Advocacy groups ask FTC to expand Biden administration efforts to rein in junk fees

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Casey Quinlan | Alaska Beacon
The Prison Policy Initiative, a criminal justice policy think tank, and the National Consumer Law Center, along with 27 other organizations, including the Center for Responsible Lending, and Southern Poverty Law Center, signed the letter. It explained that incarcerated people are often hit with fees for phone calls and messaging services, electronic monitoring and post-arrest diversion programs.

Kyrsten Sinema Founded Consulting Firm With Arizona Figure Tied to Payday Loan Industry

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Daniel Boguslaw | The Intercept
“Saying that people who are in hard financial straits need access to this kind of credit is sort of like giving a starving person rotten food,” Whitney Barkley-Denney, senior policy counsel at the Center for Responsible Lending, told The Intercept. “It makes them sicker than they were in the first place. People who borrow with payday loans find themselves facing bankruptcy, foreclosure, and worse. So the solution to the problems so many people face is higher wages and better jobs, instead of loans that sink them further and further into financial insecurity.”

What are junk fees and how might Biden tackle them?

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Sam Cabral | BBC News
At least three federal agencies have also taken action over the past two years to reduce junk fees and increase transparency. That includes the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which has ramped up its oversight of surprise overdraft and depositor fees charged by banks. The Center for Responsible Lending has hailed the move as "a big step" in highlighting the harms of charges that "wreak havoc on household budgets".

President Biden calls on Congress to crack down on ‘junk fees’

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Jessica Dickler | CNBC
“Despite recent progress in addressing overdraft fees, the job is far from complete. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau took a big step by banning surprise overdraft fees,” Nadine Chabrier, the Center for Responsible Lending’s senior policy counsel, said in a statement. “We are encouraged that the consumer bureau announced it will take additional steps, and we urge the bureau to place strong limits on the size and frequency of these fees.”

Tips for Student Loan Borrowers Waiting for Answers on Debt Relief

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Suzanne Potter | WSIU
Jaylon Herbin, director of federal campaigns at the Center for Responsible Lending, said borrowers need to stay in constant contact with their loan servicer, which may have changed. "During the beginning of 2022, federal student aid took on new contracts for servicers," Herbin pointed out. "It used to be Navient and Sallie Mae. So you should have been receiving those emails. Some of them may have come from Aid Advantage who took on the Navient contract. Mohela as well."

The problems with using buy now, pay later to fund travel

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Sally French of Nerdwallet | AP
Repaying buy now, pay later purchases with credit cards isn’t any better, even though some do it. “This practice — essentially using a credit card to pay off other debt — is a sign of inability to repay,” according to the Center for Responsible Lending and other groups in a March 2022 joint report.

New law slashing interest rate cap shakes up state's small-loan industry

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Daniel J. Chacón | Santa Fe New Mexican
“I will never forget going to Gallup on my way to the Navajo reservation and seeing just store after store after store of predatory lenders lined up tip to tail all the way to the border with Arizona,” said Whitney Barkley-Denney, a deputy director of state policy and a senior policy counsel for the Center for Responsible Lending. “I think they locate in those areas ... for all sorts of reasons, including historical and system racism,” she said. “People have less wealth, right? They have less money to fall back on, and they’re more likely to be lower paid, and so they go there because those

The Hill’s Top Lobbyists 2022

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The Hill
This list honors the corporate lobbyists, hired guns, association leaders and grassroots activists who leveraged their expertise and connections to make a difference in the nation’s capital this year. Grassroots advocates won hard-fought battles to secure some of this year’s most significant bipartisan measures, including the first gun violence bill in decades and legislation to expand benefits for veterans exposed to burn pits.