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CFPB May Crowdsource Payday Lender Crackdown

First Posted: 02/03/11 05:03 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:30 PM ET

Cfpb Crowdsourcing

WASHINGTON -- The new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau rolled out a preliminary version of its website on Thursday, and with it a few indications about the agency's plans to crowdsource prospective regulations that may soon target shady payday lenders.

The CFPB hopes to use its website at consumerfinance.gov to collect data not just from banks, but from consumers, in order to monitor trends in various lending markets. While they're still devising specific plans, the agency hopes to have an active public presence, with a simple, closely-watched platform for borrowers to submit complaints. Elizabeth Warren, an adviser to President Barack Obama who is charged with setting up the bureau, told HuffPost in October that she hopes to use crowdsourcing to enhance the regulator's impact.

One of the agency's crowdsourcing initiatives may involve payday lenders and check-cashing shops. Because these businesses are often small operations, they can be difficult for federal officials to track, appearing in a neighborhood only to disappear a few weeks later.

Citizens could organize to take photos of new payday lending or check cashing products, and upload those photos to the CFPB website. That could help notify other members of the neighborhood about potentially-troublesome local companies, as well as helping the regulator build a list of shops to investigate.

As Warren said in a speech at the University of California at Berkeley in October, "Through crowd-sourcing technology, consumers can deal collectively with those who would take advantage of them--and can reward those who provide excellent products and services."

Payday lenders provide short-term, high-interest loans to consumers that critics say are designed to be difficult to repay, often encouraging consumers to repay one payday loan with another. This can lead to a vicious -- and expensive -- cycle of debt.

Members of the U.S. military are a particular target for high-interest lenders. A 2006 Department of Defense report concluded that payday lending was having a negative effect on military readiness and troop morale.

The CFPB is yet to formally detail any specific programs, but the bureau hopes to submit new consumer-protection ideas to the public on its website and allow borrowers to voice approval or disapproval through an online voting system.

The bureau's website stresses the struggles facing borrowers. A "Protecting You" page features three stories from borrowers who have had problems with their bank, emphasizing that the CFPB hopes to respond to similar cases.

The new website's design represents a considerable change of tone from the consumer-complaint resources available from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, previously the ostensible go-to for borrowers. The OCC's consumer call center, based in Houston, has long been criticized by state banking regulators and public-interest groups for being inattentive to consumer complaints.

In December 2007 testimony before the House Subcommittee on Financial Institutions and Consumer Credit, Ed Mierzwinski, Consumer Affairs Director for the U.S. Public Interest Research Group, noted that some state regulators referred to the call center as "OCC's black hole in Houston." The OCC, which declined to comment for this story, rolled out its helpwithmybank.gov website in 2007 in response to criticism that its call center is clunky, but many consumer advocates say the regulator remains clunky and unhelpful.

The banking horror stories on the CFPB's site are reproduced below:

Karen, 32, is an airport security supervisor from Pennsylvania. When she refinanced her mortgage, her broker promised her a low fixed-rate loan but instead gave her two more expensive loans. Why? She didn't know it at the time, but giving her both a large adjustable-rate first loan and a second smaller loan increased the fees she paid to the broker. Karen told the lender what she had in savings and her income, but the broker changed the numbers on her form. (Some brokers changed numbers in order to make borrowers eligible for higher loan amounts than they could otherwise qualify for--and to close a deal for a bigger mortgage that will give the broker bigger fees.) The broker scheduled Karen for a late-night closing and did not give her the closing documents at the time of closing, so she was not aware of these changes. The consumer bureau will work to prevent similar abuses, in part by enforcing the requirement in the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act that mortgage lenders document and verify a borrower's income or assets before making a loan to ensure that the borrower can afford to repay it.

Robin, 55, is a seventh-grade science teacher from Georgia. Her credit card company increased the rate on her existing credit card balance from 10.90% to 17.90%, even though she paid her account on time every month. The increase has been particularly difficult for her family because her husband's landscaping business has been hard hit recently by the financial crisis. The consumer bureau will enforce the Credit CARD Act, which President Obama signed in 2009 to ban credit card issuers from arbitrarily raising rates on existing balances and other unfair practices. The CFPB will also be responsible for updating the credit card rules moving forward.

Andrew, 62, is a retired Baltimore police officer and Vietnam veteran who manages a fitness center for seniors. Andrew had both a primary checking account and a separate "veteran's account" in which he received $123 in benefits each month. In 2009, his bank made a mistake that caused confusion about a replacement debit card for one of his accounts. The bank had also automatically enrolled Andrew's veteran's account, including transactions using the debit card, in "overdraft" protection that he never asked for--a practice that has since been prohibited. When Andrew used the replacement card--expecting it to withdraw from his primary checking account--he was hit with hundreds of dollars in overdraft fees on his veteran's account. Andrew discovered the bank's error and explained the situation, but the bank was willing to refund only part of the fees. The consumer bureau will examine big banks to ensure that they are following the rules that now require banks to give consumers a real choice of whether to join overdraft protection programs for ATM and debit card transactions. The CFPB will update those rules to respond to changes in the marketplace over time.

