REVISED
APPROVED AS TO FORM AND LEGALITY
___________________________________
CITY ATTORNEY
OAKLAND CITY COUNCIL
ORDINANCE NO. ________C.M.S.
AN ORDINANCE AMENDING THE OAKLAND MUNICIPAL CODE TO PROHIBIT PREDATORY
LENDING PRACTICES FOR HOME LOANS IN THE CITY OF OAKLAND
The Council of the City of Oakland does ordain as follows:
SECTION 1. This Ordinance shall be known as the "Anti-Predatory Lending
Ordinance."
SECTION 2. Chapter 5.33 is hereby added to the Oakland Municipal Code
to read as follows:
Chapter 5.33
HOME MORTGAGE LENDING
5.33.010 Purpose.
The purpose of this chapter is to prohibit certain predatory lending
practices for home loans made in the City of Oakland.
5.33.020 Findings.
The City Council finds and determines the following:
A. The City of Oakland as a home rule charter city has the right and
power to make and enforce all laws and regulations that are its municipal
affair, including the power to regulate business practices to promote the
health, morals, safety, property, good order, well-being, general
prosperity or general welfare of Oakland residents.
B. Predatory lending on home loans is a widespread, significant and
growing problem in the City of Oakland, and threatens the well-being and
general prosperity of Oakland residents and the City as a whole. Predatory
lending practices are a significant economic drain on lower-income
families and communities in Oakland. Predatory lending practices also lead
to conditions of blight and the loss of affordable housing in Oakland,
increase displacement and economic dislocation, reduce property values,
erode the tax base, and increase the strain on City services.
C. Because of socioeconomic and market conditions in Oakland which give
rise to predatory lending practices, predatory lending is a municipal
affair and a matter of unique local interest and concern for the City of
Oakland.
D. Neither state law nor federal law adequately address the predatory
lending problem in Oakland.
E. The regulation of home mortgage lending practices by the City to
prevent predatory lending, by prohibiting certain lending practices and
requiring independent counseling on high-cost home loans, serves the
public interest, is necessary to protect the health, morals, safety,
property, general welfare, well being and prosperity of the residents of
Oakland, and is within the home rule powers and police powers of the City.
5.33.030 Definitions.
As used in this chapter, the following terms have the following
meanings:
An "affiliate" means any business entity that controls, is controlled
by, or is under common control with, another entity, as set forth in the
federal Bank Holding Company Act of 1956 (12 U.S.C. §1841, et seq.), as
such statute may be amended from time to time, and includes any successors
in interest or alter egos to the business entity.
"Annual percentage rate" means the annual percentage rate for a home
loan calculated according to the provisions of the federal Truth in
Lending Act (15 U.S.C. §1601, et seq.) and its implementing regulations,
as such statute or regulations may be amended from time to time.
A "borrower" means singularly or collectively any natural person or
persons with an obligation to repay a home loan, including without
limitation a coborrower, cosigner, or guarantor.
A "business entity" means any individual, domestic corporation, foreign
corporation, association, syndicate, joint stock company, partnership,
joint venture, limited liability company, sole proprietorship, or
unincorporated association engaged in a business or commercial enterprise.
The "City" means the City of Oakland.
A "first mortgage" means a home loan secured by a deed of trust or
mortgage on real property if the deed of trust or mortgage is senior in
priority to any other deed of trust or mortgage on the real property.
A "high-cost home loan" means a home loan that meets either of the
following thresholds:
(1) the annual percentage rate of the loan equals or exceeds
(a) by more than 3 percentage points, if the home loan is a first
mortgage, or
(b) by more than 5 percentage points, if the home loan is a junior
mortgage,
the rate set by the required net yield for a 90-day standard mandatory
delivery commitment for a first mortgage loan from either the Federal
National Mortgage Association or the Federal Home Loan Mortgage
Association, whichever is greater, as such yield is reported on the
fifteenth day of the month immediately preceding the month in which the
application for the home loan is received by the lender; or
(2) the total points and fees on the loan equal or exceed either 5% of the
total loan amount or $800, whichever amount is greater.
If the terms of the home loan provide for an initial or introductory
period during which the annual percentage rate is lower than that which
will apply after the end of such initial or introductory period, then the
annual percentage rate to be considered for purposes of this definition is
the rate which applies after the initial or introductory period. If the
terms of the home loan provide for an annual percentage rate that varies
in accordance with an index plus a margin, then the annual percentage rate
to be considered for purposes of this definition is the rate that is in
effect on the date of loan consummation. In the case of a home loan with a
regular interest rate that varies in accordance with an index plus a
margin, but with an initial or introductory interest rate established in
some other manner, the annual percentage rate to be considered is the rate
that would have been in effect on the date of loan consummation were the
regular rate determined by the index plus the margin to apply, that is,
the fully-indexed rate on the date of loan consummation.
