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Big Changes for Credit Reports, Improving Accuracy for Millions of Consumers
As described in this article, two dramatic changes to consumer credit reporting become effective this summer, scaling back reporting of tax liens, civil judgments, and medical debt. The result will be improved accuracy and higher credit scores for millions of consumers.
CFPB Report Details Problems, New Requirements Consumer Reporting Companies Must Implement
Essentials About Credit Reporting: Consumer Debt Advice from NCLC
FDCPA’s Application to IRS’ New Private Debt Collectors
The Latest on Metro 2: A Key Determinant As to What Goes Into Consumer Reports
Six Key Pointers in Advising Clients at Tax Time
Mortgage Relief for Homeowners Affected By COVID-19
Implications of New CFPB Bulletin on Consumer Reporting of Renters
On July 1, 2021, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) issued an Enforcement Compliance Bulletin (hereafter Rental Reporting Bulletin) on consumer reporting issues involving tenant screening reports as well as the reporting of rental information on credit reports.
Two New CFPB Advisory Opinions Facilitate Private FCRA Litigation
Effective January 23, 2024, two new CFPB advisory opinions clarify a number of critical Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) issues and should facilitate private FCRA litigation. The first advisory opinion addresses accuracy issues in background check reports used by most employers and landlords. The second advisory opinion addresses problems consumers face when seeking complete disclosure of their credit reports.
CFPB Clarifies Limits on Pay-to-Pay, Other Debt Collector Charges
A new CFPB advisory opinion not only clarifies when “pay-to-pay” fees are prohibited, but also whether a wide array of other debt collector charges violate the FDCPA. This article provides numerous examples of potentially illegal debt collector charges under the just-announced standards. A Truth in Lending Act provision provides even stronger remedies for fees added to automated payments for credit card debt.
Congressional, First Circuit, CFPB, and VA Actions Affecting Fair Credit Reporting
A Congressional amendment, a First Circuit decision, two CFPB administrative issuances, a CFPB report, and a Veterans Administration rule all will have significant consequences for consumer reporting under the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA). This article provides the highlights of these recent developments and their implications for consumers, advocates, and FCRA practitioners.
Data Gatherers Evading the FCRA May Find Themselves Still in Hot Water
2019 decisions from three circuit courts exempt data gatherers from the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA). This article explains that these firms should be careful what they wish for, as FCRA preemption no longer applies and they become subject to potentially powerful state laws.
CFPB Issues Three FCRA Interpretations with Widespread Implications
This article examines practice implications of three recent CFPB interpretations of the Fair Credit Reporting Act, including: tenant and background screening companies’ use of name-only matching violates the FCRA; users are strictly liable for permissible use violations; and state law can limit when medical debt, evictions, rental arrears, and criminal records can first be reported.
LIBOR’s Death Will Soon Impact $1.4 Trillion in Consumer Contracts
The most widely used index for adjustable-rate consumer contracts, the LIBOR, will soon cease to exist. This article explains new legal requirements that will apply when creditors are forced to change the index and margin on $1.4 trillion of adjustable-rate consumer contracts—millions of home mortgages, home equity lines of credit (HELOCs), credit cards, and private student loans.
Supreme Court: Federal Agencies Can be Sued Under Fair Credit Reporting Act
On February 8, the Supreme Court held that the FCRA waives federal sovereign immunity from FCRA damage claims when federal agencies furnish inaccurate information to consumer reporting agencies. This article examines the broader implications—other FCRA claims against federal agencies, FCRA claims against state and local agencies, and which other consumer statutes waive sovereign immunity.