Woonsocket Residents Will Benefit Again From Tax Sale Protections

A year after it The Public’s Radio learned that residents could not benefit from a statewide program, the city and Rhode Island Housing officials agreed to close the loophole

The home of Woonsocket residents Sabrina and Jonathan Harlan, who faced foreclosure after getting behind on their property taxes.
The home of Woonsocket residents Sabrina and Jonathan Harlan, who faced foreclosure after getting behind on their property taxes.
Matthew Healey/The Public’s Radio
Share
The home of Woonsocket residents Sabrina and Jonathan Harlan, who faced foreclosure after getting behind on their property taxes.
The home of Woonsocket residents Sabrina and Jonathan Harlan, who faced foreclosure after getting behind on their property taxes.
Matthew Healey/The Public’s Radio
Woonsocket Residents Will Benefit Again From Tax Sale Protections
Copy

Woonsocket residents will now benefit from statewide protections against losing their homes in a tax sale after the state housing finance agency announced Thursday it would no longer exclude local homeowners from a program designed to prevent foreclosure.

Under the Madeline Walker Act, Rhode Island Housing has the authority to purchase tax liens placed on property when homeowners get behind on their bills before investors, offering protection to homeowners on the brink.

In March 2023, The Public’s Radio reported that Rhode Island Housing had stopped purchasing liens in Woonsocket under the Madeline Walker Act in 2016, following a disagreement with local leaders over vacancy taxes. At the time, The Public’s Radio identified nearly three dozen homeowners who had faced foreclosure, despite appearing eligible for the law’s protections.

“We need to work with them,” Woonsocket Mayor Christopher Beauchamp said. “There’s a housing crisis everywhere, right?”

The city’s disagreement with Rhode Island Housing was related to the tax sale process. Rather than deal with settling debts directly with homeowners, local governments and utility companies in Rhode Island routinely collect on overdue bills by attaching a lien to property and holding a tax sale. At an auction, investors can buy the lien in exchange for paying the overdue bills. That means an investor has a right to the property unless the homeowner pays them back. If homeowners can’t pay off the initial bills plus interest and fees within a year, investors can foreclose on the home.

The Madeline Walker Act allows Rhode Island Housing to purchase homeowners’ tax debt before investors can scoop it up, giving homeowners more time and leeway to pay off what they owe. The act, passed in 2006, was named for an elderly woman in Providence who lost her house after falling behind on her water bills. An investor purchased the lien the city placed on her home for $836.

This story was reported by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

A settlement paid by Barletta Heavy Division, Inc. for using contaminated fill while constructing Rhode Island’s Route 6/10 Connector project will fund pediatric dental clinics that serve low-income families.
For the Blackstone Valley Schools co-op, this season has been about grief, support and staying together — on and off the ice
Plastic products cost us, even after we’re done with them — That’s because municipal recycling is paid with taxpayer money. But could the companies that made these products be responsible for paying for them?
Keepers at Roger Williams Park Zoo slept on-site and adjusted routines to ensure animals stayed warm, fed and secure during Rhode Island’s latest storm
The longtime Valley Breeze editor discusses the stories that mattered most and why he decided it was time to step away
Reimbursement rate set by state law in 1979 woefully inadequate to cover car repairs, motorists and auto repair experts say