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Bank Of America Debit Card Fee Leads To Legislative Response

Bank Of America Fee

First Posted: 10/03/11 03:51 PM ET Updated: 10/03/11 07:26 PM ET

WASHINGTON -- While demonstrators in New York are calling for an occupation of Wall Street, a new push by Democrats in Congress proposes a different tactic: Just walk away.

Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin and Rep. Brad Miller are going on the offensive against Bank of America after the financial behemoth cited Wall Street reform in announcing a new five dollar monthly debit charge last week. Miller, a Democrat from BofA's home state of North Carolina, plans to introduce legislation that would make it easy for consumers to switch banks and simultaneously swap their direct deposit, electronic bill paying and other automatic features that make moving money from one bank to another more hassle than it's often worth.

Illinois Democrat Dick Durbin, meanwhile, is encouraging consumers to abandon the bank's debit card. "My word to consumers across America is talk with your feet, look for a debit card that doesn't charge the Bank of America fee," Durbin told HuffPost, adding that the revenue from the new fee likely far outstrips what they'll lose to swipe fee reform. "It would be no surprise if we found out that Bank of America is overcharging consumers again. They've been found guilty of that in the past, but I really encourage consumers across America to look for competition that doesn't charge this fee, move their debit cards."

The Chicago Tribune, Durbin's home state paper, dubbed the BofA charge "the Durbin fee," which conservative blogs and Republicans have been happy to latch onto, arguing that the hike was a logical consequence of Durbin's swipe fee reform, which capped the fees banks could charge merchants for using debit cards.

On Saturday, the Federal Reserve instituted a 24 cent cap on swipe fees, estimating that running the card costs banks between 7 and 10 cents per swipe. The cap is roughly 20 cents lower than the average swipe fee had been previously.

Anne Pace, a Bank of America spokeswoman, noted that other banks are testing similar fees and that Regents and SunTrust are also hiking charges. "The price of a debit card was previously determined by the amount and type of transactions. We were able to pass some of these costs along to merchants, but because of regulatory changes, we are adjusting our pricing to reflect today’s economics," she told HuffPost.

On Friday, Durbin's office sent around a memo, obtained by HuffPost, to other senators who had supported his swipe fee amendment, telling them to reject the suggestion that swipe fee reform required BofA to raise fees. Banks raise fees no matter what, Durbin argued in defense, noting that they'd raised fees after the bailout.

The Electronic Payments Coalition, which represents banks in the swipe fee battle, hit back at Durbin. “It is astounding that Senator Durbin, who created today’s chaos, is now trying to point the finger at everyone but himself for the widely predicted consumer harm," spokeswoman Trish Wexler emailed to HuffPost.

"Senator Durbin has spent years pushing the agenda of giant retailers, while flatly ignoring repeated warnings by consumer advocates, economists, and regulators this type of consequence. The truth is that Senator Durbin knew that banks and credit unions across the board would have to raise prices. Instead of heeding our warnings and protecting consumers, he chose to put millions of dollars into the pockets of giant retailers.”

Miller's bill represents a chance to go on offense. Durbin told HuffPost it's something he could get behind, though he has yet to see the legislative language. "I've worked with Brad, he's come up with some pretty good ideas and I like the concept very much," Durbin said. "We've got to give consumers an opportunity for creating competition in the banking industry. Right now that is very difficult, we've got to make it easier."

The system in place today makes it difficult to switch accounts. But it doesn't have to be that way. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation regularly takes over failing banks on Friday afternoons and converts them to new banks by Monday morning, using software that makes sure not a single customer misses an automatic bill pay or a direct deposit. Miller's bill would require banks to make it as easy as technologically possible to switch accounts, and would forbid practices aimed at keeping consumers locked in.

Miller had been studying the legislation for at least a year, he said, but decided to pull the trigger after BofA's $5 fee was instituted. It is at heart a free-market reform, he said, and was inspired by HuffPost's Move Your Money campaign that unfolded after the bailout.

“If we can find a way to introduce real competition into banking, that'd do more than any regulation," Miller told HuffPost. "The biggest banks have turned the switch for market forces to the off position. If consumers could shop around for banks the way they can for everything else, banks wouldn’t think they had a God-given right to pay their executives vulgar bonuses and still make enormous profits, and consumers would get a much better deal."

Due to Republican-controlled redistricting, Miller faces a difficult primary against Democratic Rep. David Price if he hopes to remain in Congress, as both have been stuffed into the same district.

Legislation and regulation without a free market will ultimately fail, Miller said, and will lead to endless new fees as banks replace revenue lost to consumer protections with new charges. Without a real free market, consumers won't be able to respond the way they normally would.

Durbin noted that small banks and credit unions that are able, under Durbin's amendment, to charge higher swipe fees, should use that revenue to provide free debit cards that could win market share from BofA. "The community banks and credit unions that are exempt from this ought to step in with a zero charge debit card. At that point, it could be interesting. We could actually have some competition over debit cards," he said.

