Senator Rockefeller Hails Passage Of The Credit Card Accountability, Responsibility And Disclosure Act
May 19, 2009 -- Washington, D.C. -- Senator John D. (Jay) Rockefeller IV hailed passage of the Credit Card Accountability, Responsibility and Disclosure Act. The legislation passed in the U.S. Senate by a vote of 90 to 5.
“It is time for credit card companies to stop ripping off consumers by hiding their fees and practices in term sheets that are impossible to understand. Credit card companies must be stopped from using deceptive practices that push American families further into debt. By making credit cards and interest rates more complicated than they need to be, credit card companies have reaped profits from consumers paying more than they should have to – this must stop,” said Senator Rockefeller.
“This legislation puts consumers first, forbids abusive fees and penalties and forces credit card companies to be more clear and forthcoming in their paperwork,” said Senator Rockefeller.
Senator Rockefeller is deeply committed to protecting American consumers. As Chairman of the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee, Rockefeller held his first hearing as Chairman on protecting vulnerable consumers from homeowner fraud.
Background on the Credit Card Accountability, Responsibility, and Disclosure Act
The legislation will:
· Get rid of hiding items in the fine print by requiring greater disclosure of rates, terms and billing details by credit card companies.
· Protect consumers from arbitrary interest rate hikes and unfair and abusive fee and finance charge increases.
· Prohibit universal default on existing balances, which involves credit card companies raising interest rates on customers who have a perfect record with the credit card, but miss a payment with any other creditor.
· Prohibit interest charges on paid-off balances from previous billing cycles (also known as a double-cycle billing ban).
· Require payments to be applied first to the credit card balance with the highest interest rate, so families can forge a meaningful path out of debt.
· Protect students and other young consumers from aggressive credit card solicitations, particularly at a time that colleges lose more students to credit card debt than to academic failure.
· Establish tougher penalties for companies that violate the law.
Source: Senator John D. (Jay) Rockefeller IV
Scroll down for related articles:
Related articles
- 2009-05-20: Senator Rockefeller Hails Passage Of The Credit Card Accountability, Responsibility And Disclosure Act
- 2009-06-09: Senator Whitehouse Hears From Rhode Islanders About Unfair Credit Practices
- 2009-05-25: CARD Act Fact Sheet: Reforms To Protect American Credit Card Holders
- 2009-05-25: President Obama Signs Credit Card Bill (CARD Act)
- 2009-05-25: NY Gov. Paterson, Consumer Protection Board Chair Bockstein Statements On Credit Card Reform Legislation (CARD Act)
- 2009-05-20: Pew Statement Applauding Senate Vote to Stop Many Deceptive Credit Card Practices
- 2009-05-20: CFA Statement On Passage Of The Credit Cardholders’ Bill Of Rights By The Senate
- 2009-05-20: AARP: Senate Passage of Enhanced Credit Card Legislation Brings Financial Relief One-Step Closer for Consumers
- 2009-05-20: SEIU: Hold Credit Card Companies Accountable for Good of Our Economy
- 2009-05-20: Senator Webb Supports Measure to Protect Consumers, Reform Credit Card Practices
- 2009-05-20: Senator Stabenow Hails Senate Passage of Legislation that Protects Consumers from Unfair Credit Card Company Practices
- 2009-05-20: Senator Snowe Lauds Senate Passage of Credit Card Reform Bill