A "home loan" means a loan of money, including without limitation a
line of credit or an open-end credit plan, if all of the following apply:
(1) the principal amount of the loan does not exceed the current
conforming first mortgage loan size limit for a single-family dwelling as
established by the Federal National Mortgage Association,
(2) the borrower incurred the loan primarily for his or her personal,
family, or household uses,
(3) the loan is secured in whole or in part by a deed of trust, a mortgage
(as defined under California Civil Code §2920 or §2924), or a similar
security device or instrument, on real property located within the City of
Oakland,
(4) this real property contains or will contain either (a) one to four
residential units, or (b) individual residential units of condominiums or
cooperatives, and
(5) one of these residential units is or will be occupied by the borrower
as the borrower's principal dwelling.
In the case of multiple borrowers, the criteria in subsections (2) and (5)
above will be considered satisfied if at least one of the borrowers has
met the stated criteria. A "home loan" does not include a reverse mortgage
as defined in California Civil Code §1923.
A "junior mortgage" means a home loan secured by a deed of trust or
mortgage on real property if the deed of trust or mortgage is junior in
priority to another deed of trust or mortgage on the real property.
A "lender" means any person or business entity that extends a home loan
or arranges for the extension of a home loan. Notwithstanding the above, a
"lender" does not include a bank chartered under the federal National Bank
Act (12 U.S.C. §21, et seq.), a credit union chartered under the Federal
Credit Union Act (12 U.S.C. §1751, et seq.), or a savings and loan
association regulated under the federal Home Owners' Loan Act of 1933 (12
U.S.C. §1461, et seq.); however, an affiliate of any such federally
chartered or regulated bank, credit union, or savings and loan association
that extends home loans is considered a "lender" if the affiliate itself
is not a bank, credit union, or savings and loan association chartered or
regulated under the above-referenced federal statutes.
A "mortgage broker" means any person who functions as intermediary for
a fee between the borrower and the lender in the making of a home loan.
A "person" means a natural person or a business entity.
"Points and fees" means the following:
(1) all items required to be disclosed under §226.4(a) and §226.4(b) of
Title 12 of the Code of Federal Regulations, as amended from time to time,
except interest or the time-price differential;
(2) all charges for items listed under §226.4(c)(7) of Title 12 of the
Code of Federal Regulations, as amended from time to time, but only if the
lender receives direct or indirect compensation in connection with the
charge or the charge is paid to an affiliate of the lender;
(3) all compensation not otherwise specified in this definition paid
directly or indirectly to a mortgage broker, including a broker that
originates a home loan in its own name through an advance of funds and
subsequently assigns the home loan to the person advancing the funds;
(4) the premium of any single premium credit life, credit disability,
credit unemployment or other life or health insurance; and
(5) all prepayment fees or penalties.
The term "points and fees" does not include any of the following:
(1) taxes, filing fees, recording and other charges and fees paid or to be
paid to public officials for determining the existence of, or for
perfecting, releasing, or satisfying a security interest; or
(2) charges paid to a person other than the lender, an affiliate of the
lender, a mortgage broker, or an affiliate of a mortgage broker, as
follows: fees for flood certification; fees for pest infestation and flood
determinations; appraisal fees, fees for inspections performed prior to
loan closing; credit report fees; survey fees; attorneys' fees (if the
borrower has the right to select the attorney from an approved list or
otherwise); notary fees; escrow charges that are not required to be
disclosed under §226.4(a) and §226.4(b) of Title 12 of the Code of Federal
Regulations; title insurance premiums; or fire insurance or flood
insurance premiums (provided that the conditions in §226.4(d)(2) of Title
12 of the Code of Federal Regulations are met).
"Total loan amount" means the total credit received by the borrower as
part of the loan, excluding points and fees.
5.33.040 Prohibited terms and practices for home loans in general.
No lender may make a home loan in violation of any of the following
prohibited terms or practices:
A. No excessive prepayment penalties. No lender may charge a prepayment
penalty on a home loan, unless the home loan is not a high-cost home loan,
and the prepayment penalty is only imposed on prepayments within the first
three years of the date of the promissory note for the home loan, and then
solely as set forth herein and otherwise allowed by state and federal law.
Any such prepayment penalty is limited to 3% of the total loan amount
during the first year after the date of the note, 2% of the total loan
amount during the second year, and 1% of the total loan amount during the
third year. Notwithstanding the above, when a borrower refinances a home
loan, at no time may a lender charge a prepayment penalty on the home loan
being refinanced if the same lender or an affiliate of that lender will be
the holder of the note for the new home loan. For purposes of this
paragraph, a "prepayment penalty" means any penalty, fee, or charge
imposed on a borrower by the lender or an affiliate of the lender for
paying all or part of the principal of the home loan before the date when
the principal payment is due.
B. No financing of credit insurance. No lender may finance any credit
life, credit disability, credit property, or credit unemployment
insurance, or any other life or health insurance premiums when making a
home loan. Insurance premiums not included in the home loan principal and
calculated and payable on a monthly basis will not be considered financed
by the lender for purposes of this paragraph.
C. No recommending default. No lender may recommend or encourage a
borrower to default or not to make payment on a home loan or any other
debt, when such lender action is in connection with the closing or planned
closing of a home loan that refinances all or part of the borrower's debt.
