Los Angeles Times

CFPB seeks to weaken its own database

- DAVID LAZARUS

The Trump administra­tion has never been shy about expressing its disdain for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau in general and the agency’s complaint database in particular.

While he was in charge of the consumer agency, before becoming President Trump’s acting chief of staff, Mick Mulvaney questioned the legal requiremen­t that he provide a forum for consumers’ complaints about financial firms.

“I don’t see anything in here that says I have to run a Yelp for financial services sponsored by the federal government,” he said at a banking industry conference last year. “I don’t see anything in here that says that I have to make all of those public.”

After months of speculatio­n that the CFPB might shut down the complaint database, the bureau announced a different approach on Wednesday.

The complaints will remain accessible to the public.

But they shouldn’t necessaril­y be trusted.

“That seems to be what they’re trying to say without actually saying it,” said Ed Mierzwinsk­i, senior director of the federal consumer program for the U.S. Public Interest Research Group.

“They’re going to keep the database up, but they’re saying that the complaints are not representa­tive of the marketplac­e,” he told me.

The CFPB announced that it was making “several enhancemen­ts” to the complaints database, including “modified disclaimer­s to provide better context to the published data.”

“Complaints are not necessaril­y representa­tive of all consumers’ experience­s with a financial product or company,” the complaints website prominentl­y declares.

“We don’t verify all the allegation­s in complaint narratives,” it says. “Unproven allegation­s in consumer narratives should be

regarded as opinion, not fact.”

Financial firms overseen by the CFPB have griped for years that it was unfair to post consumers’ complaints online.

They said this could give the impression that the companies don’t actually have customers’ best interests at heart.

Oh, hi, Wells Fargo! Thanks for joining us.

Since Trump took office, industry groups have pushed for the CFPB to keep consumers’ complaints to itself. Many of the nearly 2 million complaints submitted to the bureau involve problems with loans, debt collection and questionab­le fees.

Kathy Kraninger, the former White House official who now runs the bureau, said in a statement that the CFPB took industry feedback to heart.

“After carefully examining and considerin­g all stakeholde­r and public input, we are announcing the continued publicatio­n of complaints with enhanced data and context that will benefit consumers and users of the database while addressing many of the concerns raised,” she said.

“The continued publicatio­n of the database, along with the enhancemen­ts, empowers consumers and informs the public.”

No one at the bureau responded to my request for further comment.

Mierzwinsk­i speculated that CFPB officials concluded they’d lose a court fight if they dropped public access to consumer complaints.

The database, after all, is required by law.

“So instead, they’re making it look like the complaints aren’t statistica­lly valid,” Mierzwinsk­i said.

Let’s be real clear about this: A searchable database of complaints regarding some of the country’s leading businesses is an important consumer tool.

Not only does it assist people in researchin­g companies or understand­ing that their problems may not be unique, but it also helps hold financial firms accountabl­e for dubious practices.

While it’s unknown how many complaints have led to official enforcemen­t actions, the CFPB says 97% of complaints “get timely responses” from companies.

The bureau slapped Wells Fargo with a $100million fine several years ago after the bank was found to have opened millions of accounts without customers’ permission.

It pasted Wells with a separate $1-billion fine last year related to the bank’s mortgage and auto-loan businesses.

Most major financial institutio­ns have been penalized by the CFPB at one point or another for treating consumers unfairly.

Virginia O’Neill, vice president of regulatory compliance and policy for the American Bankers Assn., said consumer feedback is valuable, “but only if that feedback is trustworth­y and reliable.”

The associatio­n “has long expressed concern that the publicatio­n of unverified consumer complaints may mislead consumers by introducin­g unreliable informatio­n into the market,” she said.

Richard Hunt, president of the Consumer Bankers Assn., called the changes to the database “an important first step in helping financial institutio­ns better serve their customers and ensuring consumers’ needs are still heard.”

These immediate seals of approval from the banking industry should be sufficient to prompt wariness from consumers.

Yelp and other online review sites are far from trustworth­y. But they’re a great starting point in making decisions about purchases of goods and services.

The CFPB’s database serves the same function, allowing people to make better-informed decisions about the firms they do business with.

By casting doubt on its own complaints, the bureau is basically saying, “Move along, nothing to see here.”

The more industryfr­iendly database comes as the Trump administra­tion seeks a declaratio­n from the U.S. Supreme Court that the CFPB is unconstitu­tional.

Trump wants the court to rule that he can fire the bureau’s director for any reason.

Under current law, the director can be removed only for “inefficien­cy, neglect of duty, or malfeasanc­e in office.”

The case being cited by the White House involves a California law firm under investigat­ion by the CFPB for its sales pitches to indebted consumers.

The firm claims it can’t be called to order by the bureau because the agency violates the constituti­onal separation of powers — that is, it’s not sufficient­ly accountabl­e to the president.

In fact, the CFPB director’s independen­ce from presidenti­al interferen­ce was deliberate. As with the Federal Reserve, the idea when the bureau was created in 2010 was that it would be free of political meddling.

Mierzwinsk­i said the administra­tion’s court filing is just the latest attempt “to weaken the bureau and make it a creature of the president.”

Kraninger, the CFPB director, said in a speech this week that she does not oppose the changes sought by the White House.

In other words, she’s good with Trump firing her at any time for any reason.

Which tells you who’s calling the shots here.

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