Saturday, September 22, 2012

How to get assistance from the Consumer Finance Protection Bureau

Black woman protests home foreclosure2

 Mortgage Assistance – CFPB


The CFPB can help you get connected to a HUD-approved housing counselor. At no cost to you, the counselor can help you work with your mortgage company to try to avoid foreclosure. A housing counselor can help you organize your finances, understand your mortgage options, and find a solution that works for you.
Here’s what to do:
Have this ready when you work with your mortgage company or housing counselor to discuss a possible work-out solution.
  • Mortgage loan number (account number)
  • Any additional paperwork from your mortgage company
  • Recent pay stubs
  • Recent tax return
  • Household expenses (bills including food, utilities, car payments, insurance, cable, phone, credit cards, car loans, and student loans)
Call the CFPB at 1.855.411.CFPB (2372)
If you would prefer to look for mortgage help online, HUD provides a list of foreclosure prevention resources arranged by state. Military members or veterans can call us or visit the VA’s home loan website to get personalized assistance.
Foreclosure prevention and loan modification scammers target homeowners who are having trouble paying their mortgages. These scammers might promise “guaranteed” or “immediate” relief from foreclosure, and they might charge you very high fees for little or no services. Don’t get scammed. If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is. Call the CFPB if you think you may be the target or victim of a scam.
Legal aid
If you believe you are in need of an attorney, or if you have been served with a notice of foreclosure or other related legal complaint, there might be legal representation available at little or no cost to you. Find legal aid in your state.

Mortgage Assistance – FTC (federal trade commission)
The Federal Trade Commission has help for homeowners in distress.  They have useful suggestions and some resources that might provide you with the help you need.
To learn more about mortgages and other credit-related issues, visit www.ftc.gov/credit and MyMoney.gov, the U.S. government’s portal to financial education.
The FTC works to prevent fraudulent, deceptive and unfair business practices in the marketplace and to provide information to help consumers spot, stop and avoid them. To file a complaint or get free information on consumer issues, visit MyMoney.gov or call toll-free, 1-877-FTC-HELP (1-877-382-4357); TTY: 1-866-653-4261. Watch a video, How to File a Complaint, at ftc.gov/video to learn more. The FTC enters consumer complaints into the Consumer Sentinel Network, a secure online database and investigative tool used by hundreds of civil and criminal law enforcement agencies in the U.S. and abroad.

 

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

There's a New Sheriff in Town: The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau

For years, the big three credit reporting agencies - Equifax, TransUnion, and Experian, have operated with little to no government oversight or regulation. These are the three agencies that control who gets approved or rejected for loans on everything from credit cards, to cars, to even buying a home.

Consumer protection organizations such as US PIRG (US Public Interest Research Group) have long claimed that the big three operate under a mysterious shroud of secrecy and are the reason the entire credit and lending system is plagued with inaccuracies and erroneous information.

Several studies over many years have repeatedly documented the chronic problem of inaccuracies in credit reports. The U.S. PIRG has conducted at least six studies between 1991 and 1998 and each time has found a shocking number of serious errors in consumer credit reports. US PIRG’s most recent study in 1998 revealed the following:

Twenty-nine percent (29%) of the credit reports contained serious errors --false delinquencies or accounts that had never belonged to the consumer --that could result in the denial of credit; 


 Forty-one percent (41%) of the credit reports contained personal demographic identifying information that was misspelled, long-outdated, belonged to a stranger, or was otherwise incorrect; 

Twenty percent (20%) of the credit reports were missing major credit, loan, mortgage, or other consumer accounts that would demonstrate the positive creditworthiness of the consumer; 

Twenty-six percent (26%) of the credit reports contained credit accounts that had been closed by the consumer but incorrectly remained listed as open; 

Altogether, 70% of the credit reports contained either serious errors or other mistakes of some kind.


Federal laws like the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) and the Fair Debt Collections Practices Act (FDCPA) provide consumers with some protections and more importantly, a basis for litigation against companies who violate consumer protection laws regarding how consumer credit information is handled, and how debts should be collected by collection agencies. Still, it seems collection agencies, and the big three credit reporting agencies have managed to sidestep the regulations aimed at protecting consumers from their mistakes, lack of security and illegal collection practices. Credit reporting agencies and collection agencies try to defend (even in courts of law) severely flawed business models that make it extremely difficult if not impossible for the average consumer to call them on their mistakes and get relief from practices that are intentionally harmful to a consumers credit file. Consumer requests to the credit reporting agencies to correct erroneous or inaccurate information in their file are routinely ignored or mishandled. Consumer investigation requests are conducted via a process that has been describes as “shoddy” and “grossly irresponsible” by legal professionals in the industry.


