Posts Tagged ‘credit counseling’
Tuesday, June 2nd, 2009
2 Arkansas Women Dodge Credit Repair Fraud Allegations
Friday, May 29th, 2009
Two Arkansas women who have been sued for defrauding at least 139 people in a credit-repair scam have refused to respond to a judgeâs order to pay $700,000 in penalties and have even started a new credit repair operation, the Arkansas Democrat Gazette reports (âState Wins Credit-Repair Fraud Case,â May 26, 2009).
For four years, Sherrye Mance and Tiffany Morris allegedly defrauded customers seeking the credit repair services of three of their companies. The women, who operated the three unincorporated businesses Financial Services Unlimited, Service Unlimited Inc., and Credit Counseling Service, have reportedly started running a new credit repair operation under the name âFresh Start Credit Service.â
In a lawsuit, the Arkansas attorney general has accused Mance and Morris â who collectively owe their victims $127,565 â of charging customers for âservices purported to improve a customerâs credit history, credit record, and credit ratings,â although these services were likely never âactually performed.â
Mance and Morris have, so far, refused to respond to the lawsuit, missed their court hearing, and failed to respond to a court injunction. Meanwhile, the Arkansas attorney generalâs office has already started receiving complaints from California residents about the defendantsâ new company.
Arkansas Attorney General Dustin McDaniel believes the two women still live nearby â Mance in a neighboring Arkansas county and Morris in Mississippi. McDaniel says he is exploring all legal options that would force the women to pay the penalty fees and repay the 139 affected customers.
Popularity: 13% [?]
$500,000 Award Against Collections Company One of the Largest Yet
Thursday, May 7th, 2009
In one of the largest collection awards ever granted by a jury, a California couple has been awarded $500,000 in damages for being harassed and threatened by the debt collection agency Credigy Services Corporation, reports insideARM (âJury Awards $500,000 to California Couple in FDCPA Case,â May 5, 2009).
Under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, which protects consumers against abusive collections tactics by debt collectors, Manuel and Luz Fausto were awarded $100,000 for actual damages and $400,000 in punitive damages, granted by a jury for âmalicious and reckless disregard of the coupleâs rights.â
The award stems from a dispute over the coupleâs Wells Fargo charge card debt they thought they had paid off in the late 1990s, said the Faustosâ lawyer, David Humphreys of Humphreys Wallace Humphreys, P.C.
During the mid-1990s, the couple realized that their credit card balance was continuing to rise even though they were making payments on their account, but a local Wells Fargo branch denied their request to have the account frozen.
To resolve the situation, the Faustos went to a local debt settlement company that promised to negotiate a payoff of the credit card balance. The couple thought the account had been paid off in the late 1990s, after they made two money order payments.
Then in 2006, the couple was contacted by Credigy with a demand to pay $17,000. Even after a cease-and-desist notice was sent to a Brazilian affiliate of Credigy, the debt collection company still made over 90 threatening calls and sent innumerable letters to the Faustosâ home.
Debt collection attorney Manny Newburger says the jury award in this case is one of the largest given to a consumer under the FDCPA, noting that usually âthere is little or no evidence of actual damages presented by the consumer.â In this particular case, however, the Faustos were able to document the harassing nature of Credigyâs practices, including the companyâs baseless threats, having recorded the last phone call from the collector.
Newburger believes that the verdict in the Fausto case was based largely on state legislation and doesnât think that the size of the award will motivate more consumers to sue debt collection agencies in the future.
âI think this verdict is indicative of what this jury thought of this particular case,â Newburger said, âbut not of anything else.â
Correction: May 8, 2009
This post has been revised to reflect the following correction: The original post mistakenly referred to the $500,000 jury verdict as the largest award conferred upon a consumer under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act. In fact, the $500,000 decision is among the largest FDCPA findings on behalf of a consumer, but not the singular largest.
Popularity: 16% [?]
5 Tips for Managing Your Medical Bills
Friday, May 1st, 2009
In what is turning out to be the worst recession since the Great Depression, many Americans are struggling to pay their bills as companies continue to shed jobs and the economy continues to contract.
In this recession, costly expenses like medical bills are taking a backseat to daily expenses like water, electricity, food, car, and mortgage payments. Now, as with credit cards, consumers are struggling to keep up with their medical bills and increasingly letting more and more of their bills go unpaid.
