Consumer advocates are urging Congress to amend the bankruptcy code so that homeowners can restructure high-cost loans and avoid foreclosure.The current code protects mortgage lenders, according to the National Association of Consumer Bankruptcy Attorneys, and does not allow the bankruptcy judges to reduce the interest rate or principal amount so that homeowners can successfully emerge from bankruptcy with affordable payments. As a result, more homeowners with subprime loans are forced to walk away from the homes, according to NACBA president Henry Sommer. "Help is urgently needed for hundreds of thousands of American families at risk of losing their home due to abusive home loans," he said. An NACBA survey shows that bankruptcy attorneys are finding that more of their clients have problems involving subprime loans. Half of the respondents said 50% of their clients with homes have mortgage-related problems, while 20% of the attorneys said 75% of their clients with homes have mortgage-related problems. The Consumer Federation of America and the Center for Responsible Lending joined the NACBA in calling for bankruptcy reforms.
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