Car insurance

Why it Never Makes Business Sense For a Bank to Foreclose on an Owner Occupied Home

I believe that in the current housing and economic environment (with declining home values nationwide) it never makes economic sense for a Bank/Servicer to foreclosure on an owner occupied home. In a declining home price environment, a foreclosure is always the least attractive option for a Bank economically, as the time and cost of foreclosure result in lower economic returns compared to other pre-foreclosure options. As a result, I believe we can successfully and rightfully place a temporary nationwide foreclosure moratorium on homes occupied by cooperative owners/borrowers – if we design such a moratorium right and support it with appropriate private sector initiatives.

A foreclosure should only be necessary if and when the borrower (individual or family) doesn’t return the Bank’s phone calls or respond to the Bank’s letters and is otherwise uncooperative on the issue of how to address their housing costs and reality in a way that is sustainable for them and the Bank longer term. This in my mind is a key concept: the goal of all foreclosure prevention initiatives should be to adapt the borrowers economic reality with their housing reality.

In simple terms, here’s how we can avoid foreclosures in a way that is consistent with good business and good policy:

1. Loan modifications to make housing costs affordable: Maximize the number of borrowers whose loan is modified such that their housing costs are consistent, on a go forward term basis, with their go forward monthly income. The Obama administration has announced several initiatives to expand current loan modification programs to help achieve this goal.

However, loan modification cannot work for everyone. If an individual’s earnings are down a lot with no immediate prospect of returning to previous higher levels (which is the case for many people in the housing, real estate and mortgage sectors)…then they really cannot afford to stay where they currently are. For example, if a realtor previously earned $500,000 per year and is living in a $3 million dollar home but is now only making $100,000 per year then loan modification just isn’t an option for them. A different solution is required.

2. Servicer assisted short sales: For every individual who does not qualify for a loan modification, a servicer assisted short sale should be pursued right at the point the loan modification decision is made. In a servicer assisted short sale, the (troubled) borrower works with the servicer as a partner instead of adversary. The home is sold for market value, the difference between the amount of the home sale proceeds and the loan amount is forgiven (and current law waives any tax liability associated with this forgiven amount), and the servicer can even afford to pay the borrower to help make their move to more affordable housing smooth, graceful and respectful.

This type of short sale program is and should be the industry standard – and I and HausAngeles are enthusiastically working with a leading servicer to pilot and refine this program in Los Angeles (so it can quickly be rolled out nationwide).

The above foreclosure prevention strategy – implemented in a coordinated and well communicated manner – can effectively eliminate foreclosures for all cooperative troubled borrowers while actually reducing servicer/Bank losses on these troubled assets.

Can doing the right thing be good business? On the issue of owner occupied foreclosures I believe the answer is yes – as long as all parties are polite, respectful and realistic.

Disclaimer: This blog is not intended to provide legal or tax advice to anyone and merely reflects my personal understanding and opinions on this issue. Individuals should consult with their tax advisor before taking any action based on the above.

The Silver Lining of The Crisis: Affordability and Humility

It’s hard to find much good news nowadays, surrounded as we are by doom and gloom attitudes and news at work, in the media and in conversations. However, I see at least 2 important areas where the current trend is positive for us as a society: Housing Affordability and Humility.

First, as a result of the housing crisis and the tremendous (and at least for now, continuing) declines in the prices of residential real estate, home or condo ownership is suddenly becoming a viable possibility for many lower income families. As an example, please check out the press release below from the California Association of Realtors (a trade organization) which discusses the massive improvements in housing affordability in California over the past 12 months. The analysis below is grounded in Q4 08 vs. Q4 07 data and will continue to “improve” (from a lower income family standpoint) in the coming months. This information is a far cry from conversations I remember just a few years ago regarding how housing had become a “luxury product” in California. Given the tremendous and well acknowledged familial and social benefits of home ownership, this significant improvement in housing affordability is great news for California and for Los Angeles.

Second, one of my least favorite aspects of the boom days was the massive inflation of ego’s all around me. Many people made much easy money during the boom, and in too many cases this financial success was accompanied by an increased sense of relative self-importance (for reasons discussed by both Nassim Nicholas Taleb and Malcolm Gladwell in recent books). The current crisis is quickly downsizing people’s ego’s and I, for one, think a humbler, gentler us will be a better us as a whole.

Entry-level housing affordability increases to 59 percent
Click here for the full article: Full Article

Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2009

C.A.R. reports entry-level housing affordability increases to 59 percent

LOS ANGELES (Feb. 18) The percentage of households that could afford to buy an entry-level home in California stood at 59 percent in the fourth quarter of 2008, compared with 33 percent for the same period a year ago, according to a report released today by the CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® (C.A.R.).

C.A.R.’s First Time Buyer Housing Affordability Index (FTB-HAI) measures the percentage of households that can afford to purchase an entry-level home in California. C.A.R. also reports first-time buyer indexes for regions and select counties within the state. The Index is the most fundamental measure of housing well-being for first-time buyers in the state.

The minimum household income needed to purchase an entry-level home at $248,030 in California in the fourth quarter of 2008 was $48,900, based on an adjustable interest rate of 6.02 percent and assuming a 10 percent down payment. First-time buyers typically purchase a home equal to 85 percent of the prevailing median price. The monthly payment including taxes and insurance was $1,630 for the fourth quarter of 2008.

At $48,900, the minimum qualifying income was 42 percent lower than a year earlier when households needed $83,700 to qualify for a loan on an entry-level home. Recent decreases in home prices and mortgage rates have brought affordability into better alignment with income levels of the typical California households, where the median household income is $59,160.

At 76 percent, the High Desert region was the most affordable area in the state. The San Luis Obispo County region was the least affordable in the state at 44 percent, followed by the Los Angeles County region at 46 percent.

The First-Time Buyer Housing Affordability Index also rose 6 percentage points in the fourth quarter of this year compared with the third quarter of 2008, due to a 14.1 percent decrease in the entry-level median home price.

Historical affordability data can be found at: historic data.

Announcing the creation of “HR Helping Hands”: An All Volunteer HR Professionals Mentor Network

Every American can and should be a part of the solution to the historic housing and economic crisis our country and people are currently grappling with. This is my strong personal view as well as a key founding principle behind my real estate company HausAngeles, and is a view that is shared by most everyone around me both at work and at home. The truth is that until America is back on its feet and stronger economically, there will be millions of Americans (possibly up to 5 or 10% of our population) who need different types of help….but this number will be far smaller than the number of Americans (likely 90 to 95% of our population) who are in a position to help…in some way, big or small, monetary or non-monetary. So if we can help connect those with the ability and willingness to help with those that need this help….we can accelerate the path to economic recovery in a manner that isn’t dependent on the government “bailing everyone out”.

It is with this spirit that I have founded “Human Resources (HR) Helping Hands”: an all volunteer, free network of professionals with HR experience who want to donate their time and talents to help fellow Americans (e.g., those that have lost a job recently) in need of advice and support with respect to their job and career transitions.

As a former Chief People Officer for a 10,000+ employee organization, I have worked with many Human Resources professionals and know that “HR people” are helpers and empathizers by nature. Many HR professionals really want to help those impacted by this crisis, particularly given the large number of people experiencing job loss right now, but don’t have an easy way to get connected with these individuals in need. Enabling this “connection” is what HR Helping Hands is all about.

