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The fourth annual AFN Conference was attended by all
facets of the industry including servicers, investors, and
field service providers, in addition to bankruptcy attorneys and
judges. AFN dedicated a session to discuss the disaster aftermath
of the 2005 hurricane season, with Robert Klein as the session
moderator. Panelists shared their updates, lessons learned,and best
practices for handling the devastation and encouraging the recovery
effort. The industry remains focused on unity, improvement, and
proactive preparation as the combined foundation for facing
disasters in the future. Session panelists included former
Louisiana Commissioner of Insurance Robert Wooley, now with Adams
& Reese; Bill Merrill, Freddie Mac; Todd Barton, Fannie Mae;
Jeanne Fairweather, Ohio Savings Bank; Ron Reitz, GMAC-RFC; and
Anita Holbrook, National City Mortgage.
The disaster impacted not just the Gulf Coast, but
the entire country, and the industry needed to make changes across
the board to aid in handling future disasters. The AFN panelists in
the disaster session facilitated discussions on necessary changes
and processes for addressing displaced persons and damaged
properties resulting not only from the storms of 2005, but for
future storms. The biggest challenge for the servicers was
establishing contact with the displaced borrowers following the
hurricanes, while the role of the field service providers was to
supply the servicers and investors with accurate information
regarding the damaged cities, neighborhoods, and properties.
Accurate property status information is crucial to assist the
servicers in making contact with borrowers, following up on hazard
insurance claims for vacant and occupied properties, and ensuring
completion and quality of property repairs.
Robert Klein and Ron Reitz with GMAC provided the following
observations of on the ground reports received from the field:
Many insurance claims have not yet been settled
because of pending litigation and a shortage of insurance
adjusters. For the settled claims, Safeguard has completed
insurance loss draft inspections on behalf of servicers for more
than 23,000 properties in the disaster-affected areas. The
results of these inspections report the following:
- Repairs are being completed, but not to the
adjusters' scope of work detailed in the settlement
- The shortage of contractors and supplies have
led to excessive bids and prices for completed work
- There is a large delay between insurance claim
settlement and completed repairs because of contractor
shortage
- Insurance checks are being cashed by borrowers
without notification to servicers
- Insurance checks are issued by the insurance
carrier without listing the servicer as co-payee; particularly with
flood insurance settlements
- Insurance settlement amounts are not
sufficient to cover the repairs
- Contractors and their subs are moving to
bigger jobs with more earning potential before finishing current
jobs
- Personal Lines insurance carriers are not
willing to release information to the servicers/lenders, citing
"privacy act" as a reason
- Borrowers are not educated on the process to
obtain supplemental payments
- Slow resolution to insurance claim
settlements
- Building permits cannot be obtained from city,
despite awarded insurance proceeds, because of pending NFIP reform
and shortage of city personnel
- Private settlements between companies and
borrowers, such as the
Murphy Oil Spill, do not include the servicer on the settlement
proceeds
Commissioner Wooley expressed concern that insurance
industry is not complying with the needs and requests of the
servicers and lenders because they are not knowledgeable of the
industry's needs and role in unpaid liens. The Commissioner
suggested organizing a meeting between the trade organizations of
the insurance and mortgage industries, which will help the
insurance commission, city and state officials, and legislators to
understand the role of the servicer and investors in regard to
damaged properties and unpaid liens. Communication between
all of the impacted parties and cooperation from the servicers,
investors, and legislators will better enable the industry to reach
out to the borrowers and establish policies that benefit all
facets. Communication and education are the keys to developing
procedures that allow the industry to handle future disasters with
cooperation and success.
The insurance environment in the state of Louisiana was troubled
before the 2005 hurricanes and policies were revamped following the
disasters. Insurance carriers continue to review policies in the
Gulf area and threaten to exclude wind and hail from policies going
forward because of their heightened risk in these areas. The
possible exclusion of wind and hail, combined with proposed NFIP
reforms, may lead to unaffordable Gulf-area insurance, raising the
risk for all servicers in these areas.
The proposed NFIP reforms continue to evaluate revising flood zone
maps and requiring a raised home elevation, both of which will
affect the availability and afford ability of insurance in these
areas. This impact will significantly slow the movement of
borrowers to rebuild or return to the severely devastated
areas.
Bill Merrill, Director of Non-Performing loans at
Freddie Mac, shared the lessons his company learned from its
post-hurricane responses, which were meant to preserve
homeownership and stimulate rebuilding.
For example, in early 2006, Freddie Mac
established a zone methodology to better target its foreclosure and
servicing actions based on the level of local damage. The defined
zones also provide clearer policy instruction to servicers.
