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Senate Amendment Targets High-Interest Bank Loans To Soldiers


Posted: 11/18/11 08:00 PM ET

For nearly five years, federal law has set strict guidelines on risky loans doled out to members of the military, after numerous reports documented how payday lenders were preying on soldiers and saddling them with enormous debts.

But traditional banks that are now offering payday loan-style products have been able to get around those laws, offering short-term loans with interest rates far above the 36 percent annual limits set for members of the military.

Sen. Jack Reed (D-R.I.) introduced an amendment on Friday aimed at closing this loophole, which has been used by banks including Wells Fargo, U.S. Bank and Fifth Third Bank.

The move will "ensure that lenders cannot evade the original purpose of the act by simply placing a different label on the same exorbitantly high-interest payday loans the act aimed to prohibit," read a letter written Friday by retired Army Gen. Gordon R. Sullivan, president of the Association of the United States Army, a military support group.

Consumer advocates have long criticized payday loans, which often carry high interest rates and fees that can leave borrowers trapped in a long-term debt cycle, unable to pay off the original loan. A 2006 report from the Department of Defense documented how payday lenders and other high-interest operations were setting up shop outside of military bases, offering products to soldiers struggling to make ends meet on meager paychecks.

High debts can directly impact a soldier's career: privileges such as security clearances can be revoked, as a soldier could be viewed as susceptible to bribes from foreign governments. Congress stepped in with laws in 2006 that capped interest rates at 36 percent for certain loans to the military, including payday loans.

But in recent years, many traditional banks have started to offer products that closely resemble payday loans. Known as "account advances," such loans come with high fees that carry effective annual interest rates of more than 300 percent -- $10 for every $100 borrowed at U.S. Bank and Fifth Third Bank, $7.50 for every $100 borrowed at Wells Fargo, according to a recent report from the National Consumer Law Center.

The money is fronted to an account holder and then debited, along with the fees, when the customer gets the next direct deposit, regardless of whether there is enough money in the account to cover the loan.

The 2006 military lending limits applied to traditional payday loans, but the Department of Defense did not prohibit such cash advances from traditional banks. As more traditional banks have turned to such payday loan products as a way to earn additional fees from customers, advocates for the military have called for the 36 percent caps to also apply.

"It's basically the same thing," said Lauren Saunders, an attorney with the National Consumer Law Center. "Traditional payday lenders take your paper check and hold that until your payday. The banks hold your money until your next deposit, and then have the right to grab it as soon as it comes in."

Wells Fargo, Fifth Third and U.S. Bank did not respond to requests for comment Friday.

The amendment, tacked on to a Defense spending bill in the Senate, is not expected to come to a vote until after Thanksgiving.

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For nearly five years, federal law has set strict guidelines on risky loans doled out to members of the military, after numerous reports documented how payday lenders were preying on soldiers and sadd...
For nearly five years, federal law has set strict guidelines on risky loans doled out to members of the military, after numerous reports documented how payday lenders were preying on soldiers and sadd...
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03:13 AM on 11/22/2011
Lack of consumer protection in general. The USA really is in dire need of a legal limit on any loan to consumers (including those soldiers) of say 20% annualized. Anything more that is delivering citizens into a kind if indentured slavery. The BS of they know what they sign up for is allowing predatory practices on the citizens which are already coping marginally with live in this society. The lack of such legislation is an epic fail of the fiduciary duty of politicians to the voters/citizens brought on by a thoroughly corrupting lobbying of the financial institutions (actually predatory con men) involved.
Oginikwe
I think therefore I'm dangerous
12:21 AM on 11/22/2011
We used to call this usury. What patriots--our soldeirs deserve to be paid as much, if not more, as the privatized people they work next to, then this wouldn't be a problem.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kitten Kramer
America has lost the dream a long time ago
05:48 PM on 11/21/2011
ROBBING THE SOLDIERS THAT GO TO WAR SO THEY CAN REMAIN "FREE", THAKE THESE BANKS AND TOOHS THEM IN THE DEAH.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
eljefefx
07:46 PM on 11/21/2011
First off, good energy. Secondly, disengage your Caps Lock key. Finally, the last bit of your part is uncalled for.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kitten Kramer
America has lost the dream a long time ago
04:51 PM on 11/22/2011
I agrre with about my comment, it justmakes my blood boil over when banks take from the very people that put their life on the line to help keep this country free. Talk about slefish, ego manics, and out of control entitlement, our congress and banks are a disgrace to this country.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kitten Kramer
America has lost the dream a long time ago
05:47 PM on 11/21/2011
FFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF.......BANKS
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Antifascist-08
01:45 PM on 11/21/2011
yep. Send them off to war, and if they should make it back alive, make them pay more for health care and loans.

