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Zoeller: More work still ahead as banks reach obligations under National Mortgage Settlement

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NMS Monitor Joseph A. Smith to provide progress update during state roundtable

greg zoellerINDIANAPOLIS – As the nation’s five largest mortgage servicers close in on fulfilling their obligations under the National Mortgage Settlement more work is still ahead, according to Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller.

Since last year, the ResCap Parties (formerly GMAC), Bank of America, Citi, JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo have reported providing 4,464 Hoosier consumers with $174 million in total relief which includes, but is not limited to, home loan modifications, short sales and mortgage refinances. ResCap has completed its consumer relief obligations while the other servicers could be complete by the end of the year.

Zoeller will host a roundtable discussion today in Indianapolis to highlight the settlement’s progress and draw attention to the work ahead to help curb the number of foreclosures and delinquencies. Joseph A. Smith, Jr., who is the Monitor of the National Mortgage Settlement, is scheduled to give a report on the settlement’s impact so far on Indiana and the nation.

“The National Mortgage Settlement has shown to have a positive impact on Indiana and the participating banks have provided much-needed relief to struggling homeowners,” Zoeller said. “While Indiana’s foreclosure rate is down there is still a long road ahead in making sure distressed borrowers are treated fairly and our state recovers from the nation’s economic downturn.”

In Indiana, 18,440 foreclosed borrowers received $26.3 million in direct payments from participating banks if they lost their home between Jan. 1, 2008 and Dec. 31, 2011, and submitted a valid claim. About 55.9 percent of eligible borrowers submitted a claim, which is comparable to the national response rate of 55 percent, and received a check for $1,480.

Smith, an attorney and former North Carolina Commissioner of Banks, was appointed in March 2012 to oversee the implementation of the settlement and ensure the banks’ compliance with the new servicing standards. Smith has visited several states to hear first-hand from attorneys general, consumer counselors, advocates and lawyers who represent borrowers on how the banks are performing.

“It’s important for me to hear first-hand about the experience borrowers and the professionals who work on their behalf are having with the National Mortgage Settlement,” Smith said. “I know there is still more work to be done for the Settlement’s servicing reforms to have meaningful impact on these homeowners and I am grateful for Attorney General Zoeller’s invitation to gain insight from professionals in Indiana. General Zoeller has been an important leader on these issues and I look forward to his and his staff’s feedback.”

The roundtable will include representatives from the Indiana Foreclosure Prevention Network, Indiana Supreme Court Task Force and state legislators, and other key stakeholders.

Zoeller said the National Mortgage Settlement was a step in the right direction, but statistics show more work is needed. According to the Indiana Supreme Court, 41,274 foreclosures were filed in Indiana courts in 2010 and nearly 34,000 were filed in 2012. Last year, 6,141 foreclosures were filed in Marion County courts.

According to the Mortgage Bankers Association, Indiana’s delinquency rate for the second quarter in 2013 was 8.5 percent compared to the national rate of 6.8 percent.

As part of the settlement, the Indiana Attorney General’s Office was awarded $43.8 million with $28.8 million of that dedicated by the Legislature to the Low-Income Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP). According to LIHEAP, more than $2.5 million in total state heating and crisis assistance has helped 47,230 Hoosiers so far with the average benefit per homeowner being $50 and $127 respectively. Zoeller said families facing foreclosure are often forced to make painful financial choices and LIHEAP reduces the need for these families to choose between paying their monthly heating bill or their mortgage payment. The LIHEAP funds are distributed in increments of about $4 million a year.

The Attorney General’s office committed the rest of the funds to its Consumer Protection Division and Homeowner Protection Unit (HPU) and other efforts to prevent foreclosure.

Since 2010, Zoeller’s office has filed 165 lawsuits against mortgage-rescue businesses accused of promising homeowners they can stop foreclosure and then taking off with thousands of dollars in upfront fees. In many of these cases the state is awarded default judgments, but companies do not often pay the ordered consumer restitution. To help these already struggling homeowners, the Indiana General Assembly created the Consumer Protection Assistance Fund which is made up of monies recovered from those sued by the Attorney General’s office for violating consumer protection laws. To date, more than $340,000 has been distributed to 192 victims of foreclosure-rescue scams.

Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation Executive Meeting

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EVSC

 

The Board of School Trustees of the Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation will meet in executive session at 3:30 p.m. on Monday, September 23, 2013, in the John H. Schroeder Conference Centre at the EVSC Administration Building, 951 Walnut, IN 47713, Evansville, IN. The session will be conducted according to Senate Enrolled Act 313, Section 1, I.C. 5-14-1.5-6.1, as amended. The purpose of the meeting is for discussion of collective bargaining, (2)(A);  initiation of litigation or litigation that is either pending or has been threatened specifically in writing, (2)(B); purchase or lease of property, (2)(D); and job performance evaluation of individual employees, (9).

The regular meeting of the School Board will follow at 5:30 p.m. in the EVSC Board Room, same address.

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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nick hermanBelow is a list of felony cases that were filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office on Thursday, September 19, 2013.

Nathan Brown Domestic Battery-Class D Felony

John Fisher Operating a Vehicle with an ACE of .08 or More-Class C Misdemeanor (Enhanced to D Felony Due to Prior Convictions)

Operating a Vehicle While Intoxicated-Class C Misdemeanor

(Enhanced to D Felony Due to Prior Convictions)

Christopher Swango Theft-Class D Felony

For further information on the cases listed above, or any pending case, please contact Kyle Phernetton at 812.435.5688 or via e-mail at KPhernetton@vanderburghgov.org

Under Indiana law, all criminal defendants are considered to be innocent until proven guilty by a court of law.

In 2002 Winnecke Ran Against Consolidation

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Winnecke 2002 Campaign Letter on Consolidation
Winnecke 2002 Campaign Letter on Consolidation

IS IT TRUE September 21, 2013 “LAUGHING STOCK MY ARSE”

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Mole #3 Nostradamus of Local Politics
Mole #3 Nostradamus of Local Politics

IS IT TRUE September 21, 2013

IS IT TRUE the barrage of centrally orchestrated public relations actions to try to convince, cajole, threaten, and shame two members of the “Responsible SIX” members of the Evansville City Council to vote YES to some permutation of a hotel development agreement on Monday night is getting more and more desperate and off the charts of blarney?…the latest shot from the supporters is an editorial in the Courier and Press online edition titled “THE LAUGHING STOCK OF THE MIDWEST”, in which the editor of the CP asserts that the deliberations of the City Council that have spilled into the public arena are fodder for jokes from Peoria to Pennsylvania?…the Midwest is indeed full of towns that were at one time cities that in prosperous circles are indeed laughing stock?…the ultimate laughing stock is of course Detroit that has gone from being the innovation capital of the world to a bankrupted beggar city in a scant period of 60 years?…there are plenty of other Midwestern cities including Cleveland, Youngstown, Gary, St. Louis, and a host of others that would be pot calling the kettle black if they are actually pointing at Evansville with humor in their eyes over a renewed demand by the City Council to vet projects?

IS IT TRUE the Evansville of recent history does indeed have things in common with these laughing stock republics?…first and foremost is the misguided belief that temples to sports, entertainment palaces, and even publicly financed hotels are a solution to the loss of skilled jobs and a magic bullet that will bring education young professionals to town?…all of these bankrupted shrinking cities already did the things that Evansville has been doing in the last 5 or 10 years?…all have either flirted with or found themselves in bankruptcy?…to brand responsible diligence as “laughing stock” is the kind of thing that makes the one who asserts the “laughing stock” badge worthy of wearing the jesters cap and being branded a fool?

