Collections news at your fingertips

Stay up-to-date with the latest news and developments in the collections industry.
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.

January

26
2026
Industry News

Florida Court Stays TCPA Discovery While Weighing Whether Texts Are ‘Calls’

A federal judge in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida stayed discovery in a putative Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA) class action while the court considers whether text messages qualify as “calls” under the statute’s do-not-call (DNC) provisions. In McGonigle v. Pure Green Franchise Corp., the court granted the defendant’s motion to stay, finding that the key issues can be resolved as questions of law without discovery. 2026 WL 111338 (S.D. Fla. Jan. 15, 2026).

Read post

January

26
2026
Industry News

CFPB receives funding for continued operations

The CFPB has received the funding it requested from the Federal Reserve, according to a January 15 letter submitted by the Justice Department to the court in the lawsuit filed against the CFPB by the National Treasury Employees Union.

Read post

January

22
2026
Compliance

White House Signals Direction on National AI Policy, Details Still Limited

A senior White House official offered only broad insights into the administration’s forthcoming recommendations for a national artificial intelligence policy during testimony before the House Science, Space and Technology Subcommittee on Research and Technology on Jan. 14.

Read post

January

22
2026
Trends

CFS Bites of the Month - 2025 Annual Review - Student Lending

In this article, we share a timeline of monthly "bites" for the past year applicable to student lending.

Read post

January

22
2026
Industry News

[PODCAST]: Illinois Supreme Court Tightens Standing for No‑Injury Consumer Claims

In this episode of The Consumer Finance Podcast, host Chris Willis is joined by his colleague Lou Manetti from the firm’s Chicago office to unpack a significant new Illinois Supreme Court decision on standing in consumer cases based on federal statutes. Chris and Lou walk through the court’s FCRA “receipt truncation” ruling, explaining how Illinois — long thought to have more generous standing rules than federal court — has now imported a “concrete injury” requirement for common-law standing where the statute does not expressly confer a right to sue.

Read post

Weekly newsletter

Get DebtHub's weekly newsletter, packed with the latest economic trends, compliance news, and strategy insights that matter to collections professionals like you.