Mortgage refinancing help still eludes some homeowners St. Louis Post-Dispatch
He stood in the lobby with a sign-carrying crowd made up largely of young people chanting, "They got bailed out; we got sold out!" They were demanding that the bank ease up on home foreclosures.
A short 46-year-old with muscular arms, the carpenter looked a little out of place. When they gave him the megaphone, he looked out at the security guards in the lobby, and the bankers watching from the balcony above, and asked to be allowed to stay in his home.
"I'll pay everything I owe. Just give me some time," he said. "Just don't kick me out of my house... I'm not begging. I'm not crawling. All I'm asking is a little help."
A couple of years back, he would never have believed he'd be taking part in a protest against the biggest bank in the country.
There are thousands of St. Louisans in danger of foreclosure as the region suffers under a 9.8 percent unemployment rate. Some are successful in getting the lender to cut
You can also go to the National Association of Insurance Commissioner www.naic.org for insurers by state along with any complaints against them. Check to make sure that the land under your house isn't included in the value of the home since it isn't at