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Credit Reporting Topped Debt Collection Complaints in 2022 By Charlene Crowell

April 25, 2023 

CFPB Credit Score Image

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Despite the rate of inflation slowing from last year’s 40-year high, elevated household costs still plague most families. Findings from recent reports from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) and the New York Federal Reserve help illuminate the top financial concerns of consumers.   

Congress requires CFPB to monitor and regularly publish reports on key credit issues. One such report is an annual compilation and analysis of the concerns consumers bring to its attention. Known as CFBP’s Consumer Response Annual Report, the 2022 edition shares that nearly two million consumers from every state as well as American territories like Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands filed complaints last year.  

Regardless of how complaints are filed - website, by telephone, or mail - each is monitored to assess compliance with consumer laws and risks in the marketplace. The agency allows up to 60 days from the date they receive complaints to provide a final response to the CFPB and the consumer. Last year, more complaints, per capita, came from Georgia than any other state, followed by Delaware, Florida, and the District of Columbia 

Nearly 95 percent of these complaints in 2022 were about credit or consumer reporting; debt collection, credit card, checking or savings account; and mortgages. .  

For example, 76 percent of last year’s complaints – or 978,00 total – were about the three national credit reporting bureaus, Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion. More than half of 2022 complaints in this category came from consumers under the age of 62, reflecting the importance of credit bureaus’ role in determining which consumers can access affordable credit to buy a home, secure auto financing, or obtain a credit card..  

According to CFPB’sreport, “Consumers also sometimes reported that they met the disclosed terms of credit card reward offers, but the rewards were not given. Some consumers said they applied for credit cards that included account opening bonuses, but the reward bonuses were not issued. Other consumers reported that they lost accrued awards when their credit cards were closed.”  

But CFPB found credit repair questions had the greatest percentage of growth last year -- up 94 percent from 2021.  

“Consumers often expressed dissatisfaction with the benefits they received from credit repair companies, often stating that the cost of the services offered was not worth the benefits provided,” statesCFBP. “In their responses, companies sometimes stated that they were unable to guarantee specific results.”  

By contrast, debt collection concerns, a long-time leader in consumer complaints, dropped five percent to the second-highest complaint area with 115,900 requests. Despite the decrease in number of debt collection complaints, the leading reason remains the same since 2013: consumers being hounded for debts they do not owe. 

To be clear, though, a growing number of consumers are still struggling with debt. The New York Federal Reserve’s2022 Quarterly Report on Household Debt and Credit noted that credit card balances increased $61 billion in the fourth quarter to $986 billion, surpassing the pre-pandemic high of $927 billion. Additionally, auto loan balances increased by $28 billion in the fourth quarter, consistent with the upward trajectory seen since 2011. And student loan balances now stand at $1.60 trillion, up by $21 billion from the previous quarter.  

"Credit card balances grew robustly in the 4th quarter, while mortgage and auto loan balances grew at a more moderate pace, reflecting activity consistent with pre-pandemic levels," said Wilbert van der Klaauw, economic research advisor at the New York Fed. "Although historically low unemployment has kept consumer's financial footing generally strong, stubbornly high prices and climbing interest rates may be testing some borrowers' ability to repay their debts." 

A related blog by the Fed showed that an increasing number of younger borrowers are beginning to miss some credit card and auto loan payments. 

“As interest rates rise, so does the cost of borrowing, and higher interest rates result in higher minimum monthly payments for credit card balances. On the other hand, most auto loans are fixed rate loans, so only auto loans taken out more recently faced these higher rates. This difference between credit card debt (variable rates) and auto loans (fixed rate) is consistent with the pattern of delinquencies rising faster for credit cards than for auto loans and may be evidence of higher interest rates driving some of the increase in delinquency.”  

After acknowledging the effects of rising inflation, the Fed’s blog raised questions about the long-term effects of these and other financial stress points.  

“Americans have been facing higher prices everywhere though—including on purchases they may be putting on their credit cards—at the grocery store, at the gas pump, and for many other types of goods. It is possible that increasing prices—and correspondingly, debt service payments—are cutting into borrowers’ balance sheets and making it more difficult for them to make ends meet, particularly as real disposable income fell in 2022,” concluded the Fed. 

Charlene Crowell is a senior fellow with the Center for Responsible Lending. She can be reached at Charlene.crowell@responsiblelending.org.  

 

Despite Protests, No FCC Movement on Vote for Standard General-TEGNA Deal By Barrington M. Salmon

April 25, 2023

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More than 100 protestors stood in front of the Federal Communications Commission on April 20 to show support for the Standard General-TEGNA merger and to encourage the FCC to vote on it. PHOTO CREDIT: Arc of Justice

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - For well over a year, a vote on the proposed $8.6 billion deal between TEGNA and Standard General by the Federal Communications Commission has been delayed because the transaction is under scrutiny.