The Commonwealth Fund, a healthcare research foundation, reports that in 2007, 41 percent of adults were struggling to pay their healthcare bills, up from 34 percent in 2005 (âWhen Medical Bills Outpace Your Means, Seize Control Swiftly,â The New York Times, April 25, 2009). And itâs not just the uninsured who have fallen behind on their payments, nearly two-thirds of people with medical debt actually have health insurance.
Experts say, however, that there are ways to manage your medical debt even if you arenât capable of paying it off right away.
1. Communicate with your creditor.
If you know youâre going to be late on one or more of your medical bills, let your creditors know. Just talking with them wonât obligate you to make a payment, but if your creditor is aware that youâre trying to stay on top of your debt you may be able to avoid collections, at least temporarily, and protect your credit.
2. Review your bills.
Keep a running tab of your doctor visits and medical procedures to accurately review your bills when they come in. Errors in medical billing can occur often, so if you find a discrepancy call your provider for an explanation. And remember that it can never hurt to resubmit bills to your insurer if youâve been denied coverage.
3. Bring in extra help.
Try negotiating with your provider for a discount or for some leeway on repayment. If your creditor still wonât work with you, consider hiring a billing specialist who may be able to help you find errors in your medical bills and better understand the often-complex language of medical billing.
4. Avoid the plastic.
Donât react with panic when you receive a late-payment notice by transferring your medical bill debt onto your credit card. Chances are if you canât pay your medical bill now, youâre not going to be able to pay the credit card bill when it comes in later. And medical bill charges that stay on your credit card will immediately start earning interest, not to mention that charging a large sum to your credit card could negatively affect your credit score, if youâre carrying too high a debt load.
5. Know your rights.
Just because a medical bill goes to collections, doesnât mean creditors have free rein to hassle you into paying; they have guidelines and rules to abide by â they can only call between 8 a.m. and 9 p.m. and they canât scare you into paying the debt. Ask for the callerâs name and request that they send you the name of the creditor and the amount you owe in writing. Visit the Privacy Rights Clearinghouse for a guide to debt collection.
Popularity: 12% [?]
California Unemployment Rate at Highest Level Since WWII
Thursday, April 23rd, 2009
Californiaâs unemployment rate hit a record 11.2 percent in March, leaving 2.1 million people jobless â the highest level since World War II, according to a report released last week (âState Unemployment Rate Highest Since 1941,â San Francisco Chronicle, April 18, 2009).
The March figure surpasses the 11 percent unemployment rate the state reached during the early 1980âs recession, says Patti Roberts, spokeswoman for the stateâs Employment Development Department. The March unemployment rate approaches the 11.7 percent unemployment rate the state had in January 1941.
While last monthâs unemployment rate for the state was significantly higher than the national figure of 8.5 percent for March, California had the 4th highest rate of unemployment in the country, perhaps due to the decline in real estate.
âCaliforniaâs higher rate of job loss is primarily the result of greater exposure to the housing downturn,â said Stephen Levy, director and senior economist at the Center for the Continuing Study of the California Economy in Palo Alto.
Forecasters Vary on Outlook
The unemployment rate is grim and many Californians have been affected by job losses, âBut on the other hand things are not really as bad as you might think,â said Chris Thornberg of Beacon Economics, a California real estate and economic forecasting firm.
Thornberg believes that these job losses can be attributed to the slump in consumer spending over the last year, and sees spending starting to stabilize in the near future along with the job market.
But Jerry Nickelsburg, an economist with the UCLA Anderson Forecast, believes that in all likelihood, the job market will continue to get worse before it gets better. He predicts Californiaâs jobless rate will reach a high of 12 percent before it begins to decline sometime in 2010.
âUnemployment will likely creep up through the end of the year,â Nickelsburg said, âbecause employers will want to see that the increase in demand is strong before they hire.â
Popularity: 8% [?]
The Blame Game: Why Bailed Out Banks Still Arenât Lending
Wednesday, April 22nd, 2009
William Spellman, a 44-year-old IT professional from Indianapolis, has come to the realization that the old adage âwhat goes around, comes aroundâ isnât true in todayâs recession. Spellman has been repeatedly denied a loan for his daughterâs summer school classes by some of the very banks who have been bailed out by his tax dollars, ABC News reports (âBanks Take Billions From TARP, but Give Fewer Loans,â April 21, 2009).
âThey need my help, but now theyâre unwilling to help me,â Spellman said.
The 21 banks receiving the most bailout money from the Troubled Asset Relief Program made or refinanced 23 percent fewer loans in February than in October when TARP funds were first distributed, according to Treasury Department numbers. And excluding mortgage refinancing, consumer lending amongst these banks fell by one-third during that same time period, both of which suggest that âjawboning by federal officials for banks to use TARP funds to boost lending is having a limited effectâ (âTARP Cash Isnât Moving Forward,â The Wall Street Journal, April 16, 2009).