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03:02 PM on 02/07/2011
Sooo... am I the only one reading this that thinks it's hilarious that ALL 3 of those examples are already protected by EXISTING LAWS.... so glad we have a "NEW" agency to ENFORCE existing laws. Too bad the "compliance" officers, I mean police force or possibly the drug enforcement collection agency, I mean the courts couldn't do their jobs and protect citizens and prosecute businesses breaking the law. Quick, nanny socialist government come to our rescue so you can justify the 100's of trillions of dollars you waste every year.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
truthinesshurts
03:33 AM on 02/07/2011
What we really need is to bring back the usury laws. They went away along with Glass–Steagall with the passage of Gramm–Leach–Bliley. Credit card companies can now charge ove 30% and payday lenders charge 300%. CRIMINAL!!
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
StJames
In absentia luci tenebrae vincunt
09:14 AM on 02/07/2011
Exactly!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bkerensa
Evangelist at Ubuntu
05:31 PM on 02/06/2011
I applaud the creation of the CFPB. States are not doing enough to regulate payday lenders and so-called consumer finance businesses that offer the highest interest rates in the industry to the most financially vulnerable people in our nation. These businesses use marketing ploys and pretend to be their customers "Trusted Friends" while loaning them money they cannot pay back in most cases and then garnishing their wages or taking their vehicles (which mind you they sell in excess of the amount owed and interest owed).
heckmepitus
Truth, justice and the American way
01:39 PM on 02/06/2011
Warren must be in league with organized crime, why else does she work so hard to drive millions to illegal loan sharks?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
xianred
wo bu zhidao
07:15 PM on 02/06/2011
????
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
truthinesshurts
03:34 AM on 02/07/2011
Dittohead!
10:10 AM on 02/06/2011
Warren for president.

We need a genuine representative of the People and not a symbolist.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dadw5boys
Disabled Vietnam Vet
08:43 PM on 02/05/2011
Just call the Law Firm of Dowe Screwthem Andhow they are the Banks Lawyers.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ernie Evil
Smiting the false prophets
09:21 AM on 02/05/2011
Alleged Democrat Agenda - Regulation
Alleged Republican Agenda - Less role for government

So why are the so-called "conservatives" in this board don't like Warren's idea. It's giving power to the people. Except if in reality, they are anti-populace and use the less regulation agenda for the benefit of swindlers.
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studana51
Old and tired
04:31 AM on 02/05/2011
This is especially a problem for the military families, particularly those with members in deployment. Just look outside the gates of the bases and you'll see clusters of these "PayDay" and pawnshop vultures. It's known as usery,interest rates exceeding 300% in some cases. Read the Bible (I'm not a thumper) about that...it's a sin.
07:08 PM on 02/04/2011
Cracking down on payday loans in this financial crisis is like handing out umbrellas in a flood; it doesn't mean squat. How many Americans are even affected by these loans, compared to the millions of us that have lost our jobs, our homes and our life savings due to the MORTGAGE crisis? It's just a big window-dressing distraction from our government's inability to do anything about the actual causes of this crisis.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
James Fisher
08:31 PM on 02/04/2011
they prolly aren't even American. why help them.
04:15 PM on 02/04/2011
Scary Scary Scary

So Ms. Warren will use the power of the government (Big Brother) to allow community activists to slander businesses without checking the facts.

If someone who is an opponent of private enterprises that are licensed and heavily regulated is able to post stories or make statements that are not factual or truthful, what are the consequences? Apparently none.

Community activists with agendas gone wild!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
James Fisher
08:14 PM on 02/04/2011
Well settle down then, community activist.Whats your agenda?

You have a problem with the people watching out for each other? You couldn't have read the same article I did to blather out something so nonfactual and untrue.

http://www.bankrate.com/brm/news/debt/20050912b1.asp

if you look at this chart of each states regulations,you will see interest rate limits Between 390% up to no limits.

If I were a betting man I'd bet you own one of those yellow and red buildings
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Theophrastus
Stuck in the orgone chamber, again...
11:49 PM on 02/04/2011
Nice catch, James. fanned
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
CJCalgirl
nothing breeds faster than stupid
02:27 PM on 02/05/2011
Facts are real, So...It is a SCARY thing to have the truth KNOWN?  So far as I have seen in my life, I know of NO ONE who is against private enterprise in their communities except those huge conglomerates like Walmart who put smaller private enterprises out of business.  Your fears are a product of your reptile brain.
03:09 PM on 02/04/2011
Ms. Warren will hopefully be confirmed by the Senate for a full-time post on the CFPB -- she has the guts and intelligence required for the job, and has proven herself dedicated to consumer instead of businesses.

The easy way to fix the payday lending problem (and, let's be honest: it IS a problem) is to:

1. Put a HARD federal APR cap of 36% on all lending products;

2. Give banks and CUs more incentive to offer smaller-dollar loans to people with lower credit scores so the obvious current need for such products is filled;

3. Require basic financial literacy education starting in middle school, all the way through college, so that people better understand the financial products they use.

Those three simple things could go a long, long way to putting more Americans on the path to fiscal solvency and success.

Well, that and raising top marginal rates, true national health care, and some freakin' jobs! :-)
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
CJCalgirl
nothing breeds faster than stupid
02:28 PM on 02/05/2011
tke, Good post!  Amazing what a little education could do!
02:29 PM on 02/04/2011
THE GIRL WHO KICKED THE HORNETS ASS - Way to go Ms. Warren!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tierce
We need less government, that empowers the ppl
12:37 PM on 02/04/2011
Every little bit helps. Thank you E. Warren.
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
lodger16x
04:13 AM on 02/04/2011
In some nations,  local criminals stealing and running are treated harshly.
 In America, they can disappear and move on, because deregulation sucks is the new slogan.
It's fine  good to go after the local criminal financiers, but it all starts on Wall St, and K ST, and everyone knows it!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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02:18 AM on 02/04/2011
The future of this nation - and the world - rests on the shoulders of a few remaining individuals who have not (yet) sold their decency and integrity for petty cash.

Elizabeth Warren is a shining example of this rare breed. Perhaps the only such surviving specimen in Washington DC.