The Denver Post

Treasury opposes arbitratio­n rules

- By Ken Sweet

NEW YORK» The Trump administra­tion has come out against a set of new regulation­s that would allow consumers to band together to sue their bank or credit card company.

A Treasury Department report released Monday takes aim at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s so-called forced arbitratio­n rules, which the agency finalized this past summer. In the report, the department questions whether the rules are in consumers’ interests and says the agency failed to consider alternativ­es.

The report comes as Congressio­nal Republican­s are trying to rally support to pass a bill to override the CFPB’s new regulation­s. But the November deadline for passing an override under what’s known as the Congressio­nal Review Act is approachin­g. The House has passed the bill but the Senate’s version has stalled.

“Based on (the CFPB’s) own data, it is far more likely that the rule will generate massive economic costs — borne by businesses and consumers alike — that dwarf the speculativ­e benefits,” the Treasury report says.

While the report criticizes the CFPB’s new rules, it does not call for them to be repealed. But it’s likely to be ammunition for Republican­s who want to get the rules overturned before the deadline expires.

The CFPB is an independen­t agency whose director was appointed by President Barack Obama. The agency has long been a target of congressio­nal Republican­s, who believe the bureau was given too much executive authority and not enough oversight when it was created after the financial crisis.

The banking industry and its lobbyists have been pushing hard to overturn the CFPB’s new regulation­s. If allowed to go into effect in 2019, they could expose banks to large class-action lawsuits, a possibilit­y that has taken gotten more attention following the sales practices scandal at Wells Fargo and the security breach at credit company Equifax.

Democrats and liberal-leaning consumer advocates were quick to denounce the Treasury Department report. The CFPB itself took the unusual step of criticizin­g a fellow federal government office for its report.

“This report and similar industry analyses fail to make the case for allowing companies to continue using these clauses to deny consumers their day in court,” said CFPB spokesman Sam Gilford.

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