Nearly 5 million homeowners nationwide have been granted loan modifications since 2007, according to the Hope Now Alliance. About 18,000 homeowners in Massachusetts have received such help from Bank of America alone since 2008, bank officials said.
A recent survey by the nonprofit Connecticut Fair Housing Center found that about 24 percent of 655 modifications around the country resulted in improper fees, credit report damage, or foreclosure notices.
“There are not enough penalties for getting things wrong,’’ said Jeff Gentes, managing attorney for foreclosure prevention at the center, based in Hartford.
“I’ve talked to people who say, ‘I’m giving up now.’ They got their loan modification and then they get billed for $1,700 [in fees] and they say, ‘I’ve had it.’ ’’
The complications have added to the workload of foreclosure prevention counselors and staff at legal aid bureaus.
Nadine Cohen, managing attorney for the consumer rights unit at Greater Boston Legal Services, a nonprofit organization that helps low-income earners, said it can take months - even years - to straighten out confusion over a loan modification.
“It is a drain on our resources,’’ she said. “It is never-ending.’’
Roddy Klein & Ryan filed its suit this spring in US District Court in California, the site of the offices of BAC Home Loans Servicing LP, a Bank of America Corp. subsidiary that once administered home mortgages for the company. Earlier this year, BAC Home Loans was consolidated with Bank of America.
One of the plaintiffs, Maria Campusano, an executive secretary in Lawrence, said Bank of America granted her a permanent loan modification in April 2010, but she was later threatened with foreclosure.
Campusano, 44, said weeks after signing a contract that reduced her mortgage payment by several hundred dollars a month to $1,566, she received a bank statement that appeared to show no agreement had been reached. She eventually received letters from the bank telling her she was in default, although she consistently made payments for months.
Campusano said her credit rating suffered because of the mix-up. After failing to resolve the issue with several bank employees, she contacted a lawyer.
“Nothing was making sense,’’ Campusano said. “I started panicking.’’
William Roberson and his wife, Christina Perez, thought their housing troubles were over when Bank of America approved a loan modification for their Springfield, Vt., home in late 2009. The deal cut their mortgage payment by about $100 and rolled in some past debts.
The couple said the bank offered to help them after they fell behind on payments.
But within weeks of signing a loan modification contract, Roberson said, they began receiving letters and phone calls from Bank of America informing them they were in arrears on their mortgage.
In the meantime, the bank kept accepting the adjusted monthly payments dictated by the contract it approved, Roberson said.
“It went on for months and months and months. Phone call after phone call with no resolve.’’
He and his wife, who have temporarily moved to Connecticut for work, still own the Vermont home, but fear it will be seized by the bank. They joined the lawsuit in hopes of getting someone to pay attention to their dilemma.
“We were just a small person trying to challenge a monster of a bank and didn’t know where to go,’’ Roberson said.