The State Bank of Lincoln was one of just a few Illinois lenders 
			that saw the new program as a way to help their customers with 
			moderate to low income qualify to buy a home. With a guarantee from 
			Rural Development, the bank was able to offer home loans with no 
			down payment, a fixed interest rate and a long term. Since its 
			adoption of the guaranteed loan program, the bank has used the 
			program to make affordable home loans to thousands of rural 
			homebuyers. The bank has also become a USDA nationally approved 
			lender, making guaranteed loans in multiple states.
			Jeanne Scheurer, State Bank of Lincoln vice president, says: 
			"This is a good program for borrowers that have no money to put 
			down, and the Rural Development's housing staff is easy to work 
			with. We are able to assist borrowers that we otherwise could not 
			help."  
			
			
			  
			Colleen Callahan, Rural Development state director, presented a 
			plaque to Steve Aughenbaugh, bank president, in recognition of the 
			bank's 20th anniversary with the loan program. 
			Callahan said, "The State Bank of Lincoln has been an integral 
			part of the progress of this community and the surrounding area for 
			more than a century. Their early adoption and continued commitment 
			to the GRH program is a good example of how they seek out ways to 
			help their community prosper."  
			In the first year of the program, with strong support from the 
			State Bank of Lincoln, a total of 93 Illinois buyers used the USDA 
			guarantee to purchase their homes. By 1995, the number of guaranteed 
			home loans had grown to 540, surpassing Rural Development's direct 
			home loan program that was authorized 46 years earlier. The program 
			continues to expand, topping 4,500 guarantees last year throughout 
			rural Illinois. 
			Rural Development has continued to find ways to keep the GRH 
			program responsive to the changing needs of homebuyers and the 
			housing market. In 1998, the program's loan limitation was lifted so 
			that moderate-income homebuyers could purchase any home they could 
			afford in a rural community. In 2001, the agency permitted existing 
			USDA customers to refinance their mortgages at a reduced interest 
			rate. The American Reinvestment and Recovery Act provided $10 
			million in supplemental funding to support homebuyers during the 
			housing crisis. 
			
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			 Other recent adaptations included a change in the fee structure 
			that ensured funding for guarantees would be available year-round 
			and not dependent on annual congressional appropriations. This year, 
			Rural Development in Illinois and 18 other states, where homeowners 
			were hardest hit by financial markets, were selected to offer a 
			streamlined refinancing program to existing USDA housing customers 
			to obtain a reduced interest rate loan with lower closing costs. 
			Finally, in response to tightening federal budgets, Rural 
			Development centralized the processing of GRH loans to ensure quick 
			and consistent responses to guarantee requests. 
			
			Interested homebuyers can call the State Bank of Lincoln at 
			800-847-1536 or Rural Development at 866-481-9575 for more 
			information on the guaranteed home loans. 
			Rural Development has more than 40 programs that foster growth 
			and economic stability in rural areas by providing affordable 
			financing and technical assistance. In addition to housing, support 
			is available for regional food systems, broadband and biofuel 
			infrastructure, business development, and community needs. More 
			information on USDA Rural Development programs is available on the 
			Web at 
			www.rurdev.usda.gov/il.  
			[Text from file received from
			USDA Rural Development, 
			Illinois] 
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