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REFUGE CONCERTS AND EVENTS

ST. PETE FOR PEACE (www.stpeteforpeace.org), THE REFUGE, and PPEHRC present: DAVID ROVICS with Dave Shepard at CAFE BOHEMIA, WED. NOV. 10th. TIX are $10 suggested donation. GO to www.stpeteforpeace.org for info.

REFUGE PRODUCTIONS PRESENTS @ THE COURTYARD @ PALM BAY HOTEL

LIVE MUSIC and DJ’S EVERY THURSDAY AND FRIDAY NIGHTS

711 3rd Ave. South, Downtown St. Petersburg, Fl 33701

DRINK SPECIALS EVERY WEEK!!

AFTER PARTY, AFTER EVERY SHOW!! $4 for 18 -21, $2 for males 21 and up, ladies 21 and up free!!!! with drink specials and LIVE DJ til 3am

FOR MORE INFO> 727 278 1547, bgcwright@aol.com, www.myspace.com/refugeproductions, all shows are all ages.

PS. PLEASE BRING CANNED GOODS FOR THE NEEDY TO EVERY SHOW!!

PLEASE NOTE ADDITIONAL ITEM: ALL PROCEEDS FROM SHOWS BENEFIT THE REFUGE’S WORK WITH THE HOMELESS AND POOR
———————————————————————————————————————————————————————-side 1

NOVEMBER CONCERTS AT THE COURTYARD:

NOV. 9th “MEN AS TREES WALKING” FEATURING ALLAN AGUIRRE OF SCATTERED FEW, CHORD OF 3 and TBA $7

NOV. 12th ” FALL ON PURPOSE”, “INDIGENOUS WAYS”, “CADILLAC POLICE” $6

NOV. 19th HIP HOP SHOW featuring: “DangeRu$$”, “Ken-Kong”, “Manifest Destiny”, “Brother Cross”, and TBA $7 for under
18 and $5 for 21 and over

NOV. 26th “FALL ON PURPOSE”, “8 ARMS TO CHOKE YOU WITH” and TBA $6
ALL SHOWS AT 7PM

UPCOMING CONCERTS:

DECEMBER 8th, Wednesday: THIS DAY WILL TELL (INDIANOLA RECORDS), HEART CAKE PARTY, AND SET APART
7PM SHOW, TIX ARE $12

JANUARY 6TH, THURSDAY: CHASE COY (UNIVERSAL RECORDS), BACKSEAT GOODBYE, PLUG IN STEREO (TRIPLE
CROWN RECORDS), AND HELLO ASTRONAUT 7PM SHOW, TIX ARE $12

FEB. 25TH, FRIDAY: I AM EMPIRE (TOOTH AND NAIL RECORDS), THE SILVERLINE, AND BRIGHTLIGHT PARADE
7PM SHOW, TIX ARE $12

FOR MORE INFO> 727 278 1547, bgcwright@aol.com, www.myspace.com/refugeproductions, all shows are all ages.

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CORNEL WEST

Iconocast Episode 15: Cornel West
by the Iconocast Collective on October 7, 2010

In this episode, co-hosts Eliacin and Mark speak with one of America’s most celebrated and controversial public intellectuals: Dr. Cornel West.
Dr. West is an African American philosopher, author, critic, actor, and civil rights activist. West currently serves as the Class of 1943 University Professor at Princeton University, where he teaches in the Center for African American Studies and in the department of Religion. He is the author of a number of books including: Prophesy Deliverance! An Africo-American Revolutionary Christianity, Race Matters, The Future of Race, Democracy Matters, and Hope on a Tightrope.
In the interview, we talk to Dr. West about being disinvited as a keynote to the CCDA conference, his relationship with Barack Obama, the rarity of social movements, the power of love, the difference between charity and justice, and much, much more.
Special thanks to Jarrod McKenna…who stayed up all night in Perth, Australia to be a part of this interview but (due to upsetting technical difficulties with Skype) was unable to participate (listen to the end of the podcast–at around 56:45) to find out more…
Tagged as: barack obama, ccda, Cornel West, eliacin rosario-cruz, Iconocast, mark van steenwyk, podcast, social movements

