(long, but essential)

NY Times May 30, 2010
Blacks in Memphis Lose Decades of Economic Gains
By MICHAEL POWELL

MEMPHIS — For two decades, Tyrone Banks was one of many 
African-Americans who saw his economic prospects brightening in this 
Mississippi River city.

A single father, he worked for FedEx and also as a custodian, built a 
handsome brick home, had a retirement account and put his eldest 
daughter through college.

Then the Great Recession rolled in like a fog bank. He refinanced his 
mortgage at a rate that adjusted sharply upward, and afterward he lost 
one of his jobs. Now Mr. Banks faces bankruptcy and foreclosure.

“I’m going to tell you the deal, plain-spoken: I’m a black man from the 
projects and I clean toilets and mop up for a living,” said Mr. Banks, a 
trim man who looks at least a decade younger than his 50 years. “I’m 
proud of what I’ve accomplished. But my whole life is backfiring.”

Not so long ago, Memphis, a city where a majority of the residents are 
black, was a symbol of a South where racial history no longer tightly 
constrained the choices of a rising black working and middle class. Now 
this city epitomizes something more grim: How rising unemployment and 
growing foreclosures in the recession have combined to destroy black 
wealth and income and erase two decades of slow progress.

The median income of black homeowners in Memphis rose steadily until 
five or six years ago. Now it has receded to a level below that of 1990 
— and roughly half that of white Memphis homeowners, according to an 
analysis conducted by Queens College Sociology Department for The New 
York Times.

Black middle-class neighborhoods are hollowed out, with prices 
plummeting and homes standing vacant in places like Orange Mound, White 
Haven and Cordova. As job losses mount — black unemployment here, 
mirroring national trends, has risen to 16.9 percent from 9 percent two 
years ago; it stands at 5.3 percent for whites — many blacks speak of 
draining savings and retirement accounts in an effort to hold onto their 
homes. The overall local foreclosure rate is roughly twice the national 
average.

The repercussions will be long-lasting, in Memphis and nationwide. The 
most acute economic divide in America remains the steadily widening gap 
between the wealth of black and white families, according to a recent 
study by the Institute on Assets and Social Policy at Brandeis 
University. For every dollar of wealth owned by a white family, a black 
or Latino family owns just 16 cents, according to a recent Federal 
Reserve study.

The Economic Policy Institute’s forthcoming “The State of Working 
America” analyzed the recession-driven drop in wealth. As of December 
2009, median white wealth dipped 34 percent, to $94,600; median black 
wealth dropped 77 percent, to $2,100. So the chasm widens, and Memphis 
is left to deal with the consequences.

“This cancer is metastasizing into an economic crisis for the city,” 
said Mayor A. C. Wharton Jr. in his riverfront office. “It’s done more 
to set us back than anything since the beginning of the civil rights 
movement.”

The mayor and former bank loan officers point a finger of blame at large 
national banks — in particular, Wells Fargo. During the last decade, 
they say, these banks singled out blacks in Memphis to sell them risky 
high-cost mortgages and consumer loans.

The City of Memphis and Shelby County sued Wells Fargo late last year, 
asserting that the bank’s foreclosure rate in predominantly black 
neighborhoods was nearly seven times that of the foreclosure rate in 
predominantly white neighborhoods. Other banks, including Citibank and 
Countrywide, foreclosed in more equal measure.

In a recent regulatory filing, Wells Fargo hinted that its legal 
troubles could multiply. “Certain government entities are conducting 
investigations into the mortgage lending practices of various Wells 
Fargo affiliated entities, including whether borrowers were steered to 
more costly mortgage products,” the bank stated.

Wells Fargo officials are not backing down in the face of the legal 
attacks. They say the bank made more prime loans and has foreclosed on 
fewer homes than most banks, and that the worst offenders — those banks 
that handed out bushels of no-money-down, negative-amortization loans — 
have gone out of business.

“The mistake Memphis officials made is that they picked the lender who 
was doing the most lending as opposed to the lender who was doing the 
worst lending,” said Brad Blackwell, executive vice president for Wells 
Fargo Home Mortgage.

Not every recessionary ill can be heaped upon banks. Some black 
homeowners contracted the buy-a-big-home fever that infected many 
Americans and took out ill-advised loans. And unemployment has pitched 
even homeowners who hold conventional mortgages into foreclosure.

Federal and state officials say that high-cost mortgages leave 
hard-pressed homeowners especially vulnerable and that statistical 
patterns are inescapable.

