| March 1, 2006
The Honorable Charles Grassley
Chairman, Senate Committee on Finance
219 Dirksen Senate Office Building
Washington, DC 20510
Dear Chairman Grassley:
This letter is submitted on behalf of the Bankruptcy Implementation Council (“BIC”)
to provide our comments on Section 221 of H.R. 4297, the Tax Relief Act of 2005,
as recently passed by the Senate. The BIC is a coalition of financial services
companies, trade associations, and other interested parties that share the goal
of implementing the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act (“BAPCPA”)
in the manner intended by Congress. While we do not represent the credit
counseling industry, our members are major third party users of the system.
Section 221 of the Tax Relief Act is designed to curb reported abuses within the
credit counseling industry. We share your goal of ensuring that credit
counseling offered by non-profit entities to consumers is done so in a
legitimate and beneficial manner. There are no legitimate beneficiaries when
companies abuse their non-profit status or provide inappropriate counseling
services.
Although we appreciate your desire to address reported abuses in the credit
counseling industry, we are concerned that the provisions in Section 221 of the
Tax Relief Act may have significant unintended consequences. For example, we
believe that a statutory limit on debt management plans could adversely affect
the operation of legitimate credit counselors. In addition, the restrictions
against assisting individuals in improving their credit history may chill the
ability to provide legitimate counseling which could have the effect of
improving a consumer’s credit history. We also note that it may be more
appropriate to require a credit counselor to disclose any relevant fees as part
of the initial counseling, as opposed to submitting the fees to the consumer
only after the consumer has obtained the service.
We believe it is important to share these concerns with you because a key
provision in the BAPCPA was the requirement that the consumer should be informed
of their options through a reputable credit counseling agency prior to filing
for bankruptcy. Although bankruptcy may be the most appropriate option for a
consumer, it is critically important that the consumer fully understand the
other options available and the consequences of filing for bankruptcy. For this
reform to achieve viability the credit counseling industry must retain
sufficient capacity to continue to offer these services to potential debtors. It
is our hope that you will redraft the provisions in Section 221 of H.R. 4297 in
a manner that addresses the abusive practices without unintentionally reducing
vital credit counseling capacity provided by legitimate counselors. We would be
pleased to discuss this issue further at your convenience.
Sincerely,
American Bankers Association
America””s Community Bankers
Consumer Bankers Association
The Financial Services Roundtable |
American Financial Services Association
Coalition for the Implementation of Bankruptcy Reform
Independent Community Bankers of America
Mortgage Bankers Association |
|