Whose PPP Loan Is It, Anyway?

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Sam Bee | Full Frontal
Trump's Paycheck Protection Program was supposed to help small businesses stay afloat during the COVID-19 crisis, so naturally loans went to his friends and huge companies. We talked to Ashley Harrington of ResponsibleLending.org and the small business owners of 46 Mott, Fan Fan Donuts, Brown Butter, ConBody, and Kato Sake about the ramifications of that corruption.

Banks Brace for Tougher Rules Under Biden on Consumer Protection, Fair Lending

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Andrew Ackerman and Orla McCaffrey | The Wall Street Journal
In keeping with President Biden’s focus on helping minorities and people with low and moderate incomes—groups hit hardest by the coronavirus-induced downturn—financial regulators are expected to emphasize racial equity as they focus on consumer protection and expanding access to financial services.

Consumer advocates push President Biden in his first 100 days

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Charlene Crowell | The Bay State Banner
More than 325 organizations, including the Center for Responsible Lending (CRL), called upon the Biden administration to use its executive authority on its first day to cancel federal student debt. Originally sent this past November, the letter was updated on Jan. 15 with 85 additional signers.

PPP Reboot: Business Advocates Hope More Funds Get to Those in Need

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Len Besthoff | NBC
“These are business owners, they should be able to access this program…. there’s a whole section of people who, no one has found them guilty of anything they haven’t been tried in court, yet they can’t access the program”, said Ashley Harrington, federal advocacy director for the Center for Responsible Lending.

Battle looms over subprime lending regulation under Biden

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Chris Arnold | NPR
"Payday lenders not only disproportionately harm people of color, they target communities of color," says Rebecca Borné, a lawyer with the nonprofit Center for Responsible Lending. "So the agency is really taking the language of civil rights to do something that's fundamentally inconsistent with the original intent of that language." says Borné. The result, she adds, would be to exacerbate...

Landmark Anti-Redlining Law Is in Trouble

Regulators are updating Community Reinvestment Act protections, but will they do it without giveaways to banks? by Paula Melton Redlining may be coming back. The practice of denying loans to people and businesses based on their neighborhood effectively became illegal in the U.S. in 1977 with passage of the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA). This law requires deposit-accepting banks to meet...

Two consumer groups sue CFPB over payday rule

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Kate Berry | American Banker
“Reversing course, without any rational basis for doing so, as the COVID-19 pandemic continues to ravage the economy, will only push struggling families closer to the brink,” said Will Corbett, litigation director at the Center for Responsible Lending.

OCC Finalizes Rule That Threatens to Bring Payday Lenders Back into North Carolina

Durham, NC — Despite widespread opposition from advocates and state officials, the OCC issued a final rule today that would allow the banks they regulate to participate in “rent-a-bank” partnerships with predatory lenders, encouraging the return of 400% interest debt traps to North Carolina. After closing down illegally operating payday and car title lending in North Carolina in 2006, North...

What the unbanked need from the 2020 election

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McKenna Moore | Fortune
“Supposedly there’s been a major recovery since the Great Recession, but communities of color haven’t recovered,” Ashley Harrington, the federal advocacy director and senior counsel at the Center for Responsible Lending, says. “They lost over a trillion dollars in wealth that has yet to be regained. We have been most impacted by every single pandemic and recession that has hit...