Los Angeles Times

Late changes to banking bill

Equifax and other firms get some lastminute benefits in a bill originally meant to punish them.

- By Jim Puzzangher­a jim.puzzangher­a @latimes.com

WASHINGTON — Equifax Inc. was publicly excoriated by senators last fall for its massive data breach. Now, the company and other credit reporting firms are in line to get some last-minute benefits in a banking deregulati­on bill that originally was designed to punish them by adding new consumer rights.

The bipartisan Senate bill includes requiremen­ts that Equifax and the other credit reporting companies allow people to freeze and unfreeze their files for free and provide free credit monitoring for active-duty members of the military.

Those provisions were in direct response to the outrage over a data breach revealed in September that the company says affected 147.9 million Americans. Consumer advocates generally support those changes.

But as the bill nears final approval in the Senate this week, its main sponsor, Sen. Mike Crapo (R-Idaho), has proposed an amendment with provisions that would offset some of the new requiremen­ts for Equifax and the other two major credit reporting companies, Experian and TransUnion.

Crapo’s amendment, which included numerous other revisions to the bill, passed a procedural hurdle in the Senate on Monday by a 66-30 vote.

The amendment would prohibit active duty military from suing credit-reporting companies regarding any problems with the free credit monitoring.

Chi Chi Wu, a staff attorney at the National Consumer Law Center, said that, if approved, the provision would be the first time federal law would prohibit a consumer’s right to sue regarding their credit reports.

“It’s especially a bad precedent given that this is a right being given to service members,” she said

Sen. Sherrod Brown (DOhio), a leading opponent of the legislatio­n, said he could not understand the change to the bill.

“Americans are furious with Equifax, as they should be, but this amendment ... for reasons I can’t fathom includes provisions designed to help Equifax,” Brown said.

He called free credit monitoring for service members “a small gesture to the people who serve our country” but one that was too much for Equifax and Republican­s.

“In exchange for this token benefit, they demanded that consumers and service members give up their right to take Equifax to court,” he said. “So Equifax is willing to do a little bit for people, just a little bit, but damn it, you can’t sue us then.”

An Equifax spokeswoma­n said in a prepared statement that the company supported the free credit freezes but did not address the amendment providing immunity from lawsuits on credit monitoring.

Equifax also could get another benefit in an arcane change to the bill designed to open competitio­n for credit scores used for mortgages purchased by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which are under federal government conservato­rship.

Crapo’s amendment would insert a provision proposed last summer by Sens. Tim Scott (R-S.C.) and Mark Warner (D-Va.) that would require the Federal Housing Finance Agency, which regulates Fannie and Freddie, to create a process to validate and approve new credit scoring models.

Equifax, Experian and TransUnion jointly own VantageSco­re, a competitor to San Jose’s Fair Isaac Corp., the company behind the FICO score now used by Fannie and Freddie.

Consumer advocates have called for updated credit scoring models that are fairer to minorities. But they noted that FHFA in December issued a formal request for input on the agency’s credit score requiremen­ts and the Senate bill’s proposed provision could upend that process.

“It appears to be an attempt to set up a better runway to help them take over the credit-scoring market,” Mike Litt, consumer campaign director for the U.S. Public Interest Research Group, said of the credit reporting companies.

An FHFA spokeswoma­n declined to comment.

Brown is suspicious of the last-minute change. “Instead of allowing FHFA to take the time it needs to get it right, this bill ignores that, and it sets up its own process,” he said. “I have my hunch, though, as to who is pushing for it. Guess who is one of the biggest beneficiar­ies of this change? … Equifax, of course.”

Rachel Cohen, a spokeswoma­n for Warner, said the provision “will encourage more innovators to update their credit scoring models or invest in alternativ­e credit scoring models, which have the potential to make homeowners­hip a reality for more qualified borrowers who lack access to traditiona­l forms of credit.”

Scott’s spokeswoma­n, Michele Exner, said “a handful of Senate Democrats” who opposed the banking bill are trying to use misleading claims to derail it, including singling out a provision that “outside of this bill would be lauded as a bipartisan solution to helping minority families reach new opportunit­ies.”

Warner has been an outspoken critic of Equifax. In January, he joined Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) in proposing “massive and mandatory” fines for data breaches at credit reporting companies, starting at $100 for each consumer whose sensitive informatio­n is compromise­d.

Warner also is one of the main Democratic co-sponsors of Crapo’s deregulati­on bill, which backers say is intended to provide relief to small and midsize banks. Warner was among a bipartisan group on the Senate Banking Committee that drafted the bill and told reporters last week he was disappoint­ed the bill wasn’t tougher on Equifax. For example, he said, he was unable to get Republican­s to agree to include the databreach fine proposal.

Litt said the U.S. Public Interest Research Group supports free credit freezes for consumers, but he’s not happy with the bill because of the other provisions.

“For all this talk about action after the Equifax breach, Congress hasn’t done anything in six months but now is moving to make things worse,” he said.

 ?? Justin Lane EPA-EFE/REX/Shuttersto­ck ?? A BANKING bill would require Equifax and other credit firms to let people freeze and unfreeze their files for free. But the bill’s main sponsor has proposed an amendment that would offset some of the new requiremen­ts.
Justin Lane EPA-EFE/REX/Shuttersto­ck A BANKING bill would require Equifax and other credit firms to let people freeze and unfreeze their files for free. But the bill’s main sponsor has proposed an amendment that would offset some of the new requiremen­ts.

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