Assembly Bill 238 would allow borrows to put a stop to their mortgage payments for up to 180 days with no fees, penalties or interest, simply by attesting — without documentation — that the fires caused a financial hardship. The relief could be extended another 180 days at the property owner's request.
The bill also would prohibit a mortgage servicer from initiating a foreclosure, and moving for or executing a foreclosure judgment or sale.
"This should be the industry standard across the board and I look forward to continuing to work with stakeholders to make this a reality for all those who were impacted by the wildfires," said Assemblymember and co-sponsor, Democrat John Harabedian, whose district includes hard-hit Altadena.
The bill, co-sponsored by Democratic Assemblymember Jacqui Irwin, whose district includes Pacific Palisades, was introduced prior to Newsom's agreements with several big banks and hundreds of state-chartered lenders to provide mortgage relief — but not on as generous terms.
Those agreements provided for streamlined processes to seek 90-days of relief from payments, without accruing late fees or being dinged by credit bureaus, and protections from new foreclosure of eviction actions for at least 60 days. It is being offered to borrowers whose properties were damaged or destroyed.
Federally chartered Wells Fargo, Bank of America, JP Morgan, Citibank and U.S. Bank reached an agreement with Newsom to provide the voluntary relief on Jan. 18, following by270 state-chartered banks last week.
Among the state banks participating in the program are Banc of California, Hanmi Bank and PennyMac Loan Services.
City National Bank, a subsidiary of Royal Bank of Canada and the largest bank headquartered in the county, added its name this week to the roster of lenders providing mortgage relief.
The Assembly bill would typically be referred to a committee for a hearing in the spring, but Tom Steel, Harabedian's chief of staff, said the lawmaker will be seeking other options to expedite the legislation .
The bill has nine principal co-authors, nearly all representing districts including Los Angeles County.
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