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New State Bank Bills Address Credit and Housing
Crises
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, February 27, 2011 Seventeen states
have now introduced bills for state-owned banks, and others are in the
works. Hawaii’s innovative
state bank bill addresses the foreclosure mess.
County-owned banks are being proposed that would tackle the housing
crisis by exercising the right of eminent domain on abandoned and foreclosed
properties. Arizona has a bill
that would do this for homeowners who are current in their payments but
underwater, allowing them to refinance at fair market value.
The long-awaited settlement between 49 state Attorneys
General and the big five robo-signing banks is proving to be a major
disappointment before it has even been signed, sealed and court
approved. Critics maintain that
the bankers responsible for the housing crisis and the jobs crisis will
again be buying their way out of jail, and the curtain will again drop on
the scene of the crime.
We may not be able to beat the banks, but we don’t have
to play their game. We can take
our marbles and go home. The
Move Your Money campaign has already prompted
more than 600,000 consumers to move their funds out of Wall Street banks
into local banks, and there are much larger pools that could be pulled out
in the form of state revenues.
States generally deposit their revenues and invest their capital with large
Wall Street banks, which use those hefty sums to speculate, invest abroad,
and buy up the local banks that service our communities and local economies.
The states receive a modest interest, and Wall Street lends the money
back at much higher interest. Rhode Island is a case in point.
In an article titled “Where Are R.I. Revenues Being Invested? Not
Locally,” Kyle Hence
wrote in ecoRI News on January 26th: According to a December
Treasury report, only 10 percent of Rhode Island’s short-term investments
reside in truly local in-state banks, namely Washington Trust and BankRI.
Meanwhile, 40 percent of these investments were placed with foreign-owned
banks, including a British-government owned bank under investigation by
the European Union. Further, millions have been invested by
Rhode Island in a fund created by a global buyout firm . . . . From 2008 to
mid-2010, the fund lost 10 percent of its value — more than $2 million. . .
. Three of four of Rhode Island’s representatives in Washington, D.C., count
[this fund] amongst their top 25 political campaign donors . . . . Hence asks: Are Rhode Islanders and the state economy
being served well here? Is it not time for the state to more fully invest
directly in Rhode Island, either through local banks more deeply rooted in
the community or through the creation of a new state-owned bank? Hence observes that state-owned banks are “[o]ne emerging solution being widely considered nationwide . . . . Since the onset of the economic collapse about five years ago, 16 states have studied or explored creating state-owned banks, according to a recent Associated Press report.”
2012 Additions to the Public Bank Movement Make that 17 states, including three joining the list
of states introducing state bank bills in 2012:
Idaho (a
bill for a feasibility study),
New Hampshire (a
bill for a bank), and
Vermont
(introducing THREE bills—one for a state
bank study, one for a state currency, and one for a state voucher/warrant
system).
With North Dakota, which has had its own bank for nearly a
century, that makes 18 states that have introduced bills in one form or
another—36% of U.S. states. For
states and text of bills, see
here. Other recent state bank developments were in Virginia,
Hawaii, Washington State, and California, all of which have upgraded from
bills to study the feasibility of a state-owned bank to bills to actually
establish a bank. The most
recent,
California’s new bill, was introduced on Friday, February 24th. All of these bills point to the Bank of
North Dakota as their model.
Kyle Hence notes that North Dakota has maintained a thriving economy
throughout the current recession:
One of the reasons, some say, is the Bank
of North Dakota, which was formed in 1919 and is the only
state-owned or public bank in the United States. All state revenues flow
into the Bank of North Dakota and back out into the state in the form of
loans. Since 2008, while servicing student,
agricultural and energy— including wind — sector loans within North Dakota,
every dollar of profit by the bank, which has added up to tens of millions,
flows back into state coffers and directly supports the needs of the state
in ways private banks do not.
Publicly-owned Banks and the Housing Crisis A novel approach is taken in the
new Hawaii bill:
it proposes a program to deal with the housing crisis and the
widespread problem of breaks in the chain of title due to robo-signing,
faulty assignments, and MERS.
