Politics & Government
Home Loan Rescue Program Adds $5 Million to Oakland Property Values
County crosses $5 million milestone in step forward foreclosure prevention funds. Nearly $207,150 has helped Ferndale homeowners.

A program backed by the Troubled Asset Relief Act has helped more than 550 Oakland County residents remain in their homes. (Photo via Shutterstock)
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A program that helps Oakland County homeowners pay off delinquent property taxes, interest and fees just received its five-millionth dollar, according to a news release.
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The Step Forward Michigan Loan Rescue Program provides up to $30,000 per homeowner to bring past-due amounts current.
βWeβre using every tool available to boost property values, fight foreclosure and keep Oakland County residents in their homes,β Oakland County Treasurer Andy Meisner said in a news release. βStep Forward Michigan erased the property tax debt of 500-plus families for more than $5 million.β
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The money is part of a $498.6 million allocation to Michigan, one of 18 states and the District of Columbia targeted in the $7.6 billion βHardest Hit Fund,β part of the federal governmentβs Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) signed into law by former President George W. Bush in 2008 in response to the subprime mortgage crisis.
Oakland County lost billions in taxable value during the ensuing Great Recession, said Scott Held, a spokesman for the treasurerβs office. βIt wasnβt just poor people who ran into problems,β he said. βMiddle-class homeowners also found themselves under water in communities that arenβt considered distressed.β
That includes:
- Bloomfield Township β 7 households helped, $42,612.79 ($10,653.20 average)
- Clawson β 6 households helped, $39,216.57 ($7,843.31 average)
- Ferndale β 24 households helped, $207,149.52 ($9,415.69 average)
- Huntington Woods β 2 households helped, $23,212.84 ($4,606.42 average)
- Rochester β 2 households helped, $12,898.83 ($6,449.42 average)
- Rochester Hills β 12 households helped, $146,478.81 ($12,206.57 average)
- Royal Oak β 15 households helped, $136,118.45 ($10,470.65 average)
- Troy β 11 households helped, $117,472.92 ($13,052.55 average)
- West Bloomfield β 18 households helped, $131,233.88 ($10,094.91 average)
Held said everyone wins under the program.
βItβs good for us because we get the delinquent property taxes back,β he said. βItβs good for the homeowners, because they get to stay in their houses. Itβs good for the community, because it makes it more stable.β
Whoβs Eligible?
Assistance for homeowners with property tax delinquencies was made available beginning Jan. 15, 2013, through the Step Forward Michigan Loan Rescue Program, which requires:
- That homeowners are the title owner of the property;
- They are facing a hardship, like unemployment or medical disability;
- They have delinquent and/or late property taxes;
- They donβt have large cash reserves.
The program, which runs through 2017, grants zero-interest loans and forgives 20 percent of the amount each year as long as the recipient remains in the home. When notice of these funds was made available, the County Treasurerβs Office immediately connected with the Michigan State Housing Development Authority about program rules, sent a letter about Step Forward to every delinquent taxpayer in the county and created a 23-page βcheat sheetβ to guide homeowners through the often confusing online application process.
βBecause the money from this program goes directly to Oakland Countyβs bottom line, our goal when the program began was $1 million,β Meisner said, adding that β557 families received more than $5.2 million to keep their homes and protect our property values is a victory that far exceeds our expectations.β
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