Congress Sides with Predatory Lenders in Sending Rollback of Dodd-Frank Financial Reform Law to the President’s Desk

Meanwhile, FDIC today announced that bank profits this quarter were the highest on record WASHINGTON, D.C. – Just now, the U.S. House of Representatives voted in favor of S. 2155, a partial rollback of the Dodd-Frank financial reform law, which, since it has already passed the Senate, sends the bill to the President for his signature. The White House has issued a Statement of Administrative Policy in support of the bill. Center for Responsible Lending (CRL) Senior Legislative Counsel Yana Miles issued the following statement: This bill puts out a welcome mat for many of the same reckless

CFPB Payday Rule To Remain Intact For Now

WASHINGTON, D.C. - Congressional Review Act (CRA) resolutions—S.J. Res 56 and H.J. Res 122—to repeal the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s (CFPB or consumer bureau) payday and car title lending rule will not advance in Congress, as their legislative clock has expired. The CFPB rule, finalized in October, establishes basic consumer protections on these 300% or more interest loans, including the common sense standard that lenders should have to verify a borrower’s ability to repay before making the loan. Consumer and civil rights advocates are urging the consumer bureau to keep intact the

CFPB Turns Blind Eye To Overdraft Fee Abuses

Overdraft fees cost consumers $14 billion a year WASHINGTON, D.C. – Mick Mulvaney, who is unlawfully leading the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB or the consumer bureau), recently announced that the agency will halt its rulemaking plan to address bank overdraft fee abuses. The announcement was made along with the agency’s updated spring agenda, which dropped an overdraft fee rule from the list of upcoming actions. Since February 2012, under the previous CFPB Director, the consumer bureau has studied abusive overdraft fee practices and the results have been clear: overdraft programs

Education and Consumer Advocates Rally at CFPB to Protest Mulvaney Decision to Close Office Designed to Protect Student Loan Borrowers

WASHINGTON, D.C. – This morning, education and consumer advocates convened outside the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) to condemn the announced plan by Mick Mulvaney of the Trump Administration to dissolve the CFPB’s Office for Students and Young Consumers. Watch video of the press conference that included representatives from twelve states, DC, and the US Virgin Islands. "Mulvaney is shutting the Office for Students in the middle of a student debt crisis. It's like sending the fire trucks home in the middle of a three-alarm fire," said Alexis Goldstein, Senior Policy Analyst at

New Analysis Breaks Down North Carolina’s $457 Million Annual Savings on Payday and Car Title Lending Fees by County and Congressional District

Savings Figures Could Flip to Fee Drain if Federal Threats to NC Consumer Protections Are Realized DURHAM, N.C. – A new Center for Responsible Lending (CRL) analysis breaks down the $457 million that North Carolinians save each year through an interest rate cap on predatory payday and car title loans, calculating the fees that residents of each county and Congressional district would lose without that protection. North Carolina enjoys strong protections against triple-digit interest loans that are designed to trap cash-strapped families in long-term debt. Payday loans were legal for four years

Homeowner's Bill of Rights Clears CA Senate, Heads To Assembly

SB 818 would renew mortgage and foreclosure safeguards, such as the right to appeal when a loan modification application is denied. SACRAMENTO, CALIF. – Today, the California Senate passed SB 818, a bill to restore key provisions in California’s landmark “Homeowner’s Bill of Rights” (HBOR) legislation which passed in 2012 in response to the foreclosure crisis. HBOR has prevented thousands of avoidable foreclosures by requiring mortgage loan servicers to engage in timely, fair and transparent process with struggling homeowners before proceeding to foreclosure. The bill’s sponsor is Senator Jim

Mulvaney Shutters Consumer Bureau's 'Office of Students' As Student Loan Debt Bends the Backs of Hardworking Americans

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Mick Mulvaney, the unlawful Acting Director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), announced today that he is closing the Bureau’s Office of Students and folding it into the Office of Financial Education. The closure is the latest in a series of actions and proposals that threaten to undermine the consumer protections that have been put into place by the CFPB to address large-scale abuses within our financial system. Whitney Barkley-Denney, senior policy counsel with the Center for Responsible Lending, issued the following statement: The former director of the

Poll: 91% of Maryland Voters Agree that States Must Act to Ensure Students Are Treated Fairly When Repaying Student Loans

Only 12% of Marylanders think that U.S. Department of Education is doing a good job overseeing student loan servicers. WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, the Center for Responsible Lending (CRL) released a poll showing that 91% of Maryland voters agree that the State of Maryland to has a responsibly to protect residents with student loan debt. This includes high level of concern about the student loan debt crisis, and concerns about abusive practices by student loan servicers, such as Navient, which often deepen student’s debt burden. The polling results also shows that only 12% of Marylanders believe

Congress Approves Making Auto Lending Discrimination Easier

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, the U.S. House of Representatives voted to pass S.J. Res 57, a Congressional Review Act (CRA) resolution to undo the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s (CFPB) 2013 indirect auto lending guidance, which was put in place to limit the discriminatory impact of dealer interest rate markups in the auto lending market. This is a first-of-its-kind vote, abusing the streamlined procedures of the CRA to try to undo longstanding guidance issued more five years ago. The CRA resolution is expected to be signed by the President. The effort to eliminate this important consumer

New Report on Federal Housing Administration Proposes Fixes to Repair a Two-Tiered System

50 years after the Fair Housing Act, racial mortgage disparities persist WASHINGTON, D.C. –The Federal Housing Administration (FHA) is both a historic driver of the nation's persistent racial wealth gap and a necessary part of any solution for the nation's housing market, finds new research from the Center for Responsible Lending (CRL). Although FHA has been and remains central in creating homeownership opportunities for borrowers of color, low- to moderate-income borrowers, and lower-wealth borrowers, that was not the case in its early development. CRL's research report is being discussed in