Article by The Iconocast Collective
The Iconocast is twice-monthly podcast exploring the anti-imperial implications of Jesus’ teachings within our modern imperial context. It is the work of a number of collaborators, separated by hundreds (even thousands of miles) each engaged in thoughtful praxis.
The Iconocast Collective has written 15 articles for us.
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Nelson Costa 11 minutes ago

How somebody can cancel a lecture by Dr. West because a interview in Playboy? Imagine if Jesus were here today … He would give an interview in Hustler!
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Previous post: The Winona Catholic Worker
Iconocast Episodes
Iconocast Episode 15: Cornel West
Iconocast Episode 14: Onleilove Alston
Iconocast Episode 13: Carol Rose
The Iconocast Episode 12: Seth Martin (and the Menders)
The Iconocast Episode 11: Gender, Sexism, and Community
Iconocast Episode 10: An Interview with Richard Horsley
The Iconocast Episode 9: Interview with Brian McLaren
The Iconocast Episode 8: Interview with Wes Howard-Brook
The Iconocast Episode 7: Interview with Mary Jo Leddy
The Iconocast Episode 6: Interview with Jim Douglass (part 2)
The Iconocast Episode 5: Interview with Jim Douglass (part 1)
The Iconocast Episode 4: Interview with Waziyatawin (part 2)
The Iconocast Episode 3: Waziyatawin (part 1)
The Iconocast Episode 2: Ched Myers
The Iconocast Episode 1: Nekeisha Alexis-Baker

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REFUGE UPDATE FOR SEPT 2010

UPDATE FOR THE REFUGE FOR SEPT. 2010

Dear friends, Supporters, and the Curious,

It has been a while since I have written a newsletter. Much has been going on, in both my life and the life of the Refuge. As you already know, we participated in several trips over the summer, including the Poor Peoples March, and visiting several intentional communities (Communes). For details… about the Poor People’s March go to www.economichumanrights.org and for more about the communities, google to the New Monasticism.
Currently, the Refuge is going through numerous reorganization efforts. Our Youth/Young adult mentor home continues to go well. We are about to restart our Food outreach to the homeless. We continue to distribute bread to local needy families, the elderly, and the needy at the Enoch Davis Center. We are reopening our Food Pantry at Norwood Community Church. We will be open every Thursday from 430 pm to 6pm. Additionally, we will distribute to those in need by appointment. We are beginning to again help needy families with financial support as available.
At a personal level, I continue to have several struggles financially, but it is slowly improving. We have had a car donated, but because it is an out of state title, it is expensive to register. We need about $600 to register it. If you can help, let us know. This vehicle is both a ministry and personal vehicle.
Another project we are working on is starting an intentional Faith based Community as part of the Refuge. This community is where I would live as well as 4 others, with space available for needy individuals. We would be running it on Progressive Radical Faith based views. We would have a community garden and participate in Peace and Justice activities. We would have discussion groups and a rule of order similar to what is expressed in the New Monasticism. We are looking for people committed to progressive Christian views, committed to peace and justice and radical community. We are currently looking for men to join us in this 1st community. But, we are looking to form several communities of men, women, and families. If you are interested contact us via email and we will give you details.
Lastly, please keep in you thoughts and prayers several people in need: A Couple with addictions issues on the street, a women struggling with addiction and prostitution, and a single mom trying to make it on Food stamps, cash assistance and section 8. Also pray for another woman’s son is struggling with addiction and lastly another woman who is struggling with cancer.
In Closing, the Refuge is still in a difficult position financially. Currently, a friend and supporter of the ministry is driving me around until car can be registered. We need support for him, as well as the General financial need, salary shortage, our benevolence support. If you can help, please email me at bgcwright@aol.com or go to paypay at www.refugestpete.org. You can also call me at 727 278 1547. Checks can also be sent to the Refuge at 1818 29th Ave. North, St. Petersburg, Florida 33713. Thank you.