Evidence of high error rates in the credit reporting system is also found in the complaints received by the Federal Trade Commission regarding credit reports. For many years consumer complaints about credit reports have ranked at the top of all complaints submitted to the FTC for any reason. Identity theft, which also involves creditors or furnishers of credit information and credit reporting agencies, is now at the top of all fraud complaints received by the FTC. The FTC reported to Congress that as of March 2002, the FTC received approximately 3000 calls per week to their toll-free identity theft hot line. Approximately 43% of all complaints received by the FTC in all subjects are identity theft related. When one considers number of people applying for credit in the US on a daily basis, the number of persons affected by credit reporting agency mistakes and information mismanagement is absolutely staggering.


It is clear that the credit reporting agencies and the collection companies need more regulation and oversight. A close examination of their procedures and Operations reveal that their business models complement each other, resulting in a two-pronged attack upon the consumer. Well, it appears the consumers’ cry for help after all these years has finally been heard.


On July 16th in Detroit Michigan, the new director of the newly formed Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) Richard Cordray announced: “the Consumer Bureau is issuing a new regulation to expand our supervision program to oversee these credit reporting companies. The authority to supervise firms is the authority to conduct on-site examinations of whether and how they are complying with the law. It affords an opportunity to gain a more thorough understanding of their business models and their business practices, to work with them to correct any problems we find, and to find ways to resolve matters that may be causing harm to consumers.”


Cordray went on to comment about the important role credit reporting agencies play in our entire economy:

“So this critical market is at the heart of our lending systems. It has enabled many of us to get credit and to afford a home or a college education. But it is also clearly a market that can cause considerable problems for consumers. For example, sometimes credit reports contain errors that inaccurately reflect people’s financial histories and can unfairly block them from getting approved for credit or can make it cost more than it should. Consumers also can encounter great difficulties at times in getting errors corrected. When the Consumer Bureau first opened its doors almost a year ago, we asked people to share their consumer experiences with us. We have heard reports since from many consumers that their credit reports are not accurate, and it is difficult to get them corrected. Because of the critical role that credit reports play in consumers’ lives, it is our job to make sure we understand the full extent of these problems and address them effectively.”

“Given its enormity, given its influence, and given its wide impact on our overall economy, you can see that there is much at stake in ensuring that the credit reporting market is working properly for consumers.”

David Holt, with
Clear Point Credit Counseling Solutions says it's a good move. "This is a big deal for consumers," he says. The goal is to ensure credit reporting agencies are working properly for consumers, lenders and the economy. "The laws are already there in the Fair Credit Reporting Act but they are going to shore up the rules on what the agencies have to do," Holt says.

David Holt of Clear Point is exactly right, this is a big deal. However, the effectiveness of this new bureau will surely be measured by what they actually do, and what real regulative authority they have. I believe the effectiveness of any regulatory government agency should be measured first by its leadership, and second, by its mission statement. The CFPB is headed up by Richard Cordray. But as anyone who hasn’t spent the last three years in a cave would know, the first choice to lead the agency was Elizabeth Warren, the up and coming Harvard Law professor who gained notoriety as an outspoken critic and Chairman of the Congressional Oversight Panel of the infamous TARP Bailout of 2008.

In the hallowed halls of congress, Warren is considered the Champion of the beleaguered Middle Class. The CPFB was her own brainchild. As she crisscrossed the country, spreading the word about the C.F.P.B., Warren became a familiar face to many, especially to those who had seen her on television—on CNBC, Real Time with Bill Maher, and The Daily Show with Jon Stewart. Whatever the reasons, president Obama ignored scores of political groups like the AFL-CIO and thousands of people around the county who had petitioned him to appoint her as the nation’s top consumer protection watchdog. (See article in
Vanity Fair).

So, who is Richard Cordray? As attorney general of Ohio, Cordray aggressively pursued lawsuits against some of the country’s biggest financial firms — including AIG, Bank of America and Fannie Mae — for misleading the state’s pension funds, ultimately securing a $700 million settlement from AIG over accounting fraud. He also led an early effort to go after so-called “foreclosure mills” that used falsified documents to speed up foreclosures on consumers, suing Ally Financial in 2010 and campaigning for big banks to slow down their own foreclosure proceedings. “We pursued many actions against foreclosure rescue scammers who were reaching into the pockets of desperate people in an effort to steal what little remained as they sought to keep their homes,” His background seems well suited for the position, but the jury is still out as to what direction the bureau will take and how affective it will be. For Mark Spindel, co-founder of the Potomac River Fund, that will be a major indicator of how effective the CFPB can be. “The key for me is whether and when and if this will have some impact on the foreclosure and housing markets. the real test for the CFPB will be in seeing how aggressive Cordray will be in pushing financial policy to favor consumers.















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