IS IT TRUE the barrage of idiocy started Thursday with County Commissioner Marsha Abell’s threat to shutter the Centre, the old Courthouse, and the Coliseum?…it was followed up Friday by a meeting of the union bosses that resulted in phone calls to the “Responsible SIX” threatening non-support or even support of opponents in future elections?…of course today was the Courier’s day to throw a plastic rock at the thinking offenders of the status quo?…we wonder who will get into the act on Sunday and Monday?…we may be able to expect Brando’s ghost to come to town and offer the “Responsible SIX” a deal they can’t refuse?…these kinds of antics are what really make a place slide into obscurity and join the other cities that borrowed themselves into impotence while failing to maintain critical infrastructure?

IS IT TRUE perhaps the most ridiculous thing in the article was the claim straight out of the Vietnam War protests that “THE WHOLE WORLD IS WATCHING”?…having travelled the world extensively what this writer can assure you about the world is that it does not know Evansville from Banger, Maine?…Evansville has no reputation and no recognition outside of about a 300 mile radius of the bend in the river?…even in the western states of America Evansville is thought to be a Chicago suburb and is known for nothing?…contrary to the latest CHICKEN LITTLE claim “THE WHOLE WORLD IS NOT WATCHING”?

IS IT TRUE that things like falling for the Earthcare Energy scam, failing to balance the books for two years, being blindsided by Whirlpool’s departure, and having a series of stoplights on an expressway are things that cause a place to be a laughing stock?…carefully deliberating a public investment in a private business in a professional manner is something that can separate Evansville for the plethora of laughing stock cities already dying in the Midwest?

Mayor’s Hypocrisy Memorialized by Last Minute Reduction in Room Count

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Lost Wallet

Mayor’s Hypocrisy

Evansville, September 21, 2013:

For months as this debate on the downtown hotel has raged, we have been told by the Mayor, the CVB, the ERC, and the DMD representatives that anything under 250 rooms would not attract the kinds of conventions we wanted to draw to the City of Evansville.

In an attempt to reduce the subsidy and “make it more palatable” for some of the Council Members to change their votes, the size of the hotel has now been reduced to 225 rooms while the subsidy has been slashed by $6 million. Unfortunately, the fat that’s been trimmed from this deal still only reduces the proposed subsidy to $31.5 million and does nothing to cut the hotel from a full service hotel with competing meeting space to a more manageable limited service facility that will serve The Centre effectively.

So what has changed? Why was it that a mere week ago anything less than 253 rooms would not suffice, yet now 225 rooms should be adequate? If anything, this most recent attempt to change the deal at the 11th hour should be cause for Council Members Weaver, Mosby, and McGinn to join their colleagues in voting “no”.

Bob Warren of the CVB said in a May 21 interview with the Courier & Press, “If you build a hotel and it’s less than 250 rooms, or 240 rooms, chances are good I’m not going to get the blocs we need to be able attract that convention. It would be my suggestion that we consider staying at a higher level.”

In a Youtube video released by the Mayor entitled “FAQ: Why does Evansville Need a 250 Room Hotel?”, the Mayor explicitly states, “It’s our belief and that of our consulting firm that the 253 rooms we’re considering is the minimal standards for operating. Anything less would NOT accomplish the objectives of the city in driving economic growth and would not support the size of our existing convention center.”

Once again, we reiterate our call to the Administration to drop this quixotic, imprudent quest for a deal with HCW based on the current proposal.

https://www.facebook.com/EvansvilleSaysNo

IS IT TRUE, Marsha’s Panic over the Centre Seems to have been a PR Panic Attack

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Marsha Abell

True Analysis of Centre Finances

This spread sheet on the link below is a great illustration of the true financial results of the Centre’s operation, when you account for the Innkeepers Tax Subsidy. Joe Gries, County Auditor confirmed they have a $4.1 Million Dollar cash reserve, which is very close to the calculations found from the Centre’s financial statements prepared by SMG and data provided by Brian Gerth.

In addition, please find a copy of the Innkeepers Tax code IC 6-9-2.5 which provides the language regarding the Vanderburgh County Innkeepers Tax. Specifically, I draw your attention to section IC 6-9-2.5-7.7 titled Convention Center Operating Fund where the County Treasurer is required to establish a convention center operating fund; deposit into this operating fund the amount of 2% rate (of the gross receipts of hotels, motels cabins, etc… in Vand. Co.); and the money can only be expended for the operating expenses of a convention center.

