Eugene Murphy Knowledge Transfer GLAS payments Rathcroghan Ballaghaderreen maternity leave 4th Western Brigade Roscommon Mental Health service commercial rates Youth Work Ireland Mount Dillon

“Mortgage to Rent Scheme needs radical shake-up” says Eugene Murphy TD

Eugene Murphy Knowledge Transfer GLAS payments Rathcroghan Ballaghaderreen maternity leave 4th Western Brigade Roscommon Mental Health service commercial rates Youth Work Ireland Mount Dillon

Fianna Fáil TD Eugene Murphy says that new figures from the Housing Agency show that, at the end of 2016, no Mortgage to Rent transactions have been completed in the past four and a half years in County Roscommon and only 217 nationally.

Eugene Murphy feels that the figures indicate the need for a radical shake-up of the scheme.

The Fianna Fáil TD also highlighted the fact that only one Mortgage to Rent transaction was completed in County Leitrim and County Longford during the same time period while in County Westmeath only two Mortgage to Rent transactions were completed by the end of 2016.

Deputy Murphy pointed out that in County Roscommon only three Mortgage to Rent transactions were active by the end of 2016, nine were ineligible, none were complete and 29 were terminated. In County Leitrim the figures show that one case was active, five were ineligible, one complete and 11 were terminated by the end of 2016. In County Longford two Mortgage to Rent transactions were active, eight were ineligible, one complete and 25 were terminated for the same time period. In County Westmeath 16 were active, 14 were ineligible, only two were complete and 55 were terminated for the end of 2016.

“a bureaucratic nightmare”

“When the Mortgage to Rent scheme was launched by the previous FG / Labour government in 2012, it was held up as a safety net to keep families deep in mortgage arrears in their homes. Since then, the scheme has turned into a bureaucratic nightmare and delivered a paltry return.

“The main banks in Ireland have been involved in just one third of the 217 completed transactions, with AIB, for example, concluding just one transaction in the last four and a half years. In contrast, Pepper, acting on behalf of so called ‘vulture funds”, has been involved in 107 of the 217 completed cases,” said Deputy Murphy.

“It has been clear for some time now that this scheme is simply not working. With over 43,000 family home mortgages currently in arrears for more than a year, the lack of support for the Mortgage to Rent scheme by the Government and many of the main lenders is very apparent and offers little hope to those deep in mortgage arrears.

“The scheme is overly bureaucratic, takes far too long and has proven to be a deeply frustrating experience for those in mortgage arrears who have sought to avail of it. Nothing short of a major overhaul of the scheme, including putting it on a statutory footing will suffice at this stage.

“The Government talks a great game about keeping families in their own homes but is presiding over a Mortgage to Rent scheme that is badly broken, while at the same time thousands of families are faced with the real risk of their home being repossessed.

“Meaningful reforms are urgently needed to rescue this scheme and make it fit for purpose. Fianna Fáil will be pressing this issue when the Dáil resumes later this month,” concluded Eugene Murphy.