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Minnesota Senate backs foreclosure delay plan

ST. PAUL -- Senators said they were responding Monday to reckless residential mortgage lending practices when they approved a plan giving some homeowners facing foreclosure temporary reprieve.

ST. PAUL -- Senators said they were responding Monday to reckless residential mortgage lending practices when they approved a plan giving some homeowners facing foreclosure temporary reprieve.

The Minnesota Senate passed a bill 34-29 that allows some mortgage borrowers on the verge of foreclosure a delay making payments of up to one year. The delay is meant to give them time to negotiate new mortgage terms and avoid foreclosure.

"We are in a crisis the likes of which we have not seen since the Great Depression," said bill author Sen. Ellen Anderson, DFL-St. Paul, blaming the crisis largely on bad lending practices. "We're just trying to deal with predatory loans."

Anderson said the bill could help up to 12,000 homeowners. Critics said the bill is too broad, not targeted to victims of foreclosure fraud and would permit the state to intervene in private contracts.

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