D. No loans violating federal lending laws. No lender may make a home
loan that violates any applicable provision of the federal Truth in
Lending Act, as amended by the Home Ownership and Equity Protection Act of
1994 (15 U.S.C. §1601, et seq.), or any applicable provision of the
federal Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act of 1974 (12 U.S.C. §2601, et
seq.), or any regulations implementing these statutes, as these statutes
and regulations may be amended from time to time. The City intends that
any violation of provisions in these laws pertaining to home loans shall
give rise to a cause of action under this chapter independent of federal
law, and shall entitle the aggrieved party or the City Attorney to pursue
any of the rights and remedies set forth in this chapter.
5.33.050 Prohibited terms and practices for high-cost home loans.
No lender may make a high-cost home loan in violation of any of the
following prohibited terms or practices:
A. No lending without home loan counseling. No lender may make a
high-cost home loan without first receiving written certification from an
independent housing or credit counselor approved by the United States
Department of Housing and Urban Development, the State of California, or
the City of Oakland, that the borrower either has received counseling on
the advisability of the loan transaction and the appropriateness of the
loan for the borrower, or has waived the counseling option as provided for
in this subsection. A borrower may waive the counseling option by
contacting an approved independent housing or credit counselor by personal
meeting or live telephone conversation at least three days prior to the
closing of the home loan and certifying in writing to the counselor that
he or she has elected to waive the counseling option. The counselor shall
keep any such certification of waiver on file for at least three years
following the certification. A lender is not liable for the content of any
advice or counseling an independent counselor gives to the borrower, nor
is an independent counselor liable to a lender for the content of any
advice or counseling the counselor gives to the borrower.
B. No lending without regard for repayment ability. No lender may make
a high-cost home loan unless the lender reasonably believes at the time it
makes the loan that one or more of the borrowers under the loan will be
able to make the scheduled payments on the loan. Such a determination of
the lender must be based upon a consideration of the borrower's current
and expected income, current obligations, employment status, and other
financial resources (other than the borrower's equity in the dwelling
which secures repayment of the loan). A borrower is presumed to be able to
make the scheduled payments to repay the loan if, at the time the loan is
made, the borrower's debt-to-income ratio does not exceed 50%. If the
borrower's debt-to-income ratio exceeds 50%, the lender must fully justify
the decision to approve the high-cost home loan in a written statement
provided to the borrower at loan closing that sets forth specific
compensating factors, such as the excellent long-term credit history of
the borrower, a demonstrated ability in the past by the borrower to make
payments under comparable or greater debt-to-income ratios, conservative
use of credit standards, significant liquid assets of the borrower, or
other factors that reasonably justify the approval of the loan. For
purposes of this paragraph, "debt" means the scheduled monthly principal
and interest payments on all of the borrower's debts, including amounts
owed under the home loan as well as other secured or unsecured debts of
the borrower, plus payments associated with the dwelling prorated monthly
for property taxes and assessments, homeowners insurance premiums,
mortgage insurance premiums, and condominium or homeowners association
dues or fees, and "income" means the borrower's monthly gross income as
verified by the credit application, the borrower's financial statement, a
credit report, financial information provided to the lender by or on
behalf of the borrower, or any other reasonable means. In the case of a
high-cost home loan offering a lower introductory or initial interest
rate, the lender's determination of borrower debt must be based on the
borrower's monthly payments on said loan at the interest rate following
the introductory or initial rate rather than the monthly payments under
the introductory rate. The provisions of this paragraph apply only to a
high-cost home loan in which all of the borrowers have an income, as
reported on the loan application that the lender relied on in making the
credit decision, no greater than 120% of the median family income for the
Oakland Metropolitan Statistical Area (as determined by the United States
Department of Housing and Urban Development), adjusted for family size.
C. No excessive financing of points and fees. No lender may finance
points and fees in excess of either 5% of the total loan amount or $800,
whichever amount is greater, when making a high-cost home loan.
D. No advance payments. No lender may make a high-cost home loan that
includes terms under which more than two periodic payments required under
the loan are consolidated and paid in advance from the loan proceeds
provided to the borrower.
E. No modification or deferral fees. No lender may charge a borrower
any fees or charges to modify, renew, extend, or amend a high-cost home
loan or to defer any payment due under the terms of a high-cost home loan,
unless after the modification, renewal, extension or amendment, the home
loan is no longer a high-cost home loan and the annual percentage rate on
the home loan has decreased by at least two percentage points as a result
of the modification, renewal, extension or amendment. The prohibition on
such fees or charges shall not apply if the high-cost home loan is in
default and the modification, renewal, extension, amendment, or deferral
is part of a work-out arrangement.
F. No prepayment penalties. No lender may charge a prepayment penalty
on a high-cost home loan. For purposes of this paragraph, a "prepayment
penalty" means any penalty, fee, or charge imposed on a borrower by the
lender or an affiliate of the lender for paying all or part of the
principal of the high-cost home loan before the date when the principal
payment is due.
G. No call provisions. No lender may make a high-cost home loan that
includes terms which permit the lender in its discretion to accelerate the
indebtedness. This restriction does not apply to terms that provide for
the acceleration of repayment of the high-cost home loan upon default or
pursuant to a due-on-sale clause.