As previously reported, generally accepted accounting principles have NOT been followed in regards to the reporting of the results of operations. The attached analysis clearly indicates that innkeepers’ tax revenues have bypassed the income statement, misleading the public as to the true financial condition of the Centre. If Marsha Abell should elect to close the Centre it will be on the false premise that the Innkeepers tax is not part of the Centre’s income stream.

Ms. Abell’s well timed and most likely orchestrated by some puppetmaster “the sky is falling so give me my hotel” manifesto turns out to be nothing more than part of the hotel supporter’s last ditch PR campaign that thus far has been based on false claims, last minute concessions, undue distress directed at the Evansville City Council (more on this later), brow beating by union officials, and veiled threats to any opposition with influence.

Centre Financial Analysis

VanderburghCountyInnkeepersTaxStatute

Ricketts’ Drive for Success

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d-patrick-evansville-indiana-used-cari-dealership-luxury-driver-2013-tony-rickettsProfile of General Manager of D-Patrick, Tony Ricketts

By Scottie Thomas

After starting out with Showplace Cinemas, Tony Ricketts took changed gears and found a job selling cars. A part of the industry since 1988, his passion for the sales and automotive industries directed him to his current career. Eighteen months later, he gets promoted to Business Manager, followed by Sales Manager in 1995.

Ricketts drives a BMW, but his ideal vehicle would be a Porsche 9-11. His drive for success in the automotive sales industry is fueled by his passion and interest in cars. He favors his German-made vehicles such as Volkswagon.

D-Patrick is ‘family owned,’ as began working for the O’Daniels Family. With a value of family himself, his wife, Heather, have two sons, Alec and Adrian. Alec is at the University of Louisville and Adrian is at the University of Evansville. Heather also owns her own business, Second-Hand Chic. They often go out to eat at places such as El Charro and the Canton Inn, as they like to support the local businesses and deviate away from selecting chain restaurants.

This is one of the reasons Ricketts loves his job with the people and situation he is in. Ricketts is happy working for a privately owned dealership ‘because it provides a more personal touch,’ he says. ‘At any given time, you are able to talk to the owner [or management] as now many are publicly owned in the automotive industry.

In the next few years, Ricketts shared his plans for growth with D-Patrick, as they want to create a showroom for each line of car brand, build a new Nissan showroom and lot, as well as expanding the used car selection, given the demands of the market. Along with growth, Ricketts and D-Patrick are heavily involved in the community, including their philanthropic efforts with Susan G. Koem: ‘Race for the Cure,’ Evansville’s Philharmonic Orchestra, and other patrons such as marathons and wine festivals.

Lately, Ricketts has also taken interest in the School Board for EVSC as he is considering a second run. He wants to bring a business background into the mix with fresh, innovative ideas, as Ricketts states that ‘Change is good.’ He would like to hold office for two or three terms, making a contribution ‘that will open doors for others to continue.’

Dr. Bucshon Votes to Fund the Government, Defund ObamaCare

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220px-Larry_Bucshon,_official_portrait,_112th_Congress

(Washington, DC) – On Friday, the House passed H.J.Res 59 the Continuing Appropriations Resolution for 2014, which continues funding the government and defunds the Affordable Care Act.

 

Representative Larry Bucshon, M.D. (IN-8) released the following statement regarding the passage of H.J.Res 59:

 

“While passing a Continuing Resolution is not an ideal outcome, the bill we passed today serves two fundamental and vital functions: it prevents a government shutdown and protects American families from the harmful impacts of the Affordable Care Act. 

 

“As I traveled across the 8th District over August, I consistently and clearly heard from Hoosiers that the Affordable Care Act is damaging, harmful, and costly to families and it must be defunded.  This message has resounded across the country and the House listened.

 

“This short-term CR funds our country’s obligations, protects families, and avoids a government shutdown. Now it is time for the Senate to a