How a D.C.-based reverse mortgage assistance program was revived

United States Capitol Washington DC street view lights cars night time

At the end of August, the District of Columbia Housing Finance Agency (DCHFA) announced that it had relaunched its Reverse Mortgage Insurance & Tax Payment Program (ReMIT), which originally began in 2019 and expanded in 2020 before being halted at the end of 2021.

Tikisha Wilson, director of single-family programs at DCHFA, sat down with HousingWire’s Reverse Mortgage Daily (RMD) to offer details about the program’s revival, what made it possible and the kind of assistance it seeks to provide to reverse mortgage borrowers residing within the nation’s capital.

Reason for ending

When asked if the prior version of the ReMIT program ended due to an exhaustion of allocated funds, Wilson instead explained that inflation was the primary culprit behind that action.

“After the legislation ended, the council realized there was still a need to assist the seniors that were under a reverse mortgage, and so temporary legislation has been passed to allow ReMIT to relaunch,” Wilson explained.

A permanent revival of the program is being considered, but Wilson is unsure when the D.C. council will convene to debate and potentially implement such a move. She has been told, however, that it could happen later in 2024. There is no end date for the current round of assistance.

“There’s not necessarily a cutoff point,” she said. “We’re just trying to help as many seniors as we can with the bucket of funds that we have that carried over from the previous legislation. “When the funds that were implemented under the previous legislation run out, the new legislation should be passed by then, so we won’t have a lapse in assistance.”

Vocal support

As far as why the revival was sought by her agency, Wilson said it simply came down to listening to the residents of Washington, D.C., and bringing it back based on what DCHFA was hearing.

“They were very vocal that there was still a need,” she said. “The community got out, they spoke with the council and to us, and it was determined that we wanted to fill that gap because there aren’t a lot of reverse mortgage assistance programs out there. Since the need was still there, and we already knew how to run the program — it was just dormant due to the legislation — it was a no-brainer to revive it.”

One of the reasons the program is described as a “no-brainer” is because it was quite successful as far as the agency’s assistance programs go, Wilson explained.

“It was very successful. Around $200,000 was distributed, and our average loan size was around $3,900,” she said. “So, that’s roughly 50 loans — 50 Washingtonians that we were able to help save their homes. It was very successful.”