War mon g er s don't like to pay for what they do.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Stretchumall
"With Liberty and Justice for All"
01:12 PM on 11/21/2011
"R" Math......................................................................
Amount loaned.................................$1000.00
Total payback Amount.......................$2800.00
Interest Rate.....................................36%
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
zooks1
12:16 PM on 11/21/2011
Soldiers should get interest free loans and automatic credit protection. not only that they should be paid a higher wage. why is it the dems fight for higher union wages but not for our military. Why is it govt paper pushers get 200 k a year but not a soldier? who is more important democrats? our military or your union benefactors?????
07:10 PM on 11/21/2011
You think the dems are the ones allowing the banks to do this?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
olitenup
12:13 PM on 11/21/2011
I guess that Joe Walsh, repub from IL, didn't read this article last week. Had he done so, he would not have been so ignorant with his comment about veterans and OWS.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
09:18 AM on 11/21/2011
Dodd-Frank eliminates loopholes for payday lenders....they forgot to include the trusted everyday banking weasels.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
zooks1
12:13 PM on 11/21/2011
They also made fannie and freddie immune to dodd- frank, yet both caused the financial collapse with their shady mortgage bundles they sold to investors and banks.
12:24 PM on 11/21/2011
Deregulation of the financial services industry is what caused the crisis. It lead to such lovely practices as the major banks creating derivatives they sold to investors, while making side bets they would fail. The fat cats of the financial services industry have tried to blame others - Fannie, Freddie, and the Dems made us to do!
07:27 AM on 11/21/2011
Newt, this is what Occupy Wall Street is about.
06:19 AM on 11/21/2011
loans come with high fees that carry effective annual interest rates of more than 300 percent.. ----???
www.onlinepaydayloansinc.com
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Stretchumall
"With Liberty and Justice for All"
12:55 PM on 11/21/2011
Flagged as Spam
05:53 AM on 11/21/2011
36%??
Not even the Mafia charges that much interest.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Stretchumall
"With Liberty and Justice for All"
12:56 PM on 11/21/2011
A 12% cap would be too much!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
vippy
Carpe Diem!
05:30 AM on 11/21/2011
This what they call "support the troops."  High interest bank loans and phone charges, for 4 second call something like $ 41 dollars from Europe to the USA, all the while depicting these empty phrases.
Enough already.  Actions speak loudest.
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Kate McCloud
There will be disappointment, but never shame
03:37 AM on 11/21/2011
Glad the Feds are taking action, because at the state level, soldiers are getting screwed.
North Carolina's newly-Republican legislature refused to tighten rules on these predators even though we're home to Fort Bragg, Camp LeJeune, Seymour Johnson AF Base, Pope AF.
GOP will send our troops to war, but let them be broken & defeated at home
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
zooks1
12:18 PM on 11/21/2011
because they are under fed law not state laws. And the dems use their fed position to squash it. Whatever happens on domestic stations is always under fed control
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Antifascist-08
02:10 PM on 11/21/2011
it is the Rs are who start these wars and send the troops off without proper equipment, make them pay for food and washing their clothes for $100 a load and when they come back they face this. Then they want to cut spending on health care and other treatment for our soldiers. Even McCain voted against supplying the troops in Iraq. Now we are buying 36 submarines at billions a piece when we don't need them. Engines for fighters cost billions and we don't need them. But care and fair treatment for our vets?

Sorry, can't afford it.

Our military is a disgrace at this level.
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Kate McCloud
There will be disappointment, but never shame
01:34 AM on 11/22/2011
Pay day check cashing and lenders are under state juridiction
03:22 AM on 11/21/2011
These banks are unbelievable. That anyone can defend their actions is mind boggling.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Antifascist-08
02:11 PM on 11/21/2011
Correct. BUt should regular citizens be paying the amounts they are, as well?

Everyone is getting hosed by these people.