In the few days since I made the decision to create this network, I am already inspired by the enthusiasm and response from my HR colleagues and friends. Susan Cline, my former (fabulous) assistant at Indymac Bank, has agreed to be the “administrator” of this network…purely in her “free time” (i.e., during the evenings after she comes home from work). Key current and former Indymac HR leaders – Annissa Deshpande, Jennifer Pikoos and Marie Therese Wynne – have also joined the network, as well as agreed to be part of the core team that helps to build and manage this network (again, all in their personal time).

The network is “live” so if you are an HR professional (or know one) who would like to join and help, please email Susan at susanmc50@gmail.com. Alternatively, if you have a friend or acquaintance who could use an HR mentor…connect them with Susan to help them get an HR professional mentor assigned.

In order to keep the process simple (since this is an all-volunteer initiative), we are asking the HR professionals for the following minimum support for each mentee: an email or phone resume consultation/feedback session, and a 30m or more job and career advice session. Mentors can decide to do more and mentee’s can ask for more help…but we will leave this up to them to discuss and resolve.

I will keep you blog updated as this initiative progresses….and hope you will share this with anyone you think might be either a potential mentor or mentee. ray

Peace of Mind as a Tool to Abate the US Crisis of Confidence

I believe – and I think this is a relatively non-controversial view – that the current recession/crisis has been and will be worse/deeper as a result of fear seeping deep into the American psyche. Even though I disagree with many of the actions and in-actions of the Bush administration/team, I can understand at some level the logic supporting their reluctance to step in to prevent company/Bank failures early in the crisis. However, this very reluctance and the resulting inaction in helping fundamentally sound companies survive failure-inducing-panics significantly deepened the economic crisis by escalating the level of panic and fear in people’s psyche (as consumers or financial counterparties).

Basically, the prior administration let companies fail due to panic and this was, in my opinion, a fatal logical flaw in their policies. I believe if they had prevented any/all panic-driven failures, we would have had a more orderly market correction, a softer recession, and less unemployment/people problems.

Aside from this view described above, 2 other factors support the idea described below (and first introduced in an earlier blog). First, the fact that there is an over-supply of housing in the US today. I think this is a well accepted fact: just look at all the vacant foreclosed and unsold homes in the market and on Bank’s balance sheets. Second, food is cheap in America. This was a surprise to me when I moved to the US from India in the early 1990’s: a country where the poor are fat and the rich are thin! This is exactly the opposite of the situation you see in most less developed nations including India.

So my idea/concept is very simple:

Most people’s #1 and #2 fear related to this crisis are: will I and my family lose the roof over our heads at some point due to this crisis, and will I and/or my family need to go hungry if things get really bad. People are scared because they don’t know how bad things can get for them, and they are worried about a worst case scenario playing out. There are even well known leaders/voices discussing this worst case scenario, and advising people to stock up on guns and food in preparation of a 2nd depression with civil unrest.

Well…it seems to me the housing problem is the simplest to solve as a country. Given the oversupply of homes nationwide, there is no reason a single American family should go homeless as a result of this crisis. Yet, every day families are facing this very issue. I know this because I have heard some of these very people speak at some of our public forums in LA (including one last week). The food situation is similar….food is cheap in America…super cheap relative to most other countries (on a purchasing power parity basis). Therefore, there’s no reason a single American should go hungry as a result of this crisis.

I think if the US President and/or Government were to tell all Americans simply this: We will make sure not a single American family goes homeless or hungry as a result of this economic crisis….that this would have a tremendous calming effect on the American people….and will accelerate our economic recovery. I think this “guarantee” should be relatively cheap to provide….especially in relation to the monies already being invested and spent to stabilize the financial system and stimulate the economy.

As with so many other things in life, there is both a real and an emotional/mental aspect to this crisis. If we can address people’s biggest fears as described above, I think it would go a long way toward addressing the mental issues….which are often even more important/impactful than the real ones.

February 26, 2009 Update

Unfortunately, the reality on the ground – especially in California – continues to get worse. Witness this article today in Bloomberg on how previously middle class families are standing in line for government subsidized housing and food/social services due to the impact of the crisis on their lives. See article below:

California’s Newly Poor Push Social Services to Brink

Feb. 26 (Bloomberg) — In California’s Contra Costa County, 40,000 families are applying for just 350 affordable-housing vouchers. Church-operated pantries are running out of food. Crisis calls have more than doubled in the city of Antioch, where the Family Stress Center occupies the site of a former bank.

The worst financial crisis in seven decades is forcing thousands of previously middle-income workers to seek social services, overwhelming local agencies, clinics and nonprofits. Each month 16,000 people, including many who were making $60,000 to $100,000 annually just a few years ago, fill four county offices requesting financial, medical or food assistance.

For the full article click here: Bloomberg article

Foreclosure 101 from LA Times: Link and Thoughts

Given the widespread nature of our current economic troubles and the number of people having issues making their mortgage payment, there are a lot of players in the market who are trying to help consumers. Some of these players are legitimate and well-intentioned…and unfortunately, some are not. When in doubt, I always prefer to direct people to government, government supported, or non-profit resources (i.e., free resources).

Here is an LA Times article that provides good information on the foreclosure issue, including contact information for government/non-profit resources available to homeowners in trouble in the Los Angeles area.

One key and obvious issue the article mentions and which I’d like to re-iterate is this: we can debate many aspects of how to best act when you are unable to make your mortgage payments in full and on time, but one thing we should not debate is this: avoiding the problem and not doing anything is the wrong answer. Unfortunately, too many homeowners do just this – avoid addressing the issue until it’s too late. If you don’t feel comfortable calling your Bank/servicer, contact one of these independent resources and try to be proactive in addressing the issue.

Mission and Vision for HausAngeles

A recent blog introduced you to “HausAngeles” and described what we do, the geographies we serve, what’s unique about our approach and who’s on the team. If you missed that blog and related newsletter, please click here to check it out: Introducing HausAngeles. Now, I’d share with you our mission and vision for HausAngeles. You can listen to me describing this live or read the text below:

Foundation: HausAngeles – and it’s vision and mission – are grounded in who we (the co-founders of HausAngeles) are as people and what we’re trying to accomplish in life. Here are the key drivers:

1. Our Passions and Interests: AV and I have the following key passions and interests (which are reflected in both our educational and professional experiences to date): Public Policy/Economics, Problem Solving, Business/Marketing, Architecture/Design and Technology. We plan to create a business that “connects these dots” in a way that could sustain our family consistent with our values.
2. Our Values and Principles: We are building a business that reflects who we are as people in 2 key ways: (a) It’s not just about making money, but in a significant way about giving back and helping others; (b) We always do what we believe is right, no matter what
3. Our Family and Life Goals: We are highly family oriented and love Los Angeles (where we live). We want to create a business that is local and doesn’t require regular travel.