H. No increased interest rate upon default. No lender may make a
high-cost home loan that includes any provision increasing the interest
rate after default or delinquency. This restriction does not apply to
interest rate changes for a variable rate home loan otherwise consistent
with the provisions of the loan documents, if the change in the interest
rate is not triggered by an event of default, delinquency, or acceleration
of the indebtedness.
I. No refinancing without borrower benefit. No lender may make a high-
cost home loan if the high-cost home loan pays off all or part of an
existing home loan or other debt of the borrower, and the borrower does
not receive a reasonable and tangible net benefit from the new high-cost
home loan considering all the circumstances, including the terms of both
the new home loan and the refinanced debt, the cost of the new home loan,
and the borrower's circumstances. A borrower is presumed to receive a
reasonable and tangible net benefit from a refinance if any of the
following are true: (1) as a result of the refinance there is a net
reduction in the borrower's total monthly payments on all debts
consolidated into the new home loan combined with the borrower's payments,
prorated monthly, for homeowners insurance, mortgage insurance, and
property taxes and assessments, whether such insurance and taxes are paid
through the lender or not, and this reduction will continue for at least
36 months after the refinance, (2) as a result of the refinance there is a
reduction in the borrower's blended interest rate on all debts
consolidated into the new home loan, and it will not take more than 5
years for the borrower to recoup the points and fees charged for the
refinance, (3) the borrower receives cash proceeds from the refinance,
provided that either the amount of the points and fees charged for the
refinance is no greater than 5% of the amount of the cash proceeds
received by the borrower, or the cash proceeds received by the borrower
equals or exceeds the greater of 15% of the total loan amount of the new
loan or $12,000, or (4) the new home loan is necessary to prevent default
under an existing home loan or other secured debt of the borrower,
provided that the lender for the new home loan is not the same as or an
affiliate of the creditor for the existing home loan or other secured
debt.
J. No refinancing special mortgages. No lender may make a high-cost
home loan if the high-cost home loan pays off all or part of an existing
home loan, and such existing loan (1) is originated, subsidized, or
guaranteed by the State of California, the City or other unit of local
government, or a nonprofit organization, and (2) either has an interest
rate at least two percentage points below prevailing market mortgage
interest rates, or has one or more nonstandard payment terms beneficial to
the borrower, such as deferred payments, loan forgiveness features, or
payments that vary with income, that would be lost as a result of the
refinance. This restriction shall not apply if an independent housing or
credit counselor has reviewed the terms of the refinance of the special
mortgage and has determined that the refinance is in the best interests of
the borrower.
5.33.060 Corrections.
A lender who, when acting in good faith, fails to comply with this
chapter, will not be considered to have violated this chapter if the
lender establishes that, within 30 calendar days of the closing of the
home loan and prior to the institution of any action under this chapter,
the lender has notified the borrower of the compliance failure, the lender
has made appropriate restitution, and the lender has adjusted the terms of
the home loan in a manner beneficial to the borrower to make the loan
comply with this chapter.
5.33.070 Investments and loan assignments.
A lender may not make investments that are backed by any home loan that
violates this chapter. Any person who purchases or is otherwise assigned a
home loan is subject to all claims, actions and defenses related to that
home loan that the borrower, the City Attorney, or others could assert
against the original lender.
5.33.080 Civil enforcement and remedies.
A. An aggrieved borrower or an organization acting on behalf of an
aggrieved borrower or borrowers may bring a civil action for injunctive
relief or damages in a court of competent jurisdiction for any violation
of this chapter. If the court finds that a violation of this chapter has
occurred, the court shall award: (1) actual damages sustained by the
borrower as a result of the violation; (2) exemplary damages to the
borrower in the amount of the points and fees charged for the home loan
plus 10% of the total loan amount; and (3) reasonable costs and attorneys'
fees. In addition the court may, as the court deems appropriate: (1) issue
an order or injunction rescinding a home loan contract which violates this
chapter, or barring the lender from collecting under any home loan which
violates this chapter; (2) issue an order or injunction barring any
judicial or nonjudicial foreclosure or other lender action under the
mortgage or deed of trust securing any home loan which violates this
chapter; (3) issue an order or injunction reforming the terms of the home
loan to conform to this chapter; (4) issue an order or injunction
enjoining a lender from engaging in any prohibited conduct; (5) award
punitive damages as the court may deem appropriate if the court determines
by clear and convincing evidence that the lender has shown reckless
disregard for the rights of the borrower; or (6) impose such other relief,
including injunctive relief, as the court may deem just and equitable.
B. A borrower may also assert a violation of this chapter as a defense,
bar, or counterclaim to any default action, collection action or judicial
or nonjudicial foreclosure action in connection with a home loan.
C. Any relief granted to a borrower under this chapter under law or
equity may not reflect negatively in the credit history of the borrower. A
lender may not report any action or relief granted to a borrower under
this chapter to any credit agency, and may not consider any such action or
relief when considering the making of any future home loans to the
borrower.
D. The City Attorney may bring a civil action for any violation of this
chapter. If the court finds in any such action that a lender or other
party has violated this chapter, the court shall impose civil penalties of
not less than $500 and not more than $50,000 per violation, and shall
award reasonable costs and attorneys' fees to the City Attorney. For
purposes of this paragraph, each home loan made in violation of this
chapter is considered a separate violation.
