California Bows to Payday Lenders on Interest Rate Caps

Source
Nick Cahill | Courthouse News Service
The Center for Responsible Lending — which sponsored Assembly Bill 2500 — said lawmakers wilted and succumbed to the financial industry’s heavy lobbying. “Assembly members just signaled to predatory lenders that it’s OK to target distressed Californians into taking out abusive loans,” the nonprofit’s policy director Graciela Aponte-Diaz said. “People around California and across the country want protections from these...

El presidente Trump y 234 representantes de la Cámara Baja ven la discriminación racial de color verde [$$$]

Source
Aracely Panameño | Univision Noticias
El presidente Donald Trump, empoderado por el voto de 234 representantes de la Cámara Baja del Congreso estadounidense, firmó esta semana una ley federal que alienta la discriminación racial en el financiamiento de la compra de autos, al bloquear regulaciones impuestas años atrás por la Oficina de Protección Financiera del Consumidor. En enero de este año, Eric Trump dijo: “Mi...

U.S. Banks Urged to Make Small Loans In Competition With Payday Lenders

Source
Bradley Keoun | The Street
But some consumer advocates were quick to caution that it remains to be seen how banks will tailor their new offerings - and what the OCC will allow. There's no official cap at a federal level on the interest rates banks can charge, but research has shown that anything above 36% is difficult for most borrowers to afford, said Rebecca...

Groundhog Day at Fannie-Freddie Where the Fix Is Always Tomorrow

Source
Joe Light | Bloomberg
The Center for Responsible Lending, a left-leaning nonprofit, advocates for wide credit access and is calling for highly regulated versions of Fannie and Freddie to be preserved. The group says it’s so unclear what the Trump administration wants that next year is likely to end up looking much like 2018. There’s reason to think Congress might eventually try again, but...

House Rolls Back Guidance On Auto Lending

Source
David Greene | NPR
NPR’s David Greene speaks to Rep. Jeb Hensarling and the Center for Responsible Lending’s Debbie Goldstein about the vote to repeal CFPB guidance meant to protect car buyers from discriminatory loans.

Watchdog agency signals less focus on student loan abuses

Source
Ken Sweet | Associated Press
"Education alone cannot stop predatory behaviors on the part of for-profit schools and servicers, nor can it help hundreds of thousands of Americans in serious debt because of these practices," said Whitney Barkley-Denney, senior policy counsel with the Center for Responsible Lending.

Twin Cities bank at center of huge redlining case reaches settlement

Source
Martin Moylan | MPRnews
Mick Mulvaney, President Trump's acting head of the Consumer Finance Protection Bureau, for example, has been openly contemptuous of the agency he now runs. "We just have seen a general retreat from enforcing the fair lending laws and ensuring that fair housing opportunities are available to everyone," said Melissa Stegman, senior policy counsel at the Center for Responsible Lending.

House poised to nix anti-discrimination rule as part of broader push to unravel Obama regulations

Source
James Goodwin | USA Today
Rebecca Borne, senior policy counsel at the Center for Responsible Lending, a nonprofit devoted to promoting fair lending practices, said repealing the consumer provisions will send “a really damaging message” to auto lenders that the federal government is not serious about enforcing anti-discrimination laws. "For decades now, study after study has shown that discrimination in the auto-lending market is a...

U.S. House overturns rule meant to curb car loan bias

Source
Katanga Johnson | KFGO
"Overturning the auto lending guidance just opened the door to uncertainty across federal agencies that use rules and guidance to protect the public from financial predators," said Rebecca Borné, an attorney with the Center for Responsible Lending.

Trump rolling back Obama efforts on racial bias

Source
Katy O'Donnell | Politico
“Although it occurs, it’s rare for people to be openly racist. Most of the discrimination happens in a manner that the only way to prevent it is through disparate impact enforcement,” said Mike Calhoun, president of the Center for Responsible Lending. “And if you say no disparate impact enforcement, you’re largely saying no discrimination enforcement at all.”