Tag Archives: Consumer Financial Protection Bureau

What the banks don’t want you to know!


Policy and Action from Consumer Reports

They’re out to weaken your rights – and your watchdog!

Our financial watchdog is under attack right now in the Senate. Without a confirmed director to hold them accountable, the financial industry can get away with a lot more tricks! Tell your Senators to hold the banks accountable!

Lax banking and mortgage oversight tanked our economy, so Americans like you demanded a real financial watchdog, not a bank lapdog.

You got one in the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. In a little more than a year, this watchdog made the banks pay back $425 million to consumers they duped, made sure borrowers can pay back their loans, and demanded an end to hidden credit card fees.

But rather than being celebrated, your watchdog is under attack. A minority of Senators is holding up the CFPB director’s confirmation unless they can weaken his ability to protect the public – and turn him into a lapdog!

If you’re tired of these politics, email your Senators now and demand the accountability you were promised! 

For more than a year Richard Cordray has successfully led the CFPB, not only holding the banks accountable but going after the giant credit reporting and student loan industries. 

But this success is rubbing the financial lobbyists the wrong way. They want to weaken the bureau by subjecting it to the highly politicized and sluggish Congressional funding process; replace the director with a five-member commission; and let other bank regulators (those who failed to prevent the economic meltdown) veto the bureau’s decisions.

A block of Senators is holding up Cordray’s confirmation for a new term until they get these changes. And without a confirmed director, each of us is at greater risk of being scammed – the CFPB can’t exercise its full powers over payday lenders and certain mortgage operators, as well as student loan servicers and credit reporting agencies.

Email your Senators here and tell them you want a watchdog that holds the financial industry accountable!

The best way to stymie this plan is to flood the Senate with a tidal wave of constituent messages demanding the watchdog we were promised. Please take action, then forward this to as many people as you can so they can act too.

Sincerely,

Pamela Banks, DefendYourDollars.org
Consumers Union, policy and action from Consumer Reports

Consumer Financial Protection Bureau -Thank President Obama & Elizabeth Warren


This morning, a group of public servants showed up to work at a brand-new agency created to protect everyday Americans from the abuses of Wall Street.

They’re the folks of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, and they’ll be the cops on the beat protecting consumers from predatory credit card and mortgage lenders, bait-and-switch creditors, and anyone trying to make a quick buck by deceiving or manipulating Americans who are just trying to secure their financial future.

Many Americans don’t know it, but this bureau is just one part of a sweeping Wall Street reform law — the most pro-consumer and pro-taxpayer reform of our financial system since the Great Depression — that President Obama signed a year ago today.

Watch this video to get a quick overview of the law, and a briefing on the special interests trying to undermine it:

  http://youtu.be/STAm_6csuxc
Whether you watch the video or not, please share this email with someone.

It’s important that everyone knows what this law means for all of us. Simpler mortgages. Clearer credit card rates, fees, and rules. Fairer loan terms. It’s based on the simple idea that if you make sure that people get clear information, they’ll make the financial decisions that work best for them.

And we can all rest a little easier knowing that our common financial future is more protected from the irresponsibility of a few. This law made structural reforms to ensure that the financial crisis we experienced in 2008 never happens again and that taxpayers aren’t on the hook to pay for Wall Street’s risky bets.

It’s up to you to make sure more people know about this. Most Americans don’t have all the details on how this law is working for them, and it’s our job to change that.

Take a look, and be sure to pass this one on:

Amazingly, each and every Presidential candidate on the other side opposes this law.

And the same opposition that tried to block it more than a year ago is still alive and well.

Right now, lobbyists are at work trying to weaken the tough regulations this law imposes.

That’s no accident — its provisions are designed to rein in the Wall Street, credit card, and mortgage banking interests these people represent.

As we know, there aren’t a whole lot of high-powered lobbyists in Washington looking out for the common good of everyday families.

That’s exactly why this law is necessary, and why our growing organization in all 50 states is so important. It’s up to us to make sure our friends and neighbors know about it.!!!