E. The remedies provide under this chapter are cumulative. The
protections and remedies provided under this chapter are in addition to
other protections and remedies that may be otherwise available under law.
Nothing in this chapter is intended to limit the rights of any injured
person to recover damages or pursue any other legal or equitable action
under any other applicable law or legal theory.
5.33.090 Limitations on actions.
A borrower must file any civil action brought under this chapter within
three years after the discovery of the violation by the borrower. This
limitation does not apply in the case of a borrower asserting a violation
of this chapter as a defense, bar, or counterclaim to any default action,
collection action or judicial or nonjudicial foreclosure action. The City
Attorney must file any action brought under this chapter within six years
after the violation.
5.33.100 Criminal liability.
Any person who wilfully violates this chapter is guilty of an
infraction.
5.33.110 Nonwaiverability.
Any written or oral agreement in which a borrower purports to waive any
rights or remedies that he or she may have under this chapter is against
public policy and is void and unenforceable.
5.33.120 Applicability.
The provisions of this chapter apply to home loans made on or after
November 1, 2001. For purposes of this paragraph, a home loan is
considered "made" on the date the promissory note for the loan is signed
by the borrower.
SECTION 3. The record before this Council relating to this Ordinance and
supporting the findings made herein includes, without limitation, the
following:
A. All staff reports and legal opinions produced by or on behalf of the
City with respect to predatory lending practices and this Ordinance, and
other documentation and information attached to or cited in those reports
or cited in this Ordinance;
B. The ACORN study and the HUD/Treasury report;
C. All oral and written information received by City staff and the City
Council including its committees before and during the consideration of
this Ordinance, including public comments and testimony; and
D. All matters of common knowledge and all official enactments and acts
of the City, such as the Oakland City Charter and all applicable state and
federal laws, rules and regulations.
SECTION 4. The recitals contained in this Ordinance are true and
correct and are an integral part of the Council's decision.
SECTION 5. The custodians and locations of the documents or other
materials which constitute the record of proceedings upon which the City
Council's decision is based are respectively: (a) the Community and
Economic Development Agency, Housing and Community Development Division,
250 Frank H. Ogawa Plaza, 5th floor, Oakland, California; and (b) the
Office of the City Clerk, 1 Frank H. Ogawa Plaza, 1st floor, Oakland,
California.
SECTION 6. The City Manager and his or her designee is hereby
authorized to adopt rules and regulations consistent with this Ordinance
as needed to implement this Ordinance, and to make such interpretations of
this Ordinance as he or she may consider necessary to achieve the purposes
of this Ordinance.
SECTION 7. The provisions of this Ordinance are severable, and if any
clause, sentence, paragraph, provision, or part of this Ordinance, or the
application of this Ordinance to any person, is held to be invalid or
preempted by state or federal law, such holding shall not impair or
invalidate the remainder of this Ordinance. If any provision of this
Ordinance is held to be inapplicable to any specific category, type, or
kind of loan or points and fees, or category of lender, the provisions of
this Ordinance shall nonetheless continue to apply with respect to all
other covered loans, points and fees, and lenders. It is hereby declared
to be the
legislative intent of the City Council that this Ordinance would have been
adopted had such provisions not been included or such persons or
circumstances been expressly excluded from its coverage.
IN COUNCIL, OAKLAND, CALIFORNIA, _______________, 2001
PASSED BY THE FOLLOWING VOTE:
AYES- BRUNNER, CHANG, MAYNE, NADEL, REID, SPEES, WAN, AND PRESIDENT DE LA
FUENTE
NOES- ?????
ABSENT- ?????
ABSTENTION- ?????
ATTEST:________________________________
CEDA FLOYD
City Clerk and Clerk of the Council
of the City of Oakland, California
AN ORDINANCE AMENDING THE OAKLAND MUNICIPAL CODE TO PROHIBIT PREDATORY
LENDING PRACTICES FOR HOME LOANS IN THE CITY OF OAKLAND
N O T I C E A N D D I G E S T
This Ordinance adds Chapter 5.33 to the Oakland Municipal Code to
prohibit certain predatory lending terms and practices for home loans
secured by residential property located in the City of Oakland, and makes
certain findings in support of its enactment.
APPROVED AS TO FORM AND LEGALITY
___________________________________
CITY ATTORNEY
OAKLAND CITY COUNCIL
ORDINANCE NO. C. M. S.