Sincerely, Rev. Bruce Wright

ps. you can get info. about the Intentional Communities by going to www.newmonasticism.org.

PSS> REFUGE NEEDS IMMEDIATE HELP FINANCIALLY. I AM $615 SHORT ON MY SALARY AND HAVE IMMEDIATE BILLS THAT NEED TO BE PAID WITHIN NEXT 4 DAYS

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foreclosure crisis

September 4, 2010
Florida’s High-Speed Answer to a Foreclosure Mess
By GRETCHEN MORGENSON and GERALDINE FABRIKANT

TEN days from now, a four-bedroom house on a cul-de-sac in Middleburg, Fla., is scheduled to be auctioned off at the Clay County courthouse, 25 miles south of Jacksonville.

A judge who recently took over their foreclosure case has ordered Rodney Waters; his fiancée, Terri Reese; and their four children to leave the home they bought in 2006.

Mr. Waters, a supervisor at a local packaging company and the family’s sole breadwinner, fell behind on his mortgage two years ago after his property taxes jumped unexpectedly. He now owes $264,000 on the house; a similar home down the street sold for $138,500 in February.

The predicament of the Waters-Reese family is common in Florida today. The state routinely sets new records for foreclosures — in the second quarter, 20.13 percent of its mortgages were delinquent or in foreclosure, a national high, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association. And with housing prices still in a free fall, almost half of all borrowers in Florida owe more on their mortgages than their properties are worth, says CoreLogic, a data firm.

While the Waters-Reese case may not be unusual in Florida, the coming auction of the home is still notable: it will be a result of the Florida Legislature’s new effort to cut the number of foreclosures inching their way through the state’s courts. Earlier this year, Florida earmarked $9.6 million to set up foreclosures-only courts across the state, staffed by retired judges. The goal of the program, which began in July, is to reduce the foreclosures backlog by 62 percent within a year.

No one disputes that foreclosures dominate Florida’s dockets and that something needs to be done to streamline a complex and emotionally wrenching process. But lawyers representing troubled borrowers contend that many of the retired judges called in from the sidelines to oversee these matters are so focused on cutting the caseload that they are unfairly favoring financial institutions at the expense of homeowners.

Lawyers say judges are simply ignoring problematic or contradictory evidence and awarding the right to foreclose to institutions that have yet to prove they own the properties in question.

“Now you show up and you get whatever judge is on the schedule and they have not looked at the file — they don’t even look at the motions,” says April Charney, a lawyer who represents imperiled borrowers at Jacksonville Area Legal Aid. “You get a five-minute hearing. It’s a factory.”

But Victor Tobin, chief judge in the 17th Judicial Circuit, which includes Broward County, defended the effort. “There are more assets devoted to those three foreclosure divisions in Broward than to any other division in the building in terms of case managers and that sort of thing to help the general public,” he said. “The people who come get fully, fully heard.”

In any event, huge numbers of cases are being handled. In an article last week in The Florida Bar News, Belvin Perry Jr., chief judge for the state’s Ninth Judicial Circuit, said that during July, 1,319 cases had been closed by three senior judges in the district’s two counties, Orange and Osceola.

Florida’s foreclosure mess is made murkier by what analysts and lawyers involved in the process say are questionable practices by some law firms that are representing banks. Such tactics, these people say, have drawn out the process significantly, making it extremely lucrative for the lawyers and more draining for troubled homeowners.

Doctored or dubious records presented in court as proof of a bank’s ownership have become such a problem that Bill McCollum, the Florida attorney general, announced last month that his office was investigating the state’s three largest foreclosure law firms representing lenders.

“Thousands of final judgments of foreclosure against Florida homeowners may have been the result of the allegedly improper actions of these law firms,” said Mr. McCollum in an interview. “We’ve had so many complaints that I am confident there is a great deal of fraud here.”

To be sure, adjudicating foreclosure cases is difficult, complicated by multiple transfers of mortgages and notes when a loan is sold, bewildering paperwork submitted by loan servicers and shoddy record-keeping by the many institutions that touched the mortgages during the byzantine securitization process that fueled the housing boom.

