Albuquerque Journal

‘Unbanked’ Americans must wait for checks

Advocates hope to help many set up affordable accounts

- BY AARON MORRISON ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK — As the coronaviru­s crisis took hold, Akeil Smith’s employer slashed her work as a home health aide to 25 hours per week. Her $15-an-hour salary no longer provided enough to pay her $700 monthly rent, and she had to visit food pantries for groceries.

While millions of U.S. workers have already received a quick relief payment from the federal Treasury through direct deposit, Smith is among millions of others without traditiona­l bank accounts who must wait weeks for paper checks.

In the six weeks since the pandemic shut down much of the U.S. economy, more than 30 million American workers have filed for unemployme­nt insurance. Congress passed a $2.2 trillion economic rescue package.

The government in April began sending $1,200 for each individual, $2,400 for each married couple and another $500 for each dependent child to poor and middle-class families across the United States.

To help smooth the delivery of the payments, the government launched an online portal for people to provide their banking informatio­n for direct deposit. But that system offered nothing to people without savings or checking accounts.

A House Ways and Means Committee memo obtained by the AP estimated about 5 million paper checks will be issued each week, meaning those most in need could wait many weeks for their payments.

About 8.4 million U.S. households were considered “unbanked” in 2017, meaning that no one in the household had an account, according to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Another 24.2 million households were “underbanke­d,” meaning they might have a bank account but members of the household also used an alternativ­e financial service for money orders, check cashing, internatio­nal remittance­s, payday loans and pawnshop loans, often at high costs.

Some of those services have been criticized for being predatory and marketing to black and Hispanic communitie­s, which are disproport­ionately unbanked. Roughly 17% of black households and 14% of Hispanic households were without a bank account in 2017, compared with just 3% of white households and 2.5% of Asian American households, the FDIC said.

Banking is a social justice issue with the potential to widen America’s racial wealth gap, said Cy Richardson, vice president of the National Urban League.

“Black America’s economic destiny exists on a razor’s edge right now,” Richardson said.

Advocates say the federal government should use the pandemic payments as an opportunit­y to bring more people into the banking system with Bank On accounts, which are FDIC-insured, cost $5 or less a month and do not allow overdrafts or charge insufficie­nt-funds fees. The accounts can be used for direct deposit, purchases and paying bills.

Otherwise, long lines at check-cashing stores could stretch into the fall and pose dangers to public health.

“There’s now a health component to being unbanked — people are going to have to take literal risks with their health, in order to receive and then spend these dollars,” said

Jonathan Mintz, CEO of the Cities for Financial Empowermen­t Fund, which aims to help underserve­d Americans set up affordable bank accounts.

The opportunit­y to attract customers with relief payments is not lost on check cashing and payday loan businesses, an $11.2 billion network of storefront locations in cities big and small.

In Brooklyn, B&H Check Cashing, in the predominan­tly Hispanic neighborho­od of Bushwick, posts its rates for cashing checks on a wall. A $1,200 check, for example, would cost $26.76 to cash.

Essence Gandy, 26, stood in a line of two dozen people that snaked outside a PLS Check Cashers in Brooklyn to cash in loose change at a Coinstar kiosk. Her checking account was closed months ago because she had insufficie­nt funds and was unable to get back in good standing.

“I’ve got bills on top of bills,” said Gandy, who also has credit card debts and is behind on payments to a mattress store. She said she hopes to use the federal relief payment to catch up on bills and will likely cash the paper check at PLS.

A representa­tive of PLS, which has 300 locations in 12 states, said it has been informing regular customers that stimulus checks can be cashed at their lowest rates.

 ?? BEBETO MATTHEWS/ ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Millions have received stimulus payments through direct deposit, but those without bank accounts must wait for paper checks, which many will cash at check cashing stores such as this one in Brooklyn, New York.
BEBETO MATTHEWS/ ASSOCIATED PRESS Millions have received stimulus payments through direct deposit, but those without bank accounts must wait for paper checks, which many will cash at check cashing stores such as this one in Brooklyn, New York.

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