| Bankruptcy credit counseling gets
mixed reviews |
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"I think we knew this was going to be a problem.
This is an unfunded mandate," says Loonin. "Those who
supported this mandate in the first place over-sold what kind of
revenues they were going to get from it. The filing fees are already
extremely high. Even if you charge everybody the reasonable fee
it's not going to cover costs."
And, although the U.S. Trustees office states that
it's possible for someone other than the consumer to pay the fee,
Michael McAuliffe, CEO of Family Credit Counseling Service in Rockford,
Ill., finds some relationships a little unsettling. He says debtors
typically find out about the credit counseling provision when they
visit their bankruptcy attorney, and some consumers are being convinced
that they should file bankruptcy when it's not necessary.
"Bankruptcy attorneys should not have a relationship with
the credit counseling agency," says McAuliffe. "There
are cases where the bankruptcy attorney is putting the pre-filing
and/or post-filing fees into their attorney fee and paying the credit
counseling agency direct. This is a revenue stream for the credit
counseling agency. It's a major conflict of interest."
"Counseling is required to be adequate, and approved agencies
are required to be nonprofit," says Limprecht. She warns "third-party
actions that jeopardize adequacy of counseling services will be
investigated and can place continued approval at risk."
Consumer advocates also claim that some credit counselors are walking
a very fine line when outlining counseling
options to pre-filers.
"General information about the strategies is not going to
be legal advice," says Loonin. "But the more specific
you are in advising any particular strategy to that consumer then
the closer you get to the legal-advice line."
Consumer advocates want the government to provide a clear statement
to counselors telling them they must not give bankruptcy advice
or engage in the unauthorized practice of law.
Limprecht says the U.S. Trustees office has responded. "Non-attorneys
are not permitted to provide legal advice, and approved credit counseling
agencies are notified of that fact."
Startup glitches: Supply vs. demand
A number of agencies initially approved by the U.S. Trustees did
not offer the service in person. Some counselors say most clients
prefer the anonymity of the phone and the Internet anyway.
The availability of counseling sparked concerns when the law was
enacted. Advocates pointed out more agencies were being approved
for the debtor education course than the pre-filing credit counseling;
options for receiving the counseling were mostly limited to the
telephone or the Internet with very few agencies offering the briefing
in person, and, even if the person were to visit the counseling
agency for a session, they would have to prepare for a long drive
with the agencies few and far between.
Limprecht says the government is trying to fix the problem.
"As of Jan. 1, 2006, U.S. Trustees have approved over 100
credit counseling agencies and over 150 debtor-education course
providers," she says. "In the judicial districts overseen
by the U.S. Trustee program, brick-and-mortar services are available
in all but 10 districts for credit counseling and in all but 11
districts for debtor education."
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