News Now
Dodd rate-freeze bill may move quickly to a vote
WASHINGTON (10/28/09)--Legislation that would freeze credit card interest rates and fees until the recently-passed Credit Card Accountability, Responsibility and Disclosure (CARD) Act comes into full effect has been fast tracked and could soon be voted on in the Senate.
Commenting on S.1927, introduced on Monday, Sen. Chris Dodd (D-Conn.) said that the bill was an effort to combat the practices of credit card companies that "have been jacking up rates in a last ditch effort to squeeze customers before all of the bill's provisions can take effect."
The legislation would end many of the abuses of credit card companies that are "looking for ways to get around the protections this Congress and the American people demanded" and would "further protect customers today," Dodd added.
The Credit Union National Association is currently analyzing the legislation. "We're taking a look at the bill and talking with our members about the potential impact if would have on their operations," said Ryan Donovan, vice president of legislative affairs.
The House Committee recently passed legislation that accelerates the effective date of the CARD Act from Feb. 22 to Dec. 1, and that legislation is awaiting a vote in the full House or Representatives.
CUNA worked with legislators to add an amendment that would exempt depository institutions with under 2 million credit cards in circulation from the expedited effective dates contained in the bill. CUNA also supported an amendment that would strike expedited effective dates for gift cards from the bill.
More Washington
News Now LiveWire
- Chicago's Alliant CU announces that it will merge w/ Tempe, Az.'s Continental FCU. Merger may be complete in Jan. 2011... - 2 days ago
- Last of series: Entire CU movement rallied behind CUs after Katrina, which changed how CUs approach disaster relief. See today's News Now. - 2 days ago
- FFIEC--of which NCUA is a component part--is planning to revise its FOIA rules. News Now takes a look in next issue, Sept. 7. - 2 days ago
- Heartland Payment Systems yesterday announced a $5M data breach settlement with Discover Financial Services. - 2 days ago
- Private employers add 67,000 jobs in Aug. CUNA's Bill Hampel to Associated Press: number must be 100,000+ to avoid slipping into recession. - 2 days ago
- Sign up; News Now LiveWire on Twitter




