The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Hamilton considers legislatio­n to limit payday loan outlets

- BY TARA DESCHAMPS

City of Hamilton councillor­s are set to vote on whether the number of payday loan outlets should be capped at 15.

The radial separation legislatio­n they’ll consider on Tuesday is aimed at keeping payday loan companies from targeting low-income communitie­s, whose members often turn to the high-interest businesses in desperatio­n, but fall further into debt because of the high interest rates and fees that come with the loans.

Hamilton is one of the few cities in Ontario to consider such legislatio­n, adding to its ongoing crusade against payday loan companies. It previously cracked down by requiring them to be licensed, to educate the public on how their rates compare to traditiona­l lenders and to share informatio­n on credit counsellin­g with customers.

The city’s latest attack on the lenders comes from Councillor Matthew Green, who said he proposed a cap of one lender per ward, or 15 total after discoverin­g that loans of $300 were costing locals up to $1,600 because of fees and annualized interest rates he found to be about 546 per cent.

“This is no way for people living in poverty to try to get by,” he said. “The targeting of our inner city neighbourh­oods was a bit pernicious...we had more payday loans in some kilometres than Tim Hortons.”

He believes payday loans companies should be abolished, but settled for fighting for the per-ward cap because the provincial and federal government­s have allowed the process to continue and he lacks the power to overturn them.

The Ontario government decreased the cost of borrowing a payday loan from $21 to $18 per $100 in 2017 and dropped it down again to $15 this year.

The Canadian Consumer Finance Associatio­n, formerly the Canadian Payday Loan Associatio­n, did not respond to the Canadian Press’ request for comment.

It has previously argued that it provides a bridge for consumers who are rejected by banks and would otherwise have to turn to illegal lenders.

The policy councillor­s will vote on won’t immediatel­y decrease the city’s number of payday loan businesses to 15 to match its number of wards because it will grandfathe­r in existing companies, but will prevent new ones from opening, said Tom Cooper, the director of the Hamilton Roundtable for Poverty Reduction.

He’s noticed a “community crisis” has spawned from the 40 payday loan outlets he’s counted in Hamilton, which are mostly “clustered together” in the city’s downtown core.

Cooper said the proximity creates a “predatory” scenario because “we often see people who owe money go to one payday loan outlet and then go to a second to pay the first and then a few doors down again (to another) to pay the second one.”

A survey commission­ed by the Canadian Payday Loan Associatio­n in 2007 revealed for every new customer, 15 become repeat customers.

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