Bankruptcy bill on the move again.

Discussion in 'Credit Talk' started by bbauer, Mar 5, 2003.

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    Legislation curbing dissolution of debts moving in Congress again

    By Marcy Gordon, Associated Press, 3/5/2003 04:18

    WASHINGTON (AP) After getting very close to passage last year, legislation making
    it more difficult for consumers to wipe away their debts in bankruptcy court is moving
    in Congress again.

    Key Republican lawmakers want to move quickly to draft and vote on a bill, ''but we
    will be thoughtful in the process,'' Rep. Christopher Cannon, R-Utah, chairman of a
    House Judiciary subcommittee, said at a hearing Tuesday.

    Rep. Mel Watt, D-N.C., said he supports changes in the bankruptcy laws in principle
    but not the House legislation as written, which he said would create ''a paupers'
    bankruptcy court.''

    ''I think we're about to engage in a travesty on the public,'' said Watt, who is from
    Charlotte, a major banking center.

    Banks, credit card companies and retailers have pushed since 1997 for the
    legislation, which arises again as the record pace of new personal bankruptcies in
    2002 is expected to continue this year.

    Lawmakers of both parties and President Bush support an overhaul of the federal
    bankruptcy laws. Consumer and civil rights groups and unions oppose it, saying it is
    unfair to low-income working people and would remove a safety net for those who
    have lost their jobs or face huge medical bills.

    Bankruptcy filings jumped to a record high last year, gaining 5.7 percent over 2001,
    according to data released last month. The figures compiled by the Administrative
    Office of the U.S. Courts showed that new bankruptcy filings in 2002 totaled
    1,577,651, up from 1,492,129 in 2001, the year in which the economy slid into
    recession.

    ''Concerns about the rising tide of bankruptcy filings and the ever-increasing number
    of abusive filings are shared across the country,'' Lucile Beckwith, president and
    chief executive officer of Palmetto Trust Federal Credit Union in Columbia, S.C., said
    at the hearing.

    Beckwith spoke on behalf of the Credit Union National Association, which she said
    estimates that nearly 46 percent of all credit union losses last year, about $775
    million, stemmed from bankruptcies by customer-members.

    House and Senate leaders, including Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Orrin
    Hatch, have promised to move quickly on the bankruptcy legislation. Now that the
    Republicans control both chambers, the process is expected to be speedy.

    Rep. James Sensenbrenner, R-Wis., the House Judiciary chairman, put forward the
    nearly enacted 2002 measure after removing a provision barring anti-abortion
    protesters from seeking shelter through bankruptcy laws to avoid paying
    court-imposed fines. Last year, that provision led conservative anti-abortion
    Republicans to join with House Democrats opposed to bankruptcy overhaul to block
    the bill, a House-Senate compromise that came the closest to passage of any of the
    six previous years' versions.

    More than 225 groups, including the AFL-CIO, Consumer Federation of America,
    church groups, the NAACP, the National Organization for Women and the Public
    Interest Research Group, signed a letter Monday to House leaders asking them to
    reject the new bill as written.

    ''At a time when many Americans have been harmed by a very shaky economy and a
    massive wave of corporate scandals, moving forward mechanically with ... (the bill)
    would be a mistake,'' the groups said. ''Rising bankruptcies are driven by economic
    difficulties. The timing of this bill could not be worse.''

    The legislation could especially hurt women, minorities, the unemployed and the
    elderly, the groups said.

    Proponents of the legislation insist it is needed to stop abuse of the bankruptcy
    system by people who can afford to repay their debts. The abuse, they say, creates
    a hidden tax of about $400 a year on every American family through higher interest
    rates passed on by consumer credit businesses and other charges.

    The goal is ''to prevent people who have been abusing the system from continuing to
    do so,'' said Tom Lehner, executive vice president of the American Financial Services
    Association, a group representing retail credit businesses.

    Under current law, Chapter 7 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code allows people to erase
    their credit-card and other debts, usually in exchange for giving up some personal
    assets. Filings under Chapter 13 force people to repay debts over time in accordance
    with a court-approved plan.

    A bankruptcy judge or a private attorney appointed by the Justice Department
    usually decides whether someone qualifies for dissolution of debts or should be
    forced to repay under a reorganization plan.

    The legislation would apply a new standard in which, if a debtor had sufficient income
    to repay at least 25 percent of the debt over five years or earned at least the median
    income for his state, he or she would be forced into a Chapter 13 repayment plan.
     

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