AN ORDINANCE AMENDING ORDINANCE NO. 12066 C.M.S., THE LINKED BANKING
SERVICES ORDINANCE, TO REQUIRE LENDERS TO CERTIFY THAT NEITHER THEY NOR
THEIR AFFILIATES ENGAGE IN PREDATORY LENDING PRACTICES
WHEREAS, the subprime lending industry has grown rapidly in the last few
years and has increased its share of conventional home loan applications;
and
WHEREAS, some subprime lenders seek to fill a void created by
redlining, i.e., the practice of mainstream banking institutions avoiding
doing business in poor or minority communities; and
WHEREAS, some of these lenders aggressively market high-cost home loans
that borrowers are unable to repay and engage in other unfair credit
practices that may be stripping families and communities of the equity
they have in their homes; and
WHEREAS, some of these lenders target those communities least able to
afford these loans; and
WHEREAS, these practices are commonly referred to as "predatory
lending"; and
WHEREAS, the HUD/Treasury Task Force on Predatory Lending, in its
recent report Curbing Predatory Home Mortgage Lending (the "HUD/Treasury
report"), has documented and analyzed the problem of predatory lending in
home mortgage lending; and
WHEREAS, the HUD/Treasury report has concluded that predatory lenders
tend to target their efforts at the neighborhood level; and
WHEREAS, predatory lending practices, as documented by the HUD/Treasury
Task report and other commentators, can include, among other things:
repeated refinancing of a loan without any tangible benefit to the
borrower; charging excessive prepayment penalties; financing single
premium credit insurance; encouraging a borrower to default on his or her
other debts; failing to comply with federal requirements with respect to
disclosure of loan terms and loan settlement; making a loan for more than
the borrower can repay; financing excessive points and fees; requiring
advance payments; charging fees to modify a loan or defer payments;
permitting acceleration of a loan at lender's discretion; and increasing
the interest rate upon default; and
WHEREAS, the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now
("ACORN") has documented the problem of predatory lending in Oakland in
its recent report Stripping the Wealth: An Analysis of Predatory Lending
in Oakland (the "ACORN study"); and
WHEREAS, because of the high number of minority and lower-income
homeowners in Oakland, and the pressures of gentrification in certain
neighborhoods that increase property values and home equity, Oakland
residents in low-income areas have been perceived to be "house rich and
cash poor" and thus are prime targets for predatory lending practices; and
WHEREAS, the ACORN study demonstrates that subprime lending is heavily
concentrated in lower-income and minority areas of Oakland; and
WHEREAS, testimony before this Council from community organizations and
victims of predatory lending practices, as well as reports from City
housing counseling and community development staff, demonstrates that
predatory lending is a widespread, significant and growing problem in
low-income Oakland neighborhoods; and
WHEREAS, there is strong anecdotal evidence that predatory lenders have
been deliberately targeting low-income neighborhoods in Oakland through
intensive mail campaigns and door-to-door solicitation; and
WHEREAS, predatory lending practices can lead to a significant economic
drain on lower-income families and communities in Oakland; and
WHEREAS, predatory lending practices contribute to an increase in the
number of foreclosures that can result in abandoned houses and blighted
neighborhoods and contribute to the physical and economic deterioration of
lower-income, minority and inner-city communities in Oakland; and
WHEREAS, the HUD/Treasury report has concluded that "[f]oreclosed homes
are often a primary source of neighborhood instability in terms of
depressed property values and increased crime," and the ACORN study has
concluded that in Oakland "predatory lenders have contributed to further
deterioration of lower-income and minority communities by stripping
homeowners of their equity and charging exorbitant interest rates leading
to foreclosures and vacant houses"; and
WHEREAS, predatory lending practices lead to conditions of blight and
the loss of affordable housing in Oakland, increase displacement and
economic dislocation, reduce property values, erode the tax base, and
increase the strain on City services; and
WHEREAS, the City adopted the Linked Banking Services Ordinance,
Ordinance No. 11607 C.M.S., in 1993 to prohibit the City from doing
business with depositories and other financial institutions that fail to
meet community lending goals; and
WHEREAS, the Linked Banking Services Ordinance was amended and restated
by Ordinance No. 12066 C.M.S. in 1998; and
WHEREAS, it is counterproductive for the City to participate in
development projects that generate profits and income to predatory
lenders, profits and income that such lenders can use to continue harmful
business practices that adversely affect the economic health and
well-being of the City; and
WHEREAS, it is also counterproductive for the City to support
first-time homebuyer programs, housing rehabilitation programs, and other
mortgage assistance programs to homebuyers when first liens on these
properties are imposed through predatory lending practices, since such
liens unfairly threaten the equity position of the homeowner and the
security position of the City; and
WHEREAS, it is the intent of the City that City resources not be used
to support, directly or indirectly, institutions that engage in such
predatory lending practices; and
WHEREAS, the Council has received and considered a number of staff
reports on the problem of predatory lending, including reports from the
City Manager dated March 21, 2000, June 13, 2000, October 10, 2000,
October 24, 2000, as well as the staff report accompanying this Ordinance,
and a legal opinion from the City Attorney dated October 10, 2000; now
therefore
The Council of the City of Oakland does ordain as follows:
Section 1. Section 3 of Ordinance No. 12066 C.M.S. is hereby amended to
read as follows (additional text is underlined):
SECTION 3. Depositories providing the City with Banking Services must
provide annually to the City such information as established from time to
time by the City Manager or his or her designee in order to establish
whether the depository has met the requirements of an Eligible Depository
as defined in Section 2.D. In particular, depositories must provide
annually information to establish whether they have provided sufficient
levels of Community Credit Lending, as defined in Section 2. A., to meet
their Fair Share Goals. A depository meeting the definition of a small
bank contained in the federal Community Reinvestment Act may elect to
submit information annually on one or more reporting areas to demonstrate
that it has met its Fair Share Goal of providing community credit. All
other depositories must provide information on all Community Credit Need
reporting areas as established by the City Manager.