Banks Say Theyâre Lending, Just Not As Much As Anticipated
Investigators for the Congressional Oversight Panel on TARP, the independent agency thatâs in charge of analyzing how banks are spending their $200 billion in government funds, suggest that consumers like Spellman shouldnât be so quick to write the bailout off as a failure just because they havenât personally seen a change in lending.
Neil Barofsky, the Treasuryâs special investigator for TARP, said the program has allowed banks to lend more than they would have been able to without the government assistance but that banks just havenât increased lending as much as the government had hoped.
âA lot of banks have indicated that because they received the TARP funds, they were able to maintain or not reduce lending as much as they would have otherwise,â Barofsky said.
Banks Say Slack in Lending Is Out of Their Hands
Bank executives contend that they havenât been able to expand lending to meet government and consumer expectations because demand for loans is down.
âI think one of the huge misconceptions out there is that banks arenât lending,â said JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon. âThe lending balances are up and down based on demandâŚâ
Dimon also pointed out that the non-bank lenders that have accounted for 75 percent of all lending have all but disappeared in this recession. Now-defunct lending giants Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers created a huge lending void when they folded, taking their large balance sheets and capital out of the financial markets. Wachovia and Washington Mutual also stepped out of the picture when they failed and were consumed by other banks.
Financial experts, on the other hand, attribute this slack in lending to the simple fact that lendersâ fear of rising consumer defaults have changed the way they lend; a good credit score is no longer enough to secure a line of credit. To this end, banks are tightening their lending restrictions and, before they issue any new loans, are analyzing consumersâ debt-to-income ratios and looking at how efficiently consumers pay off their debts, in addition to just looking at credit score.
Popularity: 6% [?]
Card Companies Taking the Ax to Consumers With Good Credit
Thursday, April 9th, 2009
After some 10 million consumers with poor credit saw their credit lines reduced earlier last year, responsible consumers with good credit are now seeing the same credit card limit reductions as credit card issuers move to insulate themselves from defaults, reports USA Today (âLenders Slash Credit for Responsible Borrowers,â April 2, 2009).
Approximately 22 million cardholders â all of them consumers who have kept up on their credit card payments, have paid their bills on time, and have maintained their credit â have had their accounts closed or credit limits cut, according to a recent report by Fair Isaac, the creator of the FICO credit score.
Typically, lenders have targeted those with poor credit but as the economy has continued to unravel, lenders have changed their definition of risk, says Josh Lauer, a professor at the University of New Hampshire who is writing a book on credit reporting.
Consumers who have high credit scores tend to use their credit cards less and carry low balances, says Fair Isaacâs Careen Foster, which may be why theyâre now being targeted by lenders.
And consumers who pay their bills on time arenât a very profitable demographic for lenders since these consumers tend to pay few credit card fees, adds John Ulzheimer, president of consumer education for Credit.com. Even though these cardholders are less likely to default, lenders must still set aside reserves in case consumers stop making payments on their loans.
When credit card companies close a consumerâs accounts or reduce a consumerâs credit limit, it can increase the proportion of available credit a consumer is using and bring down his or her credit score, making it harder to qualify for any type of loan in the future, especially for a consumer who already has bad credit.
The good news for those who have been responsible with their credit is that, according to the Fair Isaac report, card companiesâ recent credit line reductions have had very little impact on these consumersâ credit scores, perhaps because these consumers have had their credit limits cut by only 5 percent.
Bank analyst Meredith Whitney estimates that by 2010 banks will have slashed another $2.7 trillion of available credit on consumer cards. With lenders continuing to tighten their credit standards, Ulzheimer says cardholders, even those with good credit, canât afford to be complacent about their credit scores.
Popularity: 8% [?]
Credit Cardholdersâ Bill of Rights Revisited by Senate
Monday, March 30th, 2009
Lawmakers are attempting to resurrect the Credit Cardholdersâ Bill of Rights legislation that died in the Senate last year in an attempt to provide relief for indebted credit card holders, reports Inside ARM (âCredit Cardholdersâ Bill of Rights Gets New Life in Congress,â March 25, 2009).
Introduced by Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., and Sen. Richard J. Durbin, D-Ill., H.R. 627 would protect consumers from credit card companiesâ predatory lending practices by limiting their exorbitant interest rate increases.
