Public and private programs can help low- and moderate-income families gain homeownership.
TODAY'S roiling mortgage market and still-high prices have made buying an entry-level house in Southern California seem about as likely for struggling first-time buyers as owning a villa at Italy's Lake Como. At least, that's how Christopher and Hedy Maar saw it. Then lightning struck.
The couple, who had been renting a North Hollywood house for five years, learned early this summer about state- and city-government programs for first-time buyers needing financial help purchasing a home.
"Some clients tell me they don't want to share the appreciation on housing-department loans. I tell them to stay a renter," said Roberta Berthold, a Golden Empire Mortgage lender in Sherman Oaks who specializes in low- and moderate-income buyer programs. "The loan layering gets very complicated, and clients get frustrated, but I tell them it's worth it."
Rules for eligibility
It must be. In 2005, the Los Angeles Housing Department, for example, funded 37 low-income and 13 moderate-income loans. So far this year, it has funded 105 low-income and 169 moderate-income loans, according to the department. And cities throughout Southern California sponsor such programs, each with their own set of eligibility rules. Borrowers should consult their city's or county's local housing, community development or redevelopment agencies to check out the programs.
To qualify for a housing-department loan for down-payment assistance and closing costs in L.A., borrowers must be first-time buyers and purchase a home within the city. If married, both partners must be first-time buyers. The low-income loan ceiling is $90,000 for purchase assistance only and $115,000 for purchase assistance and rehabilitation. Other loans are available too.
The housing department's annual income limit for a low-income, one-person household is $41,450, and $47,350 for two people. There also are two moderate-income programs, which have higher income ceilings.
It's one thing for buyers to get mortgages. It's another to find homes they can afford, especially in Los Angeles and Orange counties. Counselors urge them to think condo. That's what Amy Gross did. The Orange middle-school math teacher, 26, began saving for a house in her teens. She lived at home while earning her college degree and teaching credential, to save every nickel.
Finally, with $20,000 in the bank and knowing she was eligible for a program to help teachers, Gross started looking for a condo about a year ago. She also signed up for a homeownership class, where she met Bonnie Morris, homeownership manager for the Affordable Housing Clearninghouse in Lake Forest, an Orange County nonprofit.
To pay for her two-bedroom, $285,000 condo -- the 900-square-foot foreclosed unit is a bargain in Laguna Hills -- Morris guided Gross to two CalHFA loans: $230,000 for her first mortgage and $12,500 for the second. Her $40,000 third mortgage is from Orange County's Mortgage Assistance Program. She got an $8,580 fourth loan from the state's Extra Credit Teacher Program, which requires that the borrower teach in a low-performing public or charter school.
Gross' monthly payment is $1,600, plus $250 in homeowners' association fees. Her three subordinate loans are deferred, and she used some of the money to fix up the unit.
"Being low-income, I thought I would never own," Gross said. "I'm thrilled."
In Los Angeles, low-income buyers also can get funds through the housing department's American Dream Downpayment Initiative. The loans are equal to 6% of the purchase price or $10,000, whichever is greater. The amount is added to the purchase-assistance loan.
The city's Mortgage Credit Certificate Program issues certificates allowing home buyers to claim up to 20% of the annual interest paid on their mortgages as a federal income tax credit.
Those who live in other parts of L.A. County get a break too. The county's Community Development Commission sponsors the Homeownership Program, which includes education seminars, first mortgages, silent seconds, down-payment assistance and mortgage credit certificates.
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the nation's largest providers of mortgage money, offer their own assistance. Fannie Mae's Flexible 97 and Flexible 100 programs help buyers with limited down payments and closing costs, and their MyCommunityMortgage program offers 100% financing. Freddie Mac's Home Possible Mortgages allow zero or low down-payment and flexible credit terms, among other options.
Private organizations also offer home-buying assistance to first-timers. The California Assn. of Realtors' Housing Affordability Fund distributes monies to local associations that partner with groups facilitating homeownership. The Assn. of Community Organizations for Reform (ACORN), an advocacy organization for low- and moderate-income families, has collaborated with the Bank of America on a program with 100% financing and no private mortgage insurance on loans of up to $500,000. Korean Churches for Community Development in Los Angeles offers home-buying education and loan counseling for first-time buyers. Cities such as Pasadena, Inglewood and Fountain Valley provide home-buying assistance; the programs vary from city to city and county to county. The bottom line is, help is out there.
"Owning a home has changed my life," Christopher Maar said. "I look at my wife and she's happier every day."
You can't put a dollar figure on that.
diane.wedner@latimes.com