At an open meeting late last week, the issue took centerstage although it was not among those topics commissioners considered. Protestors inside the meeting auditorium and outside in front of the FCC were out in numbers trying to coax and cajole commissioners to schedule a simple up-and-down vote.

That didn’t happen. However, protestors were not shy about their desire and intentions.

“I came to support the deal because it would be good for us. (A vote) is of great and historic significance. It is an opportunity to shatter the glass ceiling,” said The Rev. Kirsten John Foy, president and founder of Arc of Justice, a New York-based civil rights organization. “We have few minority owners at the top. We are locked out and a number of barriers are placed in front of us. We need adequate and appropriate representation of women and people of color...If we’re at the table, we can influence the narrative, not one imposed on us that’s not true to us.”

Foy was one of more than 100 protestors who lined the sidewalk in front of the FCC in downtown Washington. He and other supporters argue that allowing Standard General and TEGNA to become one entity could be a game changer in terms of minority ownership in America’s current white, male-dominated media environment.

Foy emphasized Kim’s commitment to equity, inclusion, and diversity to a reporter and said so in a letter of support he drafted on behalf of his organization last year in which he expressed confidence in the deal and Soo Kim, Standard General’s CEO.

“Our confidence in Standard General and Tegna is founded not in future promise but on past record and a corporate culture that reflects the American ideals of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion,” the letter said. “It is founded on Soo Kim’s personal and professional commitment to Diversity, Equity and Inclusion and his vision to enlarge the footprint of people of color in broadcast media.”

No community has a greater interest in the diversification of America’s broadcast media than African Americans, Foy added.

“We have long sought and fought for expanded access to ownership, administration, operational, programmatic opportunities within the television broadcast industry,” he said. [Kim’s] new company will operationalize a robust and rigorous vision of inclusion and industrial scale access for Communities of Color, writ large, but specifically to the Black community which through long suffering and moral fortitude has long sought and fought for.”

But there is substantial and significant opposition from critics ranging from other media entities and unions such as the National Association of Broadcast Employees and Technicians (NABET)-CWA and The NewsGuild-CWA which filed a petition to dismiss or deny the deal with the FCC  last year. Union officials contend that an “unprecedented array of sequenced transactions and swaps” — are actually an attempt to “game the Commission’s ownership and retransmission consent rules in ways that contravene the Commission’s public interest standard,” according to a June 22, 2022, Broadcasting and Cable story.

Charlie Braico, head of NABET-CWA, presented his concerns and opposition in a guest column in Broadcasting and Cable. FCC scrutiny, he said, is necessary to safeguard local news coverage in an era when TV and radio stations, as well as newspapers, are being snapped up by hedge funds and other news outlets are being shuttered at an alarming rate.

“We have already seen the detrimental effects that Wall Street control of local journalism produces — news deserts for local communities created by consolidation and even increases in government costs as a result of the lack of scrutiny over local deals,” Braico said. “Now, Wall Street funds like Apollo Global Management have turned their attention to broadcast TV, and it is crucial to determine if the Standard General-Tegna megamerger will serve the public interest, and not reduce coverage of local issues, impose viewpoints that are out of step with the community, or put jobs in local newsrooms at risk.”

More than 80 percent of Americans say they find local news coverage on television and radio to be most trustworthy, Braico added.

“We must not violate that trust by ceding control of local news to a handful of hedge funds,” he asserted.

In February last year, Tegna, which owns 64 television stations in 51 US markets, agreed to be acquired by Standard General for $8.6 billion, including debt. Supporters point to the potential benefits including a 300 percent increase of minority-owned or controlled commercial full-power television stations; expansion of the number of minority-owned commercial full-power television stations in the US from 24 to 85; and a surge in the number of Asian-American-owned or controlled stations from 4 to 65.

Outside the Federal Communications Commission building, Korean and African-American protestors wearing black T-shirts with white lettering saying, “HOLD A VOTE,” stood resolutely in the cool morning. Charles Yoon walked down the line shaking each demonstrators’ hand while bowing deeply.

“Soo Kim has been a leader in the Korean community for a long time. He is an expert in diversity. This expansion is very important for the community at large,” said Yoon, president of the Korean American Association of Greater New York. “I came to support the deal because it would be very important to increase diversity.”

Yoon, an attorney who traveled with protestors on a bus from New York, said he understood that the proposed merger has not been voted on and that its fate is in the hands of an administrative judge.

“I hope we show the FCC how much we care,” he said.

Inside the meeting, four FCC commissioners – closely watched by almost a dozen protestors – went through a five-item agenda. At the end of the hearing, in a Q&A with the media, Commission Chair Jessica Rosenworchel tried to explain why the Standard General-TEGNA question had not yet been put to a vote.

