South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Next text could be from debt collector as CFPB mulls rule

- By Renae Merle

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau will unveil new debt collection rules in a few weeks, the agency’s director said this week, potentiall­y unleashing a battle over the industry’s tactics and consumers’ rights.

The proposal, which would be the first update to the Federal Debt Collection Practices Act in more than 40 years, will address how often debt collectors can call someone and the industry’s use of emails or text messages, said CFPB director Kathy Kraninger.

The CFPB will “modernize the legal regime for debt collection,” Kraninger said in her first major speech since becoming the bureau’s director in December.

The $11 billion debt collection industry has been anxiously awaiting the proposal, hopeful that the Trump administra­tion would set out clear rules making it easier for debt collectors to avoid fines and lawsuits. Consumer advocates, meanwhile, have asked the CFPB to stop debt collectors from harassing consumers and collecting on “zombie” debts.

The proposal comes as the CFPB undergoes a radical makeover under the Trump administra­tion. The number of cases filed against financial companies has plummeted and the bureau has started rolling back some regulation­s — particular­ly on payday lenders.

Kraninger laid out a business-friendly vision for the CFPB before a packed crowd at the Bipartisan Policy Center Wednesday, including a focus on educating consumers to make better decisions and reducing “unwarrante­d” regulatory burdens. The CFPB “cannot be everywhere, with everyone, at every transactio­n — nor should it try to be,” Kraninger said.

Under Kraninger, the CFPB has already proposed rolling back rules requiring payday lenders to verify customers can afford their loans — a major industry win. She has also endorsed a decision by Mick Mulvaney, her predecesso­r and current acting White House chief of staff, ending the bureau’s practice of preemptive­ly verifying that companies are complying with the Military Lending Act, which protects military members and their families from financial fraud.

The proposal on debt collection rules is expected to launch another major fight. The country has more than 7,000 debt collectors who made over $1 billion combined last year, according to data from industry researcher IBISWorld. In 2018, the CFPB said it received about 81,500 complaints about debt collectors, making the industry one of the most common sources of consumer complaints. But debt collectors say they have already been hampered by CFPB oversight and disparate court rulings on how aggressive­ly they can go after consumer debts.

The industry wants “clear lines of what we should be doing and not doing,” said Leah Dempsey, senior counsel for ACA Internatio­nal, a large industry lobbying group.

For example, courts have split on whether debt collectors can leave consumer voice mail messages, Dempsey said. And the existing law was written before email and text messages became standard ways to communicat­e, she said.

“Millennial­s like me don’t answer their phone,” she said. “Respectful communicat­ion in a way that is helpful to the consumer will benefit both parties.”

Consumer advocates say they are concerned the CFPB will attempt to weaken existing law, in favor of an industry that racks up thousands of complaints to regulators every year. Debt collectors shouldn’t be able to call consumers more than once a week, contact them on social media such as Facebook or through work email addresses, advocates say.

The bureau should also prohibit the industry from attempting to collect on old debts, according to advocates. Consumers are not always aware that some state laws protect them from having to pay “zombie” debts, and that they could harm their cases if they pay even a small amount to stop harassing phone calls, they say.

 ?? ANDREW HARRER/BLOOMBERG NEWS ?? Kathy Kraninger, the director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, plans to update debt collection rules.
ANDREW HARRER/BLOOMBERG NEWS Kathy Kraninger, the director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, plans to update debt collection rules.

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