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    Pedro Nava

    So How's Nevada's Foreclosure Mediation Program Doing? And Will California Soon Follow Our Lead?

    by: atdleft

    Mon Nov 16, 2009 at 10:06:39 AM PST

    (I'm back early for Thanksgiving holiday with my family here, so I'll occasionally be writing about my thoughts on goings-on in Orange County and greater California. This is cross-posted at Nevada Progressive, and you're more than welcome to check in over there often for my ruminating on everything Silver State.) :-)

    So how's Nevada doing? Foreclosures are still high, but are off their record highs and thankfully on the decline.

    Nevada had 13,842 foreclosure filings, which was a 26 percent decline from September. Filings fell 4.4 percent from October 2008.

    The firm reported one filing for every 80 households in October. Nationwide, foreclosure filings fell 3 percent from September, but were up 19 percent compared with October 2008.

    In Nevada, notices of default on home payments dropped 10 percent from October 2008 and scheduled foreclosure auctions were down 6 percent. Bank repossession, however, rose 8 percent in October.

    RealtyTrac spokesman Daren Bloomquist said a new state mediation program implemented July 1 may have caused the declines in Nevada because it slowed the flow into the foreclosure pipeline. Under the program, homeowners have the option of going through mediation with lenders.

    Wait, so what's RealtyTrac talking about? They're talking about AB 149, the new law passed by the Nevada Legislature earlier this year that actually requires the banks to go into court-sponsored mediation to work out a home loan modification. And if this mediation doesn't work out due to the bank's refusal to agree in good faith, the distressed homeowner can persue a remedy in Nevada state court.

    There's More... :: (0 Comments, 840 words in story)

    Nava on Drilling on the Coast

    by: joeesha

    Mon Jun 08, 2009 at 16:55:44 PM PDT

    Assemblyman Pedro Nava just sent this statement regarding the governor's bid to move oil lease approval to the Finance Department:

    50 cents a barrel. That's all it would take to raise 100 million dollars a year for the State of California. Instead of asking the oil companies to pony up what amounts to the price of a daily newspaper per barrel of oil, the Governor wants to approve the first new offshore oil drilling lease in California state waters since the 1969 Santa Barbara oil spill.

    In 2008 Exxon Mobil had $45.2 billion in profits and Chevron posted a record profit of $18.7 billion.  Don't you think they would spend 50 cents a barrel to help California out?

    According to the Department of Conservation, California currently produces nearly 217 million barrels of oil annually. Rather than threaten our coastal economy, the oil companies could pay fifty cents ($0.50) a barrel of oil and help all Californians.

    In January of 2009, the independent State Lands Commission (SLC) rightfully denied the first new lease in California waters (confidential PXP proposal) since the 1969 Santa Barbara oil spill. Unhappy with the vote, our "Environmental" Governor is asking the Legislature to ignore the SLC decision, to turn over the power to approve offshore oil drilling to his Department of Finance and to force new drilling as a part of the state budget. The Governor's proposal does not have to contain any aspects of the confidential PXP agreement.

    "The Governor's proposal usurps existing law and public review and demands that some new oil drilling project should go forward regardless of the fact that it is fatally flawed," said Assemblymember Nava.  "This sets a dangerous precedent by placing money over environmental protection.  The Governor's proposal, like the confidential PXP deal itself, is fatally flawed."

    This end run around the State Lands Commission is a "first" since its formation in 1938.  Every major environmental organization, including those previously in support of PXP, is opposed to this budget scheme and almost all worry about enforceability.

    "The oil company has essentially offered to loan $100 million to California in exchange for granting the first new oil drilling lease in California since the Santa Barbara oil spill 40 years ago," said Lt. Governor John Garamendi, Chair of the State Lands Commission.  "This would be a clear signal to the federal administration that California is willing to issue new oil drilling leases off the California coast opening the door for the federal government to drill baby drill. California should be a leader in renewable energy production, not a producer of a polluting product best left in the 20th century."

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