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Springfield's Owner Occupied Rehab Loan Program


Loans for the Rehabilitation of Owner Occupied Properties

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"Making a Difference One Loan at a Time"

 

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To the Homeowner Seeking a
Housing Rehabilitation Loan

To approve a rehab loan, the City needs to:

Establish your eligibility for the loan program
Check your credit history and ability to repay a loan
Help you develop a rehabilitation plan
Determine the project's financial feasibility
Execute the loan papers


1) ELIGIBILITY. You may be eligible for a low-interest loan if you live in the program area (see map) and if your gross household income falls within the income guidelines (see guidelines). You must also be the owner of record of the property, which allows you to use the rehabilitated property as security for the loan. This normally means you hold a general warranty deed that is on record with the County.

2) CREDIT & BORROWING ABILITY. Once a loan application has been received, the City will also order a report on your credit history from the local credit bureau. (However, any financial and personal information about you is never released to another agency or anyone outside of the Loan Committee.) As for borrowing ability, you need to show on your application that between your total income and total fixed expenses you could afford to repay a City housing rehabilitation loan.

3) REHABILITATION PLAN. A City representative will conduct a preliminary inspection to get an idea of what would be needed to upgrade the house according to the City's Housing Rehabilitation Guidelines and to estimate how much that might cost.
If, after reviewing the rehabilitation needs list and cost estimate, you want to go ahead with the project, the City representative will begin preparing a detailed list of specifications and drawings for your approval. This plan may go through several revisions as different solutions are discussed.
The rehabilitation plan may also involve arrangements for temporary housing in cases where the renovations would disrupt the household too much for the family to stay there. Reasonable expenses for temporary housing normally would be paid by the City and would not be included in the loan. After the basic rehabilitation plan has been worked out, general contractors can be invited to bid on the construction work. The City will introduce you to some experienced general contractors who are interested in bidding on City rehab projects. You have the option of inviting other contractors to bid, but you are responsible for checking out all bidders' qualifications and references before deciding which contractor's proposal to accept.

4) FINANCIAL FEASIBILITY. While you are developing your rehabilitation plan and are selecting a contractor to help you carry out that plan, the City will order an appraisal of the property's potential market value and search the records to verify the amount of debt (mortgage) that is already secured by the property. This information, plus the selected contractor's bid price, will help the Loan Committee decide whether there would be enough equity to secure an additional loan by the City.

5) LOAN PAPERS. Once you have decided to accept the Loan Committee's loan offer, a loan closing will be scheduled. At that time you will sign a promissory note for the amount of the rehabilitation loan. You will also sign a deed of trust granting the City a security interest in the property until the loan has been paid off. You will be given a full disclosure of the finance cost, schedule of payments and other loan terms. You will have three days from the loan closing in which to reconsider the deal before it becomes final. After the three days you will sign the construction contract and send the general contractor a notice to proceed.

Supervision. A City representative will periodically inspect the work being done. Payments to the general contractor will be approved only after you and the City's representative agree the terms of the contract have been met. The work will be guaranteed by the general contractor for a year.

Click here for Printable Application(PDF)

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