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Michael Winship

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Giving Up Your Bank for Lent

Posted: 03/15/2012 7:36 pm

Growing up Protestant in a small town in upstate New York, the commemoration of Lent was not as major an event as it would be in, say, a Catholic household. We didn't give up chocolate or gum or anything else for those forty days between Ash Wednesday and Easter, nor did most of the grown-ups we knew forsake any of their particular pleasures or bad habits.

When I was twelve, one night a week during Lent was spent in religious training before becoming a member of our church at a service on Maundy Thursday (what Catholics and many others call Holy Thursday, the day of The Last Supper). But baptism was a prerequisite for membership and I had not yet been christened in the Congregational Church we attended; neither had my parents or my younger brother and sister. So all five heathens were lined up in the living room one Monday evening, and our minister quickly did the deed with a bowl of tap water. Then we had cake.

My other powerful memory of the Lenten season is weekly religious breakfasts on cold Wednesday mornings. I was in high school and it meant waking up even earlier than usual on frigid winter days and getting a ride to the parsonage.

Yawning protests to the contrary, those meals were worth it. In that big, white-framed house, we were greeted with the sweet maternal warmth of the minister's wife, enormous platters of food, and a brief talk by the minister on the Eastertime meaning of it all, preaching repentance and redemption but suffused more with brightness than brimstone. Afterward, each of us walked the few remaining blocks to school, our breath in frosty flumes, full of bacon, scrambled eggs and a certain pious self-satisfaction. No fasting for us.

All of which came to mind while learning that today, some churches are taking matters into their own hands and delivering one of the most powerful Lenten messages ever. According to the progressive website ThinkProgress, "As congregations across the country observe the period between Ash Wednesday and Easter by sacrificing and repenting, religious leaders are asking big banks that have wrongfully foreclosed on homeowners and exacerbated the pain of the housing crisis to do the same."

On Ash Wednesday, churches in San Francisco announced they were removing $10 million from Wells Fargo and called on the bank, as per the advocacy group Faith in Public Life, "to put an immediate freeze on its foreclosures and repent for their misconduct." The March 9 New York Times reported that:

The Rev. Richard Smith of St. John the Evangelist, an Episcopal church in San Francisco, likened the divestment campaign and public protests to early Christianity's ritual of 'reconciliation of the penitents.' Far from taking place in the private sanctity of the confessional, that rite occurred in public, with the penitent overseen by a priest and required to present himself before a bishop.


'It seemed like a parallel to us,' said Mr. Smith, 62. 'Our banks have done a great deal of damage in a very public way. So it seems appropriate as we enter into a season of penitence that we invite those who separated themselves from the community to repent with us. It's basically 'Ethics 101.'

The effort is part of several national campaigns to get consumers and community groups to remove their money from the big banks and transfer accounts to credit unions and smaller financial institutions. Travis Waldron at ThinkProgress wrote, "Religious organizations have been at the forefront of movements to get consumers to move their money. The New Bottom Line, a coalition of faith groups, pledged to move $1 billion this year, and before Thanksgiving, churches moved $55 million away from Wall Street banks with pledges to remove as much as $100 million more."

Occupy Wall Street has been in the lead, as has the Move Your Money project -- its website even includes a handy locator that lists credit unions and community banks near your zip code.

On the November 5th "Bank Transfer Day," some 40,000 moved their money out of the nation's biggest banks, but according to the consulting firm Javelin Strategy and Research, the event actually had a much wider impact. In a January 26 report, Javelin estimated, "5.6 million U.S. adults with a banking relationship changed providers in the past 90 days. Of those switchers, 610,000 US adults (or 11% of the 5.6 million) cited Bank Transfer Day as their reason and actually moved their accounts from a large to a small institution."

The March 2 Los Angeles Times noted, "Consumers fed up with the rising tide of bank fees helped the nation's credit unions more than double their number of new customers last year... More than 1.3 million Americans opened new credit union accounts last year, up from less than 600,000 in 2010, the National Credit Union Administration reported. That brings the number of credit union members to a record 91.8 million."

As a result of all this, CNN Money reported last November, "The nation's 10 biggest banks could stand to lose as much as $185 billion in deposits in the next year due to customer defections, according to cg42, a Wilton, Conn.-based management consulting firm that has conducted research for several of the nation's top banks." Sounds like a lot, but keep in mind those same ten banks hold retail deposits of $2.04 trillion.

