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In S.C., foreclosure settlement is $190M

Relief payments to be parceled out among more than 15,000 homeowners.

By Andrew Dunn
adunn@charlotteobserver.com

More Information

  • Relief for underwater borrowers in default: $137.3 million

    Refinancing for underwater borrowers current: $36.5 million

    Cash payments to families who lost homes: $16 million

    Total directly to homeowners: $189.8 million

    State's portion: $32.8 million

    North Carolina

    Relief for underwater borrowers in default: $179.5 million

    Refinancing for underwater borrowers current: $61.5 million

    Cash payments to families who lost homes: $33.6 million

    Total directly to homeowners: $274.6 million

    State's portion: $63.7 million



More than 15,000 South Carolina homeowners will receive about $190 million in foreclosure relief and other compensation from the blockbuster settlement between state attorneys general and the country's largest mortgage servicers.

The figures - a state-by-state breakdown of how the country's underwater borrowers will be aided in the settlement - come from the consortium of state attorneys general who negotiated the deal, and were posted this week on their website, NationalMortgageSettlement.com.

All told, the mortgage servicers - including Bank of America Corp. and Wells Fargo & Co. - will pay about $25 billion to absolve claims that they used incorrect and improper foreclosure and mortgage servicing practices.

Forty-nine states and the District of Columbia participated, along with several federal agencies.

About 28,000 North Carolinians will receive about $275 million from the settlement. The state itself will receive an additional $64 million, most of which will be used for housing counselors, legal assistance and expanded prosecution of financial crimes.

South Carolina previously had announced that its state government's share would be about $33 million. The state has not yet broken down how it will use that money, as North Carolina has done.

California, by far, is receiving the most: about $16.5 billion for more than 471,000 homeowners. Florida, Arizona, Nevada and Illinois each will receive more than $1 billion.

North Carolina ranks No. 14; South Carolina comes in at No. 20.

Dunn: 704-358-5235

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