Mission: With a foundation in the above principles/goals, our mission at HausAngeles is to:

1. Solve real problems on the ground: As we all know, there are plenty of problems in the real estate market right now particularly in the area of foreclosures and foreclosure prevention
2. Improve the practice of real estate: In particular, we see a need and opportunity to:
a. Better educate and inform consumers on the market situation and also the real estate/mortgage process. This includes everyone given how complex the mortgage and real estate process is, but particularly those that are less educated and looking for homes in the lower priced ranges.
b. Improve the level of professionalism and ethics practiced in real estate
3. Help people and create opportunities: We are passionate about helping those less fortunate than us. As founders of a private company, we can make our company anything we want and so we decided to become social entrepreneurs by:
a. Donating 10% of our earnings – before either AV or I get paid – to help people in need or to create opportunities for those that lack them such as the kids that live in public housing developments
b. Donating more when we make more: For transactions over $1million, we will increase the above number to 15% and for transactions over $2million, we will increase it to 20%

Vision: Based on the above as well as the reality on the ground in Los Angeles real estate, here is vision and focus at HausAngeles:

1. Foreclosure Prevention and Loss Mitigation: Design and implement innovative programs to help consumers, prevent foreclosures, reduce lender losses, and help the housing market find its bottom. We have developed a short (3 pages total) vision on this topic, which is published on this blog. We will be working with key lenders/servicers to design, pilot, refine and widely share (with an open source philosophy) programs consistent with this vision. Stay tuned for an announcement on a key foreclosure prevention program pilot we are slated to launch in the next 30 or so days – in the area of lender assisted short sales.
2. Affordable housing/First Time Home Buyers: In real estate, those generally less educated, less informed consumers who are looking for lower priced “affordable” homes (say in the $200,000 to 400,000 range) and need education/information on the mortgage and real estate process the most….unfortunately receive the worst quality real estate support and education. We think this makes no sense, and will be focusing on supporting this key market with high quality, education driven first time home buyer/affordable housing programs.
3. Investments: We believe it is likely the current down housing market will represent some of the best real estate investment opportunities in our lifetimes. Certainly, we plan to personally “double down” in real estate during this cycle. We will be working with investors, as individuals and in groups, to help them identify and execute on real estate investment opportunities.

Foreclosure Prevention & Housing Market Stabilization: Thoughts from the Ground Level

Please find below a brief proposal I have put together on the issue of foreclosure prevention and housing market stabilization based on what I and the team at HausAngeles as well as our colleagues, clients and strategic partners are actually seeing (and not seeing) on the ground in Los Angeles/Southern California. I and we do not claim to have all the answers on this “massive issue”. Nor do we claim all of the ideas below are mine or ours (please see footnote 1: acknowledgements). However, refining and executing on some or all of these ideas will be a key focus for me and the team at HausAngeles for the foreseeable future and until the housing market stabilizes. Our primary geographic focus is Los Angeles, but we plan to share learnings and information widely and freely to maximize impact at the ground level.

Preventing Foreclosures, Helping Consumers and Accelerating the Stabilization of the US Housing Market

Background and Context

I am the former Chief People/Administrative Officer and CEO Chief of Staff of Indymac Bank, who found herself at the epicenter of the mortgage and housing crisis since mid-2007. I resigned from Indymac after the FDIC placed the company into conservatorship, but decided to continue to focus on the housing/real estate sector where I saw and continue to see tremendous opportunity for positive impact, both personal and professional.

As I have gotten deeper into the real estate market and understood the reality on the ground on foreclosures[1], I have discovered numerous untapped and under-tapped opportunities to better help consumers manage their financial issues/life transitions, prevent foreclosures, reduce lender/investor losses, and help the housing market “find its bottom”. I strongly believe the housing market reaching bottom (or close to it) will mark a crucial turning point in our economic recovery.

Two interesting and important characteristics that I believe many of these opportunities share are:

1. Many (if not most) of the proposed initiatives actually help consumers, lenders/investors and the US economy. This alignment of interests is historic as these stakeholders often have competing objectives, especially in times of crisis;
2. Many of these opportunities require government coordination and support to work effectively and expediently, as key implementation challenges are common across industry players and/or require government support/regulatory changes.

Untapped and Under-tapped Opportunities to Help Consumers, Reduce Loan Losses and Accelerate the Bottoming of the Housing Market:

1. Ensure every homeowner in trouble who can realistically afford to continue to own their home with a modified loan, gets one as soon as possible

* One of the big reasons a large percentage of borrowers in trouble currently don’t get timely help via a loan modification is literally because they don’t respond to letters from their Bank. It’s not difficult to understand this behavior: consumers delinquent on payments are scared to open/respond to letters from the very organization that they owe money to (which they are not sure they can pay back as promised).
* On the other hand, there are thousands (likely millions) of licensed professionals (e.g., realtors, financial advisors/planners) already living in the same communities as the borrowers in trouble…who are not being leveraged to solve this communication problem.
* So let’s leverage these licensed professionals on the ground to ensure we have evaluated every borrower who is behind on their mortgage to see if there’s a way to realistically help them retain ownership of their home[2].

2. Turn more owners into renters:

* In times of crisis, it’s critical to prioritize what’s most important. My belief is that safety and family are more important for homeowners in trouble than ownership, given the seriousness of the crisis we are facing.
* As a result, I believe we should implement programs that turn some current homeowners into renters without making them move e.g., by transferring ownership of the homes they are living in and love to investors who are looking for income earning assets.

3. Implement systematic, lender supported short sales:

* Where it is not possible for the current homeowner to continue to own their home, we should avoid the foreclosure process (which is painful, time consuming and expensive) and instead facilitate the sale of the home with the borrower and lender working as partners instead of adversaries.
* As someone in the real estate business I can tell you that getting a short sale executed right now is nightmarish. There are no industry standards and most lenders are not set up internally to properly approve/manage short sales. Yet short sales nip the foreclosure process in the bud and are better for homeowners (who would have the opportunity to adjust their housing reality to their economic reality and prospects with greater dignity and respect), lenders and the US economy[3].
* Since systematic, lender assisted short sales are a lower cost option to foreclosure, it may be possible to divert some of the cost savings back to consumers to help them with their life transition (e.g., for relocation and/or other expenses related to their move/life change)

4. Implement rent to own programs to expand demand
* For families who do not have enough saved to make a down payment or qualify for a conventional mortgage but who have jobs/steady monthly income there is an opportunity to create future home ownership opportunities through creative rent to own program designs

5. Expand the nation’s affordable housing stock:
* In many cities across the country there is currently an acute shortage of affordable housing and the existing affordable housing stock is in poor condition. In Los Angeles (where I am personally involved), as an example, we are embarking on a 25 year plan to redevelop our ~10,000 public housing units. Such redevelopment and development programs will take decades and cost billions.
* Why embark on that costly and time consuming process, when we have an excess supply of housing nationwide already? Instead, let’s turn some of these currently empty/lender owned properties into affordable housing and bring hope to those that sit at the bottom rung of the economic ladder in our society.
* I believe Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac REO’s (which are currently being held on these entities’ balance sheets due to recent foreclosure moratoriums), or a significant portion of them, are likely best suited for this purpose. Some of this newly created affordable housing could be transferred to public housing authorities across the nation for management/administration, while some could be sold to investors as income-earning Section 8 or other affordable housing.[4]

Thoughts on Implementation

Given the seriousness of the current housing and economic crisis and my view that housing reaching a bottom will mark a crucial turning point in our economic recovery, I believe a cross-functional, multi-agency, multi-lender task force/team should be put together with a goal of clearing the market of the current total inventory of bank/lender/investor owned single family properties over the next 12 months.

