iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

In South Carolina, Bank Of America Takes A Piece Of State Income Tax Returns

Bank Of America

First Posted: 02/28/2012 8:29 am Updated: 02/28/2012 4:57 pm

This year South Carolina income tax refunds will arrive on prepaid debit cards unless taxpayers specifically opt for a check or direct deposit.

The change could potentially save South Carolina as much as $1 million in printing and mailing costs this year, state projections indicate. And for the nearly 200,000 South Carolina households that do not have bank accounts, a prepaid debit card offers an end run around check-cashing fees and protects against the risk of holding so much cash.

But the biggest winner could be Bank of America, which will issue the prepaid cards and stands to collect an untold amount in fees from card users and merchants who own the stores where the cards may be used. The arrangement allows the Charlotte, N.C. bank to charge some card users fees as high as $10 per transaction. And unlike ordinary debit cards linked to a bank account, there are no caps on the fees banks can charge merchants when customers use prepaid debit cards.

The South Carolina Department of Revenue’s decision is part of a larger movement inside government. In 41 states, unemployment benefits are issued via prepaid debit card. Nearly every state issues food stamp and cash welfare benefits on prepaid debit or similar cards. Even the federal government will stop issuing traditional social security checks early next year. Government agencies stand to save millions while banks stand to gain much more.

The nation's largest banks have been eager to help government agencies make the transition to prepaid debit cards, industry analysts say. The reason: banks hungry to replace revenue lost to new financial regulation stand to collect millions in small fees from multiple card users and merchants.

Bank of America declined to answer detailed questions about the way that prepaid debit cards are most often used or the bank’s projected earnings from the tax refund cards. But the bank insists the potential fees won’t hit many customers.

“There are no [card user] fees for many typical uses of the card,” Jefferson George, a Charlotte-based Bank of America spokesman said in an email. George provided a link to a story describing critics of South Carolina's newest prepaid card option as overwrought.

Prepaid cardholders can visit a bank teller anywhere a Visa logo is displayed and, during their first visit, remove their entire tax refund at no cost, according to the fees listed on the South Carolina Department of Revenue's web page. They can also use the card to make purchases in stores.

If a card user decides to gradually access their refund at a teller -- one way to avoid walking around with large amounts of cash or get around ATM limits -- they will face a $10 fee each time. At an ATM, the fee is $2.50 for bypassing one of the more than 300 Bank of America ATMs in South Carolina. That's a problem for some rural South Carolina residents and families without cars.

The average tax refund in South Carolina was $837.44 last year. Many ATMs have maximum daily withdrawal limits typically under $1,000. Plus, card users will have to figure out how to withdraw the last few dollars from their card; most ATMs only allow withdrawals in increments of $10 or $20. Card users that request cash back at a store register will likely encounter similar limits.

And at some gas stations and other stores, when a prepaid debit card is used, the store charges the card user the amount due and holds additional money as a security deposit for a few days after the purchase is made.

These aren’t simply hypothetical experiences.

In 2010, when the state's unemployment agency launched the prepaid debit card option, state officials and the bank assured the public that with typical use, unemployed people would not pay fees to access their benefits. But under the initial terms of the deal, some South Carolina residents wound up paying ATM fees each time they needed to access cash or for calling customer service. They faced limits or security deposits while using their prepaid debit card that were not described in materials provided by the bank or state, The Huffington Post reported in November. (The customer service fee has since been eliminated.)

State officials said they have not tracked how much customers or merchants have paid Bank of America in fees on unemployment benefits. The bank has declined to provide these figures.

But documents obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request by The Huffington Post reveal that Bank of America aimed to generate such fees from at least $40 million in transactions in one year. The bank offered to pay South Carolina a one-time $35,000 "resource allocation" payment if the state awarded the contract to Bank of America and signed up enough people for the unemployment prepaid debit card to meet that goal.

South Carolina officials hope that about 350,000 people will receive tax refunds on prepaid cards this year.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST BUSINESS

This year South Carolina income tax refunds will arrive on prepaid debit cards unless taxpayers specifically opt for a check or direct deposit. The change could potentially save South Carolina as m...
This year South Carolina income tax refunds will arrive on prepaid debit cards unless taxpayers specifically opt for a check or direct deposit. The change could potentially save South Carolina as m...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 1,023
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Post Comment Preview Comment
To reply to a Comment: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to.
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (23 total)
02:08 PM on 03/01/2012
If we ever get a chance lets bail them out again, okay? With lots of missed opportunites to kick their butts with rules regulations. Go Obama!

Now let's work on those jobs and gas prices. Go Obama!