"In any other line of business, companies would be reluctant to raise their fees for fear of losing customers. That fear doesn't seem to be present in the banking industry," Miller said.

Even without the increased competition from Miller's bill, BofA's fee may not last. In January 2010, TCF Bank, which pioneered free checking in the 1980s, announced it would begin charging a monthly fee in response to Fed rules restricting overdraft charges. The move was regularly cited during the 2010 swipe fee fracas as evidence of the harm that would befall consumers if Durbin didn't back off. This January, TCF brought back free checking after losing customers.

One day before the Senate was expected to vote on delaying swipe fee reform in June, Chase went one step further: Thanks to the Durbin amendment, thousands of Chase customers were warned, your kid can forget about that trip to Disney World. "Congress recently enacted a new law known as the Durbin Amendment that significantly impacts debit cards," reads the letter. "As a result of this law, we will be changing our debit rewards program. After July 21, 2011 you will no longer earn Disney Dream Reward Dollars when you use your Disney Rewards Debit Card."

Durbin said that the fee is part of the bank's lobbying strategy to undo swipe fee reform. "I expect the banking industry to continue to kick and scream over this...They just happen to think they can win the day, ultimately, in Congress if they keep the pressure up," he said. "I'm not going to shed any tears for Bank of America. They made some awful decisions when it came to mortgages that jeopardized the future of their bank. They've had problems with profitability and losses leading up to this moment and for them to blame this law, which finally puts an end to the monopoly they had on swipe fees, it just doesn't bear up under close inspection."

Miller, in a letter to House colleagues, describes ways in which the legislation makes it easier to switch accounts:

The Freedom and Mobility in Consumer Banking Act makes the following changes and clarifications to existing law:

Increases competition among banks by guaranteeing consumers the right to close a personal checking or savings account:

• Provides consumers the right to close an account at no charge

• Provides consumer the right to close an account at any time, regardless of whether the balance is positive, zero, or negative

• Provides consumer the right to close an account in person, by phone, or by other remote means as may be prescribed by regulation

Prohibits abusive fees and charges:

• Prohibits fees or charges from being assessed to an account after receiving a request to close an account

Requires banks to take reasonable steps to facilitate account closures:

• Requires institutions to notify consumers of preauthorized and recurring debits that hit their account for 30 days after a qualified account is closed

• Requires institutions to remit the balance in a closed account to the customer’s new account electronically if the consumer chooses

Prohibits banks from blacklisting consumers for failing to satisfy bank-generated fees assessed to an account at time of closure:

• Provides that consumers shall be given at least 30 days to remit payment for an account that is closed with a negative balance before the institution can initiate any collection activity, or reporting to a third party

• Provides that where an account is closed with a negative balance that is exclusively the result of overdraft or other fees assessed to the account by the depository institution, the institution may not report the account as delinquent to ChexSystems or any similar specialty consumer reporting service.

HuffPosts's Zach Carter contributed reporting.

This article has been updated to include a statement from the Electronic Payments Coalition.

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WASHINGTON -- While demonstrators in New York are calling for an occupation of Wall Street, a new push by Democrats in Congress proposes a different tactic: Just walk away. Senate Majority Whip Dic...
WASHINGTON -- While demonstrators in New York are calling for an occupation of Wall Street, a new push by Democrats in Congress proposes a different tactic: Just walk away. Senate Majority Whip Dic...
 
 
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
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tony wise 07:33 PM on 10/03/2011
it would have been far better if we had actually saw a reform that was useful and didnt pass the costs on for it to the customers.

thanks for nothing.

and btw this isnt the only negative impact for lower/middle class due to financial reform. look up H&R black and the shift to jackson hewitt because of the "reform" and how that worked out.

a personal tetimonial.

ive been  Read More...
01:21 PM on 10/13/2011
When do they start handing out the torchs at OWS?
02:52 PM on 10/10/2011
Used to be, they paid us for the privilege of using our money. Here's an idea for them: Maybe it is time bankers take a serious pay cut instead of raising fees! Perhaps they should downsize and offshore a few of the executives on their payroll. That will get them profitable again.
08:32 PM on 10/05/2011
Thanks Durbin. Because of your bill customers of BofA will have to pay more to use their debit card. You are the reason BofA made this decision. Replace Durbin!
07:34 AM on 10/15/2011
Yet merchants raise their prices in response to higher fees charged by the banks. Either way, the consumer pays.
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drbob601
Soylent Green is People
10:34 AM on 10/05/2011
Yep, that's our Congress....writing more legislation to correct the problems caused by their previous legislation. Way to go, guys!
03:35 PM on 10/16/2011
So, how is making it easier for the customer to take their business elsewhere a bad thing? There's no legitimate excuse for banks to not honor a request immediately, or to charge for closing an account. I can see making sure all transactions have cleared, but if there are no outstanding charges, a bank has no right to say that someone has to wait.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
john whalen
08:55 AM on 10/05/2011
The Durban Tax hits Americans hard!!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
truthfinderddw
07:12 AM on 10/05/2011
Seems like there is another Dodd in Congress. Democrats, don't you think People are watching. And what in the world distinquishes you from Republicians?
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
midwesthousewife
10:40 PM on 10/04/2011
For all those posters who seem to think that the poor little banks have to charge all these fees in order to survive, please explain the "good old days" when there weren't all these creative fees and the banks were fine. I remember when ATM machines were first introduced, the banks began to charge people for coming into the bank to use the tellers, instead of the machines. Once people got used to using the machines, the bank then began charging ATM fees. This was at Bank of America in Berkeley, California in the 1970s. They stunk then, they stink now.
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beaker55
Orwell was right.
11:33 PM on 10/04/2011
Good old days = infinitely less federal government interference in the minutiae of daily life.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JAT3
For every action there is a reaction...
01:49 AM on 10/05/2011
Yeah, we've seen and known what less oversight and lack of regulations gets us. Obvious there is good to be done with them and where its inefficient then change it to be.

