Illinois foreclosure filings drop for a second year

Illinois foreclosure filings drop for a second year
The view inside a vacant, ransacked building in the West Humboldt Park neighborhood. WBEZ/Ashley Gross
Illinois foreclosure filings drop for a second year
The view inside a vacant, ransacked building in the West Humboldt Park neighborhood. WBEZ/Ashley Gross

Illinois foreclosure filings drop for a second year

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The view inside a vacant, ransacked building in the West Humboldt Park neighborhood. (WBEZ/Ashley Gross)
Foreclosure filings dropped in Illinois for a second year in a row, prompting some hope that the crisis is slowing. The foreclosure data firm RealtyTrac says foreclosure filings in Illinois fell 32 percent last year – pretty much in line with the nation as a whole. In a statement, RealtyTrac CEO Brandon Moore said foreclosures were delayed in 2011 as banks worked through paperwork problems and legal issues. But Erik Hurst of the University of Chicago Booth School of Business says the drop is a reflection of an economy that’s slowly improving.   “Shocks are still coming, people are still getting laid off, the job market isn’t great,” Hurst said, “But we should see declines in the foreclosure rates relative to periods when unemployment was unimaginably high and housing prices were plummeting at a very fast rate.” Kendall County had the highest foreclosure rate in all of Illinois last year, with one out of every 23 households receiving a foreclosure filing.  Kane and McHenry counties were second and third. Overall, Illinois had the eighth highest foreclosure rate in the country.