In other words, let’s do whatever we can (after agreeing on some basic principles and philosophies) to try to have the housing market bottom by the end of 2009/early 2010. Once the current inventory has been cleared, we can focus on efficiently clearing the market only of new inventory (which should hopefully be at lower levels with the help of the President’s job creation plan and the effect of some of the above described programs).

Concluding Thoughts

I believe there are 2 key flaws in our current approaches on foreclosure prevention and clearing the market of troubled real estate inventory. First, foreclosure moratoriums, although well intentioned, only “push the ball down the road” to be dealt with at a later time i.e., these moratoriums are reducing supply today and are likely to prolong the duration of home price declines. Second, I believe there is an excessive focus on home ownership as a primary goal, whereas I believe we are ‘beyond ownership’ as a country. Dealing with the housing crisis should be about safety and family, and about reflecting American families’ actual economic reality in their housing reality (as gracefully and kindly as possible). These core principles are a foundation of this proposal.

[1] My views/ideas on foreclosures, REO’s and the real estate market reflect key input and insights from: Tony Ebers, Chief Operating Officer (Indymac), Eric Friedman, SVP Default Management (Indymac), John Olinski, EVP (Indymac), Ron Bergum (CEO, Prospect Mortgage), and Ron Garber, CEO, shortsaleplan.com

[2] Note: The Hope Now alliance does not include individuals including licensed professionals

[3]For example: Short sales result in an ~2year credit impact for homeowners in CA vs. ~5 years for a foreclosure. Also, short sales are significantly less expensive than foreclosures (e.g., legal fees, home damage) and don’t have the reputational stain of foreclosures. Finally, short sales in a declining home price environment result in significantly less loan losses by accelerating the timing of asset sale

[4] I should note that I believe any new affordable housing created should come “with strings” i.e., individuals and families should be committed to learning and earning their way out of government subsidized housing within a defined period of 3-5 years to be eligible to move into the new housing.

Introducing HausAngeles

On November 2, 2008 (which was Diwali, an important national festival in India), I officially decided to “double down” into the real estate market as an entrepreneur. I have wanted to be an entrepreneur for a long time (I even studied Entrepreneurship as an MBA student at Northwestern University in the late 1990′s), and decided if I was ever going to “take the plunge”, the time was now.

I saw and continue to see tremendous opportunity for impact and value creation in the real estate market and am inspired by the immensity of the opportunities in front of us. In the weeks and months since the decision was made, I have co-founded a company we have called “HausAngeles”.

Here is a link to our first newsletter for 2009….which introduces the company:

http://www.hausangeles.com/newsletters/HA_011909.html

Reconsidering my decision to tune into the Inauguration

The US Presidential Inauguration is this coming Tuesday…and it couldn’t come soon enough. It is clear that the problems facing the US and the world at large are very serious and we need vigorious action oriented leadership with the public’s confidence at the helm in this country ASAP.

So as we approach the Inauguration, and in light of President Elect Obama having invited gay bishop Gene Robinson to lead prayers at Sunday celebrations leading upto the Inauguration, I’m reconsidering my stand on whether I’m tuning into this historic occasion.

I still believe the selection of Rick Warren for the invocation at the inauguration was a poor one, in light of the major recent loss the LGBT community has suffered in California with the passage of Proposition 8 (and generally during the last 8 years with similar constitutional amendments having been passed in 30 states). But I am also practical enough to realize 2 things:

1.The LBGT community is hardly likely to part with the Democrats in favor of the Republican party anyone soon given the continuing strong influence of social conservatives over the Republican agenda and party. The Obama team clearly understood this and so from their standpoint and given their objectives, selecting Warren was likely seen as a relatively risk free method of bringing more political support to the table.
2.The country and the world has more pressing issues to be addressed right now, and we have to prioritize and pick our battles. In fact, the country (and President Elect Obama) need every capable individual on the ground pulling their weight and trying to drive the country forward in the right direction

So I decided I do want to participate in history….and am now planning to tune in.

I think all of us need to give our new President a chance to make an impact before judging him. In fact, some judgment errors are to be expected as the team moves forward and makes decisions. I would even go as far as to say if we don’t see some (hopefully small) mistakes, it is a signal that our President and his team are not making decisions quickly enough.

A Roof Over Every American’s Head: Addressing the Core of our Current Crisis of Confidence

What is the #1 worry that most Americans have when they get laid off? I believe it is that they might lose the roof over their and their families’ heads in a worst case scenario (i.e., if they are unable to find adequate alternate sources of income).

Now imagine if the government of this country was able to promise all of its lawful citizens this: “No matter what, you and your family will always have a roof over your head. We know we are in the middle of the greatest economic downturn since the 1930’s and we also know that there has been overbuilding in the housing sector. We have put these two realities together to make a unique promise to all Americans today so that you may feel secure and confident about their family’s safety.”

Do you think the above promise would help the nation stabilize (and possibly even start an economic recovery)? I believe it might because it addresses the very heart of the problem in America today: a lack of confidence in our future and a deep worry (almost and actually a panic in many people) about what this future will bring.

Now, I am not one who believes that every American can and should own a home (even though I do strongly believe in the societal and familial benefits of home ownership). Nor do I believe that we should subsidize home ownership for current home owners any more than we would subsidize it for new homeowners. But we do have plenty of housing available in America today….and the government can and should do more to help those Americans who suddenly find themselves in an economically precarious situation.

The US government already provides rent subsidy at varying levels to the lowest income in our society…primarily through the Section 8 and public housing programs (Disclosure: I am on the Board of the Los Angeles Public Housing Authority, which owns/administers both programs in Los Angeles). So why not expand this concept to stabilize our families in a manner that is sensible, fair and proactive? This might just be the type of bold action we need given the times we are experiencing currently.

Transparency and Tradeoffs: The Missing T’s in The Healthcare Industry

AV’s recent inpatient surgery experience – she had a cervical dystectomy (relatively common neck surgery) – reminded of how fundamentally flawed our US healthcare system is. Almost every industry/market that’s “efficient” functions on some basic common principles/dynamics: Customers make purchasing decisions based on cost, quality and service and producers/companies compete on the basis of these 3 core product/service “differentiation” dimensions.

Let’s take the retail industry as an example. Walmart is all about being low cost and has build a business model that continuously wrings cost out of the entire supply chain for the goods they sell. A store like Nordstrom on the other hand tries to be more upscale, so it competes on service and to a lesser extent quality (by carrying brands perceived to be higher quality). And Louis Vitton, Tiffany, and other luxury brands compete largely on quality only (with quality being defined as a combination of style/perception, brand value, material, cut, etc.).

The key to the above tradeoffs occuring, of course, is information (transparency) about the 3 differentiating dimensions, particularly quality and cost….to enable consumers to evaluate different companies and make their decision based on what matters most to them. But none of this is possible in healthcare – an industry that is almost a fifth of US GDP!

In healthcare, you make a decision with no idea of what it will cost you and really no way/system of getting such a cost estimate without significant effort. And quality is an entirely different matter. Where cost is difficult but not impossible to assess, quality is. There is absolutely no data available to consumers to help them understand the experience level and output/performance (aka “outcomes” in healthcare) of the doctor they choose to go with. And did I mention there’s no systematic way of finding a doctor that meets your needs? The whole system of finding a doctor is primitive – you ask around to see if anyone you know (including other doctors one might know) have a recommendation (which is again, largely based on perception/reputation and not facts).

