Senate OKs bill to rein in credit card practices
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate voted overwhelmingly on Tuesday to rein in credit card rate increases and excessive fees, hoping to give voters some breathing room amid a recession that has left hundreds of thousands of Americans jobless or facing foreclosure.
The House was on track to pass the measure as early as Wednesday, paving the way for President Barack Obama to see the bill on his desk by week's end.
"This is a victory for every American consumer who has ever suffered at the hands of a credit card company," said Sen. Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., chairman of the Banking Committee. The bill passed the Senate 90-5.
If enacted into law as expected, the bill woul give the credit card industry nine months to change the way it does business: Lenders would have to post their credit card agreements on the Internet and let customers pay their bills online or by phone without an added fee. They'd also have to give consumers a chance to spare themselves from over-the-limit fees and provide 45 days notice and an explanation before interest rates are increased....read more from the AP
Market Place
myCARDlab popular credit cards for everyone
myIDlab protect your identity and manage your credit
Access Your PC from Anywhere - Free Trial plus 10% Off!
GoDaddy.com | Domains from GoDaddy.com
BLUEHOST.COM Great hosting for unlimited domains
Blogs
- MetaBank Says Dubai Suspects Used Fraud to Get Prepaid Cards
- Online Security at Smart Card Alliance Payments Summit
- House’s Frank Won’t Push to Regulate Card-Swipe Fees
- IPhone credit card swipe war heats up
- Talks on RBS asset sales intensify as deadlines loom
- 2008 Survey of Consumer Payment Choices
- Reducing Losses from Reseller Fraud: A Merchants Perspective
- Ericsson Offers SMS Payment System
- Twitter co-founder's 'Square' comes into focus
- Bank Lobbyists Paid Nearly $300,000 to Politicians Before and After Vote on Credit Card Bill