Oh and congratulations on the Super Pacs too. Go Obama!
10:25 AM on 03/01/2012
No wonder BofA rakes in$1.5 billion annually in fee income. And this time your state government is complicit. They’re not only partnered with the banking giant, the SC Department of Revenue’s website trumpets the “Convenience and Flexibility for Taxpayers.”

Maybe for some. Like, those with less than $400 in tax refund, who don’t have a bank, who live within a few miles of a Bank of America ATM (oh, did we forget to mention, you get charged $2.50 at other ATMs?). It is starting to sound like very few people “benefit,” especially compared to those South Carolina residents that Bank of America gouges simply for failing to read the fine print about opting out of the debit card refund.

www.thecorporateobserver.com
07:22 AM on 03/01/2012
More fake outrage and demonizing of business from the left.

If you are too ignorant to check the correct box, ask for help.
photo
chtrek
MichiganLiberal
09:21 AM on 03/01/2012
I guess you missed the news report today where the Bank of America is going to 'EXPERIMENT' with charging fees for various things to see which ones they can get away with. Nobody is demonizing business - it's their sneaky businesss tactics we have a problem with.
photo
bookreader451
"You can't ever have my books," she said.
06:52 AM on 03/01/2012
I think what bothers me most is this is the default option. If you don't have an account for direct deposit or request a check this is what you get.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
LHoney
REINSTATE GLASS STEAGALL!!!
09:08 AM on 03/01/2012
More corporate welfare.
photo
FreewheelinFranklin
Keep on Truckin'
09:35 PM on 02/29/2012
A tax on your tax?
photo
guveqzero
Inventor and Innovator
08:13 PM on 02/29/2012
Why doesn't the state create a bank and compete with Bank of America? That way, the government can make money on the transaction fees.
photo
Rock Fossil
Trilobite this!
07:49 PM on 02/29/2012
This and any other important issue, financial or otherwise is only News here-about 10% exposure. If this were broadcast nationally on cable news channels ABC, CBS, NBC or FOX, Bof A would be D.O.A. the next day 4ever! The system's rigged big time.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
LHoney
REINSTATE GLASS STEAGALL!!!
09:09 AM on 03/01/2012
Amen!
photo
tavvie
Same circus, different clowns
05:43 PM on 02/29/2012
Amazing, banks are now like the airlines: a fee for every teeny tiny thing!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jennifer Hoffman
Author and intuitive
04:57 PM on 02/29/2012
Let's not forget that BOA has a history with the Carolinas, since it started out as North Carolina National Bank. I wonder who in the SC state legislature was in government back then and is either a BOA employee or working in state government. Isn't this collusion, a violation of RICOH and probably a few other laws I can't think of right now? I have the feeling that banks and other corporate institutions are just laughing at us now, they have been doing this for years, they and the governments they pay for have their hands in each others' pockets and they don't care what we think or what we find out. They're going to do it anyway and if we, the consumers, don't like their policies, they will just find a back door, like this one, to make their money through. This story just makes me ill.
04:06 PM on 02/29/2012
Anyone who continues to do business with BOA is an absolute fool. They are evil and are constantly coming up with new ways to screw people out of their hard earned money. I have had a BOA account which has a balance of $1.15 for over 5 years. I will let it stay there so they waste $ every month sending out statements forever. How can the State of South Carolina let them do this?
02:48 PM on 02/29/2012
It seems no matter how many TRUE stories are written about the deals of leaders that we vote in and banks, people just can't or won't see the funneling of THEIR money is being stolen from them by 'fees' of any kind. Saving a million dollars for a state budget is a cover for robbery. And ever one knows robbery is not a service.
angel100
Class of 2013 BS Computer Info Systems
02:10 PM on 02/29/2012
There is no shame for that crowd at BOFA. They are always out to take away from the average working person to line their own pockets.
01:40 PM on 02/29/2012
Why would anyone still be banking with these thieves?

If you haven't yet - do it - MOVE YOUR MONEY
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
LHoney
REINSTATE GLASS STEAGALL!!!
09:14 AM on 03/01/2012
You don't have to be banking with them. The State of South Carolina is using BofA to create debit cards to pay citizens state income tax returns. Then BofA can charge fees of the card holders as well as the retailers when the cards are used to purchase products.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RedDog79
01:34 PM on 02/29/2012
BofA = greed.
what a disgusting group of people BofA has running it. Not to mention the shareholders that allow the corporate types to do what they want in the name of money. never will I bank at BofA
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GlassMask
Comedian/Curmudgeon
12:36 PM on 02/29/2012
I'm typing this from BofA's hometown right now (where I work daily). They're too big to not fail. Anyone who has any business with them should yank it right now; I did a few years ago. They need to go away before the weekend. Please spread the word and take them down.