Nevertheless, Florida law requires that before a financial institution can foreclose on a borrower, it must prove to the court that it actually has the standing to do so. In other words, it has to show that it is truly the owner. And this is done by demonstrating ownership of the note underlying the mortgage.

The Waters case offers an example of how wrong things can go in complex foreclosure cases.

While AmTrust, a failed Ohio bank that is now a division of New York Community Bank, said it owned the note and could foreclose, Mr. Waters’s lawyer produced documents showing that Fannie Mae, the taxpayer-owned mortgage finance giant, was really the owner.

In spite of the conflicting evidence, Aaron Bowden, the retired judge overseeing the case, made a summary judgment on Aug. 3, ruling that the property should go back to AmTrust.

Mr. Bowden did not return phone calls seeking comment.

Chip Parker, managing partner at Parker & DuFresne in Jacksonville, which represents Mr. Waters, said: “The threshold issue in any foreclosure case is who has the right to foreclose. We presented evidence to the judge that Fannie Mae owns the note and mortgage, and yet the judge ignored this crucial evidence.”

Mr. Parker is concerned that some homeowners are victimized by the system. “What we are talking about is railroading homeowners through the rocket docket,” he added.

When contacted by a reporter on Thursday, a spokeswoman for Fannie Mae confirmed that it owned the note.

David Tong, the lawyer representing AmTrust in the case, declined to comment on the matter. But on Friday, he did an about-face, filing papers with the court acknowledging that Fannie Mae owns the note.

Clearing the Backlog

Florida law requires that banks argue their cases before a judge if they want to recover property from borrowers in default, and 471,000 such cases were pending in Florida at the end of July, according to the Florida State Courts administration.

Setting up discrete foreclosure courts statewide was seen as a way to help deal with the issue; consumer law experts say they aren’t aware of any other state that has set up a temporary court to work down such a backlog.

But it is paradoxical, say lawyers representing homeowners in the cases, that Florida’s attorney general acknowledges problems in the cases while retired judges, intent on reducing caseloads, seem unconcerned about those same problems — like flaws in the banks’ documentation of ownership.

“The most shocking thing of all is the A.G.’s office understands the problem and yet the court system turns a blind eye to the fact that mortgage servicers are the problem,” says Margery Golant, a lawyer in South Florida and a former executive at Ocwen, a large mortgage servicing company. “In the meantime, neighborhoods are being destroyed, homeowners’ associations are being destroyed, and the tax base is being clobbered.”

Steven P. Combs, a lawyer at Combs, Greene, McLester, who formerly was general counsel to the Fourth Judicial Circuit as well as a family law magistrate, says the entire process may be unconstitutional.

The Florida Supreme Court has consistently recognized the need to hire retired judges on a temporary basis, Mr. Combs said, and has ruled that such a “temporary” use is constitutional.

But because the retired judges are being given foreclosure assignments “repeatedly and consecutively” to the point of usurping the elected judges’ jurisdiction over all residential foreclosure cases, he said, their use may not qualify as temporary and could thus violate the Florida constitution.

The fact that these judges are being paid to reduce the court’s case load creates a perception among homeowners that the judges have a financial interest in dispensing cases prematurely, Mr. Combs said, creating a potential bias against borrowers and possibly violating their right to due process.

He pointed to a recent case in Broward County in which a retired judge refused to postpone a borrower’s foreclosure sale even though the bank had agreed to it. The judge stated that she was there to “dispose of cases.”

“If you are an individual whose house is being foreclosed and you hear these judges are being paid to clean out the backlog, under a realistic appraisal of human tendencies, do you think that the average judge would be biased in favor of prematurely terminating your case to clean out the backlog?” Mr. Combs asked.

J. Thomas McGrady, chief judge in the Sixth Judicial Circuit, said in a press release announcing the program: “We have to clear these cases because of the negative impact they are having on other civil litigation. The real estate crisis has placed a tremendous burden on our judges, and people with other types of pending litigation are also entitled to their day in court.”

