Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Overdraft Protection Ends July 1st, 2010 Unless You Consent

Just Say No to Overdraft Fees: Opt-Out Deadline for New Customers Begins July 1, 2010

 
Starting August 15th, (July 1st for customers opening an account at a new bank) your bank cannot charge you overdraft fees on debit card transactions UNLESS you opt-in. Instead, if you lack funds, your transaction will be declined at no cost.  



WASHINGTON
June 30 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Starting tomorrow, banks must obtain permission from new customers before enrolling them in costly overdraft coverage for debit-card transactions. The Federal Reserve Board's new rule improves the status quo but still falls far short of what's needed: Banks should not be allowed to impose exorbitant charges that bear no reasonable connection to the overdraft amount or a lender's cost for making the loan. Banks also continue to pile on overdraft charges, including by manipulating transactions to maximize the number of fees they hit customers with each day.
In addition, starting August 15th, banks will need permission from existing customers before they can enroll them in overdraft programs.
Banks have been scrambling in advance of the July and August deadlines to persuade customers to say okay—to opt in—to overdraft charges, but routinely fail to fully disclose the existence of lower-cost options, such as a line of credit.
The Federal Reserve has watched for years as abusive overdraft practices became widespread. The Fed—and, eventually, the new consumer financial protection agency Congress is about to create—must do more to protect customers from practices that maximize fee revenue but provide little or no additional benefit to debit-card holders. The Fed's failure to do more means that the most financially vulnerable, who tend to overdraw more frequently than others, continue to be trapped in debt by unfair overdraft practices.
About the Center for Responsible Lending
The Center for Responsible Lending is a nonprofit, nonpartisan research and policy organization dedicated to protecting homeownership and family wealth by working to eliminate abusive financial practices. CRL is affiliated with Self-Help, one of the nation's largest community development financial institutions.
SOURCE Center for Responsible Lending

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