I am definitely a believer that government led investment in infrastucture is a key tool to help get the US out of the current economic crisis (while making sensible investments which will pay off and are required for our long term health). I would love to see the Obama administration address some of the issues above to help get the US healthcare industry more nimble, competitive and no doubt efficient.

Obama’s slap in the face to the gay community

A few days before November 4th, the evangelical/right wing proponents of Proposition 8 (the anti-gay marriage ballot initiative) widely broadcast President Elect Obama’s words on the issue of gay marriage to Californian’s. Although Obama was against Proposition 8 and supports civil unions for same sex couples, he does not support gay marriage  and has said on many occasions that he believes marriage is appropriate only between a man and a woman.

So the liberal and generally LBGT supportive Obama’s words were used against the gay community….and likely led to the victory of Proposition 8….a major step back for equal rights.

I am extremely dissapointed by the message President Elect Obama sent to gay American’s this week by picking Rick Warren for the invocation at the Presidential inaugration in January. While I totally understand and agree with listening to all sides of a debate….and speaking politely to those who disagree with you, the Rick Warren selection shows the gay community that their families don’t matter right now.

Rick Warren compares gay marriage to pedophilia, marriage between siblings and polygamy….

I’m dissapointed in President Elect Obama…..and won’t be tuning into the invocation or the inaugration. I’d rather just sit and meditate by myself.

Untapped and Under-tapped Foreclosure Prevention Strategies: “Let a Hundred Flowers Bloom”

There is widespread agreement among key national political, economic and housing stakeholders (the government and regulators, consumers and Banks among others) on the need to help prevent foreclosures, keep as many people as possible in their homes, and “clear the housing market” of troubled assets quickly and fairly. This would help the housing market find a bottom more quickly – which housing market bottom will mark a turning point in our nations’ economic recovery.

In the spirit of Barney Frank’s statement “Let a Hundred Flowers Bloom”, I have put together this foreclosure prevention vision (including feedback and insight from Ron Garber, CEO of Short Sale Plan and Eric Friedman, SVP of Loss MItigation at Indymac Bank).

The housing market and economy are facing problems larger than any individual or organization….and it is in this spirit that I am publicly sharing this vision. I would welcome feedback from anyone who has experience in foreclosure prevention and any of the related strategies/areas.

I will be pursuing some or all of these strategies for Los Angeles and perhaps nationally in my capacity as CEO of HausAngeles, and in partnership with Ron Garber, who has spent the last 2 years developing and refining systematic short sales knowledge, education/training, processes/documentation and infrastructure….believing that they are the preferred alternative to foreclosures for all parties involved.

My Grandfather’s Sikhism, My Simple Life Philosophy

I consider myself spiritual but not very religious and don’t have much patience for the bureaucracy of most religions including my own. I just don’t see the need to have middlemen translate the teachings of my religion to me; my grandfather did a fine job of this during the times we spent together on vacation in Punjab, India while he was alive.

He taught me that our religion was about substance not form, that what matters is how you act in real life not whether you visit the Gurudwara (temple) everyday, and that the basic tenets of life and religion are simple. What’s difficult is actually living them fully and consistently.

My family are Sikhs, followers of a religion that I consider more a spiritual philosophy than a religion, and which originated about 500 years ago largely due to the friction between Islam and Hinduism in Northern India when the Mughals (who were Muslim) ruled over the largely Hindu populace.

I love and live by the version of Sikhism my grandfather taught me. It was mostly shared via a bunch of stories about the 10 Guru’s who created and propagated the religion. Tales of their courage, honesty and philanthropy; how they stood up for what’s right even in the face of death…again and again.

He told me that being a good Sikh was simple. All you had to do was live by 6 simple words: “Kirat Karo, Naam Japo, Vand Chako” (Kirat Karo: earn your livelihood by the sweat of your labor; Naam Japo: meditate on the name of God; and Vand Chako: share your earnings with others).

And he told me about “Chardi Kala” (which literally means “Rising Spirits”), the undying spirit of the Sikhs and a mindset and way of being I find myself returning to regularly even today. Here’s what www.answers.com had to say about Chardi Kala: “Chardi Kala indicates the elation or high spirits of Sikhism. Chardi Kala, meaning ‘the positive attitude’ is an equivalence of a mind that never despairs, never admits defeat and refuses to be crushed by adversities.”

I was reminded of my grandfather today, when my uncle Bob sent me a link to an online photo gallery on Sikhs by a photographer who visited India. Many of these images were familiar and comfortable for me: you can check them out at http://www.charlesmeacham.com (under Galleries; Being Sikh).

I liked Mr. Meacham’s description of Sikhs on his website. Here’s what he says:

“For over 500 years the teachings of the 10 enlightened Guru’s have influenced the believer’s of Sikhism to follow the doctrines of honesty, universal equality, fidelity, and meditation on God and his message. Their daily prayers urge peace and wellbeing for all mankind and their religion commands willingness to die in the protection of those who are poor and weak, no matter race or creed. Often described as Warrior Saints Sikhs have more than once taken to the sword in defending their homeland of Punjab and India”.

Capital and Risk-Sharing: Smart Crisis Fighting Tools That Should Be Used Much More

I’m glad to see the government is finally using 2 “smart” tools – capital and risk sharing –  to help address the financial institution panic and resulting failures we have seen since earlier in 2008 which have seriously escalated the financial and economic crisis facing the US and global economies today. While these tools don’t comprehensively address the myriad of financial and economic issues facing the US or the world today, they:

 

·         Help stabilize Banks when no other 3rd party can/will do so: this is critical to stabilizing consumer sentiment, the markets and economy

·         Are leveraged in their impact to the real economy: Because Banks typically lend $10 to $20 for every dollar in capital they hold

·         Help minimize the tax-payer bill from all this government investing and intervention: by acknowledging the uncertainty around where the housing and credit/financial markets will bottom out, and putting a “cap” on the maximum losses a private investor can incur on an investment  

·         Help establish a floor for asset values (by limiting downside risk for investors): and therefore support and encourage the return of private investors into the capital markets

 

The need for government provided capital was obvious to me months ago at Indymac since such a significant capital infusion would likely have prevented the Bank’s failure and no private capital was available for the job. Every investor who had invested capital into any financial institution in the 12 months leading up to Indymac’s failure had lost all or a big portion of their money by the summer of 2008, so this lack of private capital was a rational market outcome. And risk sharing can and should reduce the size of the loss the government creates by selling Indymac’s assets as it will help mitigate the negative financial impact of the fact that Indymac’s assets are being sold by the government into the worst housing asset market since the Great Depression.    

 

A wise man once said it was possible to “transform a breakdown into a breakthrough” and I think the tools above can be powerfully applied to the global economy today. After all, no large company is just a “US” company today. All major American companies are generally global in the markets they serve, the organizations they work with, and the workforces they leverage (even “little Indymac” which only operated in the US supported over 1000 employees in India). So by supporting US Banks and Financial Institutions the US government is already supporting the global economy (not just the US economy).

