Lodi News-Sentinel

House lawmakers move to repeal payday lending rules

- By Jim Puzzangher­a

WASHINGTON — A bipartisan group of House lawmakers on Friday introduced legislatio­n to repeal the first broad nationwide regulation­s on payday and other short-term loans, arguing the rules from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau would effectivel­y ban millions of Americans from accessing credit.

The move is the latest in a Republican-led fight against the agency, an Obama-era creation that was the center of controvers­y this week in a legal dispute over who should serve as acting director.

The House members hope to duplicate the successful effort this year to use the Congressio­nal Review Act, a formerly little-used mechanism, to repeal a new consumer bureau rule that would have allowed Americans to file class-action suits against banks instead of being forced in many cases into private arbitratio­n.

“I and my colleagues in Congress cannot stand by while an unaccounta­ble federal agency deprives our constituen­ts of a lifeline in times of need, all while usurping state authority,” said Rep. Dennis Ross, R-Fla., the sponsor of the resolution to repeal the payday loan rules.

The regulation­s were unveiled in October by bureau director Richard Cordray, whose resignatio­n last week set off the succession battle.

President Donald Trump installed Mick Mulvaney, the White House budget director, in the job. Cordray had appointed Leandra English to be deputy director, and she filed suit saying she was lawfully entitled to the position.

A federal judge ruled in Mulvaney’s favor Tuesday in the first of what’s expected to be a lengthy legal fight.

The centerpiec­e of the new payday rules, which are not scheduled to take effect until mid-2019, is a full-payment test that lenders would be required to conduct to make sure the borrower could afford to pay off the loan and still meet basic living expenses and major financial obligation­s.

The rules also would limit the number of payday and auto-title loans that could be made in quick succession to an individual borrower to three. There are no caps on interest rates.

Cordray said lenders used short-term loans to trap cashstrapp­ed Americans in a highintere­st cycle of debt and that nationwide restrictio­ns were needed on the $38.5 billion-ayear payday lending industry.

The loans typically are cash advances on a worker’s paycheck for two to four weeks and carry a flat 15 percent fee or an interest rate that doesn’t seem particular­ly high. But the effective annual interest rate is actually 300 percent or more and costs can quickly add up if the loan isn’t paid off, the bureau said.

Consumer advocates and most Democrats in Congress strongly back the rules.

But the payday industry and most Republican­s oppose the regulation­s.

The Community Financial Services Associatio­n of America said payday loans are used by about 19 million households to meet budget shortfalls or unexpected expenses. The majority of users have annual incomes between $25,000 and $50,000.

The group said that the typical fee for a $100 payday loan is less than the penalty for bouncing a $100 check.

Ross’ bill is cosponsore­d by Reps. Alcee Hastings, D-Fla., Tom Graves, R-Ga., Henry Cuellar, D-Texas, Steve Stivers, ROhio, and Collin Peterson, DMinn.

Allied Progress, a consumer watchdog group, said the six lawmakers have received $471,725 in contributi­ons from the payday lending industry during their congressio­nal careers.

“Make no mistake, this industry will do whatever it takes to keep their predatory racket humming along,” said Karl Frisch, the group’s executive director.

The resolution is likely to pass the Republican-controlled House. Rep. Jeb Hensarling, RTexas, the powerful chairman of the House Financial Services committee and a leading critic of the bureau, said Friday that he supported the repeal.

“Americans should be able to choose the checking account they want, the mortgage they want and the short-term loan they want and no un-elected Washington bureaucrat should be able to take that away from them,” Hensarling said.

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 ?? OLIVIER DOULIERY/ABACA PRESS ?? President Donald Trump named Mick Mulvaney, who serves as head of the White House Office of Management and Budget, as interim director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
OLIVIER DOULIERY/ABACA PRESS President Donald Trump named Mick Mulvaney, who serves as head of the White House Office of Management and Budget, as interim director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
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