6 Things Debt Collectors Can and Can’t Do

Wipe our Debt

(Photo credit: Images_of_Money)

By Sheiresa Ngo

This week, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau released its annual report outlining how it has worked to enforce the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act. Their activities have included efforts to make it easier for consumers to file complaints, as well as greater oversight over non-bank entities that provide consumer products and services. And as of January, the CFPB also has authority over larger entities. Now, any firm with more than $10 million in annual receipts from consumer debt collection activities will be under the authority of the CFPB. Consequently, about 175 U.S. debt collectors will be under their rule.

The report finds the majority of consumer complaints are about the debt-collection industry. According to CFPB, last year more than 125,000 complaints were made about third-party debt collectors and in-house collection departments. The CFPB opened its Office of Consumer Response in July 2011. Since that time, CFPB has aided consumers by handling complaints related to credit cards, mortgages, bank accounts and services, credit reporting, private student loans, and consumer loans.

If you have a complaint for the CFPB about consumer products or services, there are several ways to make one. You have the option of complaining through an online complaint form or by telephone, email, regular mail, and fax. But how do you know if an activity violates the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act and should be investigated by the CFPB?

In their annual report on the FDCPA, the bureau includes a reminder of what a debt collector can and cannot do.

Here’s a list of six things to watch out for when dealing with debt collectors:

  1. A debt collector must identify himself. During all communications, collectors must state they are debt collectors and any information they collect could be used to recover the debt.
  2. A debt collector may not harass you. For example, a debt collector may not use profanity or abusive language.
  3. A debt collector may not make false threats. A debt collector is barred from making threats about what will happen to you if you don’t pay up unless he or she has the legal authority and intent to proceed with the action. In fact, the Federal Trade Commission recently shut down a collection agency that lied to customers and told some of them they would have their children taken away if they failed to pay their debts. If you receive a threat like this, report it immediately.

Read More Debt Collections: 6 Things Debt Collectors Can and Can’t Do.

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20 Things the Poor Do Everyday That the Rich Never Have to Worry About

By Benjamin Irwin

29POVERTY-articleLargeFinancial advisor and evangelical Christian Dave Ramsey probably wasn’t expecting this much pushback when he shared a piece contrasting the habits of the rich with those of the poor. In her response on CNN, Rachel Held Evans noted that Ramsey and Corley mistake correlation for causality when they suggest (without actually proving) that these habits are the cause of a person’s financial situation. (Did it never occur to them that it might be the other way around?)

Ramsey fired back, calling the pushback “immature and ignorant.” This from a guy who just made 20 sweeping assertions about 47 million poor people in the US — all based on a survey of 361 individuals.

That’s right. To come up with his 20 habits, Corley talked to just 233 wealthy people and 128 poor people. Ramsey can talk all he wants about Corley’s research passing the “common-sense smell test,” but it doesn’t pass the “research methodology 101” test.

To balance the picture a bit, I wanted to take a fact-based look at 20 things the poor do on a daily basis…

1. Search for affordable housing.

Especially in urban areas, the waiting list for affordable housing can be a year or more. During that time, poor families either have to make do with substandard or dangerous housing, depend on the hospitality of relatives, or go homeless.

(Source: New York Times)

2. Try to make $133 worth of food last a whole month.

That’s how much the  average food stamp recipient gets each month. Imagine trying to eat well on $4.38 per day. It’s not easy, which is why many impoverished families resort to #3…
(Source: Kaiser Family Foundation)

Read More 20 Things the Poor Do Everyday That the Rich Never Have to Worry About | Alternet.

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A Guinean solves a 270 years old Mathematics Problem

Dr. Y.'s avatarAfrican Heritage

Ibrahima Sambégou Diallo may have become the first African mathematician of the contemporary era to have elaborated a theorem.  This Guinean journalist who recently reconverted himself into mathematics has found the solution to the Goldbach’s conjecture, which is one of the oldest best unsolved mathematics problems of all times.  The Goldbach’s conjecture was elaborated 270 years ago by Christian Goldbach, tutor of the tsar Peter II, and employee in the Russian Foreign affairs’s ministry.  In 1742, Goldbach sent a letter to Euler, stating the Goldbach’s conjecture: “Every even integer greater than 2 can be expressed as the sum of two primes.” For instance, 6 = 3 + 3; 8 = 3 + 5; 10 = 3 + 7 = 5 + 5; 30 = 11 + 19 = 13 + 17; 100 = 17 + 83 … This mathematical problem was so hard to solve…

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The Burrito Chain That Pays Entry-Level Workers $10 An Hour And Wants To Pay More

By Bryce Covert

Free burrito Tuesday

Free burrito Tuesday (Photo credit: -nanio-)

Boloco, a Boston-based burrito chain, pays its entry-level workers anywhere from $9 to $11 an hour, most of them making $10, with many who advance into higher roles making $17 an hour or more, CEO John Pepper told Fox Business News.

Unlike the majority of his industry, Pepper told host Stuart Varney, “As opposed to constantly looking for ways to keep wages down, we’re constantly looking for practices and ways to bring wages up.” Given that labor is one of the biggest costs for fast food chains like his, many companies like McDonald’s and Burger King are notorious for keeping wages low. “It’s a lot easier to keep wages down than it is to find better practices, bolder practices, more efficient practices, which come through training,” he noted. But paying more and treating workers better is Boloco’s path to profits. “It’s about connecting with guests…and building a loyalty that drives people back, that alongside productivity is what builds sales and what builds profitability,” he said. “In that case you can pay people a lot more than what we pay as a rule in this industry.”