Thanks,

Messina

Jim Messina

Campaign Manager

Obama for America

Economy: Foreclosure Fraud Fallout


Late last year, several of the nation’s largest banks were forced to implement foreclosure moratoriums after it came to light that they were short-circuiting the foreclosure process through, among other abuses, the use of “robo-signers.” These bank officials were approving thousands of foreclosures per day, without verifying basic information and documentation. “I had no idea what I was signing,” said one employee from Bank of America. “We had no knowledge of whether the foreclosure could proceed or couldn’t, but regardless, we signed the documents to get these foreclosures out of the way.” The bank’s circumventing of due process resulted in improper foreclosures (and even led to instances of homeowners who didn’t have mortgages receiving foreclosure notices). As a result of the foreclosure fraud scandal, a bipartisan group of Attorneys General, alongside the Department of Justice, the Treasury Department, and federal bank regulators, launched an investigation into the banks’ mortgage practices. For several months now, the AGs have been working on a settlement, under which the banks would pay a penalty for their mortgage misdeeds, with the money being used to provide relief to troubled homeowners. However, the settlement talks have bogged down, with some conservative AGs siding with the banks and regulators breaking off to forge their own settlements with the banks, even as new information comes forward showing that abuses in the mortgage servicing arena are significant and ongoing.

THE SETTLEMENT: As the New York Times’ Gretchen Morgenson wrote, “evidence of extensive and abusive servicing practices does in fact exist. It is piling up at the offices of the United States Trustee Program, the arm of the Justice Department that monitors the bankruptcy system. … The findings should dispel any notion that toxic servicing practices were atypical or have done no harm.” For instance, one bank claimed that a borrower owed $52,043, but documentation showed that the borrower actually owed the bank just $3,156. Furthermore, a report from the Department of Housing and Urban Development‘s inspector general alleges that banks have been “defrauding taxpayers in their handling of foreclosures on homes purchased with government-backed loans.” The AGs have suggested that the banks pay $20 billion in a settlement for their mortgage abuses, while the banks have counter-offered by saying that they will pay $5 billion. However, a report from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau shows that the nation’s five largest mortgage servicers have saved more than $20 billion “by taking shortcuts in processing troubled borrowers’ home loans,” making even the AGs’ figure seem conservative. The goal of the AGs and the Obama administration is to put the money towards relief for troubled homeowners, including reducing loan principal for underwater homeowners (homeowners who owe more on their mortgage than their house is worth). Currently, nearly 30 percent of homeowners are underwater. As Center for American Progress Housing Policy Adviser Alon Cohen notes, some of the funds should also go towards mortgage mediation, which as he points out, “is working to help thousands of homeowners keep their homes while returning greater value to investors and communities than they would see in foreclosure.”

THE GOP DEFECTORS: Initially, all 50 Attorneys General joined the investigation into the banks’ foreclosure practices. However, several Republican AGs have since defected, voicing their opposition to monetary penalties in general and, more specifically, using that money to reduce loan amounts. Radical Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinnelli (R) derided loan modifications as “welfare,” while Georgia Attorney General Sam Olens (R) said, “I’m a little concerned that this process disengages the normal market forces.” Several Republican AGs joined Cuccinnelli in a letter stating that reducing loan principal “rewards those who simply choose not to pay their mortgage.” These AGs have also met with representatives of the banking industry to discuss reasons to oppose helping underwater homeowners (and they’ve all received large donations from the banking industry). Of course, many homeowners are underwater through no fault of their own: Wall Street malfeasance and a lack of prudent regulation caused a housing bubble to grow and burst, plunging home prices steeply downward. Also, as Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman noted, the proposed settlement only calls for modifications that benefit bank and homeowners alike. Not content to sit on the sidelines and let the AGs do their work, some congressional Republicans have also criticized the settlement, with Sen. Richard Shelby (AL) calling it “nothing less than a regulatory shakedown.”

THE SIDE DEAL: Another hurdle in the way of the AGs trying to reach a settlement is that two federal bank regulators — the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the Federal Reserve — brokered their own settlement with the banks, undermining the AG’s work. As Cohen noted, the regulators’ settlement is a weak one, as “There is no mention of penalties, and the servicers’ repeated focus on ‘processes’ is replaced by the terms ‘policies and procedures’ and ‘internal controls,’ nearly all of which presumably should already be in place.” The Fed and the OCC (which is notoriously cozy with the banks) only reviewed 100 mortgages before settling with the banks. FDIC Chair Sheila Bair questioned the thoroughness of the deal the OCC and the Fed struck, saying, “We do not yet really know the full extent of the problem.” “Flawed mortgage-banking processes have potentially infected millions of foreclosures, and the damages to be assessed against these operations could be significant and take years to materialize,” she said. Adding insult to injury, under the terms of the settlement, the banks are required to undergo a review of their mortgage operations, but they are allowed to hire their own reviewers and the results of those reviews are not going to be made public. As Bair pointed out, there is significant potential for conflict-of-interest, as these reviewers “may have other business with [banks] or future business they would like to do with them.” “This is a huge issue,” she said.

a message from Barney Frank


 

Here we go again – at least here I go again, and I hope you can join me.