Additionally, depositories and other private financial institutions
seeking City business under the Linked Banking Service Program, seeking to
participate as a lender in any development project financed by City loans
or monetary grants, or seeking to participate in mortgage programs
sponsored by the City, must certify that neither they nor any of their
affiliates engage in predatory lending practices. Depositories will not
receive credit towards their Fair Share Goals for predatory loans. An
entity that is not a "lender" as defined under Chapter 5.33 of the Oakland
Municipal Code will be subject to the certification requirement only if
and to the extent any of its affiliates is a "lender" under that Chapter.
For purposes of this certification, a lender is engaged in predatory
lending practices if, within the 12 months prior to the certification
date, it has made predatory loans that comprise either 5% of the total
home loans made by that entity during that period or 10 individual home
loans, whichever is fewer. A "predatory loan" means any home loan that
violates Chapter 5.33 of the Oakland Municipal Code. An "affiliate" means
any business entity that controls, is controlled by, or is under common
control with, another entity, as set forth in the federal Bank Holding
Company Act of 1956 (12 U.S.C. §1841, et seq.), as may be amended from
time to time, and includes any successors in interest or alter egos to the
entity. However, "affiliate" specifically does not include any entity
whose predominant business is the providing of tax deferred, defined
contribution, pension plans to public employees in accordance with
Sections 403(b) and 457 of the Internal Revenue Code. A "home loan" has
the meaning set forth in Chapter 5.33 of the Oakland Municipal Code.
SECTION 2. Except as specifically amended herein, all other provisions
in Ordinance No. 12066 C.M.S. shall remain in full force and effect.
SECTION 3. The record before this Council relating to this Ordinance
and supporting the findings made herein includes, without limitation, the
following:
A. All staff reports and legal opinions produced by or on behalf of the
City with respect to predatory lending practices and this Ordinance, and
other documentation and information attached to or cited in those reports
or cited in this Ordinance;
B. The ACORN study and the HUD/Treasury report;
C. All oral and written information received by City staff and the City
Council including its committees before and during the consideration of
this Ordinance, including public comments and testimony; and
D. All matters of common knowledge and all official enactments and acts
of the City, such as the Oakland City Charter and all applicable state and
federal laws, rules and regulations.
SECTION 4. The recitals contained in this Ordinance are true and
correct and are an integral part of the Council's decision.
SECTION 5. The custodians and locations of the documents or other
materials which constitute the record of proceedings upon which the City
Council's decision is based are: (a) the Community and Economic
Development Agency, Housing and Community Development Division, 250 Frank
H. Ogawa Plaza, 5th floor, Oakland, California; and (b) the Office of the
City Clerk, 1 Frank H. Ogawa Plaza, 1st floor, Oakland, California.
SECTION 6. The City Manager and his or her designee is authorized to
adopt rules and regulations consistent with this Ordinance as needed to
implement this Ordinance, and to make such interpretations as he or she
considers necessary to implement the policies adopted under this
Ordinance, and is authorized to take whatever other action is necessary or
appropriate with respect to these policies consistent with this Ordinance
and its basic purpose.
SECTION 7. The provisions of this Ordinance are severable, and if any
clause, sentence, paragraph, provision, or part of this Ordinance, or the
application of this Ordinance to any person, is held to be invalid or
preempted by state or federal law, such holding will not impair or
invalidate the remainder of this Ordinance.
IN COUNCIL, OAKLAND, CALIFORNIA, _______________, 2001
PASSED BY THE FOLLOWING VOTE:
AYES- BRUNNER, CHANG, MAYNE, NADEL, REID, SPEES, WAN, AND PRESIDENT DE LA
FUENTE
NOES- ?????
ABSENT- ?????
ABSTENTION- ?????
ATTEST:________________________________
CEDA FLOYD
City Clerk and Clerk of the Council
of the City of Oakland, California
AN ORDINANCE AMENDING ORDINANCE NO. 12066 C.M.S., THE LINKED BANKING
SERVICES ORDINANCE, TO REQUIRE LENDERS TO CERTIFY THAT NEITHER THEY NOR
THEIR AFFILIATES ENGAGE IN PREDATORY LENDING PRACTICES
N O T I C E A N D D I G E S T
This Ordinance amends Ordinance No. 12066 C.M.S., the "Linked Banking
Ordinance," to add the requirement that lenders who seek to do certain
business with the City or participate in projects or programs that involve
the City in certain ways must certify that neither they nor their lender
affiliates have engaged in certain predatory lending practices for home
loans in the City of Oakland. This Ordinance also makes certain findings
in support of its enactment.
REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY
OF THE CITY OF OAKLAND
RESOLUTION NO. C. M. S.
