| News | Monday, May 21, 2007 | 
McCaskill, Levin introduce credit card legislation
Published: Saturday, May 19, 2007 11:29 AM CDT
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 Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., and Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., today introduced  legislation to stop some of the most egregious credit card practices that  unfairly deepen or prolong credit card debt held by consumers. The Stop Unfair  Practices in Credit Cards Act follows an investigation and hearing by the  Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, which Levin chairs and on which  McCaskill serves.
“Credit card issuers too often sock consumers with  sky-high interest rates and excessive fees, making it harder and harder for  families to climb out of debt,” Levin said. “The goal of this legislation is to  put an end to unfair and abusive credit card practices that outrage so many  American families. I'm afraid these practices have become too entrenched and too  profitable to the credit card companies for the companies to change them on  their own. Congress needs to enact pro-consumer legislation to put an end to  these unfair practices.”
“Credit card companies must be stopped from  preying on the most vulnerable Americans with unfair and confusing practices. We  have to fight for those who have not hired dozens of lobbyists to make sure that  American consumers are not getting ripped off and are fully informed of how  these companies are manipulating their financial security,” McCaskill said.
Levin added: “Credit card  companies are so profitable that they can afford to give up unfair practices  like charging interest on debt that is paid on time, charging consumers a fee to  pay their bills, doubling or tripling interest rates to penalize late payments  or over-the-limit charges, imposing repeated over-the-limit fees for a single  over-the-limit purchase; and applying consumers' payments to the parts of their  accounts with the lowest interest rates first. It's past time for Congress to  protect consumers from such unfair and abusive credit card  practices.”
The Stop Unfair Practices in Credit Cards Act has been  endorsed by Consumer Action, Consumer Federation of America, Consumers Union,  National Consumer Law Center, U.S. PIRG, and the Center for Responsible  Lending.
A summary of key provisions in the Stop Unfair Practices in Credit Cards Act  follows.
Interest Rates
No Interest on Debt Paid on Time. Prohibit  interest charges on any portion of a credit card debt which the card holder paid  on time during a grace period.
No Trailing Interest. Prohibit added interest charges on credit card debt which the card holder paid on time and in full.
Limits on Penalty Interest. Prohibit interest rate hikes on a credit card account unless the card holder agrees to them at the time, and in any event, limit penalty interest rate hikes to no more than a 7 percent increase.
Apply Interest Rate Increases Only to Future Debt. Require increased interest rates to apply only to future credit card debt, and not to debt incurred prior to the increase.
Credit Card Fees
No Interest on Fees. Prohibit the charging of  interest on credit card transaction fees, such as late fees and over-the-limit  fees.
Restrictions on Over-Limit Fees. Prohibit the charging of repeated  over-limit fees for a single instance of exceeding a credit card limit, and  allow such fees to be charged only when a card holder's action, rather than a  penalty, causes the limit to be exceeded.
No Pay-to-Pay Fees. Prohibit charging a fee to allow a credit card holder to  make a payment on a credit card debt, whether payment is by mail, telephone,  electronic transfer, or otherwise.
Reasonable Currency Exchange Fees.  Require currency exchange fees to reasonably reflect the credit card issuer's  actual costs.
Other Protections
Prompt and Fair Crediting of Card Holder Payments. Require consumer payments  to be applied first to the credit card balance with the highest rate of  interest, and to minimize finance charges. Prohibit late fees if the card  issuer's action caused the delay in crediting a payment.
Fixed Credit  Limits. Require that card issuers must offer consumers the option of having a  fixed credit limit that cannot be exceeded.
 