In January I announced that I would run for reelection in 2012 because I want to fight for the values I have been committed to throughout my career. The events in Washington since that time have reinforced my view that those values are under greater attack than at any time in my life.

Over the past few weeks, Congress has gone through a bizarre, grueling, and ultimately very sad budget process. This has been a disaster for those who believe that we have the capacity as a people to come together and cooperate on measures that are essential to improving the quality of all of our lives.

Republicans are attempting to weaken the financial reform bill we passed last year, and the far right has succeeded in passing through the House budgets that will re-deregulate derivatives and to weaken the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

At the same time, they resisted any effort to make significant cuts to our swollen military budget. Instead, they chose to inflict enormous harm on virtually all domestic programs, proudly stating that they had debated the entire US government in less than three days. I stood up in the House late at night after a marathon debate and I denounced their orgy of self-congratulation over their senseless budget cutting.   http://images.myngp.com/LinkTracker.aspx?crypt=IVi0ax2%2b6UBSinc%2fCPYaKdaJwsMh0V5KnXpbYo0o6usIzZHtMm7avT6xh2PId64V3H1TXg9cveHz4X4iWQX%2f8nWBmlzPYqFO9PL61K1FacAU6VN1fqldK8%2fB3jnGOwZrHdqMotfOShGgWdUy45CNXMIOiDGBo%2fQ1q6IH2PgZSlM%3d

But the battle is not over — we will spend the next two years and more fighting this gross distortion of our budget priorities and of our values. I will give everything I can to this effort, and with your help I will do so through 2012 and beyond.

http://images.myngp.com/LinkTracker.aspx?crypt=IVi0ax2%2b6UDLpC3olJXC48%2fv%2ftqtQFGd1pYD7HCwFY6cLDeH7plfweSCOUD3b7%2bTOi%2fuQC6cVGOAYPHw4BpKsfjf%2bjAR8Nv%2bsR9N%2fCerQ9cX%2bkyg6Q8rGv72%2bTm3xKI7Gz2fKi9myl%2fpb9GfTSw4%2b0INbmIjEf4YF28eX0DMwEEjCNjlRR8ItugWUePxfSgjyYegnqay8HMtAcAUj7q6N%2bc%2bW%2fmQrZgc

Last year, you helped me defend against coordinated attacks by national right-wing organizations which had been empowered to spend freely on elections by the recent Supreme Court decision. Because it was such an especially expensive campaign year, I am writing earlier than usual to ask if you can help me begin to payoff campaign debts – including one to myself – and to start to accumulate the funds that I will need to withstand another coordinated nation-wide right-wing assault in 2012.

It’s flattering to be the focus of the Right’s unhappiness, but it’s also expensive. I would be grateful if you would help provide me with what I need to fight back.

A message from Sen.Al Franken


Sen. Al Franken recorded a video for you.

Your support for Elizabeth Warren made a difference
Take action!
Watch the thank you video from Sen. Al Franken and then share your thoughts with Elizabeth Warren about what priorities you think the new CFPB should work on first.
Take action now!


Sen. Al Franken recorded a video thanking you for your hard work standing up for Elizabeth Warren, who will now oversee the creation of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

In her new role, Professor Warren pledges to be a fierce advocate for consumers and rein in the reckless behavior of Wall Street bankers.

Without support from you and other progressive activists, she would have never been appointed. And she needs our continued pressure to hold the White House, the Treasury Department and Wall Street accountable to consumers.

This is big, and you helped make it happen.

Check out Sen. Franken’s video by clicking here.

In the video, Sen. Franken invites you to share your priorities on what the new bureau should work on first. We are working with our friends at the Progress Change Campaign Committee to make sure Professor Warren gets your thoughts.

You can watch the video and share your thoughts by clicking here.

Thanks for helping protect consumers.

Adam Quinn, Campaign Manager
CREDO Action