PUBLIC ADVOCATE TARGETS ILLEGAL EVICTIONS




State of New Jersey
Department of the Public Advocate
240 W. State St.
Trenton, NJ 08625




Jon S. Corzine-Governor
Ronald K. Chen-Public Advocate
For Immediate Release: December 23, 2008


Contact:
Laurie Brewer/NJDPA
609-826-5054
609-417-0038

Ed Rogan - DOBI
609-292-5064


PRESS RELEASE

New Jersey Public Advocate, Commissioner of Banking and Insurance:Tenants in foreclosed properties have rights – cannot be evicted due to foreclosure under NJ law

NEWARK – New Jersey Public Advocate Ronald K. Chen and New Jersey Department of Banking and Insurance Commissioner Steven M. Goldman today said they are looking into complaints that tenants who live in foreclosed properties throughout the state are being illegally forced out of their homes.

Chen and Goldman also warned real estate licensees and attorneys involved in this process that they may be subject to disciplinary action affecting their professional licenses if they intentionally mislead tenants that they must move from their residence solely because the property is in foreclosure or foreclosed.

In some cases, tenants are offered “cash for keys” agreements, where they are given money to turn in their keys and move out, but the offer does not mention that they are also free to stay. In other cases, they are just told they have to get out.

“We have had reports that tenants are being informed by real estate agents, attorneys, and others acting on behalf of a lender that they must move because their building has been foreclosed upon. We have already reached out to several of these organizations and individuals to put them on notice that their actions are illegal,” said Chen.

In 1994, the New Jersey Supreme Court held that the New Jersey Anti-Eviction Act protects tenants even when the property where they live is in foreclosure or has been foreclosed.

“A bank that forecloses on a residential property covered by this act takes the property with the tenants still in it. And, after the bank resells the property, the new owner becomes a landlord to those tenants,” said Chen.

“Real Estate Licensees have a legal obligation to their clients that requires them to be honest, forthright and to avoid misleading statements in notices that they send to the public. We expect our licensees to fulfill these obligations.” said DOBI Commissioner Steven M. Goldman. “If licensees do not completely share all information, or knowingly mislead residential tenants, the NJ Real Estate Commission will impose sanctions for this unethical behavior.”

The New Jersey Real Estate Commission (REC), a division of the New Jersey Department of Banking and Insurance, enforces New Jersey real estate licensing laws. The Real Estate Commission will issue a bulletin to real estate licensees outlining their obligations to be completely forthright with tenants.

“The Real Estate Commission staff works every day to ensure our licensees act in a lawful and ethical manner.” said Robert Kinniebrew, Executive Director of the New Jersey Real Estate Commission. “Licensees are on notice – failure to fully disclose information will result in sanctions.”

Chen noted that tenants are often not aware that they have the right to stay in their apartment even if the building is in foreclosure.

“It is absolutely vital that tenants understand their rights,” said Chen. “Tenants should also know that they must continue to pay their rent on time or save their rent if they do not know who or where the landlord is.” Chen warned that tenants who fail to pay their rent risk being lawfully evicted.

Chen said that his department wants to hear from any tenants who have received notification that they must vacate their apartments due to a foreclosure.

“If you’re a renter, and you receive a notice saying you have to move out because of a foreclosure, please call us at 609-826-5070. We want to hear about these cases so that we can inform people of their rights and make appropriate referrals for help,” said Chen.

Chen said that Legal Services of New Jersey, New Jersey Citizen Action and the New Jersey Tenants Rights Organization, among others, brought the tenant eviction issue to his attention and that all three organizations have had interactions with people affected.

“Low-income tenants are particularly vulnerable to this type of unlawful pressure to move out, and are most at risk of homelessness if they do,” said Connie Pascale, Vice President and Assistant General Counsel for Legal Services of New Jersey. LSNJ and six regional Legal Services programs throughout the state can provide legal advice or representation to eligible low-income tenants threatened with illegal eviction due to foreclosure. Tenants can call the LSNJ hotline directly at 888-576-5529.

“Unfortunately, most tenants are not aware of their rights, and can easily be convinced that they must move by unscrupulous landlords, real estate agents, or attorneys,” said Matt Shapiro, Executive Director of the NJ Tenants Organization. “Sometimes, landlords undergoing foreclosure will take the law into their own hands and effectively lock the tenants out by shutting off vital services like heat, electricity, or water. Such self-help lockouts have been illegal for many years because of the NJTO, and the tenant can sue for damages. NJTO also fought for another law which made these lockouts and shutoffs an offense under the criminal code.”
"As Citizen Action continues to be inundated with homeowners who are facing foreclosure, we are discovering that renters who occupy some of these homes are unaware of their rights as tenants and are being pressured to move out. Public education and strict enforcement of the law is essential to preventing more people from losing their homes,” said Phyllis Salowe-Kaye
Executive Director of NJ Citizen Action.