 

Why not do this more directly and on a bigger scale worldwide? As someone who is optimistic about the global economy’s long term prospects, I think we should. The US taking an ownership stake in a wide array of businesses all over the world could indeed help turn this breakdown into a breakthrough.

Redefining the War on Terror

The Mumbai “terrorist” attacks are a clear message to President Elect Obama, us, and the rest of the world. The problems of the world aren’t just economic….they are equally urgent, social and extend deeply into our homes and places of worship.

The Bombay attacks are highly symbolic in their location/s, organization-level and timing. And they hit home. I definitely feel the significance of these particular attacks personally. The violence was directed at the heart of India’s financial system where my (our) friends hang out, my (our) colleagues stay when they visit India, and our companies establish offices when they enter the Indian market (the 5 star hotels Taj and Oberoi in Bombay have been the India office for many a blue chip multi-national corporation). The targeting of westerners by the attackers is particularly galling since it targets a big source of support and growth for India and it’s democracy, philosophies and people. India is getting more integrated with the west and the global economy, and the attacks sought to strike at the core locations and symbols of this progress.

So what? Since change is in the air, here’s the 2 key changes I’d like to see made immediately in our”war on terror”:

1. Rename it in a way that reflects what it is. In some ways I think we have glorified what is really going on, by allowing this global problem to be named a “War on Terror” fought against Terrorists. Certainly the acts can and do bring terror into people’s hearts. But why not (at least) try to take away this terrible power? There is clearly no moral equality in this war, and the battleground is people’s minds and hearts (not a physical battlefield). The truth is these so called terrorists are generally pathetic (and often unlucky) losers perpetrating violence in the name of God. Calling their movement what it is will go a long way towards accelerating it’s end, in my view…and also helping make it less and ultimately non-violent.

2. Acknowledge that this is not only about Islam and is truly global/multi-national. Violent Islamic fundamentalists are certainly creating massive problems worldwide, but the problems extend beyond Islam. In my (our) lifetime the forces of religious fundamentalism have risen dramatically across the globe in reaction to the forces of globalization, westernization and modernity….and many outside Islam are also perpetrating violence in the name of their God. Broadening the focus beyond Islam will, I think, help address it more quickly in Islam also…as it will remove the ego and pride barrier created by the perceptions of denouncing an entire (and majorly important and large) religion.

Equality for all: US Supreme Court Decision and Timing

I am a strong believer that civil rights issues should be resolved through the legal (not political) process and feel it is only a matter of time until the US Supreme Court strikes all the discrimination that has been “constitutionalized” during the last 8 Bush years on the issue of gay marriage (sadly, fully 30 states now “ban” gay marriage via their constitutions).  I was feeling like a naive optimist after a conversation over brunch this past weekend, where a (clearly very smart) lawyer made a strong argument that the US Supreme court wouldn’t do what I say it will…at least not for the next 20 years!

Then today I saw 2 key arguments/quotes that give me hope that every individual and family will have equal rights and equal protection under the law in the USA sometime soon (despite the recent and unfortunate voter approval of the discriminatory Proposition 8 in California):

I was reading a fascinating article on the Princeton alumni website today entitled: “Her husband bakes, Scalia sings: Ginsburg describes the lighter side of the Supreme Court”. Here’s a direct quote from the article:

As she examined a small booklet with the text of the Constitution, she described her “favorite provision:” the end of section one of the 14th Amendment. She read aloud from it. “… (N)or shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.”

You can click here for the full article: http://www.princeton.edu/main/news/archive/S22/48/08A80/

Then, I saw an LA times opinion piece by Brian Gray, a Professor at UC Hastings College of Law in San Francisco, which draws a parallel between the arguments against Prop 8 and a decision made by the US Supreme Court on a Colorado proposition, which had (and I quote): ‘barred the state and its political subdivisions from adopting or enforcing any law “whereby homosexual, lesbian or bisexual orientation, conduct, practices or relationships” are the basis of a claim of discrimination.’

Here’s what happened on the Colorado issue (and I quote again):

“Following the enactment of Colorado’s Amendment 2, its opponents filed suit claiming that it unlawfully singled out gays and lesbians as a class to deny them rights that other citizens not only possess but take for granted. These rights include access to housing, government services, public accommodations and public and private employment opportunities without regard to an individual’s race, sex, religion, age, ancestry, political belief or other characteristic that defines each of us as a unique human being. Amendment 2, the opponents argued, therefore denied gays and lesbians the equal protection of the laws, which is a guarantee of the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

To the surprise of many, the U.S. Supreme Court agreed.”

Click here to read this fascinating LA Times article: http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oe-gray17-2008nov17,0,1425883,print.story

How long do you think it’ll be before all individuals, gay or not, have full equal rights in the USA?

Buying foreclosed homes…a lot beneath the surface

I just read this great article from this weekend’s LA Times describing the reporter’s experience purchasing a foreclosed home. I have seen/heard many similar stories from my business partner Avantika, a top performing realtor in LA who has bid on and sold several foreclosed properties recently….so thought I’d post this article. Call or email her (av@avantika.com) if you want to ask a question, buy/sell a home, or know someone who is buying or selling and could use a top notch real estate agent….in Los Angeles. ray

How I bought a foreclosed home

There were pitfalls on the the way, but an L.A. Times reporter found that research, strategy and being free of loan baggage helped.

By Peter Y. Hong
November 9, 2008

I did not set out to buy a foreclosed house. ¶ Earlier this year, I wrote about selling my condominium unit in 2005 to rent, rejecting the hyped promise of an always-rising real estate market. Now I’ve purchased a foreclosed home — but that doesn’t mean I’ve bought into the new wave of hype in real estate, the idea that cheap, repossessed houses are a sure bet. ¶ There’s usually good reason many foreclosed houses languish with no buyers. They may be badly damaged or situated in places that seemed attractive only in the frenzy of a real estate bubble. ¶ The foreclosure inventory is loaded with properties far from job centers, stripped or even vandalized by previous owners or in abandoned developments with no parks, schools or even neighbors nearby. ¶ As a result, finding a decent house amid the wreckage of the real estate crash can be a long, tedious process. Then, actually buying one can also be tricky. When a foreclosed house in good shape and in a desirable location gets to market, it often attracts multiple offers, even in this struggling real estate market.

But a foreclosed house might still be an easier way to get what you want than trying to get stubborn individual sellers to lower their list prices. In both my day job covering the housing market and my own search for a house, I’ve seen what has worked for many buyers of foreclosed homes.

This is what worked for me.

Click here for the full article:

http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-cover9-2008nov09,0,2623620.story?page=1

Real Estate Construction Costs: Deflated in LA

There has been a constant ‘inflation’ in real estate construction costs over the past few years driven by the usual suspects: high commodity prices and a tight labor/talent market (with high demand for construction labor driving labor costs higher and higher over time).

So recently, I was pleasantly surprised to hear one of our clients (who is involved with redeveloping 2 properties they recently purchased) tell us about their ongoing experience with construction costs. 2 key points to note:

1. The price of development was great i.e., lower than expectations! They had a solid bid to get their work done for about $80 per square foot. Note that the numbers one generally sees for construction costs are in the $150-$250 (or higher) per square foot range. So this is amazing…and the key reason this was possible was due to the really slow labor market right now. People have lost jobs and can’t find work as real estate development has slowed tremendously…so they are taking whatever work they can get, and reducing their rates to “win work”.

