The Obama Administration remains committed to supporting our service
members and their families. Today, as part of the Administration's ongoing
commitment, the Department of Defense (DoD) is proposing regulation changes that
would reduce predatory lending practices, significantly expand the protections
provided to service members, close loopholes in current rules, and help to
ensure military families receive the important consumer protections they
deserve.
These actions build on the President's announcement of a
voluntary partnership with financial lenders across the country http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2014/08/26/fact-sheet-president-obama-announces-new-executive-actions-fulfill-our-p
to help deliver important financial and home loan-related protections to our
military community. The new proposed actions are designed to apply the
protections of the Military Lending Act to all forms of payday loans, vehicle
title loans, refund anticipation loans, deposit advance loans, installment
loans, unsecured open-end lines of credit, and credit cards.
Congress
passed the Military Lending Act (MLA) in 2006 with bipartisan support to provide
specific protections for active duty service members and their dependents in
consumer credit transactions. The MLA caps the interest rate on covered loans to
active duty service members at 36 percent; requires disclosures to alert service
members to their rights; and, it prohibits creditors from requiring a service
member to submit to arbitration in the event of a dispute, among many other
protections. Congress took these steps to protect service members and their
families from predatory lending which negatively impacts military readiness and
can make transitioning from the military service significantly more
challenging.
The MLA also gave DoD the authority to define the scope of
credit covered by the law's protections. In 2007, DoD defined credit narrowly to
cover three products: (1) closed-end payday loans for no more than $2,000 and
with a term of 91 days or fewer; (2) closed-end auto title loans with a term of
181 days or fewer; and (3) closed-end tax refund anticipation loans. Some
lenders responded by changing their products to fall outside the regulations
narrow scope, thus allowing many predatory lending practices to continue and
defeating diminishing the full impact of the legislation to protect our Military
families. Today, some lenders continue to market loans at triple-digit interest
rates targeting service members, including storefronts clustered outside
military installations and on websites geared toward service members.
The
proposed regulation will be published in the Federal Register for public comment
on Monday, September 29, 2014 and is on display today http://www.ofr.gov/(S(stnraikvfefq3v2y11k3buzu))/inspection.aspx
. This proposed regulation, in conjunction with the important efforts of our
military service organizations and advocates, veteran service organizations, and
responsible lenders, would help ensure that our service members and their
families are as far beyond the reach of financial exploitation as
possible.
The MLA, as would be implemented by the DoD's proposed
amendment to the regulation would extend the MLA protections to active duty
service members and their families when they access the types of credit subject
to the protections of the Truth in Lending Act (TILA), other than a loan secured
by real estate or a purchase-money loan (including a loan to purchase a
vehicle). These protections include:
o A 36 percent interest-rate limit
that covers all interest and fees associated with the loan, and is referred to
as the Military Annual Percentage Rate (MAPR). However, in the case of a credit
card account, a creditor would be permitted to exclude bona fide fees that are
reasonable and customary from the charges counted toward the MAPR.
o The
creditor would be responsible for providing the military borrower with
additional disclosures, including a statement that he or she should seek other
options than high-cost credit, to include financial counseling and assistance
from the Military Aid Societies.
o Prohibiting creditors from requiring
service members to submit to arbitration, waive their rights under the Service
members' Civil Relief Act, or imposing onerous legal notice requirements as a
result of taking one of these loans.
What this Would Mean for Our Service
Members:
o This proposed rule would better protect active duty service
members and their families from excessive debt.
o This proposal would
extend the MLA's protections afforded to active duty service members and their
dependents to the types of credit that already are subject to the protections of
the TILA not specifically excluded by the MLA.
o Service members and
their families would continue to have access to a wide variety of lending
products. The proposed rule should not affect modestly priced, mainstream credit
products that do not impose high application fees or participation
fees.
o Service members would still have access to no-interest loans,
grants, and scholarships from the four Military relief societies.
o Not
all credit products will be affected by the regulation; notably residential
mortgages and purchase-money loans (to buy items like cars) are excluded from
the MLA's definition of "consumer credit."
Key Elements of the
Proposal:
o Fair, Consistent Treatment of Loans Under Existing Standards:
DoD's proposal would amend the existing regulation that implements the MLA
primarily for the purpose of extending the protections of the law to a broader
range of credit products. In this regard, the proposal would define "consumer
credit" to be consistent with closed- and open-end credit products that already
are regulated under TILA. The Department's new approach would move away from the
product-by-product approach that created opportunities to evade the purpose of
the MLA and towards a comprehensive, no-gaps approach.
o Creating a
Durable and Long-Lasting Regulation: Better aligning the MLA with TILA to
provide service members with more lasting protections, offers industry a
consistent standard across all products, and would not require continuous
revisions as the marketplace for high-cost credit evolves.
o Clearer Loan
Disclosures: The proposal would simplify lender's disclosure obligations to
covered borrowers under the MLA. The proposal would rely on existing protections
under TILA and would provide for a non-numerical descriptive statement of
Military APR that would be consistent across loans offered to service
members.
o Online Identification of Covered Borrowers: The proposal would
allow lenders to assess whether borrowers are covered by the MLA by checking
their status in an existing, publicly-available online DoD database. Lenders who
used the database would receive a safe harbor from liability under the
MLA.
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