But when the might DOLLAR puts some many avg, to bosses, to CEO in a trance and blinders that people get hurt, lose their money/savings/retirements, getting overcharged, etc. Someone or something has to help stop the slide. You and I make avg money. Well off and rich have plenty to the point its pock change, but the same pocket change adds up a lot faster and has to spreadout over all our bills.
07:37 AM on 10/15/2011
BOA still charges their customers for coming into the bank to use the tellers. One way to have free checking at BOA, is to do all your banking via ATM and bill-pay. If you use the tellers even once during a month, your account will be charged $8.95. I forgot this "rule" and was going to have my sister deposit some money to my account (she lives in another city). The teller reminded her that it would cost me $8.95 to do that. Needless to say, she just sent me a check.
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beaker55
Orwell was right.
09:47 PM on 10/04/2011
Hello... moderator? Hello??
07:01 PM on 10/04/2011
If it weren't so sad, it would be funny. One, Durbin took contributions from Walmart and The Podesta group (who lobbied for Walmart on this). Two, given Durbin's lack of intellect, he probably didn't understand that the income the banks made on swipe fees was going to be a windfall to retailers and that teh banks would make-up the lost revenue through other means. And three, the one's who will pay the cost for the swipe fee cap are those whose credit ratings are too low to qualify for a credit card (credit card swipe fees are not limited by the Durbin Amendment and we are not seeing an increase in fees for holding a credit card).
06:53 PM on 10/04/2011
In a perfect "free market" I would not be forced to subsidize when you use your debit card. As someone who pays in cash, almost exclusively, I should get a different price right? Only in gas purchases. Debit users should have to bare the full burden of charges when they decide to use their debit cards and not force all consumers to carry the hidden debit charge fee. The posters here should be demanding that their banks charge them a fee for each use and not burden the poor retailers or other consumers. That would be true free market.
06:51 PM on 10/04/2011
If only Durbin had listened to the organizations below rather than WalMart, we wouldn't be paying fees to Bank of America now.

The Federal Reserve, The FDIC, the NAACP, the NEA, Americans for tax reform, the National Taxpayers Union, National Grange, and others warned us in advance that extra fees and reduced services would result from the Durbin amendment but Durbin wasn't listening to us. He's still not listening.
07:43 AM on 10/15/2011
Durbin is not the complete ogre everyone is making him out to be. The consumer is going to pay either way...through charges because of debit fees to consumers or raised consumer prices because of extra charges to the retailer. The focus should be on the root problem...the cost of our goods and consumer products.
06:09 PM on 10/15/2011
Sorry, MLH. I used to be a fan but I've come to think he is the poster child for what is wrong with our government today.
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Hugebrass
Defend the Constitution from "Progressive" Change
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Ed Baker
Militant Moderate
04:25 PM on 10/04/2011
More today in Bloomberg.com - they are really fighting for the people who don't manage their accounts well - now they want to ban the banks from reporting your overdrafts and account abuse to Chexsystems! :) In the piece, Obama questions whether B of A has a right to charge any fees! :) I guess he wants to bring back slavery - just for banks anyway. :) They are supposed to work for free now, and not tell anyone when people rip them off.

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-10-04/bofa-customers-urged-by-lawmakers-to-quit-lender-over-debit-fee.html
04:16 PM on 10/04/2011
Isn't it odd that it's Dick Durbin's fault that Bank of America is charging such a fee? He must think we're all dumb.
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Ed Baker
Militant Moderate
04:26 PM on 10/04/2011
Check this piece in Bloomberg - they also want to stop the banks from reporting account abusers and fraudsters to Chexsystems...

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-10-04/bofa-customers-urged-by-lawmakers-to-quit-lender-over-debit-fee.html
03:54 PM on 10/04/2011
How about you just don't use a debit card? Is it that hard to find an ATM?