And while a burrito at his restaurant costs more than a burger at McDonald’s, a lot of the higher price is due to higher quality ingredients, not paying workers more. Those price increases for organic and humanely raised food have been greeted by customers who have said, “Okay, we’ll pay,” he noted. “But what about the people?” he asked. “What about paying people to come in and have high quality lives just like we want the cows to have high quality lives?”

Read More The Burrito Chain That Pays Entry-Level Workers $10 An Hour And Wants To Pay More | ThinkProgress.

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Report: Half of U.S. Families Live on the Edge of ‘Economic Chaos’

Poverty

(Photo credit: Adventures with my dogs)

By Imara Jones

Half of all families in the United States are poor, near poor or face economic insecurity where “one major setback in income could push them into poverty.” That’s the shocking conclusion of a report released today by The Hamilton Project. Released by the left-of-center think tank housed at the non-partisan Brookings Institution, the report is a bombshell for those who believe that the current workings of the economy are both sound and fair.

According to the report titled “A Dozen Facts About America’s Struggling Lower Middle Class,” families with household incomes under $60,000 a year “live in economically precarious situations.” The earnings of half of all American households fall between $15,000 and $60,000. And it’s barely sufficient for many to keep their head above water.

Sadly, the tough news for workers who face economic insecurity and their children doesn’t end with lower pay. Four out of 10 kids who live in families earning between $15,000 and $60,000 face hunger, food insecurity or food-related health challenges such as obesity.

And on top of it all, working poor and lower-middle-class workers pay the highest marginal tax rates of any other group of taxpayers in America, reaching up to 95 percent of earned income.

Read More Report: Half of U.S. Families Live on the Edge of ‘Economic Chaos’ – COLORLINES.

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Life

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Chomee – We Love You Mandela

You have entered the glowing paradise of our fathers. It is time for you to rest. Thank You Madiba.

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Honoring Nelson Mandela

By George H. W. Bush, 41st President of the United States

nelson-mandelaI was honored to be the first American President to welcome Mr. Mandela to the White House. It remains a genuine highlight from those four years I was privileged to hold that high office. Together with Poland’s Lech Walesa and Czechoslovakia’s Vaclav Havel, I viewed Nelson Mandela as one of the great moral leaders during that hopeful and transformative era of global change.

Early in 1990, after President de Klerk announced his intention to release Mr. Mandela — who was then the African National Congress leader — I publicly welcomed the news as it was another significant step on the road to the nonracial, democratic South Africa we all desired.

Following his 27 years of wrongful imprisonment, it would have been understandable if Mr. Mandela had harbored and expressed more animosity — more bitterness — towards his political adversaries. That he didn’t is one of the more remarkable examples of grace and dignity I have ever witnessed. More than that, it showed Nelson Mandela’s true wisdom and, indeed, his genuine devotion to the cause of all his countrymen that he did not indulge whatever personal emotions he may have felt in private.

Nelson Mandela knew that the progress for which he had long fought and suffered would be tougher to achieve had he contributed to a climate of division and recrimination.

In our meetings at the White House, on June 25, 1990, we talked about the future of South Africa — and how the United States could contribute towards the positive change we were already seeing. We talked about how we shared the goal of true democracy and dismantling, once and for all, the vestiges of apartheid — a system that based the rights and freedoms of citizenship on the color of one’s skin.

It was a time of transition for South Africa, and political change breeds both optimism and uncertainty. To their credit, President de Klerk and the Government of South Africa had taken concrete steps to expand the rights and freedoms of all South Africans. In order for that progress to continue, however, it was imperative that all elements in South African society renounced the use of violence in armed struggle — to break free from the cycle of repression and violent reaction that had bred little more than fear and suffering.

Read More Honoring Nelson Mandela | George H. W. Bush.

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South Africa’s Nelson Mandela dies

English: Nelson Mandela in Johannesburg, Gaute...

Nelson Mandela in Johannesburg(Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Mr Mandela, 95, led South Africa’s transition from white-minority rule in the 1990s, after 27 years in prison.

He had been receiving intense home-based medical care for a lung infection after three months in hospital.

In a statement on South African national TV, Mr Zuma said Mr Mandela had “departed” and was at peace.

“Our nation has lost its greatest son,” Mr Zuma said.

The Nobel Peace Prize laureate was one of the world’s most revered statesmen after preaching reconciliation despite being imprisoned for 27 years.

He had rarely been seen in public since officially retiring in 2004.

“What made Nelson Mandela great was precisely what made him human. We saw in him what we seek in ourselves,” Mr Zuma said.

“Fellow South Africans, Nelson Mandela brought us together and it is together that we will bid him farewell.”

Earlier, the BBC’s Mike Wooldridge, outside Mr Mandela’s home in the Johannesburg suburb of Houghton, said there appeared to have been an unusually large family gathering.

Read More BBC News – South Africa’s Nelson Mandela dies,.

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The Amazing Spiderman 2

The-Amazing-Spiderman-2-2013-Movie-Poster-517x800Arriving May 2, 2014 is the much-anticipated, The Amazing Spider-Man 2. Andrew Garfield returns as the web making superhero. The film also stars Emma Stone, Sally Field, Jamie Foxx, Denis Leary and Paul Giamatti.

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