“The more segregated a community of color is, the more likely it is that 
homeowners will face foreclosure because the lenders who peddled the 
most toxic loans targeted those communities,” Thomas E. Perez, the 
assistant attorney general in charge of the Justice Department’s civil 
rights division, told a Congressional committee.

The reversal of economic fortune in Memphis is particularly grievous for 
a black professional class that has taken root here, a group that 
includes Mr. Wharton, a lawyer who became mayor in 2009. Demographers 
forecast that Memphis will soon become the nation’s first majority black 
metropolitan region.

That prospect, noted William Mitchell, a black real estate agent, once 
augured for a fine future.

“Our home values were up, income up,” he said. He pauses, his 
frustration palpable. “What we see today, it’s a new world. And not a 
good one.”

Porch View

“You don’t want to walk up there! That’s the wild, wild west,” a 
neighbor shouts. “Nothing on that block but foreclosed homes and squatters.”

To roam Soulsville, a neighborhood south of downtown Memphis, is to find 
a place where bungalows and brick homes stand vacant amid azaleas and 
dogwoods, where roofs are swaybacked and thieves punch holes through 
walls to strip the copper piping. The weekly newspaper is swollen with 
foreclosure notices.

Here and there, homes are burned by arsonists.

Yet just a few years back, Howard Smith felt like a rich man. A 
56-year-old African-American engineer with a gray-flecked beard, 
butter-brown corduroys and red sneakers, he sits with two neighbors on a 
porch on Richmond Avenue and talks of his miniature real estate empire: 
He owned a home on this block, another in nearby White Haven and another 
farther out. His job paid well; a pleasant retirement beckoned.

Then he was laid off. He has sent out 60 applications, obtained a dozen 
interviews and received no calls back. A bank foreclosed on his biggest 
house. He will be lucky to get $30,000 for his house here, which was 
assessed at $80,000 two years ago.

“It all disappeared overnight,” he says.

“Mmm-mm, yes sir, overnight,” says his neighbor, Gwen Ward. In her 50s, 
she, too, was laid off, from her supervisory job of 15 years, and she 
moved in with her elderly mother. “It seemed we were headed up and then” 
— she snaps her fingers — “it all went away.”

Mr. Smith nods. “The banks and Wall Street have taken the middle class 
and shredded us,” he says.

For the greater part of the last century, racial discrimination crippled 
black efforts to buy homes and accumulate wealth. During the post-World 
War II boom years, banks and real estate agents steered blacks to 
segregated neighborhoods, where home appreciation lagged far behind that 
of white neighborhoods.

Blacks only recently began to close the home ownership gap with whites, 
and thus accumulate wealth — progress that now is being erased. In 
practical terms, this means black families have less money to pay for 
college tuition, invest in businesses or sustain them through hard times.

“We’re wiping out whatever wealth blacks have accumulated — it assures 
racial economic inequality for the next generation,” said Thomas M. 
Shapiro, director of the Institute on Assets and Social Policy at 
Brandeis University.

The African-American renaissance in Memphis was halting. Residential 
housing patterns remain deeply segregated. While big employers — FedEx 
and AutoZone — have headquarters here, wage growth is not robust. 
African-American employment is often serial rather than continuous, and 
many people lack retirement and health plans.

But the recession presents a crisis of a different magnitude.

Mayor Wharton walks across his office to a picture window and stares at 
a shimmering Mississippi River. He describes a recent drive through 
ailing neighborhoods. It is akin, he says, to being a doctor “looking 
for pulse rates in his patients and finding them near death.”

He adds: “I remember riding my bike as a kid through thriving 
neighborhoods. Now it’s like someone bombed my city.”

Banking on Nothing

Camille Thomas, a 40-year-old African-American, loved working for Wells 
Fargo. “I felt like I could help people,” she recalled over coffee.

As the subprime market heated up, she said, the bank pressure to move 
more loans — for autos, for furniture, for houses — edged into mania. 
“It was all about selling your units and getting your bonus,” she said.

Ms. Thomas and three other Wells Fargo employees have given affidavits 
for the city’s lawsuit against the bank, and their statements about bank 
practices reinforce one another.

“Your manager would say, ‘Let me see your cold-call list. I want you to 
concentrate on these ZIP codes,’ and you knew those were 
African-American neighborhoods,” she recalled. “We were told, ‘Oh, they 
aren’t so savvy.’ ”

She described tricks of the trade, several of dubious legality. She said 
supervisors had told employees to white out incomes on loan applications 
and substitute higher numbers. Agents went “fishing” for customers, 
mailing live checks to leads. When a homeowner deposited the check, it 
became a high-interest loan, with a rate of 20 to 29 percent. Then bank 
agents tried to talk the customer into refinancing, using the house as 
collateral.

