New rules for handling debt boost consumers' power |
| By Brigitte Yuille Bankrate.com |
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Saving your home from foreclosure, getting rid of
huge credit card bills or facing a bankruptcy may lead you to seek
credit counseling. But proceed with caution. The risks and benefits
of getting debt help vary depending on where you live.
According to the American Association of Debt Organizations,
or AADMO, which keeps a database of debt-related laws, Iowa requires
debtors to receive a written budget analysis. Kansas requires not
only a written initial budget plan but also a financial analysis,
and doesn't let businesses charge extra for obtaining a credit report.
In Mississippi, debtors pay at most $15 for a credit report and
no more than $25 for a joint report.
A national group is trying to level this playing field, lobbying for uniform state laws for credit counseling and debt management firms throughout the country.
"In many states there is not adequate disclosure
of rates, who owns the company or who's making money off the company.
There are no adequate consumer remedies, all of which make it pretty
hard for consumers (or state attorney generals) to go after bad
actors -- especially when they are out-of-state companies,"
says Michael Kerr, acting legislative director and legal counsel
for the nonpartisan National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform
State Laws, or NCCUSL.
The group of law professionals making up the National
Conference developed the Uniform Debt-Management Services Act, which
it recommends that state governments adopt. The idea is to provide
consistent guidance and oversight for credit counseling agencies
and debt settlement companies.
So far, the act has been adopted in Utah, Rhode Island, Delaware and Colorado, and is under review in Hawaii and Wisconsin.
New law's opponents
Some debt managers are concerned about the legislation. Mark Guimond,
executive director of AADMO, which is also the credit counseling
and debt management industry's largest trade association, says the
law is not flexible enough.
"It needs to give more discretion and latitude to the regulators. After all, the regulators are the law enforcement officers," he says.
Both the National Consumer Law Center and Consumer
Federation of America dislike the way the act regulates debt settlement
companies. In a joint comment last year, they argued the legislation
validates the debt settlement businesses.
The consumer groups believe these services can be a reasonable tool for consumers who have the money to participate, but they believe for-profit businesses target consumers who don't have the money to settle their debt. They say the new requirements do not stop the most serious abuses such as charging large fees to settle debts.
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