The Reporter (Vacaville)

California expands financial protection­s after US rollback

- By Don Thompson

SACRAMENTO >> California on Friday created what supporters call its own nationlead­ing, state-level version of the federal Consumer Financial Protection Bureau after critics said the Trump administra­tion significan­tly weakened national protection­s.

The legislatio­n that Gov. Gav in Newsom signed into law changes the existing Department of Business Oversight into the Department of Financial Protection and Innovation in what proponents said is the first such move by any state.

The current department regulates a significan­t part of the financial services industry, including banks and credit unions. But the expanded version will add oversight authority over debt collectors, debt settlement, credit repair and check cashing services, consumer credit reporting, retail sales financing and rent-to- own contracts.

“We need the state to lead as the federal government is pulling away from financial protection,” Newsom said.

Proponents said the change will boost consumer protection­s by expanding the department’s ability to require accountabi­lity and transparen­cy in the state’s financial system while increasing equal access to affordable credit.

Richard Cordray, who was the federal bureau’s first director under former President Barack Obama from 2012 to 2017, said he and other consumer advocates began pushing for such state- level agencies after the Trump administra­tion backtracke­d on the federal protection­s put in place after the Great Recession of 2008.

“California is such an important market and such a leading state that what is done in California will set the tone across the country,” Cordray said. “It will not only influence financial companies that will find it hard to operate differentl­y elsewhere than they operate in California — so they’ll have to meet higher standards — but it will also set an example that other states may well be inclined to follow.”

The state- level agency “will be critical for California families” regardless of whether Trump is unseated in the November election, said the bill’s author, Assembly woman Monique Limón.

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