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						Illinois Housing 
						Development Authority Announces Application Deadline for 
						the Hardest Hit ProgramHomeowners have less than one 
						week to apply for $35,000 in mortgage payment assistance 
						before the program closes on April 30
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		 [April 25, 2019] 
		The Illinois Housing Development Authority (IHDA) is announcing the wind 
		down of the Illinois Hardest Hit program, a federally funded initiative 
		that helps those facing foreclosure to stay in their homes. Homeowners 
		who are struggling to pay their mortgages due to unemployment, 
		underemployment or financial hardship are encouraged to apply for up to 
		$35,000 in mortgage payment assistance before the program closes on 
		April 30. Interested homeowners can apply online for free at
		www.illinoishardesthit.org 
		and will be automatically linked with a local housing agency that will 
		answer questions, prescreen for eligibility and assist homeowners in 
		preparing the application and assembling the required supporting 
		documentation.
 “The Hardest Hit program leverages federal dollars to keep families, 
		seniors and persons with disabilities from becoming homeless,” said 
		Governor JB Pritzker. “I encourage homeowners struggling to make their 
		mortgage payments to act now and apply before the deadline to ensure 
		they receive assistance and can stay in their homes.”
 
		
		 
		Originally launched in September 2011, the Hardest Hit program provides 
		up to $35,000 in forgivable assistance to homeowners who have 
		experienced a 15% reduction in income due to a qualifying financial 
		hardship. Hardships include unemployment or underemployment, decrease or 
		loss of business income, loss of income due to disability or 
		health-related event, or the death or divorce of a spouse or titleholder 
		of the house. The program reinstates delinquent mortgages by paying all 
		mortgage arrearage, fees and penalties, and will and makes loan payments 
		on behalf of the borrower for up to 12 months. The assistance lets 
		eligible homeowners stay in their home while they work to regain 
		employment and financial stability. As of April 2019 -  20,147 
		Illinois families have received mortgage payment assistance through the 
		program. 
		
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“Not only do foreclosures impact families, but they impact the entire 
neighborhood. I supported the creation and funding of the Hardest Hit Fund 
because I believe that we still have work to do to address problems in the 
housing market and to bring stability back to our communities,” U.S. Senator 
Dick Durbin (D-IL) said. “I encourage anyone who is currently struggling to make 
their mortgage payments to apply before the deadline.” 
 
The U.S. Department of the Treasury established the Hardest Hit Fund in 2010 to 
provide targeted assistance to families in states hit hard by the economic and 
housing market downturn. HHF is funded through the Troubled Asset Relief Program 
(TARP) and Illinois was initially approved to receive $446 million in 2010. IHDA, 
as the state housing finance agency, was chosen to administer these funds. In 
December 2015, President Obama signed the 2016 Consolidated Appropriations Act (P.L. 
114-113), which, through Senator Durbin’s leadership, transferred an additional 
$2 billion from TARP to the HHF program. After the completion of the two funding 
rounds, Treasury allocated $269 million in Hardest Hit Funds to Illinois, 
bringing the net funding received to over $715 million. As the state’s Housing 
Finance Agency, IHDA administers the program and used funds to create five 
foreclosure prevention and neighborhood stabilization programs to assist at-risk 
homeowners.
 “While many states were recovering quickly from the housing crisis, Illinois was 
lagging behind,” said IHDA Executive Director Audra Hamernik. “As the 
administrator of the Hardest Hit program, I am proud to report IHDA has assisted 
over 20,100 homeowners across 101 of the 102 counties in Illinois since the 
program originated in 2011.”
 
 Free applications for the program are available online through IHDA's Illinois 
Hardest Hit website until April 30, 2019:
www.illinoishardesthit.org.
 
				 
			[Illinois Housing Development 
			Authority] |