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Fewer Papers to Settle a Sale
The Baltimore Sun, May 12, 2002
HUD seeks to streamline settlement process
System is called antiquated
Md. has created task force to cut mystifying red tape
By
Robert Nusgart
Sun Real Estate Editor
Any buyer or seller who has gone through a real estate settlement
quickly realized how intimating, daunting and confusing the process can be.
First, there’s the lender’s package, which a courier
doesn’t deliver to the title company until just a few hours – or
minutes-before buyers and sellers sit down to the settlement table.
Then there’s the seemingly endless mound of papers to sign.
Disclosure forms that would require a translator.
And, because many times no one knows what the final costs will
be, there’s always the reminder to “bring your check-book.”
For Steven Van Grack, chairman of the Maryland Real Estate Commission,
and regulators at the Department of Housing and Urban Development in Washington,
enough and is enough.
Van Grack has organized a Settlement Task Force in hopes to “facilitate,
simplify and modify” the settlement process. The task force, which has
its first meeting last month and has a second meeting scheduled for May 24,
is made up of state officials, real estate agents and representatives of the
mortgage and title industries.
Settlement reform was born last year when newly appointed HUD secretary
Mel Martinez purchased a home in Washington. After closing on the house, he – like
thousand of other Americans – realized how complex and dense the process
typically is.
“If I’m a lawyer, and the secretary of HUD, and I’m
not reading this junk, you know there’s work [to be done],” he
said in an interview published in June.
When Van Grack took over as chairman last summer, he, too, floated
the idea of settlement reform. And when he recently refinanced his Rockville
home, it reinforced the point that the process is flawed.
“I literally, after numerous requests [for the final documents],
got them at 10:30 and it was for a 3 o’clock settlement,” he said. “There
were 62 pages of documents. They were extensive. There was redundancy, repetition,
confusion, and I literally went through and read as much as I could.”
After he relayed that experience to those attending the first meeting,
he said, others pointed to similar problems.
“It was one of those rare situations where we had 20 people
sitting around a table and nobody disagreed that the process was a nightmare,” said
Mary C. Antoun, chief executive officer of the Maryland Association of Realtors.
Van Grack said, “I think for the vast majority of people,
it is just too complex. And they just end up going into a trusting relationship.
By and large, it works out, but there are too many instances where people are
taken advantage of.”
Nerry Mitchell, a deputy commissioner in the state’s division
of financial regulation, which oversees the lenders, agreed that tackling the
settlement process is a “pretty huge task… but it is something
that has to be done because the system – as it stands right now – is
bursting at the seams. And I predict that it will collapse under its own weight
sometime pretty soon if nothing is done.”
Van Grack said HUD sent a representative to the first meeting that
at this month’s meeting he hopes to have in hand draft regulations the
federal agency is considering issuing in the summer.
Because most of the bureaucracy in a settlement is dictated by
federal regulations, Van Grack knows the states has only a certain amount of
influence on the process.
“We have the opportunity to influence federal policy, and
that is over and above any expectation that we had,” Van Grack said. “And
we certainly are now able to see if we can have a real effect on state regulations.
It’s staggering if we can do all of that.”
Members thought more attention should be paid to improving the
use of technology and to upgrading the “financial literacy” of
consumers.
“I was flabbergasted when I heard that most of what happens
in settlement is still done in this very low-tech sort of way…. That
people literally messenger forms around from lender to settlement attorneys,” said
Mark Feinroth, assistant secretary of the Maryland Department of Labor, Licensing
and Regulation. “They aren’t using computer forms. They aren’t
e-mailing forms back and forth.
“The real estate commission can issue a license paperlessly.
You can go online and electronically renew your license. There is nothing [like
that] going on in the settlement industry right now … between title insurance,
between banks and settlement attorneys. These forms are literally walked around
town.”
Feinroth would like to see the industry move away from its “Stone
Age technology” and get to the point where consumers would at least be
able to view documents over the Internet.
“I think the industry has the ability to impact the process
just through this technology issue,” he said. “They ought to b
What would also help consumers, Mitchell said, is a better way
to educate the public on the process, language and phrases used by the title
companies and lending industry.
It’s not just the functional process that we should try to
fix, but we should also look on another level at financial literacy,” he
said.
“We don’t yet have a fundamental system in our educational
system that says to kids, you’ve got to have an understanding of consumer
issues. Because all of us, whether we are doctors lawyers, newspaper editors,
are going to have to be consumers… and we need a system that includes
financial literacy and consumer education.”
What leaves Van Grack most optimistic is that all participants
realize that there is a common understanding of the problem.
“The part about this task force [I like] is that I’m
not the only guy out there singing this song,” he said. “We’re
harmonized together.”
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