“The foreclosure crisis has been devastating to our urban communities turning back the clock on decades of neighborhood revitalization and redevelopment in a matter of months, turning once well cared for homes into the blight that we see far too often,” said Gerard Haizel, Executive Director of Episcopal Community Development. “More often than not, the tenants that are being put out represent some of the most vulnerable residents of the community with the fewest options for alternative affordable housing, forcing them into substandard housing or shelters.”
The Association for Children of New Jersey recently completed focused research on this area in its Newark Kids County 2008 report and concluded that the foreclosure problem in some Newark neighborhoods is three times the state average and that families with children are heavily affected by this trend.
Chen said community-based organizations and municipalities, through the efforts of groups like the Newark/Essex Foreclosure Taskforce, are already doing a lot of important work in this area and are critical in getting the word out to tenants, gathering information about the problem, and identifying solutions. The Department of the Public Advocate is hoping to work with these groups as well as other state agencies in order to identify a multi-faceted response to protect the rights of tenants.

The Department of the Public Advocate is also working with the state Board of Public Utilities to assist tenants whose utilities are shut off when a landlord who has defaulted on the mortgage also stops paying the utility bills. Tenants in this situation should call the Department of the Public Advocate for a referral to the Board of Public Utilities.

Enacted in 1974, the New Jersey Anti-Eviction Act protects residential tenants from losing their homes through no fault of their own. The Act applies whether or not the tenant has a written lease. The Act does not apply to tenants of owner-occupied homes with two or fewer rental units; units set aside for developmentally disabled members of the owner’s immediate family; and hotels, motels and guest houses.

In general, the law protects tenants against eviction from their homes as long as they pay the rent, respect the peace and quiet of their neighbors, avoid willful or grossly negligent damage to the property, and obey rules they have agreed to in writing.

The Department of the Public Advocate will distribute tenants’ rights brochures throughout the state as part of its campaign to raise public awareness of this issue, said Chen.
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Walk-Around Update-Not Deterred


Volunteer Now!


As is often the case during this time of year the weather can be a challenge to anything taking place outdoors.


This week we were only able to get in the first of the three Walk Arounds planned. The other two will be new dates for the two postponed events will be posted as soon as possible.


The event that did take place, however, was a definite success thanks to the efforts of our partners at New Community Corporation, who was the lead agency for this Walk Around.

The Hand of Fate


While doing outreach on a particularly hard hit block in the northern part of the West Side Park neighborhood, the hand of fate lead us to brought us to the door of a single mother and her six year old daughter, who live on social security disability and a small monthly child support payment, that were less than a day from moving out of their home of two years and moving into a homeless shelter.

This family has been renting their small but well kept single family home for two years, always paying their rent on time. So why the move to a shelter? Because the landlord had lost the home to the bank in a foreclosure and the real estate broker was pressuring to move out of the house, trying to circumvent her rights by offering them money to leave, threatening tenants court and eviction if they didn’t leave. And to increase the pressure, every day that they didn’t leave, they decreased the amount that they would pay. When asked if they could stay through Christmas because her daughter had spent the last two Christmases there, they were told if they did then they would get no money. And if that wasn’t enough, they sent PSE&G to turn off the electric and gas.

So in order to get an $800 payment in hopes of using to try and get another place to rent, they were going to abandon their home for a homeless shelter.

This Walk Around was originally scheduled for Wednesday, but because of a scheduling conflict it was changed to Tuesday. Only because of a light on inside that caught the eye of the canvassers of NCC did they ring the bell as this property wasn’t on our list of homes in jeopardy. If we had come on Wednesday or that light hadn’t been on this family would now be in a shelter. And now we are working with this family so that they know their right as tenants as well as connecting them social services to help them moving forward.

A Special Thank You New Community for helping keep the light of hope burning!

NEXT EVENT:
SOUTHERN IRONBOUND: TUESDAY DECEMBER 16-10AM TO 1PM

Contact Don Baldyga @ Episcopal Community Development for more information
973-430-9985 or don@ecdonline.org

Walk-Around Update-A Great Start!!! Volunteer Now!!!


This past week the Newark/Essex Foreclosure Task Force began its Community Outreach and Vacant Property Survey Walk-Arounds.


This program has started off as an unconditional success!!!