She said the transaction is currently the subject of litigation and is before an administrative law judge and therefore she’s prohibited from talking about it. But Rosenworchel did say that she firmly believes “that diversity of the media needs to reflect the diversity of this country.”

When asked, Commissioner Brendan Carr said Rosenworchel, as the chair, has the prerogative to bring the issue to a vote, and even though at least two commissioners desire a vote, whether that happens is out of their hands. Meanwhile, the FCC has come under intense criticism for seeming to be going against its declared support for diversity.

Carr, for his part, said he’s concerned about the delay because of the message it sends.

“I believe the application deserves a straight up-and-down vote. Diversity is important. The FCC should remove any impediments,” said Carr, the senior Republican on the FCC who once served as the agency’s general counsel. “It’s been a year-long process. Local news is sputtering by the moment.”

With that reality, Carr said, the FCC needs to create incentives and inducements, adding that this deal – if approved – would represent “a really break-glass moment.”

“Hundreds of local newspapers have shut down over the last few years alone. This trend is part of a broader decline in the investments necessary to sustain the journalists and reporters that are vital to communities across the country,” he said in a Feb 24, 2023, joint statement with Commissioner Nathan Simington after the public review. “Many of the nation’s local TV stations are trying to step up and expand their news gathering operations. At this moment, the FCC should be working to encourage more of the investment necessary for these local broadcasters to innovate and thrive. It does the opposite today. After a protracted, nearly yearlong review, the commission should be providing the parties with a decision on the merits – not an uncertain future.”

The Cop Who Killed Breonna Taylor is Back in Law Enforcement

April 25, 2023

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Myles Cosgrove

Breonna Taylor

Breonna Taylor


Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from BlackMansStreet.Today

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Myles Cosgrove, the former Louisville police officer, who murdered Breonna Taylor during a raid in her and her boyfriend’s apartment, has gotten another job in law enforcement.

The Carroll County Sheriff’s Office has hired Cosgrove. The county is about an hour northeast of downtown Louisville.

He was one of three officers who fired their weapons during the raid; he fired his gun 16 times.

Despite his termination, Cosgrove has not faced any criminal charges related to her death.

Carroll County's Chief Deputy Robert Miller pointed to this fact about Cosgrove's hiring. A protest in Carroll County has already been planned on Monday in response to his hiring.

Black Voices are Speaking Out, but Are they Being Heard?

 April 19, 2023

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Cedric Richmond, former Congressman (LA-2), former chair of the Congressional Black Caucus, former senior advisor to President Joe Biden, and director of the White House Office of Public Engagement, has become the latest voice of Black America to appeal to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) for racial diversity in media ownership. 

In an opinion-editorial published in the Baltimore Sun, Richmond exhorted the FCC not to “cave to special interests who have sought to pit minority groups against each other in an effort to block one of the biggest opportunities in history to advance media ownership diversity in our country.” 

Richmond was referring to the Standard General’s acquisition of media company TEGNA, a deal widely viewed as a major opportunity to instantly enhance minority media ownership and transform local newsrooms by bringing a level of new and racially diverse media faces and voices into them like never before seen or heard across America. “It’s an exciting opportunity. But rather than celebrating this thrilling moment, deal critics have resorted to the ugliest of rhetoric,” Richmond points out.

The FCC has given Standard General no feedback or provided any reasons for not taking a vote, and it appears to be running out the clock on the deal, for which Richmond exhorts the commission to clarify any “substantive grounds for rejecting” the acquisition or “act and change its course.” 

In his appeal, Richmond joins a distinguished line up of civil rights leaders, activists and media professionals supporting the acquisition. They include household names such as the Rev. Jesse Jackson of the Rainbow PUSH Coalition and Rev. Al Sharpton of the National Action Network, media personality Roland Martin, civil rights lawyer Barbara Arnwine, Benjamin Chavis of the NNPA, among many others. 

Richmond recently appeared on Sharpton’s radio show, “Keepin’ It Real”. 

In response to Rev. Sharpton’s questions about the state of media diversity, Richmond gave a dismal report on the state of Black media in America. 

“It’s not diverse at all,” he said. “And especially when you talk about the ownership of media in the United States. And so you know it far better than I do because you have been there and been a voice… one that has always pushed for diversity. And it’s just something that we've never been able to accomplish or never been able to hold the powers that be to make them diversify it. And so now you're talking about a day and age where you have so much misinformation, so much fake news, so much alternative facts, people really need to know the truth and we always say that, you know, facts and truth empower people to know what's going on in their community. So that’s why your TV Show is so important, your radio show is so important among other voices that are out there. But if we don’t own it and you don’t have diversity in ownership then you are at the whim of what others say.” 

