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Andy Betz gave up his dream job as a loan lender earlier this
year when the mortgage crisis dried up his client pool and depleted
his income. Just before he did, money had gotten so tight that his
family sold their Ellicott City, Maryland, home.
Even though he had eight years of experience in the industry,
he said he was rejected from job after job.
He suspects he was
lumped in with predatory lenders who had sold scores of
subprime mortgages to homeowners.
"The people in the mortgage industry were like pariahs," he
said. "I felt like I was wearing a scarlet letter."
Betz loved
working as a lender, but when he meets new people he shies away
from telling them what he used to do. He doesn't like the negative
reaction he usually gets.
He says he never sold a subprime mortgage and rarely sold a
few adjustable rate mortgages. "There's not a lot of appreciation
for the people that did do it right," he said. "I was a solution
for a lot of people and I take pride in that."
After being unemployed for four months, Betz found employment
a month and a half ago. He works in the restaurant and hotel supply
industry, making less than half of his previous salary.
Selling garbage bags and paper plates isn't Betz's favorite
job, but at least it helps to pay the bills. "You do what you got
to do to survive," he said.
Betz isn't the only one hit hard by the economy these days.
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