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Dave Rosenfeld
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U.S. Senate Committee Passes Landmark Credit Card Bill
Washington, D.C.: Senate Committee Passes Landmark Credit Card Bill
Consumer
Groups Praise Senator Dodd for Progress on Bill to Curb Unfair Practices
WASHINGTON – Leaders of national and Connecticut-based consumer
organizations today lauded comprehensive legislation passed by the Senate
Banking Committee to curb predatory credit card lending practices. The groups
praised committee Chairman and bill sponsor Christopher Dodd for his strong
efforts to enact the legislation.
Introduced by Chairman
Dodd and 18 co-sponsors, the Credit Card Accountability Responsibility and
Disclosure (CARD) Act would ban a number of practices that credit card issuers
have used to unjustifiably increase interest rates, fees and other charges. It
passed the Senate Banking Committee yesterday, moving to the Senate Floor for a
final vote.
“This is the first time
ever the Senate has moved legislation to rein in abusive credit card
practices,” said Travis Plunkett, legislative director of the Consumer
Federation of America. “We applaud Senator Dodd for his efforts to pass this
sweeping bill in the face of strong opposition from the credit card industry.”
“The CARD Act recognizes
that credit card companies target unsuspecting college students for overpriced
credit cards even when they don't have jobs or an ability to repay," said Ed
Mierzwinski at the WashingtonDC office of OSPIRG. "The
bill requires them to treat students like they are supposed to treat other
consumers, fairly."
The Federal Reserve Board
issued rules to stop unfair credit card practices, giving the industry until
July 1, 2010, to implement the new practices. A number of major card issuers
are now increasing fees and interest rates on millions of Americans before the
new rules take effect. The House of Representatives passed legislation last
year that was similar to the Federal Reserve Rules and is likely to do so again
this year.
The Credit CARD Act has a
number of protections that extend beyond those of the Federal Reserve rules and
House legislation. It requires credit card companies to stop:
·Applying unfair
interest rate hikes retroactively to balances incurred under the old rate.
·Hitting
consumers with high penalty fees that are not related to the costs that credit
card companies incur.
·Assessing hidden
and unjustified interest charges on balances already paid off.
·Piling on the
debt that consumers owe by requiring them to pay off balances with lower interest
rates before those with higher rates.
·Offering credit
to students and young consumers without considering their ability to repay the
loan.
"Senator Dodd's bill
picks up where the Fed's rules leave off, protecting all Americans from
unjustified or excessive fees and stopping retroactive interest rate hikes that
only bury struggling families in insurmountable debt," said Lauren
Saunders, Managing Attorney at the NationalConsumerLawCenter.
“This bill will put the
force of law behind the Federal Reserve’s new rules, and will protect consumers
by strengthening these reforms,” said Pam Banks, senior attorney for Consumers
Union. “Credit card lenders are trying to take advantage of the fact that the
Federal Reserve’s rules don’t go into effect until 2010 by maximizing
short-term income from credit card interest payments, even if the consequences
are harmful to their own customers.”
“We know that there is a
battle ahead to preserve the strong consumer protection standards in this
legislation, but we are ready for the challenge and grateful that Senator Dodd
is with us in fighting the unfair, anti-consumer practices of credit card
companies,” said Linda Sherry, director of national priorities for Consumer
Action.
For more information
about credit card reform, visit the Consumers Union website
www.CreditCardReform.org.