Who Owns the Notes?

A foreclosure crisis that has forced millions of delinquent borrowers from their homes across Florida and elsewhere has also created enormous profits for the law firms and foreclosure servicers that represent banks and financial services in these actions.

Among the busiest of these firms are the three under investigation by Florida’s attorney general: the Law Offices of Marshall C. Watson; Shapiro & Fishman; and the Law Offices of David J. Stern.

“These law firms appear to be mills,” says Mr. McCollum. “They submit false documents, fabricate the documents, or the documents actually don’t exist. They wanted to speed the process up because the faster they get the foreclosures done the better.”

But Mr. Stern said: “I can’t speak for the other firms, but I can assure you there has not been submission of fraudulent documents. We feel a lot of it is politically motivated. We have done nothing wrong and are going to cooperate fully.”

Lawyers for the other two firms also disputed the attorney general’s contentions, maintaining that they work diligently on behalf of their clients.

Borrowers’ lawyers say they confront dubious practices, often involving false documentation “proving” who owns the note on a given property.

Typically, they say, this involves questionable affidavits asserting ownership of a note because the actual document has been lost or cannot be produced. Because the affidavits are often signed by bank representatives who have a stake in the outcome, they should not be allowed as evidence, borrowers’ lawyers say.

Yet they routinely are introduced as evidence; the Waters case involves such an affidavit signed by an AmTrust official.

The problem of who owns the note is a result of the process of bundling home loans into securities and selling them to investors — a common practice in the housing boom. This meant that notes documenting ownership on a property were repeatedly transferred, blurring the identity of exactly who controlled the note.

Documents showing that a note has been assigned to a foreclosing bank are often dated after a foreclosure, meaning that the bank bringing the case may not have the right to foreclose.

Other questions arise involving documents with improper notary stamps and wildly different signatures on legal papers supposedly prepared by the same person, borrowers’ lawyers say.

In a case in May 2009, Thomas E. Ice, a defense lawyer at Ice Legal in Royal Palm Beach, Fla., took the deposition of Cheryl Samons, an operations manager at the David J. Stern law firm. He asked her about instances at the firm of backdating the assignment of mortgages to allow foreclosures to go forward.

Mr. Ice and his wife, Ariane, who works with him, had found problems with notary stamps on mortgage assignments. “Many assignments of mortgages were signed and notarized with a stamp that had not been issued at the time of the signing, reflecting that the assignment was backdated,” Mr. Ice says.

In her court deposition with Mr. Ice, Ms. Samons testified that she was both an executive of the entity that handles the mortgage transfers and an officer at the Stern firm. Mr. Ice says that this creates a conflict of interest because clients of the Stern firm — most of the nation’s major banks — benefit from the transfer.

The law firm helps its own clients by “creating an illusion that the signing took place before and it did not,” says Mr. Ice.

Mr. Stern attributed any backdating to sloppiness on the part of paralegals and said that it had since been corrected.

As for Ms. Samons’s dual roles at the mortgage transfer registry and the law firm, he responded that, “We believe it is a solid practice.”

Ms. Samons did not return phone calls seeking comment.

Another popular practice that ties up courts’ calendars occurs after a foreclosure is granted and the property is scheduled to be returned to the bank. As ownership shifts from borrower to bank, so do all the obligations associated with it, like payment of homeowners’ association dues.

But few banks want to pay these bills, so firms representing them move to delay the final step in the process by canceling the sale of a foreclosed property at the last minute, court officials say. This does not require the banks to restart the foreclosure process, but it keeps the property in the hands of the borrower, who remains responsible for maintenance and association dues.

Earlier this year, Jennifer D. Bailey, administrative judge in Miami-Dade County, said such cancellations were occurring in 55 percent of cases in her district. In July, she instituted new rules to reduce last-minute cancellations, including a requirement that a judge hear the reason.

“There was huge volume to start with and then with this extra bogus stuff going on, the courts were cross-eyed from it,” says Ms. Golant. “There is a certain amount of truth to the gridlock, but the reason for the gridlock is the foreclosure firms are practically running the courtrooms.”