Several state and city regulators have placed Wells Fargo Bank in their 
cross hairs, and their lawsuits include similar accusations. In 
Illinois, the state attorney general has accused the bank of marketing 
high-cost loans to blacks and Latinos while selling lower-cost loans to 
white borrowers. John P. Relman, the Washington, D.C., lawyer handling 
the Memphis case, has sued Wells Fargo on behalf of the City of 
Baltimore, asserting that the bank systematically exploited black borrowers.

A federal judge in Baltimore dismissed that lawsuit, saying it had made 
overly broad claims about the damage done by Wells Fargo. City lawyers 
have refiled papers.

“I don’t think it’s going too far to say that banks are at the core of 
the disaster here,” said Phyllis G. Betts, director of the Center for 
Community Building and Neighborhood Action at the University of Memphis, 
which has closely examined bank lending records.

Former employees say Wells Fargo loan officers marketed the most 
expensive loans to black applicants, even when they should have 
qualified for prime loans. This practice is known as reverse redlining.

Webb A. Brewer, a Memphis lawyer, recalls poring through piles of loan 
papers and coming across name after name of blacks with subprime 
mortgages. “This is money out of their pockets lining the purses of the 
banks,” he said.

For a $150,000 mortgage, a difference of three percentage points — the 
typical spread between a conventional and subprime loan — tacks on 
$90,000 in interest payments over its 30-year life.

Wells Fargo officials say they rejected the worst subprime products, and 
they portray their former employees as disgruntled rogues who subverted 
bank policies.

“They acknowledged that they knowingly worked to defeat our fair lending 
policies and controls,” said Mr. Blackwell, the bank executive.

Bank officials attribute the surge in black foreclosures in Memphis to 
the recession. They say that the average credit score in black Census 
tracts is 108 points lower than in white tracts.

“People who have less are more vulnerable during downturns,” said Andrew 
L. Sandler of Buckley Sandler, a law firm representing Wells Fargo.

Mr. Relman, the lawyer representing Memphis, is unconvinced. “If a bad 
economy and poor credit explains it, you’d expect to see other banks 
with the same ratio of foreclosures in the black community,” he said. 
“But you don’t. Wells is the outlier.”

Whatever the responsibility, individual or corporate, the detritus is 
plain to see. Within a two-block radius of that porch in Soulsville, 
Wells Fargo holds mortgages on nearly a dozen foreclosures. That trail 
of pain extends right out to the suburbs.

Begging to Stay

To turn into Tyrone Banks’s subdivision in Hickory Ridge is to find his 
dream in seeming bloom. Stone lions guard his door, the bushes are 
trimmed and a freshly waxed sport utility vehicle sits in his driveway.

For years, Mr. Banks was assiduous about paying down his debt: he stayed 
two months ahead on his mortgage, and he helped pay off his mother’s 
mortgage.

Two years ago, his doorbell rang, and two men from Wells Fargo offered 
to consolidate his consumer loans into a low-cost mortgage.

“I thought, ‘This is great! ’ ” Mr. Banks says. “When you have four 
kids, college expenses, you look for any savings.”

What those men did not tell Mr. Banks, he says (and Ms. Thomas, who 
studied his case, confirms), is that his new mortgage had an adjustable 
rate. When it reset last year, his payment jumped to $1,700 from $1,200.

Months later, he ruptured his Achilles tendon playing basketball, 
hindering his work as a janitor. And he lost his job at FedEx. Now 
foreclosure looms.

He is by nature an optimistic man; his smile is rueful.

“Man, I should I have stayed ‘old school’ with my finances,” he said. “I 
sat down my youngest son on the couch and I told him, ‘These are rough 
times.’ ”

Many neighbors are in similar straits. Foreclosure notices flutter like 
flags on the doors of two nearby homes, and the lawns there are 
overgrown and mud fills the gutters.

Wells Fargo says it has modified three mortgages for every foreclosure 
nationwide — although bank officials declined to provide the data for 
Memphis. A study by the Neighborhood Economic Development Advocacy 
Project and six nonprofit groups found that the nation’s four largest 
banks, Wells Fargo, Bank of America, Citigroup and JPMorgan Chase, had 
cut their prime mortgage refinancing 33 percent in predominantly 
minority communities, even as prime refinancing in white neighborhoods 
rose 32 percent from 2006 to 2008.

For Mr. Banks, it is as if he found the door wide open on his way into 
debt but closed as he tries to get out.

“Some days it feels like everyone I know in Memphis is in trouble,” Mr. 
Banks says. “We’re all just begging to stay in our homes, basically.”
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