WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) today ordered U.S. Bank to pay nearly $21 million for keeping out-of-work consumers from accessing unemployment benefits at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. U.S. Bank froze tens of thousands of accounts. However, it failed to provide people a reliable and quick way to regain access.
On December 10, New York General Business Law § 520-e went into effect according to the Governor’s press release. The new law prevents credit card holders from losing unused earned credit card points and requires credit card issuers to send consumers a notice of any outstanding credit card points or rewards they have accrued in their accounts, even after the account is closed.
The burden of student loan debt continues to weigh heavily on millions of Americans, as evidenced by the significant number of borrowers who have not resumed making payments after the pandemic-induced pause. However, approximately 40% of the 22 million borrowers who had bills due did not make their payments by mid-November, the report said, citing data from the Department of Education.
On December 5, the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York granted a debt collection agency (the defendant) a motion to dismiss an individual’s (plaintiff’s) complaint. The case considers whether an undated Model Validation Notice (MVN) is a material detail that provides standing to sue under the FDCPA.
OAKLAND – California Attorney General Bonta joined a bipartisan multistate coalition of attorneys general in an amicus brief to the U.S. Supreme Court defending states’ rights to enforce state consumer financial protection laws against both state and national banks. In the brief filed in Cantero v. Bank of America, the coalition urges the Supreme Court to overturn a Second Circuit Court of Appeals decision holding that the National Bank Act preempts a New York state law that requires mortgage lenders to pay a 2% minimum interest rate on funds held in mortgage escrow accounts.