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Home > News > News Archive > Mortgage rescue scheme extended across Yorkshire and Humber

Mortgage rescue scheme extended across Yorkshire and Humber

Published: Fri, 16 Jan 2009 13:19:04

A mortgage rescue scheme to help vulnerable families at risk of repossession to stay in their homes is being rolled out across Yorkshire and Humber today.

The £200 million scheme is one of a range of measures the Government is putting in place to help ensure repossession is always a last resort.

The scheme is targeted at the most vulnerable households, those on incomes of less than £60,000 a year who would be entitled to be re-housed under homelessness legislation. These would be people who are elderly, disabled or those with children.

Households will be able to apply to their local authority for two options to help them remain in their homes, depending on their circumstances. They will either be able to sell a share of their home to a housing association, enabling their monthly mortgage payments to be significantly reduced, or they can sell the entire home to a housing association and remain in the property as tenants paying a subsidised rent.

The scheme, which is expected to help up to 6,000 households avoid repossession over the next two years, is being expanded to all local authority areas in England from today, following its early introduction by 80 councils in December.

In addition to mortgage rescue, the Government has taken a number of measures to support households at risk of repossession. Last week, changes came into effect on Income Support for Mortgage Interest (ISMI), cutting by two thirds - from 39 to 13 weeks - the time before homeowners who lose their jobs receive financial help with the interest payments on their mortgage. The Homeowner Mortgage Support Scheme, which will allow households who suffer an income shock to defer part of their payments for up to two years, is also being urgently developed with lenders.


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