President Barack Obama Thursday piled pressure on Congress for immediate action on steep rate hikes and predatory fees clamped by credit card firms on recession-hit Americans.
"Enough is enough, it?s time for strong and reliable protections for our consumers," Obama said at a town-hall meeting in New Mexico.
"It?s time for reform that is built on transparency, accountability, and mutual responsibility -- values fundamental to the new foundation we seek to build for our economy."
Obama wants the Senate, due to vote on the measure as early as Thursday, to pass credit card legislation and reconcile it with an already passed House of Representatives bill.
"I am calling on Congress to take final action to pass a credit card reform bill that protects American consumers and send it to my desk so I can sign it into law by Memorial Day May 25," Obama said.
"There is not time to delay. Time to get it done."
The "Credit Cardholders Bill of Rights" seeks to shield consumers from misleading small print in card contracts, empower cardholders to set their own credit limits, and require companies to fairly allocate payments.
The measure also targets practices such as marketing credit cards to minors, targets unfair rate hikes and charges and improves transparency for people shopping around for credit cards.
"You shouldn't need a magnifying glass or a law degree to read the fine print that sometines doesn't even appear to be written in English or Spanish," Obama told a crowd of several thousand people at a Rio Rancho high school.
But Obama was also careful to couch his rebuke to card firms with warnings that customers must be careful not to spend beyond their means, after an era of easy credit which he blamed for help causing the crisis.
"It's debt, and you should not take on more than you can handle," he said.
"We expect consumers to make sound choices and live within their means and
pay what they owe in a timely manner."
Obama was introduced by a local woman, Christine Lardner, who saw her interest rates skyrocket to 30 percent after a mistaken payment, approved by her credit card firm, took her over her limit.
"It is ludicrous and corrupt," Lardner said.
The US Federal Reserve says Americans have been piling on large amounts of extra credit card debt in last decade, with balances averaging 7,300 dollars.
As delinquency rates rise and many card holders have trouble paying up during the recession, card firms collect an annual 15 billion dollars in penalty fees.
"There are some things your money shouldn?t buy but that?s not gonna stop him from trying."
Enquirer
New User?
New User?
A Yahoo! News User buzzed up:
23 seconds ago 2009-05-15T01:49:46-07:00
buzzed up:
46 seconds ago 2009-05-15T01:49:23-07:00
A Yahoo! News User buzzed up:
1 minute ago 2009-05-15T01:49:03-07:00
buzzed up:
1 minute ago 2009-05-15T01:48:27-07:00
A Yahoo! News User buzzed up:
1 minute ago 2009-05-15T01:48:26-07:00
0 comments:
Post a Comment