Credit Card Accountability
Giving Consumers a Platform
Posted by Elizabeth Vale with the Department of Commerce
Last Friday, if you watched the President sign the Credit Card Accountability, Responsibility and Disclosure Act
in the Rose Garden, you may have noticed Janet Hard sitting in the
front row. Janet, a nurse from Freeland, Michigan, was responsible and
made her payments on time. Despite this, Janet’s interest rate was
increased to 24%, and the credit card company even applied this rate
retroactively to past purchases. Janet’s story was brought to the
attention of the Office of Public Engagement by Senator Levin’s
Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations. Janet was asked to attend the
signing of the bill because she was a victim of the very predatory
credit card practices that the bill is designed to eliminate.
The Office of Public Engagement
wanted to talk with American consumers like Janet and hear their
stories. The office called a number of people who had written letters
and emails to the President about the issue in an effort to find people
who to talk about the problems cardholders encounter first hand and the
need for reform. Recently, one out of every ten letters chosen for the
President to read daily has addressed consumer issues with credit
cards.
Chris, a mother of three from
Albuquerque, New Mexico, emailed the President on May 12 to tell her
story. Chris charged her daughters’ college tuition to her credit card,
unknowingly going over her limit because of a mix-up with the school.
The credit card company then charged her an over-limit fee and
increased her interest rate from 9.24% to 29.99%. The Office of Public
Engagement called Chris to learn if the bill would address her
complaint. The comprehensive credit card reform bill addressed exactly
the problem Chris had faced, and she was asked to introduce the
President at a town hall on the topic in Albuquerque.
The Office of Public Engagement
wanted to give a voice to consumers like Chris and Janet to show the
real implications the bill will have on the lives of Americans. The
bill will protect those who pay responsibly from irresponsible credit
card company policies, and millions of Americans will benefit from the
new fairer rules governing what has become a standard part of American
life.





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