With the company’s blanket moratoria expiring on August 31,
2006, Freddie Mac released an August 4th Bulletin providing
additional updates to the zone methodology and further
clarification for extending borrower payment relief on a
case-by-case basis.
Freddie Mac also reviewed its internal "reactive" process to the
disaster and established internal teams to develop a list of
"lessons learned" for future natural disaster policies.
Acting on one of the lessons learned, Freddie Mac organized a
disaster planning team to discuss successes and areas of
opportunity, as well as the implementation of onsite visits to the
affected areas.
In addition, Merrill said, the industry should consider developing
a neutral credit-reporting indicator for borrowers receiving
forbearance during a disaster. This would enable lenders to
continue reporting to credit repositories while protecting borrower
credit scores over the long term. In addition, he said,
industry partners should conduct disaster planning and policy
creation through joint efforts to drive a more proactive response
the next time.
In response to Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, Fannie Mae issued
additional guidance to servicers to supplement its existing natural
disaster policies contained in its servicing guide. Fannie
Mae, like other investors, issued a foreclosure moratorium
following the hurricanes and reminded servicers of their ability to
grant forbearance to assist borrowers. Fannie Mae offered
servicers assistance in locating borrowers to determine their
intentions with respect to their properties. Todd Barton,
associate general counsel with Fannie Mae, advised that Fannie Mae
expected to release additional instruction to servicers with
respect to the scheduled August 31, 2006 expiration of the
foreclosure moratorium. Update: Fannie Mae released
Lender Letter 04-06 Hurricane Related Special
Relief Measures on August 8,
2006.
Fannie Mae recently released
Lender Letter 06-05 authorizing insurance deductibles up to 5% of the value of the
home to help offset the costly insurance to borrowers in effort to
preserve home ownership. While the increase in deductible
will offset the rising cost in premiums, it may affect borrowers'
ability to cover the deductible in the event of damages.
Like the investors, servicers also re-evaluated their disaster
policies and established best practices. According to Anita
Hollbrook, National City recognized the need to be able to handle
increased volumes in nearly every department, specifically in
handling the customer service phone calls. In addition to the
volume, the length of calls increased as a result of extra time
needed to educate the borrower. National City created a
dedicated customer service line to handle the questions and educate
borrowers about their loss mitigation options. National City
used their field service provider to leave contact cards at the
property and to attempt to contact borrowers or
neighbors.
Similarly, other field service providers offered to send out teams
of two to contact borrowers to gather contact information and
educate them on the insurance claim process. With affected
borrowers scattered throughout 26 states, contacting them was the
biggest challenge for most servicers. Ohio Savings Bank also
felt establishing borrower contact was critical and they
volunteered to make phone calls for borrowers to insurance
companies and developed a specialized customer service script for
borrowers impacted by the disaster. Ohio Savings also relied
on their field service provider to supply up-to-date information in
the affected areas.
Ohio Savings used the information provided to evaluate the funding
of new loans, and established an internal weather alert team to
monitor potential losses around the country. This team
evaluates loans upon severe weather alerts and does not await an
official declaration from FEMA. Lastly, Ohio Savings has
programmed their system to flag loans with internal notification of
disaster status upon contact with the borrower or zip code
declaration by FEMA.
Congress has awarded over $18 billion in grant money to be awarded
to borrowers of severely damaged properties in Louisiana and
Mississippi.
The Louisiana Recovery Authority (LRA) and
Mississippi Development Authority (MDA) have been designated the authority of distributing funds
to borrowers that wish to rebuild or repair their properties, or
relocate when rebuilding is not a viable option. The LRA
plans to implement an escrow account for the funds to be monitored
and dispersed by servicers, while the MDA has not designated such
restrictions for the borrowers. The details of the escrow
accounts and planned counseling efforts of the authorities have not
yet been finalized.
Field vendors also experienced challenges from the disaster and
conducted internal reviews to evaluate their lessons learned and
apply principles for implementation in the future. We commend the
field contractors that relocated to the disaster areas for months
at a time to complete inspections to help provide the servicers
with accurate information to best service their assets. Vendors
offered assistance to the displaced homeowners, while living
themselves in RVs and trailers because of the lack of hotel and
housing accommodations. To continue in the quest for improved
information gathering, recovery, and asset protection, Safeguard
created an extended FEMA questionnaire to ensure the most detailed
information available is provided to the services and investors
when the next disaster strikes. The continued team work and
industry consensus will ensure all facets are prepared and
successful in enduring, recovering, and moving forward from future
disasters.
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