Rev. Sharpton later asked Richmond why Standard General’s deal with TEGNA matters. Mr. Richmond explained: “Well the proposed acquisition by Standard General of TEGNA would create the country’s, it would create the biggest TV broadcasting company owned by a minority, led by a female, and you have history. And for an administration that focuses on diversity, and I know for a fact that the President when he says it he means it, and the FCC is in the process of letting this golden opportunity to empower minority voices…You're talking about a deal that would infuse almost two billion dollars into TEGNA to allow them to expand local news funding. The leadership of Standard General, Soo Kim, has a great track record in terms of labor, in terms of investing in companies. So immediately off the bat they’re saying they won't lay anyone off in the newsroom for three years, and they're going to continue to create local grant funds for local journalism.”

Even with top civil rights and Black media voices pushing for the TEGNA acquisition, it appears they are not being heard. Unless the FCC does an abrupt turnaround, it is still on course to allow the proposal to die, despite promises from Kim to maximize newsroom investment and diversity. “No one in the history of this country has had to deal with what the FCC Is doing to Standard General,” Richmond concluded.

“We (Standard General) want to partner with community journalism groups to amplify the work they’re doing and the communities they represent,” Kim said in an interview last June. “We’re open to exploring new partnership models to get diverse viewpoints and perspectives on the air and to make sure people have the resources to do it. We’re calling it enhanced community access or creative community access and we’re excited about the possibilities it will open up.” 

Together, Standard General and TEGNA, would be led by television industry veteran Deb McDermott, the first woman from broadcast management to be inducted into the Broadcasting and Cable Hall of Fame.

TEGNA has a national audience with stations in over 50 markets. “I’ve long believed the people producing the news should be as diverse as those who tune in to watch it every day — and this deal is an opportunity to achieve exactly that,” Kim said last year. 

Yet, a year later, the FCC mysteriously appears poised to allow the venture to fail.  

Richmond explains in his op-ed: “The review process is meant to be completed within 180-days based on an informal 'shot clock.' Yet it took the FCC nearly a full year to make any announcement about it all; and when the commission finally did last week, the message was that it was going to delay a ruling even further by referring the deal to an administrative law judge for more hearings. Keen industry observers were quick to point out that this further delay was likely a death sentence for the transaction — since this drawn out legal process will likely continue well past the May 22nd closing deadline for the acquisition. Indeed, Standard General acknowledged as much in its public statements.” 

Among the deal’s earliest supporters, Ben Chavis, President/CEO of the National Newspaper Publishers Association with more than 22 million readers per week, said this week that the FCC should immediately revive Kim’s proposal. 

“The National Newspaper Publishers Association takes the position that the FCC should reconsider this issue of Soo Kim and the issue of the potential benefit to communities of color as a result of this proposal. We believe that upon a re-review by the FCC, it should be reconsidered because it would bring great economic benefit and strongly deal with the issue of equity. The FCC not approving this merger contributes to inequity.”

Despite what appears to be deaf ears at the FCC, the civil rights community shows no sign of giving up. 

“The FCC’s failure to seize this opportunity to advance minority media ownership is beyond disappointing,” wrote Richmond. “From Day 1, the Biden-Harris administration has taken bold action to enhance diversity, equity and inclusion throughout government. Undermining the attempt by a minority business leader to acquire a major media property, and doing so in a way that is totally unprecedented, is, on its face, at odds with the administration’s approach and core values. It is difficult to understand how we have come to this place.” 

The FCC is running out of time to do the right thing, Richmond says. But it’s not too late. He and others are clear: Our voices won’t be silenced even if they aren’t being heard.

Tornadoes and High Winds Destroy Rolling Fork, Mississippi (2)

April 3, 2023

BabyheldbywomaninRollingFork

Woman holds her baby after tornadoes destroyed Rolling Fork, Mississippi

Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from BlackMansStreet.Today

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Tornadoes and severe storms destroyed the mostly Black town of Rolling Fork, where Muddy Waters was born, knocking over homes, and businesses and leaving survivors devastated by the damage.

An estimated 26 people were killed by the tornadoes and high winds in Rolling Fork and the surrounding areas of Silver City and Winona Friday night as storms drilled through one of the poorest regions of the rural South.

President Joseph Biden declared the state a major disaster area and ordered Federal aid to supplement State, tribal, and local recovery efforts in all affected areas.

President Biden’s action releases federal funding to counties in Carrol, Humphreys, Monroe, and Sharkey.

The tornado uprooted trees, dropping them on cars and onto the rooftops of homes and businesses.

The assistance can cover temporary housing, home repairs, low-cost loans to cover uninsured property losses, and other programs to help individuals and business owners recover from the devastation.

The population of Rolling Fork is 1,392 and is just over 79 percent Black. There are 423 Whites who live in Rolling Fork.

Residents and business owners can apply for assistance online at www.DisasterAssistance.gov or by calling 1-800-621-3362.

Click here to assist with urgent disaster relief: NAACP — Donate via ActBlue

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