Baltimore Sun

Feds aim to limit debt collectors’ practices

Consumer bureau floats rules to cut down harassment

- By James Rufus Koren

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is taking its first step toward reining in debt collectors, releasing an early outline of rules aimed at preventing them from harassing consumers and trying to collect debts that don’t exist.

The proposal, discussed Thursday at a CFPB hearing in Sacramento, Calif., would require collection companies to do more to verify informatio­n about debts before contacting consumers, limit the number of times a collector can call or email consumers, and make it easier for consumers to dispute debts and put the collection­s process on hold.

Consumer advocacy groups have long complained about the practices Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Director Richard Cordray says the agency hears about many problems. of debt collectors, saying they often try to collect from the wrong people, intimidate consumers with nuisance lawsuits and harass borrowers with constant calls.

“We continue to hear about serious problems with debt collection — debiting accounts without authorizat­ion, calling at all hours of the day or night, threats of arrest or criminal prosecutio­n, or threats of physical harm to consumers and even their pets,” CFPB Director Richard Cordray said in remarks prepared for Thursday’s hearing.

Consumer groups called the proposal a good first step. But, as with other CPFB proposals, they say they would like to see more stringent consumer protection­s.

A trade group for debtcollec­tion firms, meanwhile, said rules that go too far could prevent some borrowers from getting loans in the first place.

“If creditors are not able to collect rightfully owed debts, they will be less likely to extend credit to consumers,” said Cindy Sebrell, a spokeswoma­n for trade group ACA Internatio­nal.

The proposal, released late Wednesday, is an early step in a process that could take more than a year to produce final rules. The CFPB’s initial outline will be reviewed by a panel of small debt-collection businesses before more formal rules are proposed, likely sometime next year.

The early proposal calls for debt collectors and debt buyers — firms that buy delinquent debt from banks and other lenders, then try to collect from borrowers — to contact consumers no more than six times in a week. It also calls for debt collectors to inform consumers if their debts are too old for the collector to take them to court.

In a 2013 report, the Federal Trade Commission found that while debt buyers usually, though not always, have the informatio­n they need to prove a debt exists — such as a borrower’s name, the amount they owe and the name of the original lender — they often lack documents related to the debt, such as account statements or loan agreements.

What’s more, debt buyers usually don’t receive any informatio­n about whether consumers have disputed a debt or if a disputed debt has been verified — informatio­n, the FTC noted, that would help determine whether a debt is legitimate.

The National Consumer Law Center, which has pushed for tighter restrictio­ns on debt collectors, said the proposal is a good first step but that it would like to see the CFPB put forward even tougher rules.

Margot Saunders, an attorney with NCLC, said the CFPB’s proposal would create complicate­d, difficultt­o-enforce rules regarding what informatio­n collectors have to verify before trying to collect.

Scott Pearson, an attorney at Ballard Spahr who represents financial-services firms, said debt collectors know there are problems in the industry and that the CFPB’s proposal could address some of those. “There have been lots and lots of consumer complaints resulting from attempts to collect by debt buyers who don’t have proper documentat­ion,” he said.

 ?? STEVE HELBER/AP 2015 ??
STEVE HELBER/AP 2015

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