 |
![[Photo 1: 93 graduates at the Rocky Mountain Development Council]](../images/hgv-picw-mt-2003-07-11a.jpg) |
| Homebuyers'
gather for graduation ceremony |
![[Photo 2: Sarita Santiago with her son learning a variety of programs and products]](../images/hgv-picw-mt-2003-07-11b.jpg) |
| Sarita
Santiago talks about her new homeownership opportunities |
![[Photo 3: Mayor Smith receiving award from Field Office Director Friesen]](../images/hgv-picw-mt-2003-07-11c.jpg) |
| Field
Office Director Tom Friesen presents award to Mayor James
Smith of Helena |
![[Photo 4: Beki Brandborg holding the award from Tom Friesen]](../images/hgv-picw-mt-2003-07-11d.jpg) |
| Beki
Brandborg receives award from Tom Friesen |
|
After
successfully completing a 9-week course called the "First Time
Homebuyers' Workshop Series," 93 graduates were recognized
for their accomplishments at the Rocky Mountain Development Council
on June 25 in Helena, Montana. The course, now in its 7th year,
has trained over 1300 residents of Lewis and Clark County. What
was initially started by the Helena Area Task force as an informal
discussion on homeownership options, has now grown into a full curriculum
that focuses on a wide range of homeownership topics to enable students
to become informed and sophisticated homebuyers. Students are introduced
to a variety of programs and products that assist first-time homebuyers,
including FHA programs presented by Don Smith from the Helena Field
Office. Similar presentations from Rural Development, Home Choice,
Fannie Mae and the IRS educate prospective homebuyers about other
loan options and choices. Loan officers explain the importance of
loan pre-qualification and credit reports, and each student is able
to engage in a personal session with a loan officer to discuss options
and opportunities.
Graduates,
such as Sarita Santiago with her son, are given the opportunity
to benefit from a HOME-funded program for first-time homebuyers
called HOPE, one of several options open to the students. HOPE utilizes
HOME funds to buy-down mortgages by $25,000 making homeownership
possible for persons earning between $18,000 and $24,000, and a
typical mortgage between $65,000 and $80,000. The program has assisted
24 families with homeownership in the last 14 months. With a recent
$500,000 HOME grant from HUD and $1.8M of leveraging from other
sources, HOPE will expand to assist more graduates in the future.
Their goal is to become a self-sustaining loan fund that can survive
on its own.
After
Mayor James Smith presented a certificate to each of the graduates,
HUD's Field Office Director presented awards to several key players
who developed the successful homebuyer education course that is
now offered three times each year for Helena residents. Awards went
to the Helena Area Housing Task Force and their Board Chair, Sharon
Haugen, for their initiation of the program and their on-going commitment
to assuring its success; to Beki Brandborg, the organizer and facilitator
for the class sessions and the one who has given countless hours
of volunteer effort to the program; and to Mayor James Smith, known
as Helena's strongest supporter of homebuyer education. The Mayor,
having benefited personally from homebuyer education, attends all
of graduations and is a frequent graduation
speaker. To support the graduates and those receiving plaques, attendance
at the event included representatives from Fannie Mae, Rural Development,
Senator Burns office, the Montana Board of Realtors, the Montana
Board of Housing, several lenders and title companies, Habitat for
Humanity and the Federal Reserve Bank.
For
more information about future Homebuyers' Workshops in Helena, contact
Beki Brandborg at (406) 442-2265.
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