2. They actually got a fixed bid on their project! Wow….just a few years ago, no contractor would take on that risk.

I guess in some ways the above should be no surprise. This is how the market works. In a down cycle, things get cheaper…and in some cases much cheaper. However, I don’t think most people realize what a great time it is to construct right now. Good time to buy a fixer-upper (which is already much cheaper than it was a few years ago) and then further add value by improving the property.

PS: I’m talking Los Angeles

The tyranny of the majority

On May 15th, 2008 the California Supreme Court made a historic decision. They ruled that it was a violation of the equal protection clause of the California Constitution to not afford gay couples the right to marry – almost exactly the same ruling they had made in 1948 on inter-racial marriage (which was at the time not allowed in California). Between June 16th (the day gay wedding licenses started being issued) and November 4th, approximately 18,000 couples got married in California.

The evangelical right was having none of the above. They knew that if gay marriages were allowed to continue in California (a major cultural force in the USA, and a state with the 7th largest economy in the world)…it was only a matter of time before they would become be allowed nationallly. After all, this exact sequence had occurred on the issue of inter-racial marriage. 19 years after the 1948 California ruling noted above, in 1967 the US Supreme Court (in a famous decision Loving v. Virginia) made the same ruling thereby eliminating all barriers to interracial marriage in the USA.

So on November 4th just as racial discrimination was dealt a massive and perhaps final blow with the election of the first African-American President of the USA, Californians voted by a 52.5% to 47.5% majority to take away this fundamental right to marry from gay couples in the state. Ironically, the same voters made the correct decision to expand animal rights in California.

Anger and sadness have enveloped millions in California since Proposition 8 passed last week…and this issue is by no means settled. Here are the thoughts of one prominent Los Angeles lesbian and mother who is in a 22 year committed relationship. I should also mention she is Deputy Mayor for Housing and Economic Development Policy for Los Angeles…working tirelessly to create more affordable housing for the poor and disadvantaged.ray

<!– /* Font Definitions */ @font-face {font-family:”Cambria Math”; panose-1:2 4 5 3 5 4 6 3 2 4; mso-font-charset:0; mso-generic-font-family:roman; mso-font-pitch:variable; mso-font-signature:-1610611985 1107304683 0 0 159 0;} @font-face {font-family:Calibri; panose-1:2 15 5 2 2 2 4 3 2 4; mso-font-alt:”Times New Roman”; mso-font-charset:0; mso-generic-font-family:swiss; mso-font-pitch:variable; mso-font-signature:-1610611985 1073750139 0 0 159 0;} @font-face {font-family:Tahoma; panose-1:2 11 6 4 3 5 4 4 2 4; mso-font-charset:0; mso-generic-font-family:swiss; mso-font-pitch:variable; mso-font-signature:-520082689 -1073717157 41 0 66047 0;} /* Style Definitions */ p.MsoNormal, li.MsoNormal, div.MsoNormal {mso-style-unhide:no; mso-style-qformat:yes; mso-style-parent:”"; margin:0in; margin-bottom:.0001pt; mso-pagination:widow-orphan; font-size:11.0pt; font-family:”Calibri”,”sans-serif”; mso-ascii-font-family:Calibri; mso-ascii-theme-font:minor-latin; mso-fareast-font-family:Calibri; mso-fareast-theme-font:minor-latin; mso-hansi-font-family:Calibri; mso-hansi-theme-font:minor-latin; mso-bidi-font-family:”Times New Roman”; mso-bidi-theme-font:minor-bidi;} p.MsoPlainText, li.MsoPlainText, div.MsoPlainText {mso-style-noshow:yes; mso-style-priority:99; mso-style-link:”Plain Text Char”; margin:0in; margin-bottom:.0001pt; mso-pagination:widow-orphan; font-size:10.5pt; font-family:”Tahoma”,”sans-serif”; mso-fareast-font-family:Calibri; mso-fareast-theme-font:minor-latin; mso-bidi-font-family:”Times New Roman”; mso-bidi-theme-font:minor-bidi;} span.PlainTextChar {mso-style-name:”Plain Text Char”; mso-style-noshow:yes; mso-style-priority:99; mso-style-unhide:no; mso-style-locked:yes; mso-style-link:”Plain Text”; mso-ansi-font-size:10.5pt; mso-bidi-font-size:10.5pt; font-family:”Tahoma”,”sans-serif”; mso-ascii-font-family:Tahoma; mso-hansi-font-family:Tahoma;} .MsoChpDefault {mso-style-type:export-only; mso-default-props:yes; mso-ascii-font-family:Calibri; mso-ascii-theme-font:minor-latin; mso-fareast-font-family:Calibri; mso-fareast-theme-font:minor-latin; mso-hansi-font-family:Calibri; mso-hansi-theme-font:minor-latin; mso-bidi-font-family:”Times New Roman”; mso-bidi-theme-font:minor-bidi;} @page Section1 {size:8.5in 11.0in; margin:1.0in 1.0in 1.0in 1.0in; mso-header-margin:.5in; mso-footer-margin:.5in; mso-paper-source:0;} div.Section1 {page:Section1;} –>

Yes we Can! Reflections on Gay Marriage in California

Helmi Hisserich, Deputy Mayor, Housing and Economic Development Policy

On November 4th, Gays and Lesbians were pushed to the back of the bus. The vote to change California’s constitution to ban same sex marriage was an act of prejudice against a minority group and a vote for second class citizenship. It is a sad irony that happened on the same day
that America voted for our first African American President. But it is also a reminder that the fight against prejudice is long and painful.

For the past 173 days I have thought about the meaning of marriage almost every day. I am a lesbian who has been in a relationship for 22 years. My partner and I have been faithful to one another, for richer or poorer, in sickness and health for more than two decades, but we have never had a wedding. We have been registered domestic partners since the law first allowed it in 1998, but that is definitely not the same as marriage. On my paycheck, my taxpayer ID says “single”.

On May 15th, 2008 when the moderate Republican Supreme Court said the California Constitution guaranteed the right of same sex couples to be married, a sense of acceptance and equality came over me that was so powerful it I felt it deep in my bones. My God, I do have the fundamental right to pursue happiness in marriage with the person I love. This is what it means to live in a free country, this is the meaning of equality. My gay and lesbian friends all talked about it, especially those of us who are in long term relationships. We all felt we were being protected and accorded dignity under the law. It felt amazing. Prejudice is funny that way, when it is removed you realize
how accustomed you have become to being treated with less respect you deserve.

The 173 days between the California Supreme Court decision and the November election were painful. For me, it felt like a walk to the gallows. I know good people who are awkward and uncomfortable about homosexuality. I knew the yes on 8 campaign was playing on peoples fears. It made me sick to think that people by referendum could vote to take my rights away. In California you can change the constitution with a simple majority vote, but you need a two third majority to raise sewer fees. What kind of justice is that?

On election night, I was at the Music Box theater in Hollywood, which was the rallying place for the No on Prop 8 campaign. When Barack Obama was elected president, the place went wild. People were cheering and crying. We all understood the importance of this election. Many of us had worked on the Obama campaign as well as the No on 8 Campaign; donating time and money to bring about change. For an hour we felt jubilant beyond measure. But then the reality hit that our friends and neighbors had voted to eliminate our constitutional right to marry. The happiness faded.

