NCLC, CRL & CFA Comments in Support of CFPB’s Proposed Interpretive Rule on Earned Wage Advances
These joint comments support an interpretive rule proposed by the CFPB that would clarify that earned wage advance products are credit transactions.
These joint comments support an interpretive rule proposed by the CFPB that would clarify that earned wage advance products are credit transactions.
This tip sheet for advocates was created to accompany a webinar hosted by the National Center on Law & Elder Rights on nursing home debt collection against residents, family members, and other third parties. While most older adults rely on Medicare and Medicaid to help pay for their care, these programs often come with significant…
Read More about NCLER Tip Sheet: Nursing Home Debt Collection: Issues and Defense
This group letter urges the Department of Education to take action to protect federal student loan borrowers from harm caused by the SAVE litigation’s large-scale disruption of the student loan repayment system, which has led to a temporary removal of online repayment plan applications and an extended pause in processing applications to consolidate loans or…
The undersigned consumer, labor, civil rights, legal services and community organizations write in strongsupport of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s proposed interpretive rule on emerging paycheckadvance products, sometimes marketed as “earned wage” products. Workers should not have to pay to be paid, and we support the CFPB’s efforts to guard against predatory lending in the…
Consumer groups urge the CFPB to take meaningful actions to reduce and eliminate unnecessary fees, or junk fees, in remittance transactions: curtail the use of hidden markups, eliminate the exceptions allowed for third-party fees, and reduce the exemptions for compliance my the majority of depository institutions added in 2020.
Read More about Consumer Groups to CFPB—Please Act to Reduce Junk Fees in International Remittances
NCLC submitted comments on HUD’s revised version of the Defect Taxonomy, which is a document that will be used when HUD assesses servicer compliance with FHA-insured rules.