A RESOLUTION REQUIRING FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS SEEKING TO PARTICIPATE IN
DEVELOPMENT PROJECTS FINANCED BY THE AGENCY TO CERTIFY THAT NEITHER THEY
NOR THEIR AFFILIATES ENGAGE IN PREDATORY LENDING PRACTICES
WHEREAS, the subprime lending industry has grown rapidly in the last
few years and has increased its share of conventional loan applications;
and
WHEREAS, some subprime lenders seek to fill a void created by
redlining, i.e., the practice of mainstream banking institutions avoiding
doing business in poor or minority communities; and
WHEREAS, some of these lenders aggressively market high-cost loans to
homeowners and engage in other unfair credit practices that may be
stripping families and communities of the equity they have in their homes;
and
WHEREAS, these lenders target those communities least able to afford
these loans; and
WHEREAS, these activities are considered "predatory lending"; and
WHEREAS, the HUD/Treasury Task Force on Predatory Lending, in its
recent report Curbing Predatory Home Mortgage Lending (the "HUD/Treasury
report"), has documented and analyzed the problem of predatory lending in
home mortgage lending; and
WHEREAS, the HUD/Treasury report has concluded that predatory lenders
tend to target their efforts at the neighborhood level; and
WHEREAS, predatory lending practices, as documented by the HUD/Treasury
Task report and other commentators, can include, among other things:
repeated refinancing of a loan without any tangible benefit to the
borrower; charging excessive prepayment penalties; financing single
premium credit insurance; encouraging a borrower to default on his or her
other debts; failing to comply with federal requirements with respect to
disclosure of loan terms and loan settlement; making a loan for more than
the borrower can repay; financing excessive points and fees; requiring
advance payments; charging fees to modify a loan or defer payments;
permitting acceleration of a loan at lender's discretion; and increasing
the interest rate upon default; and
WHEREAS, the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now
("ACORN") has documented the problem of predatory lending in Oakland in
its recent report Stripping the Wealth: An Analysis of Predatory Lending
in Oakland; and
WHEREAS, the ACORN report demonstrates that predatory lending practices
are heavily concentrated in low income and minority areas of the City; and
WHEREAS, predatory lending practices lead to a significant economic
drain on lower-income families and communities; and
WHEREAS, predatory lending practices contribute to an increase in the
number of foreclosures that can result in abandoned houses and blighted
neighborhoods and contribute to the physical and economic deterioration of
lower-income, minority and inner-city communities; and
WHEREAS, the HUD/Treasury Task Force on Predatory Lending has concluded
that "[f]oreclosed homes are often a primary source of neighborhood
instability in terms of depressed property values and increased crime,"
and ACORN has concluded that "predatory lenders have contributed to
further deterioration of lower-income and minority communities by
stripping homeowners of their equity and charging exorbitant interest
rates leading to foreclosures and vacant houses"; and
WHEREAS, predatory lending practices lead to conditions of blight and
the loss of affordable housing in redevelopment project areas in Oakland;
and
WHEREAS, it is counterproductive for the Redevelopment Agency to
participate in development projects that generate profits and income to
predatory lenders, profits and income that such lenders can use to
continue harmful business practices that adversely affect the economic
health and well-being of redevelopment project areas; and
WHEREAS, it is the intent of the Redevelopment Agency that Agency
resources not be used to support, directly or indirectly, institutions
that engage in such predatory lending practices; now, therefore, be it
RESOLVED: That the Redevelopment Agency hereby adopts a policy requiring
any private financial institutions seeking to participate in development
projects financed by the Redevelopment Agency in the form of loans or
grants to certify that neither they nor their affiliates engage in or will
engage in predatory lending practices; and be it further
RESOLVED: That for purposes of this certification, an entity that is
not a "lender" as defined under Chapter 5.33 of the Oakland Municipal Code
will be subject to the certification requirement only if and to the extent
any of its affiliates is a "lender" under that Chapter, and be it further
RESOLVED: That for purposes of this Resolution, a lender is engaged in
predatory lending practices if, within the 12 months prior to the
certification date, it has made predatory loans that comprise either 5% of
the total home loans made by that entity during that period or 10
individual home loans, whichever is fewer; and be it further
RESOLVED: That for purposes for of this Resolution, a "predatory loan"
means any home loan that violates Chapter 5.33 of the Oakland Municipal
Code; and be it further
RESOLVED: That for purposes of this Resolution, an "affiliate" is
defined as any entity that controls, is controlled by, or is under common
control with another entity, as determined under the federal Bank Holding
Company Act of 1956, as amended from time to time; however, "affiliate"
specially shall not include any entity whose predominant business is the
providing of tax deferred, defined contribution, pension plans to public
employees in accordance with Sections 403(b) and 457 of the Internal
Revenue Code; and be it further
RESOLVED: That for purposes of this Resolution, a "home loan" has the
meaning set forth in Chapter 5.33 of the Oakland Municipal Code; and be it
further
RESOLVED: That the Agency Administrator or his designee is hereby
authorized to adopt regulations and procedures to implement this policy,
and take whatever other action is necessary or appropriate with respect to
this policy consistent with this Resolution and its basic purpose; and be
it further
RESOLVED: That the recitals contained in this Resolution are true and
correct, and the findings made herein, as supported by the referenced
documents and the City staff reports on this subject presented to the
Agency and Council (which are all incorporated herein by reference), are
an integral part of the Agency's decision in adopting this policy