expect to release special
servicing or P&P guidelines for these properties.
Demolition
Notices The parishes of St. Bernard and Plaquemines
announced aggressive plans to demolish properties in effort to
speed the rebuilding process. They have enlisted the
assistance of the Army Corps of Engineers, who will be inspecting
the properties and tagging them to be demolished if unstructurally
sound, damaged beyond repair, or uninhabitable. Homes are not
to be demolished without the borrower's consent, and the cost of
demolition will be covered by FEMA. For additional details
regarding the demolition process please click the following
link:
Commonly asked questions about
St. Bernard Parish’s demolition
process.
There is also concern regarding insurance claim denials if the
property is demolished prior to the insurance carrier's initial
inspection. These situations will be reviewed on a case by
case basis. However, the insurance carriers are already in
these areas inspecting properties and do not expect many of these
situations. Louisiana law forces insurance carriers to
approve claims if properties are demolished per city or parish
ordinance.
Hazard Insurance
Claims Personal lines carriers and forced placed carriers
are to issue checks co-payable to the borrower and servicer.
However, FEMA benefits will only be issued to the borrower.
HUD advised in their
HUD ML 2005-41 that they are
"working with FEMA to ensure that checks issued by FEMA for flood
insurance claims are payable jointly to the borrower and the
mortgagee."
The flood insurance policy has an increased cost of compliance
amount available to raise the property above sea level or to
demolish the property. The additional benefit is up to
$30,000.
There are pending class action law suits that have been filed
against some of the personal lines carriers in the affected
states. Servicers would like to know if claims will not be
paid until the lawsuits are settled.
The Louisiana Department of Insurance is awaiting a final
declaratory judgment from the courts on whether the levy breaks
were a result of wind driven rain damage, or flood damage.
More direction can be given once the judgment has been made.
At this time there is no resolution.
Securing
Properties Servicers have begun to secure delinquent loans
found vacant and several are assessing the fee to the
borrowers. In addition, a contact card is being left at the
property with details as to why the property was secured and who to
contact at the bank.
HUD ML
2005-41 HUD released the first of 3 mortgagee letters
addressing Hurricane Katrina and Rita related issues. This
mortgagee letter specifically addresses inspections, property
preservation, and hazard claims allowables and guidance. The
next two are expected to cover a new loss mitigation tool and
extension of time frames.
HUD clarified the following pertaining to ML 2005-41:
1) The 25/35 day rule has been suspended temporarily.
Properties (across the entire country) outside of the FEMA declared
individual assistance areas are to be inspected within 40 days of
the last completed inspection.
2) Up to 2 inspections per month will be
reimbursed in the individual assistance areas if the servicer feels
necessary. It is not required to perform 2 inspections per
month.
3) The $750 allowable for emergency
repairs is only available for tarping or repairing
roofs.
4) M&M contractors are to be notified
of properties marked for demolition, however, the servicer will not
be held liable if the information was not provided to them in
advance.
Email communication to the M&M contractors reporting the
results of the initial inspection and property condition is
sufficient notice.
HUD is reviewing the reimbursement of properties without insurance
coverage or insufficient insurance settlements.
Fannie Mae
Update Fannie Mae has issued instruction in
Fannie Mae Lender Letter
02-05 requiring initial
inspections to be completed. At this time Fannie Mae does not
plan to reimburse for any additional inspections. If
servicers completed inspections prior to October 15th Fannie Mae
will reimburse if the necessary information is provided with
photos. The required questions do not need to be answered if
the property was found occupied.
Fannie Mae is in the process of issuing general property
preservation guidelines for the disaster areas. If
servicers have additional questions they are to email them
to hurricane_assistance@fanniemae.com.
Department of VA Update VA does
not plan to issue any additional guidance for borrowers affected by
Hurricane Wilma. Servicers are directed to reference the
standard VA disaster relief policies. In addition, VA does
not plan to enforce or reimburse for additional inspections in the
disaster affected areas.
Freddie Mac
Update Freddie Mac does not plan to issue any additional
guidance for borrowers affected by Hurricane Wilma. Servicers
are directed to reference the standard Freddie Mac disaster relief
policies.
The call was recorded and is available for replay by clicking
here:
Conference Call
Audio
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