Nonetheless, public opinion and the post-meltdown, Dodd-Frank financial regulations have the banks and other financial institutions scrambling, while they continue to scream in protest and lobby on Capitol Hill against the ignominy of reform. On March 12, that $25 billion foreclosure abuse settlement was filed by the federal government and 49 states -- Oklahoma was the holdout -- with Ally Financial, Bank of America, Citigroup, J.P. Morgan Chase and Wells Fargo. Twenty billion of it will be used to give a break to military and the unemployed, reduce principal for delinquent or near default loans and refinance mortgages already underwater. Another billion and half will provide some small restitution to people whose homes were sold or foreclosed upon. But as the Associated Press pointed out, "About 11 million American households are 'underwater' on their mortgages, meaning they owe more than their homes are worth," but the settlement "is expected to reduce loans for only about 1 million."

We're told that the banks, desperate when thrown a lifeline by taxpayers in 2008, are now stronger and better able to weather a crisis than they were. Fifteen of the 19 largest financial firms passed the Federal Reserve's latest stress test. Regardless of whether we as individuals could survive, the test asks, according to The New York Times:

Whether banks would have enough capital to weather a peak unemployment rate of 13 percent, a 21 percent drop in housing prices and severe market shocks, as well as economic slowdowns in Europe and Asia.


The Fed's stress tests assumed that the 19 banks would be slammed with $534 billion of losses in just over two years. Even after such hits, most banks would emerge with adequate capital...

But one of those that failed was Citigroup, our third largest, the one that took the most government assistance during the meltdown - and this in the wake of last week's announcement that in 2011 the bank paid CEO Vikram Pandit nearly $15 million in total compensation, including a cash bonus of more than $5 million, his first since the 2008 crash.

What's more, the Times said the tests revealed to the Fed that, "In business loans -- called commercial and industrial loans by bankers -- Citi and U.S. Bancorp had the worst portfolios, while Wells Fargo and Fifth Third had the shakiest credit card portfolios. In commercial real estate, regional banks appear to be the most vulnerable." Swell.

There's still a lot to be angry about, still good reason to contemplate transferring your money or at least filing with the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau if you have a complaint about your mortgage, deposit accounts or credit cards (consumerfinance.gov). As former Goldman Sachs executive director Greg Smith said in this week's bombshell Times op-ed announcing his resignation, "It astounds me how little senior management gets a basic truth: If clients don't trust you they will eventually stop doing business with you. It doesn't matter how smart you are."

Jeff Horwitz at the financial daily American Banker this week exposed J.P. Morgan Chase's credit card services division, reporting that it "took procedural shortcuts and used faulty account records in suing tens of thousands of delinquent credit card borrowers for at least two years," sparking an investigation by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. "The bank's errors could call into question the legitimacy of billions of dollars in outstanding claims against debtors and of legal judgments Chase has already won, current and former Chase employees say." As Rolling Stone's Matt Taibbi observed, "Countless credit card borrowers would now have collection agents chasing them for money they did not owe," and in some cases, according to a key witness, Chase actually owed the customer money.

Allegedly one of Chase's more pernicious practices was "robosigning," the mass production and signing of credit-related affidavits without any semblance of verification, an illegal shortcut similar to the one that plagued the mortgage market and one of the targets of a new report from the inspector general of the Department of Housing and Urban Development.

"Managers at major banks ignored widespread errors in the foreclosure process," the Times reports, "in some cases instructing employees to adopt make-believe titles and speed documents through the system despite internal objections... the report concludes that managers were aware of the problems and did nothing to correct them. The shortcuts were directed by managers in some cases..." In one of the more blatant falsifications, a Wells Fargo employee whose prior work experience was at a pizza parlor was named a bank vice president.

Inspector General David Montoya said, "I believe the reports we just released will leave the reader asking one question -- how could so many people have participated in this misconduct? The answer -- simple greed."

Simple greed -- hey banks, how about giving that up for Lent?

 

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12:19 PM on 03/17/2012
Buffet prides himself on picking his stocks in a well run company with a good CO..He now owns stock in Wells Fargo, Goldman Sacks and now Bank of America and also owns stock in Moodies

I cant think of more badly run companies with more crooked CO’s than those four

It is like investing in the Mafia..
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
08:29 AM on 03/17/2012
Here's what I'd do. (Consult with a qualified attorney about what you should do ... and, do it now.)

If you owe a reasonable amount of money on serviceable debt, as you of course ought to, then start shopping around among the dozens of local banks doing business in your community. =Any= of them can do what the big banks do, and, since they are "only banks," they'll be the survivors.

If you find that the big bank has poisoned your credit rating to try to force you to stay (remember that credit rating agencies are private, and often owned by the big banks), move your money anyway. When you look at a gigantic tree and see that its roots are rotten, you don't want your own fortune tied to that tree when it inevitably falls. (The Piper must be Paid.)

