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| WASHINGTON        (Reuters) - The Senate on Friday overwhelmingly passed legislation that        would expand the nation's largest federal homeownership program in a move        that could help struggling subprime borrowers avoid        foreclosure. The bill would        loosen underwriting standards at the Federal Housing Administration so        that the program can help 200,000 troubled borrowers save their homes,        according to the overseers of the program. The FHA is a        Depression-era program conceived in 1934 that was designed to insure the        mortgage payments of low-income borrowers who might have trouble winning a        loan. The U.S. House of        Representatives has already passed its version of FHA reform, and now        lawmakers will take the two versions of the bill to a conference where        differences are worked out. The bill will then be presented to U.S.        President George W. Bush to be signed into law. Supporters of        reform have said the program can be retooled to save hundreds of thousands        of borrowers from foreclosure as the current mortgage crisis takes        hold. "HUD's Federal        Housing Administration can provide many homeowners with a fairer, more        affordable, and more sustainable alternative to costly subprime loans,"        Department of Housing and Urban Development Alphonso Jackson said in a        prepared statement. As envisioned, the        FHA reform legislation would raise the current loan limit from $362,000 to        at least $417,000, which is the same cap on loans that binds mortgage        finance companies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The final vote was        93 lawmakers in favor and one  against. | 
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