The day after the election, my daughter came home from 6th grade and told me kids were saying gays and lesbians are disgusting. She said she felt like people hated our family without knowing us. That is what prejudice is, I told her, judging people without knowing them. But 50 years ago a black person and a white person could not get married, and today someone from an interracial family was elected the president. She asked if we could change the constitution back to what it was. At first my though wandered to the difficult struggle we face to gain acceptance, but as I looked at down at her shining face in her blue community organizer t-shirt, the future became very clear – “Yes we Can”.

  • caroline morahan naked measured
  • free play boy free nude photographs pistons
  • nude girl slideshow nude girls gallery beretta
  • faina nude victorville
  • 181 street nude celebs gundam
  • lanyard peroxide
  • free naked lilo pics grille
  • maine andrea nude exact
  • laura weedman nude johann
  • free porn older nude women seasons
  • gina lyn nude silicone
  • woman lost naked in the woods carly
  • free images of naked hairy men wheaton
  • multiplex damage
  • free young young girls nude hardcore vogel
  • 89 nude movies motorhome
  • working in nude ignition
  • viviana gibelli g mez nude pollen
  • katherine harris nude fakes merrimack
  • hot girls stripping and going nude countries
  • nonnude teen beach voyeur entrepreneur
  • male nude art cum electrician
  • nude pageant torrent nighthawk
  • naked long nipples puyallup
  • naked women after childbirth bookstore
  • genie lynne
  • free nude gril pics surfboard
  • smokes rfid
  • naked nude gail o'grady 1928
  • nude brussels connector
  • multifunction pouches
  • naked news fanclub veterinarian
  • naked men youtube nearest
  • country singer naked nightly
  • reservation putty
  • palm tree nude noisy
  • mature nude lesbians beach centro
  • twisted nude backyard
  • eva larue nude gallery bryant
  • schoolgirls naked japan fidelity
  • young looking girls nude free bran
  • euphorbiaceae indoor plant naked lady comes
  • boys nude images hack
  • amour naked pictures submission
  • nude rhode island option
  • nude virginie gervais leapfrog
  • wet teen models non nude archive
  • naked cameron diaz dunwoody
  • ada demina nude tomato
  • naked sushi las vegas neck
  • free 18 eteen nude video gallery objectives
  • sliding float
  • naked mature women and aminals timberland
  • free nude lazy town sliver
  • nude older women tan line videos airports
  • queen sized nude models peace
  • random amateur nudes wesley
  • frat dudes naked gay dishes
  • ottawa u nude girls nathalie debit
  • hot naked girls dancing snowfall
  • slumber party naked bandit
  • pics of nude teen girl vginas deed
  • james masden nude trainning
  • stacy carter nude kitten
  • rebecca callard nude sizing
  • naked webcam chat atomic
  • tiffany nude playboy measurement
  • clover nacht
  • free nude webcama skywalker
  • hegre nude pussy navel
  • nu nude millimeters
  • nude photos maxmum magazine diaphragm
  • sexy live girls naked ciba
  • threes company fake nudes naming
  • naked teens running videos chaps
  • share photos naked panties sex prizm
  • her nude vids coyle
  • anais noah nude vale
  • naked celbrties speakers
  • nude girl playing video games activate
  • meaghan conner nude trane
  • african nude paintings question
  • guidelines achievements
  • arcade faqs
  • gay naked bears and cubs videos hackett
  • naked girls video undressing nationals
  • yeast voucher
  • free nude teems drawer
  • nude abby titmus pics indicator
  • brook evers nude streak
  • diana riggs nude induction
  • chlorine integra
  • nude girls with guns colour
  • freeones naked news shrewsbury
  • milf nude movies trails
  • naked chics with guitars handicap
  • naked jenny agutter experiment
  • nude jewish teen porn roosevelt
  • matural naked oiler
  • nude emily poor deco
  • barenaked ladies somewhere movado
  • shrewsbury subway
  • naked navaho girls acdc
  • gay men nudes barbie
  • valentine rush nude pics fantasia
  • over50 nudes uninsured
  • michele phiffer nudes cath
  • amsterdam red light district nude discs
  • genuine amature nude pictures inspectors
  • non nude russians trailblazer
  • nude cheerleaders showering cronin
  • celcebrities nude pictures free fdic
  • 7000 rigby
  • mini models nude slab
  • celeb nude picture fromm
  • sienna guillory naked videos cheapest
  • goten and trunks nude surf
  • cute sexy naked girls popcorn
  • patti davis nude sleeves
  • connie stevens naked ackley
  • nude vidcaps creskoff maltese
  • cassandra peterson nude clips eastwood
  • free naked people pics carmichael
  • vanessa hudgen nude phot trick
  • barenakedladies pinch me proformance
  • cubby textured
  • classy nude ladies protect
  • latina nude on couch warrenty
  • naked in massachusetts alfredo
  • frre naked pictures chloe jones forks
  • ffxii vaan naked endometrial
  • mild affects
  • nude photos of david beckham throughout
  • nude japanese gameshow video induced
  • playboy nudes farah fawcett centimeter
  • naked woman on hamster wheel peaches
  • teen naked free dimmer
  • wolf woman nude anime pram
  • keli richards nude photos friction
  • nat wolff bio naked brothers band celebration
  • amatuer latin women nude themed
  • shannon spruill nude runs
  • tanks infinity
  • naked together showers holsters
  • nude girl photo magazine robin
  • boogie nights nude dirk penis christians
  • older asian nude women users
  • naked old women gallery crazy
  • high resolution nude picture steering
  • friend s nude mom firefox
  • lake roma nude telford
  • free nude shower movies marlboro
  • nude free edio nitrate
  • liz taylor nude photos stellar
  • obesity inspectors
  • celeb s nude opinions
  • tariffs kroger
  • nude primary school girls scoops
  • leaked nude pic of vanessa solidworks
  • sideshow carriage
  • phillip sherman wife nude pics elements
  • young pageant nude bare preformance
  • naked young womenn bugs
  • transexuals naked and fucking prague
  • naked pics of boobs fare
  • vaugier nude motorbike
  • sandra silvers nude stiletto
  • tatto villians
  • mature nude sunbathing insufficient
  • belts rolls
  • kazakhstan girl naked joshua
  • carolyn levin nude tailgate
  • allisa millano naked greenwich
  • fully naked college girls corners
  • crown angel boris nude border
  • anna palk nude helen
  • renee zellwegger nude pics smokes
  • young naked teen cinemark
  • naked southern belles libertarian
  • nude pattycake index airstream
  • lohan as monroe nude hillside
  • sexy stories nude females fractions
  • nude woman in moses lake wa sonne
  • rani mukherji nude lawnmower
  • teen nude schoolgirl free airless
  • torrie spelling nude pictires beep
  • celiberity nudes captive
  • naked news espn restricted
  • drawing nude art lets
  • free pics of all nude broom
  • male nude photos blogs gain
  • halloween 4 nude trooper
  • free nude movie clip cooper
  • vh1 reality nude unlocking
  • free xxxl naked sex biscuit
  • naked chimney sweep girls hansel
  • nude in the oc lasvegas
  • nude comic book heroines sentencing
  • mark's bookmarks naked cookies