Regulation

  • Editor's Note: The following is a release from attorney Sergei Lemberg. Collections & Credit Risk wants your reaction to his statements about the industry. Your responses will be published, upon your approval. Contact Darren Waggoner at darren.waggoner@sourcemedia.com or 815.463.9008.

    June 11
  • In urging Congress to delete the interchange amendment from the pending bank reform bill credit union executives were put in an unusual position of arguing that an exemption – a so-called carve-out – from the amendment that they have sought in other bills is unworkable and impracticable.

    June 11
  • Millions of dollars in ads are being printed and carried over the airwaves by credit unions and banks and their nemeses in the interchange amendment to the bank bill, the nation’s retailing groups, in the biggest credit union lobbying effort in more than a decade.

    June 11
  • Hundreds of credit union executives criss-crossed the halls of Congress Wednesday in an effort to convince lawmakers to scrap the provision of the bank reform bill that would establish price controls over debit card interchange, but their efforts face great odds.

    June 10
  • Industry groups continued their full-court press Wednesday to keep an interchange provision out of the final regulatory reform bill, but whether they could succeed was an open question.

    June 10
  • U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., on June 9 made a brief appearance before the Senate Judiciary Committee Subcommittee on Antitrust, Competition Policy and Consumer Rights, warning lawmakers of the need to investigate possible collusion between Visa Inc. and MasterCard Worldwide in the setting credit and debit card interchange rates.

    June 9
  • Representatives from credit unions and community banks during a June 9 press conference in Washington, D.C., exhorted lawmakers to exclude the debit-interchange amendment from the final financial-reform bill, claiming that altering debit-interchange rules likely would force them to raise overall banking fees charged to consumers.

    June 9
  • National Enterprise Systems (NES) Inc., a collection agency in Solon, Ohio, will pay $75,000 to settle illegal and abusive collection charges brought in a lawsuit by West Virginia's Attorney General's office.

    June 9
  • Two Countrywide mortgage servicing companies will pay $108 million to settle Federal Trade Commission charges that they collected excessive fees from borrowers. The settlement is one of the largest judgments imposed in an FTC case, and the largest involving a mortgage servicer. The funds will be used to reimburse overcharged homeowners whose loans were serviced by Countrywide before it was acquired by Bank of America in July 2008.

    June 7
  • Lawmakers will return from their week-long Memorial Day recess this week right in the middle of a human scrum – hundreds of credit union executives crossing hundreds of retailers arguing over a key provision in the bank reform bill that would introduce government oversight of the market for cards interchange.

    June 7