(For more on this problem, see
here.)
According to a February 10th
report on the bill from the Hawaii House Committees on Economic
Revitalization and Business & Housing:
The purpose of this measure is to establish the bank of
the State of Hawaii in order to develop a program to acquire residential
property in situations where the mortgagor is an owner-occupant who has
defaulted on a mortgage or been denied a mortgage loan modification and the
mortgagee is a securitized trust that cannot adequately demonstrate that it
is a holder in due course. The bill provides that in cases of foreclosure in which
the mortgagee cannot prove its right to foreclose or to collect on the
mortgage, foreclosure shall be stayed and the bank of the State of Hawaii
may offer to buy the property from the owner-occupant for a sum not
exceeding 75% of the principal balance due on the mortgage loan.
The bank of the State of Hawaii can then rent or sell the property
back to the owner-occupant at a fair price on reasonable terms.
Arizona Senate Bill 1451, which just passed the Senate
Banking Committee 6 to 0, would do something similar for homeowners who are
current on their payments but whose mortgages are underwater (exceeding the
property’s current fair market value).
Martin Andelman calls the bill a “revolutionary approach to revitalizing
the state’s increasingly water-logged housing market, which has left over
500,000 of Arizona’s homeowners in a hopelessly immobile state.”
The bill would
establish an Arizona Housing Finance Reform Authority to refinance the
mortgages of Arizona homeowners who owe more than their homes are currently
worth. The existing mortgage would be replaced with a new mortgage from
AHFRA in an amount up to 125% of the home's current fair market value. The
existing lender would get paid 101% of the home's fair market value, and
would get a non-interest-bearing note called a “loss recapture
certificate” covering a portion of any underwater amounts, to be paid over
time. The capital to refinance the
mortgages would come from floating revenue bonds, and payment on the bonds
would come solely from monies paid by the homeowner-borrowers. An Arizona
Home Insurance Fund would create a cash reserve of up to 20 percent of the
bond and would be used to insure against losses. The bill would thus cost
the state nothing. Critics of the Arizona bill
maintain that it shifts losses
from collapsed property values onto banks and investors, violating the law
of contracts; and critics of the Hawaii bill maintain that the state bank
could wind up having paid more than market value for a slew of underwater
homes. An option that would
avoid both of these objections is one suggested by Michael Sauvante of the
Commonwealth Group, discussed earlier
here: the state
or county could exercise its right of eminent domain on blighted, foreclosed
and abandoned properties. It
could offer to pay fair market value to anyone who could prove title
(something that with today’s defective title records normally can’t be
done), then dispose of the property through a publicly-owned land bank as
equity and fairness dictates.
If a bank or trust could prove title, the claimant would get fair market
value, which would be no less than it would have gotten at an auction; and
if it could not prove title, it legally would have no claim to the property.
Investors who could prove actual monetary damages would still have an
unsecured claim in equity against the mortgagors for any sums owed.
Rhode Island Next? As the housing crisis lingers on with little sign of relief from the
Feds, innovative state and local solutions like these are gaining adherents
in other states; and one of them is Rhode Island, which is in serious need
of relief. According to
The Pew Center on the States,
“The country’s smallest state . . . was one of the first states to
fall into the recession because of the housing crisis and may be one of the
last to emerge.”
Rhode Islanders are proud
of having been first in
a number of more positive achievements, including being the first of the
13 original colonies to declare
independence from British rule.
A state bank presentation was
made to the president of the Rhode Island Senate and other key leaders
earlier this month that was reportedly well received.
Proponents have ambitions of making Rhode Island the first state in
this century to move its money out of Wall Street into its own state bank,
one owned and operated by the people for the people. Ellen Brown is an attorney and president of the Public Banking Institute, http://PublicBankingInstitute.org. In Web of Debt, her latest of eleven books, she shows how a private cartel has usurped the power to create money from the people themselves, and how we the people can get it back. Her websites are http://WebofDebt.com and http://EllenBrown.com. |
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