Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Assembly to pass bill to loosen rent-to-own rules

- Jason Stein

MADISON - The Wisconsin Assembly was poised to pass legislatio­n loosening state regulation­s on rent-to-own stores.

If approved in the marathon session running from Tuesday into Wednesday, the proposal would go next to the Senate where it faces an uphill fight in the last days of the legislativ­e session.

Also Tuesday, the Assembly and Senate were expected to pass a big chunk of GOP Gov. Scott Walker’s election-year agenda. Among those items: a $200 million fix for Obamacare that the Senate passed Tuesday, 23-9, and the Assembly was expected to pass easily. The Senate also sent the GOP governor his bills to limit welfare, and the Assembly was expected to take up a small town jobs bill and money for recruiting outof-state workers to businesses like Foxconn Technology Group.

The rent-to-own measure, Assembly Bill 759, has raised concerns from consumer advocates opposed to removing the protection­s of the Wisconsin Consumer Act from these transactio­ns.

“These (changes) not only will prevent consumers from standing up for their rights but also allow unscrupulo­us rent-to-own businesses to open and thrive in Wisconsin,” said Sarah Orr, director of the Consumer Law Litigation Clinic at the University of Wisconsin Law School.

For their part, the bill’s largely Republican backers say it would allow for an expanded industry and more options for consumers.

Assembly Speaker Robin Vos (R-Rochester) said that allowing consumers to rent products and then return them is “kind of the way of the future.”

“The goal is to create certainty for the industry and also have world-class protection­s (for consumers),” Vos said.

The legislatio­n would drop the requiremen­t that those retailers disclose the cost of their transactio­ns in the form of an annual interest rate, which is typically well over 100%. Instead, the stores would have to disclose the cash purchase price, the cost for rental services and the total amount that would have to be paid to take ownership of an item.

The legislatio­n would also cap how much wronged customers could get if they sued rent-to-own stores. In classactio­n lawsuits, rent-to-own companies could not be forced to pay more than $500,000 or 1% of their net worth, whichever was less.

In hopes of passing the legislatio­n, national rent-to-own chain Aaron’s in November hired as one of its lobbyists former Assembly Speaker Jeff Fitzgerald (R-Horicon) — the brother of Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald (R-Juneau).

Aaron’s does not operate in Wisconsin but hopes to establish itself here if the state adopts policies more favorable to the industry, such as freeing it from having to tell consumers about the interest rates applied to its services.

The rural jobs bill would set aside $50 million a year for those programs in 56 of the state’s 72 counties. Under Assembly Bill 912, Outagamie and Sheboygan counties would not receive any of the money but Fond du Lac and Manitowoc counties would, at least for now.

Passage in the Assembly would send the bill to the state Senate. If approved and allowed to continue for the next decade, the plan could potentiall­y pump $500 million into rural areas.

That bill comes as Democrats have criticized Walker and GOP lawmakers for approving along with local officials roughly $4 billion in public subsidies for the planned Foxconn factory in Racine County.

That flat-screen plant could eventually employ as many as 13,000 workers and draw down $200 million or more a year in public subsidies, or several times more than the rural jobs plan.

With unemployme­nt in Wisconsin at 3% and some businesses already complainin­g about a lack of skilled workers, skeptics have questioned whether the state will be able to supply enough workers for Foxconn and its potential suppliers.

To help provide enough workers for businesses, Walker has proposed spending nearly $7 million to lure outof-state workers to Wisconsin. If approved this week, Assembly Bill 811 would go to the Senate.

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