The first two events were held on December 3rd and 4th and were lead by ACORN and La Casa de Don Pedro respectively. On those chilly days, not only were many residents engaged, much information distributed and many homes surveyed, but much was learned on how to make future Walk-Arounds even more productive.


A special thanks to ACORN and La Casa!!!


There are many people who, if not for their work, dedication and compassion this program would not even exist. To them we owe our undying gratitude. So thanks to Stephanie Greenwood of the, Department of Economic and Housing Development. City of Newark and all of those from the Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy, Rutgers University who conceived this program and keep it going.


But this is just the beginning.


On this day, December 7, 2008 we remember the events of Pearl Harbor so many years ago. An event the, like this current foreclosure crisis, that might have been avoided if we as a people had not become complacent, ignoring the dark clouds of danger brewing on the horizon.


So let us not forget those that perservered to bring victory from the defeat of that infamous day, December 7, 1941, and let their courage be an example to us.


Let us remember the words of a young senator as he prepared to enter the highest office in the land:


“And so, my fellow Americans: ask not what your country can do for you—ask what you can do for your country.
My fellow citizens of the world: ask not what America will do for you, but what together we can do for the freedom of man.
Finally, whether you are citizens of America or citizens of the world, ask of us the same high standards of strength and sacrifice which we ask of you. With a good conscience our only sure reward, with history the final judge of our deeds, let us go forth to lead the land we love, asking His blessing and His help, but knowing that here on earth God's work must truly be our own.”
John Fitzgerald Kennedy-January 20, 1961

Newark/Essex Foreclosure Task Force
Community Outreach and Vacant Property Survey Dates
December 2008/January 2009 (Updated 12/6/08)

For more information or to participate, please contact:
Don Baldyga, Director of Real Estate Development, Episcopal Community Development, Inc., 31
Mulberry Street, Newark , 973-430-9985 don@ecdonline.org


Upcoming Events:

December 9 West Side Park (NCC)
Time: 1-4
Streets: 15th Street to 18th Street, South Orange Avenue to 16th Avenue

December 11 Lower Broadway (LA CASA)
Time: 10-1
Streets: Stone, Cutler, Garside, Mt. Prospect , Clifton between Victoria and 3rd

December 12 West Side Park (TRI-CITY PEOPLES CORPORATION)
Time: 10-1
Streets: Springfield Avenue to 18th Avenue , 18th Street to 21st Street
Blocks: 354, 355, 356, 357, 358, 364, 366, 367, 368

December 16 Ironbound (Ironbound Community Corporation)
Time: 10-1
Streets: TBD

January (Date TBD) Fairmount (Greater Newark Housing Partnership)
Time: 10-1
Streets: South Orange Avenue to Central Avenue, 9th Street to 12th Street

VOLUNTEERS NEEDED

Essex Newark Foreclosure Task Force
Community Outreach and Vacant Property

Survey Dates-December 2008

Through a series of targeted outreach events the Task Force intends to:

· Reach all residents (tenants and homeowners) at risk of foreclosure-related problems in a particular target area by blanketing the community with information and assistance using volunteers from the sponsoring agency, other local organizations and anyone else who will volunteer
· Obtain detailed property information on foreclosure and/or abandoned homes to ascertain the physical effect of the foreclosure crisis on the structure of the community.


Below is the current schedule of events.


WE CAN ALWAYS USE MORE HELP!!! VOLUNTEER TODAY!!!

For more information or to participate, please contact:
Don Baldyga, Director of Real Estate Development, Episcopal Community Development, Inc., 31 Mulberry Street, Newark, 973-430-9985 don@ecdonline.org

December 3 Lower Roseville (ACORN) Time: 1-3
Streets: 9th Street to 13th Street between Park Avenue and 7th Avenue
Time permitting Park Ave to 4th Ave – 9th, 11th, and 12th Streets

December 4 Lower Broadway (LA CASA) Time: 10-1
Streets: Lake, Highland, Parker, and Ridge between 2nd and Park Ave
Summer between Crane and Taylor

December 9 West Side Park (NCC)Time: 10-1
Streets: 15th Street to 18th Street, South Orange Avenue to 16th Avenue

December 11 Lower Broadway (LA CASA)Time: 10-1
Streets: Stone, Cutler, Garside, Mt. Prospect, Clifton between Victoria and 3rd

December 12 West Side Park (TRI-CITY PEOPLES CORPORATION)
Time: 10-1-Streets: Springfield Avenue to 18th Avenue, 18th Street to 21st Street

December 16 Fairmount (Greater Newark Housing Partnership)
Time: 10-1-Streets: South Orange Avenue to Central Avenue, 9th Street to 12th Street