Diverse Organizations and Unions Call on House Leaders to Reject Bankruptcy Legislation
Bill Would Make It Harder For Families Hit By Financial Misfortune To Get Back On Track
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 4, 2003
Travis Plunkett, Consumer Federation of America, 202-387-6121
Joan Entmacher, National Women's Law Center, 202-588-5180
Washington, D.C. -- As a House subcommittee held hearings today on
bankruptcy legislation, a broad array of public interest and labor
organizations called on House leaders to reject the bill (H.R. 975)
because it would erect harsh new barriers to personal bankruptcy. The
bill is very similar to last year's bankruptcy conference report, which
was agreed to by House and Senate negotiators but did not pass either
body.
In a March 3rd letter, groups and coalitions representing more than 225
public interest and labor organizations urged House Speaker Dennis
Hastert, Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, Judiciary Chair James
Sensenbrenner and Judiciary Ranking Member John Conyers to reject the
bill unless substantial changes were made. Among the many organizations
signing the letter were the AFL-CIO, Consumer Federation of America,
National Council of Women's Organizations, National Women's Law Center,
Leadership Conference of Civil Rights and NAACP.
"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 last year's conference report would be a mistake,"
the groups said. "Rising bankruptcies are driven by economic
difficulties. The timing of this bill could not be worse." The groups
expressed particular concern about the especially harsh impact the bill
would have on women, minorities, the unemployed and older Americans.
The letter raised several specific concerns with the bill:
- Imposes a rigid means test. The bill sets up an inflexible formula to determine if a debtor can wipe away most of his or her debts in Chapter 7 bankruptcy. A debtor whose Chapter 7 case is challenged due to the assumptions will have to litigate the issue, an expense many debtors cannot afford. A bankruptcy judge would not be able to waive the means test even if a debtor has experienced circumstances beyond his or her control, such as a medical emergency.
- Endangers child support. Despite extravagant claims to the contrary, the bill still threatens the welfare of children. The bill allows more non-child support debts to survive bankruptcy (such as auto and credit card loans), thus forcing custodial parents to fight with creditors for the debtor's limited income.
- Allows millionaires to continue to shelter their assets in mansions. The bill will still permit some rich debtors in five states to declare bankruptcy and keep homes of unlimited value.
- Expands opportunities for creditor motions. Creditors will be able to threaten debtors with costly litigation. Those debtors who cannot afford to defend themselves in court will be coerced into giving up their legal rights.
- Makes Chapter 13 plans to save homes and cars far more difficult. Numerous provisions in the bill, such as requiring five-year instead of three-year repayment plans for many debtors, will increase the failure rate in Chapter 13. Two-thirds of those who enter Chapter 13 plans (and attempt to repay much of what they owe) already fail to successfully complete them.
- Increases the likelihood that debtors will be evicted ¾ even those who have caught up on back-rent. It will be easier for residential landlords to evict a tenant who is in bankruptcy.
- Does nothing to curb reckless lending by credit card companies and other creditors. Reckless and predatory lending would go unchecked and could increase. By making it harder for debtors to wipe away some debts, the bill reduces the financial risk for lenders and encourages them to lower their credit standards even more.
"This unbalanced bill would have a particularly destructive effect on
working Americans who most need the bankruptcy safety net when
misfortune strikes," the groups said. "These include women, who
represent the single largest group in bankruptcy; African American and
Latino homeowners, who are 500 percent more likely than white
homeowners to find themselves in bankruptcy; laid-off workers, whose
numbers are rising; and older Americans, who are now the fastest
growing age group in bankruptcy."
"Our organizations do not oppose legislation targeted at bankruptcy
abuse, whether by individuals or corporations, but this bill would harm
families who are responsibly using the bankruptcy system," the letter
said.
# # # #
The letter to House leaders was sent by the following groups and
coalitions: AFL-CIO, American Association of University Women, American
Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, American Friends
Service Committee, Americans for Democratic Action, Association of
Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN), Business and
Professional Women/ USA, Center for Community Change, Children's
Foundation, Church Women United, Commission on Social Action of Reform
Judaism, Consumer Federation of America, Consumers Union, International
Brotherhood of Boilermakers, International Union, UAW, Leadership
Conference on Civil Rights, Lutheran Office for Governmental Affairs,
ELCA, NAACP, The National Advocacy Center of the Sisters of the Good
Shepard, National Community Reinvestment Coalition, National Consumer
Law Center, National Council of Jewish Women, National Council of
Women's Organizations, National Organization for Women, National
Women's Law Center, Neighborhood Assistance Corporation of America,
Network, A National Catholic Social Justice Lobby, NOW Legal Defense
and Education Fund, Owl, the Voice of Midlife and Older Women, Public
Justice Center, Transport Workers Union, Union of Needletrade
Industrial And Textile Employees, UNITE, United Steelworkers of
America, U.S. Public Interest Research Group.
For the letter: http://www.consumerfed.org/pdfs/bankruptcyhouseleaders.pdf.