One Firm, Many Cases

The lawyer most closely identified with Florida’s foreclosure morass is David J. Stern. He is something of a mystery man within the foreclosure world; it is impossible to reach him by phone since his name is not in the firm’s voice-mail directory and, until recently, there were no publicly available photographs of him.

Several prominent borrowers’ lawyers who have litigated against his firm say they have never met him.

Operating out of a gleaming eight-story office building in Plantation, Fla., Mr. Stern, 50, has come a long way from the South Texas College of Law, from which he graduated in 1986. He spent his early career as a quality-control lawyer for Gerald Shapiro, a lawyer who represented mortgage lenders. He opened his own firm in 1994; Fannie Mae voted him attorney of the year in 1998.

Mr. Stern’s company, which now includes a law firm and ancillary foreclosure support businesses, employs more than 900 people. The firm filed 70,382 foreclosure cases last year.

Critics say the Stern firm has been able to handle this high volume because its lawyers frequently refuse to work with borrowers and are very aggressive about pushing cases through the courts even when there are questions about the documentation.

Mr. Stern sees it differently. “I refer to us as an efficient law firm with a specialization in mortgage lending,”’ he responded. “Should I feel ashamed that I have built a successful practice?” he asked. “No one references how committed I am, how I built my firm and how I work 20 hours a day.”

But some question the thoroughness of the firm’s work. Bill Warner, a private investigator in Sarasota, said the Stern firm filed a foreclosure suit against him on behalf of Deutsche Bank Financial Trust in January 2009. But the bank did not own the property and the suit erred by including in its claims a federal tax lien on another person with the same name but a different Social Security number, Mr. Warner said.

Mr. Warner’s mortgage was actually owned by Countrywide, which had sold it to Wells Fargo. “I fought them myself for a year and a half,” he recalls. “In the meantime, we did a loan modification with Wells Fargo but Mr. Stern’s firm pursued the foreclosure on the property anyway.”

Last May, Mr. Warner filed a motion to dismiss the case, alleging submission of a fraudulent document because Deutsche Bank was not owner of the note. He filed another motion questioning the credibility of the Stern firm and the lawyer on the case, he said. On June 14, Deutsche Bank withdrew the case.

Earlier this year Mr. Stern, who has profited handsomely from the foreclosure trade, sold the part of his operation that provides support services for his firm’s foreclosure work — DJS Processing — to a public company called the Chardan 2008 China Acquisition Corporation. The processing company and affiliates generated revenue of $260 million in 2009, financial filings show.

Brian Foley, a compensation consultant in White Plains, concluded that Mr. Stern made $17.8 million in 2008, including $12.64 million in compensation and nonrecurring benefits of $4.36 million. In the deal with Chardan, Mr. Stern and his affiliates were paid $93.5 million: $58.5 million in cash and $35 million after the transaction closed, according to government filings. In addition, Mr. Stern got a promissory note for $52.49 million to be paid out over the next couple of years.

In recent years, Mr. Stern and his wife, Jeanine, have bought nearly $60 million in real estate, mostly in Florida, property records show. Their Mediterranean-style home on Harborage Isle Drive, in a gated community in Fort Lauderdale, faces water on two sides and cost almost $14 million. Not far away, in Hillsboro Beach, the Sterns bought two waterfront properties for $17 million.

Mr. Stern also spent $6.8 million last year on a 9,273-square-foot apartment at the Castillo Grand Residences in Fort Lauderdale, part of a Ritz-Carlton complex. He and his wife own two homes in Beaver Creek, Colo.; one was purchased in 2001 for $4.975 million, and another bought in 2007 for $14.2 million.

His automobile collection may be worth $3 million, auto experts said; it includes a 2008 Bugatti, multiple Ferraris, Porsches and Mercedes and a Cadillac.

This being Florida, Mr. Stern also collects boats. A 108-foot Mangusta yacht, Lady J, is for sale at $5.9 million, Web postings show. It was replaced by a 130-foot yacht that cost about $20 million, according to an acquaintance who requested anonymity over concerns about Mr. Stern’s influence in the community.