âThe standard credit card agreement gives the lender the power to bleed their customer through evolving and ever more crafty tricks and traps,â Sen. Whitehouse said in a Senate hearing last week (âDebating a Ceiling On Credit Card Fees,â The Washington Post, March 25, 2009). âUnder this business model, the lender focuses on squeezing out as much revenue as possible in penalty rates and fees, pushing the customer closer and closer to the edge of bankruptcy.â
The proposed legislation would apply to those companies that raise card rates higher than 15 percent plus the current yield of a 30-year treasury bond, which is currently set at 18.5 percent.
Federal Reserve regulations set to go into effect in 2010 that will target predatory lending practices by credit card issuers would be expanded under the new Credit Cardholdersâ Bill of Rights:
- Prevent credit card companies from arbitrarily increasing interest rates on existing card balances
- End the practice of âdouble cycleâ billing that currently allows creditors to charge interest on debt that consumers have already paid on time
- Prohibit lenders from advertising âfixedâ rates unless the rates arenât subject to change, or unless the fixed-rate period is clearly disclosed to the consumer
- Forbid lenders from applying cardholder payments to higher interest rate debts last
- Force creditors to accept payments made the following business day when the billsâ due date is a Sunday or a holiday
- Require creditors to offer more reasonable cut-off times for on-time mailed payments
While banking industry advocates admit that some card issuers have engaged in harmful practices , they say the industry as a whole has not overstepped its bounds and that cardholders issuers could be hurt rather than helped by the new legislation.
If the bill passes, âthe market response would simply be to restrict credit, raise interest rates and fees or both,” said Kenneth Clayton, senior vice president and general counsel of the American Bankers Associationâs Card Policy Council, in a letter to the Senate subcommittee. âThis would significantly hurt tens of millions of Americans at the very time they can least afford it.â
Popularity: 8% [?]
Credit Card Penalties, Fees Continue to Rise
Thursday, March 26th, 2009
In order to offset record delinquencies and rising charge-offs, credit card companies are continuing to hike up penalties and, in many cases, double fee amounts for certain cardholders, reports USA Today (âBank Credit Card Fees Keep Going Up,â March 15, 2009).
By the end of 2008, almost 6 percent of all credit card accounts were at least 30 days late, the highest percentage of delinquent accounts the Federal Reserve has recorded since it began tracking credit card defaults in 1991.
These defaults are forcing card issuers to incur significant expenses both at the time of collection on delinquent accounts and later when the companies have to write off these accounts due to non-payment. To recover a portion of their projected losses before they occur, these companies are choosing to pass the buck to at-risk cardholders through higher fees and penalties.
Consumers may not see relief for penalty rates or for late or missed payments until 2010 when new Federal regulations go into effect that will alter the way credit card companies do business, The Washington Post reports (âAccelerating Debt,â March 22, 2009).
Currently, credit card issuers are getting away with charging an average late-payment penalty rate of almost 27 percent, according to a 2008 survey by advocacy group Consumer Action, and may end up collecting as much as $21 billion from cardholders as a result of these higher penalty fees, estimates Robert Hammer, chairman of the consulting firm R.K. Hammer.
Elevated fees âare a recognition of risk going up,â Hammer says. Financial institutions âare not going to watch their costs go up and take no action.â
Fees Double For Some
Earlier this year, American Express raised its late fees from $29 to $39 for corporate cardholders who were 45 days late on their payments, USA Today reports.
Wells Fargo customers who withdraw funds from their credit cards inside the bank branch have seen their fees double from $10 to $20, and likewise those who withdraw credit card funds from the Wells Fargo ATM have seen their fees double from $5 to $10.
In January, JPMorgan Chase levied a $10-a-month fee on about 400,000 cardholders who had carried a high balance for more than two years and who had made little effort to pay it off. Minimum payment requirements for these customers jumped from 2 percent of their account balance to 5 percent, forcing cardholders to pay more than double what they owe on their accounts each month.
â[Card issuers] have been very much damaged by this economic downturn and tightening of credit and all the losses that their banks have faced,â said Bill Hardekopf, chief executive of LowCards.com, a credit card review site. âIf you as a consumer do anything to increase your risk, you will probably very quickly be hit.â
Popularity: 9% [?]
Credit Card Companies Work With Consumers To Settle Debts
Monday, January 5th, 2009
Credit card companies are increasingly forgiving borrowerâs debts or are working with consumers to pay their debts in anticipation of record credit card defaults in 2009, reports The New York Times (âCredit Card Companies Willing to Deal Over Debt,â Jan. 3, 2009). (more…)
Popularity: 7% [?]