Author: | Tom Pisapia | ISBN: | 9781480946125 |
Publisher: | Dorrance Publishing | Publication: | September 23, 2017 |
Imprint: | Language: | English |
Author: | Tom Pisapia |
ISBN: | 9781480946125 |
Publisher: | Dorrance Publishing |
Publication: | September 23, 2017 |
Imprint: | |
Language: | English |
Pottersville
by Tom Pisapia
Today, if someone were to Google “savings and loan,” the search would provide headlines that would scream the words “scandals,” “fraud,” “incompetence,” and “political corruption,” leaving the uninitiated with the impression that this industry deserved to be erased from the American landscape. Pottersville: Where Is the Bailey Building and Loan? clears the air and tells the real story of the sixty-five year savings and loan experiment.
The fact is that during its reign, the savings and loan industry directly employed hundreds of thousands of people in all fifty states and most U.S. territories; put millions of people into houses with long-term affordable fixed-rate mortgages; and those homes became subdivisions and suburbs, city blocks and towns. Those houses created billions in value and generational wealth and a real estate tax base that grew economies on the state, county, and city levels. Those taxes were needed to build roads, streets, schools, and hospitals. Police and fire departments had to be created to support all those homes that the S&Ls financed and the people that lived in them. The savings and loans were a cornerstone in the building of America.
About the Author
Tom Pisapia spent over forty years in the mortgage business, taking mortgages literally from Main Street (Sycamore, Illinois) to Wall Street (Merrill Lynch Capital Markets, Institutional side, Chicago/New York) and back again. Along the way he made stops at Fannie Mae, The Federal Home Loan Bank, the FDIC/RTC, numerous savings and loans, mortgage companies and, yes, even a few banks. Not surprisingly, for the final chapter (fifteen years) of his career, Pisapia migrated toward the credit union industry, which gave him that same feeling of purpose and a greater good that he remembered from years before in the savings and loan industry. From a ringside seat, Pisapia bore witness to the savings and loan industry that served the economy well and fostered home ownership when no one else wanted the job, creating generational wealth for millions of Americans
Pottersville
by Tom Pisapia
Today, if someone were to Google “savings and loan,” the search would provide headlines that would scream the words “scandals,” “fraud,” “incompetence,” and “political corruption,” leaving the uninitiated with the impression that this industry deserved to be erased from the American landscape. Pottersville: Where Is the Bailey Building and Loan? clears the air and tells the real story of the sixty-five year savings and loan experiment.
The fact is that during its reign, the savings and loan industry directly employed hundreds of thousands of people in all fifty states and most U.S. territories; put millions of people into houses with long-term affordable fixed-rate mortgages; and those homes became subdivisions and suburbs, city blocks and towns. Those houses created billions in value and generational wealth and a real estate tax base that grew economies on the state, county, and city levels. Those taxes were needed to build roads, streets, schools, and hospitals. Police and fire departments had to be created to support all those homes that the S&Ls financed and the people that lived in them. The savings and loans were a cornerstone in the building of America.
About the Author
Tom Pisapia spent over forty years in the mortgage business, taking mortgages literally from Main Street (Sycamore, Illinois) to Wall Street (Merrill Lynch Capital Markets, Institutional side, Chicago/New York) and back again. Along the way he made stops at Fannie Mae, The Federal Home Loan Bank, the FDIC/RTC, numerous savings and loans, mortgage companies and, yes, even a few banks. Not surprisingly, for the final chapter (fifteen years) of his career, Pisapia migrated toward the credit union industry, which gave him that same feeling of purpose and a greater good that he remembered from years before in the savings and loan industry. From a ringside seat, Pisapia bore witness to the savings and loan industry that served the economy well and fostered home ownership when no one else wanted the job, creating generational wealth for millions of Americans