Rep. John G. Edwards (D-Dist. 70, Portsmouth, Tiverton)
and Sen. Harold M. Metts (D-Dist. 6, Providence) have filed bills that would
prevent banks from evicting tenants living in foreclosed homes until they sold
the house to a new owner.
Posted by Mark Schieldrop (Editor), Narragansett-South Kingstown Patch
From left, Rep. John G. Edwards, Maureen Martin, of the Rhode Island Federation of Teachers and Health Professionals, and Sen. Harold M. Metts stand in the rotunda following news conference. |
EDITOR’S NOTE: This legislation has been co-sponsored by Rep. Donna
Walsh and Rep. Teresa Tanzi.
Tiverton and Portsmouth Rep. John G. Edwards has
submitted legislation that would let tenants living in foreclosed homes stay
put until the bank holding the bag completes a sale.
“I introduced this bill six years ago when I met a
neighboring family in Tiverton who lived in a foreclosed home,” Rep.
Edwards, (D-Dist. 70, Tiverton, Portsmouth,) said.
Existing state law gives tenants 90 days before the
foreclosing lender can evict them. The new bill would require the new owner to
be a non-finanical institution for eviction to occur. That means a bank
couldn't sell to another bank just to kickstart the eviction process.
A companion bill has been submitted in the Senate by Sen.
Harold M. Metts (D-Dist. 6, Providence).
Metts said empty foreclosed homes breed myriad problems
that occupied houses tend to deflect.
"An empty foreclosed home then serves as a tempting
opportunity for thieves looking to steal pipes and cabinets. The grass is left
uncut. The property value of surrounding homes decreases dramatically. What the
foreclosure crisis does is poison whole neighborhoods, and not just urban
ones," Metts said.
"Meanwhile, families who have been evicted don’t
just have to worry about a new place to live – they have to find new schools
for their children, whose education has been interrupted. While the banks are
looking out for their interests, we must ensure that the people’s interests are
taken care of as well. This legislation brings balance to that equation.”
The primary sponsors of the legislation held a press
conference on Thursday, Jan. 30, to talk about the benefits of the bills. In
attendance were Representatives Jeremiah T. O’Grady (D-Dist. 46, Lincoln,
Pawtucket), Frank G. Ferri (D-Dist. 22, Warwick), Teresa Tanzi (D-Dist. 34,
South Kingstown, Narragansett) and Donna M. Walsh (D-Dist. 36, Charlestown, New
Shoreham, South Kingstown, Westerly).
Members of the Direct Action for Rights and Equality
(DARE), an organization whose mission includes organizing low-income families
in communities of color to pursue social justice, were also present.
Representative Edwards and Senator Metts have submitted similar versions of
this legislation for the past six years, saying the statutes need to be changed
in order to keep more people off the streets and protect tenants’ most basic
rights.
According to Housing Works RI, there were more than 9,600
foreclosures in Rhode Island since the beginning of 2009 up to the second
quarter of 2013.