In a nod to his foreclosure work, according to the acquaintance, Mr. Stern mused about possibly naming the larger yacht Su Casa Es Mi Casa — “Your House Is My House.” But his wife and others cautioned against it, according to this acquaintance, and Mr. Stern named the boat “Misunderstood.” Mr. Stern denies that he considered the “Su Casa Es Mi Casa” name.

Resigned to Moving

While Rodney Waters and Terri Reese are resigned to leaving their home and moving their family into a rental, they still face another problem.

Under Florida law, a lender may pursue Mr. Waters for the difference between what it says he owes on the house and what it will fetch in a sale. Thanks to foreclosure fees and other charges, he owes almost double the $138,500 received in February by the seller of a neighboring house.

Included in the amount that Mr. Waters owes is almost $10,000 in fees generated by AmTrust’s lawyers in the case. Mr. Bowden, the retired judge overseeing the case, ordered Mr. Waters to pay the fees.

His lawyer, Mr. Parker, had hoped to persuade the owner of the note to offer a new loan to his client in a smaller amount to reflect the reduced value in the property. He argued that this would be a better outcome for the lender and the borrower, since a foreclosure usually ends up costing a lender far more than does a principal write-down that leaves the borrower in the home.

But with the judge ruling in favor of the lender, such a deal is unlikely. Mr. Parker filed an appeal late last week, but Mr. Waters may have to file for bankruptcy to stop the foreclosure sale.

Comments

Perspective view from a person struggling with homelessness

I have been thinking alot in the last few days about what is happening here in this city with the homeless. The problems we will face are growing steadily with the new moves to drive us out of the city entirely,no sleeping outdoors at all, no showers at St Vincent De Paul, no shelter space,no panhandling,the petty police harassment,and the Final Solution mentality of the mayor and the city council are very disturbing.Perhaps even more so is the apparent attitude of the citizenry at large. At best they are apathetic at worse actively supportive.The activities of the Kenwood neighborhood association in picketing the St Pete Times for it’s suit against the city is one example of people who dont want the homeless in their neighborhoods and use the council to get laws passed to prevent the homeless from getting work or even a bit of change.Granted many would use panhandling as a way to buy booze or drugs but GW has pointed out that for many it is the difference bet ween having a place and not.The alarming increase in the number of people eating in shelters as well as the decrease in the amount of meals provided is endemic of the situation. The talk of St Vincent de Paul forcing the homeless out from under the bridge is also a big issue but one thing I dont think we are hearing alot about is why are they doing this. Has anyone who is well regarded in the community gone to them and asked why these things are happening? Is there pressure from government or community groups that is difficult for them to resist? If so is there anything that the homeless advocate community can do to help? Can we help them to stand up to those pressures if any? Are they facing funding cuts? Can we help to find alternate sources of funding? Is it a staffing issue? Can we help there with volunteers or assist in funding for paid staff? Is it just too big of a legal issue with constant calls to the police to deal with various problems every night? If this is the case we have powerful advocates for the homeless who are immensely respected by those who are homeless. Words from those individuals to those who are homeless will probably mean far more than a cop saying if you drink here under the bridge we will arrest you. Those who speak for the homeless are often the ones we are mostly likely to listen to.
I am gravely concerned about this situation not just because I am desperately afraid for Alicia but for all those who sleep on the streets. These people are not just my friends but they are all our brothers and sisters in Christ. They like us are Children of God and deserve to be treated as such.We shouldnt turn away when the vans pull up to the sidewalk and men with badges, guns and dogs come and take these people away perhaps to camps somewhere that only lack a sign over the gate saying “Arbeit Macht Frei”
Germany in the 30′s was regarded as one of the most civilized countries in Europe and yet brought to past perhaps the most horrific period in all human history with the Holocaust.The homeless are todays Jews here in St Petersburg. Before the Pogrom we should do everything we can to prevent another horror.
In Christ
David Taylor

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