If on the other hand you find that you are "underwater" on your mortgage to an unconscionable degree, don't walk away: declare bankruptcy and continue to pay on time. Finger =that= particular obligation as the root of the problem; get independent assessments and "comps" to determine what the asset is actually worth today. There are TWO parties to any business contract, not just you.

These banks are committing Securities Fraud world-wide, and yes, they'll throw your asterisk "under the bus" to save their own miserable skins.
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03:50 PM on 03/16/2012
I also gave up Lent.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
snewell
03:30 PM on 03/16/2012
THE PROBLEM IS THE BIG BANKS, NOT SO MUCH THE LITTLE INDEPENDENT ONES, THOUGH YOU CANNOT BEAT A CREDIT UNION. BIG ANYTHING IS UNDEMOCRATIC AND A THREAT TO AMERICA
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uniqumm
Hot Snark served with relish
02:45 PM on 03/16/2012
They never relent!
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sarah 2003
"Disobedience is the true foundation of liberty."
02:41 PM on 03/16/2012
In early April He/Sh/It is going to get rid of any free checking, unless you have a monthly automatic deposit from your work,pension, whatever. After all, as it was explained to me by one of their automatons at the bank, "they lost too much money from the 'new regulations". My money left long ago, other's will be soon to follow.
02:23 PM on 03/16/2012
What are a few xhurches doing with $10 million in the bank???????

Oh - that's right - churches are just another business!!!!!!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kansas Moondog
29 years as a troughfeeding firefighter.
02:22 PM on 03/16/2012
I gave BOA the boot and put my money in a credit union and a local family owned S & L that has been in business since the 1930s. Since the Washington politicans are bought and paid for, the change must come from the bottom up, with millions like me expressing their disgust and taking our hard earned money elsewhere.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
snewell
03:34 PM on 03/16/2012
WAY TO GO!! JUST MAKES SENSE, NO? GOT RID OF MY BANK IN THE EARLY 1990'S DUE TO CHANGES IN CUSTOMER SERVICE AFTER REAGAN DEREGULATED THEM IN THE 1980'S. WENT TO A CREDIT UNION AND NEVER HAD A PROBLEM THAT WASN'T FIXED TO MY SATISFACTION-EVER!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
A 1 Percenter
What Difference at This Point Does it Make
01:28 PM on 03/16/2012
Left Wells Fargo for a credit union six months ago. Easy change, put some coin back in my pocket.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Areya
Chant & Be Happy
01:00 PM on 03/16/2012
I'm wondering how I read nothing about this inspired action taken by the churches of SF. So glad I read this article. In God there is hope.
12:37 PM on 03/16/2012
I'm giving up the Catholic Church for Lent. First they knowingly harbor child molesters not just in a single diocese, but throughout the world, then to distract people from those horrific stories, they begin a crusade against gays. Now they're after women again. I think the best way to get closer to God is to get the Catholic Church out of the way.
12:24 PM on 03/16/2012
Wonderful memories of Maundy Thursday Nice to know there are other Protestants out there
12:19 PM on 03/16/2012
The banks don't have to give up greed for Lent. They are not Christian. Since the Supreme Court made them people, it begs the question of what religion they belong. My guess is that they are pagans worshiping the Golden Calf--like the one they have on Wall Street.
12:52 PM on 03/16/2012
Do you remember the former AG of New York,Elliot Spitzer?

He's a liberal attorney and fully supports the Supreme Court's opinion. Why? It's a free speech thing. If you limit Corporate Free Speech, then you limit the ability of this Website's free speech. Why, because it's owned by a Corporation too. CBS, ABC, NBC, owned by corporations. If you limit Apple's free speech, then they could limit's Time Warners or ABC's.

People are too quick to throw out glib responses to Legal decisions.
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uniqumm
Hot Snark served with relish
02:48 PM on 03/16/2012
Bull.
They worship the Bull.

It's conveniently close at the south end of Broadway!
11:58 AM on 03/16/2012
Not sure if the banks really care who pulls their money out.
They get whatever funds they need from the Federal Reserve at interest rates so low it's basically free.
Then they lend that out as credit cards or home equity etc. at much higher rates.
They even have their own trading desks where they take that money and wheel and deal the commodities that you use everyday.
The Fed is trying to stop that, but let's see how far that goes.
If you have a problem with the banks you have a problem with the government.
Same deal in Europe.
Customers have pulled their money out of many banks in troubled areas,but they get all the funding they need from the European Central Bank.
This is the modern economic system and it's worldwide.
How long it survives is the big question.
11:57 AM on 03/16/2012
Credit Unions are the way to go.