Tom Roche signs the documentation which clears his mortgage debt and allows him stay in his home for the rest of his life

By Gearoid Keegan

12 Jul 2022 8:00 PM

‘My debt is cleared’ says relieved Offaly pensioner after mortgage deal

AN Offaly pensioner has told of his relief that the mortgage-to-rent scheme has cleared his debt and allowed him to stay in the house he loves for the rest of his life.

Tullamore native Tom Roche has urged anyone who is in mortgage distress to get help from the Money Advice and Budgeting Service (MABS) first because he found them “fantastic”.

The 73-year-old Rhode resident confessed he considered harming himself and going back on the drink after being off it for 26 years when he fell behind on his TSB loan.

Mr Roche bought a half-acre site near Rhode with over €70,000 in savings in 2001 and then received loan approval from the bank (now called Permanent TSB) for a €150,000 15-year mortgage to build his house. At the time, he was on a “very good” salary with the non-governmental organisation (NGO) he founded, Just Forests.

An education and lobbying group for environmental causes, with a focus on sustainable forestry, Just Forests was receiving funding from the Department of the Environment, Concern and Trocaire.

“I got mortgage approval straight away,” said Mr Roche. He went ahead and built a 1,200 square feet two-bedroom bungalow (see picture below), plus a detached workshop for his carpentry and furniture restoration business.

“Everything was good for a while, I paid [the bank] back €72,000 over the next eight or nine years. Never once did they have to pick up the phone looking for the mortgage, it was there every month on the day.”

The recession of the late 2000s spelled the end of the Government grant for Just Forests. “When the crisis came NGOs like Just Forests were the first ones cut, the first to be wiped off the payroll,” said Mr Roche.

“I knew what was happening and I was straight into TSB in Tullamore. I didn’t delay one minute and I said I have lost my job, I have no livelihood coming in and I’m going in to sign on social welfare.”

He made an effort to keep up some repayments but soon found it almost impossible. Meanwhile, the bank began to contact him constantly.

He succeeded in getting other work but the arrears on his home had gone “sky high” so that even after paying back €72,000 the bank were “looking for €165,000” from him – €15,000 more than the original loan.

Mr Roche said he reached the point where he would stand at a bridge and “wondered would I… I was in an awful state. Thanks be to God I never went back to the drink. It would have softened the pain but it would only create more pain in the long run.”

After an unsuccessful attempt to agree a personal insolvency arrangement with the bank, he decided to try the mortgage-to-rent option and got assistance from the MABS office in Mullingar.

His mortgage has been bought by iCare Housing and through the mortgage-to-rent scheme he is treated as a social housing tenant in his own home once he surrenders the property.

As of May 10 last, Permanent TSB said the total owed by Mr Roche was €199,741, including arrears of €155,769.

Mr Roche said another advantage of the scheme is that because he is becoming a social housing tenant he does not have to pay for ongoing maintenance in his home.

“I have signed the voluntary surrender and it goes back to iCare and when it’s finalised I get to stay here for the rest of my life. I’ll have to pay a nominal rent of about €40 a week,” said Mr Roche.