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Thursday, July 2, 2009

Barney Frank Wants TARP Profits Spent on Low Income Housing

Leave it to Barney. The man who helped create the banking crisis has figured out what to do with the income the treasury gets from the banks helped by TARP. The profits generated when the banks return the money with interest. Any Congressman with an iota of fiduciary responsibility would call for the returned TARP funds and income to be used to pay down the federal deficit. Of course we are talking about Barney Frank, he can't even pronounce fiduciary responsibility, he would never think of practicing it.

The Massachusetts money-grabber plans on using the TARP funds to provide to provide rental housing for low-income families. And the fun part is he wants to do it "under the table." He has covertly introduced the legislation, because why ask the tax payers what they want?

US Rep Frank Bill Would Use TARP Income For Housing

By Meena Thiruvengadam,
WASHINGTON -(Dow Jones)- House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank has a plan to funnel income from the government's $700 billion bailout fund toward the housing sector.

The powerful Massachusetts Democrat last week quietly introduced legislation that aims to use $1 billion in dividends paid by the recipients of government aid to provide rental housing opportunities for low-income and homeless families. The money would go into a national housing trust fund established last summer in connection with legislation that allowed for Fannie Mae (FNM) and Freddie Mac (FRE) to be placed under government conservatorship.

The fund currently is empty, however President Barack Obama's fiscal year 2010 budget calls for it to receive $ 1 billion - a sum the Frank legislation would provide.

"This would be the seed money to get the trust fund up and running," said Danna Fischer, legislative director for the National Low Income Housing Coalition.

Fischer said the trust aims to garner $150 billion in total funding over the next decade.

Frank said it is feasible to use income from the Troubled Asset Relief Fund, known as TARP, to finance the trust for at least "a couple of years."

Frank's legislation also proposes funneling $1.5 billion in TARP dividend payments to state and local government efforts to redevelop abandoned and foreclosed properties.

"We made some money on this. It's now reasonable to use some of that to deal with these problems," Frank said.

Banks participating in TARP have so far paid the U.S. Treasury more than $4.9 billion in dividends.

Separately, Frank's legislation aims to reallocate some funds from the TARP itself.

The legislation would divert $2 billion in TARP dollars to an emergency mortgage relief program administered by the Department of Housing and Urban Development and another $2 billion for HUD to use for the creation of a program to cope with foreclosures on multifamily properties.

1 comment:

Carol_Herman said...

FROM CAROL HERMAN

It's too late to save the day.

Now one of the things that did happen with "low income housing" is that many areas in the big cities got cleaned up. Here. In Los Angeles. And, in NYC, Harlem was turned into having million dollar properties.

This is going to fade back to what it once was. As to the democraps, they'll keep stealing money until their kiesters get kicked out of office. If this becomes obvious before 2010? You'll see the scoundrels lying their heads off.

Typical. Democracies look good when their paths are going up.