Please contact Anna Marie Lowery, Director of Meetings and Events.
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Times listed are Eastern Time Zone
8:00 AM
Member Only Breakfast
8:50 AM
Welcome & Introduction
Speaker
Susan Weinstock
President & CEO
Consumer Federation of America
9:00 AM
Opening Address: Congressman Greg Casar
United States House of Representatives
9:30 AM
Why Does Everything Feel Like a Ripoff?
From scams to dark patterns, consumer manipulation is causing everyday economic pain. Panelists will discuss the various ways consumers are being taken advantage of. Panelists will also discuss how consumer deception shapes the choices consumers make, what consumers pay, and the trust they lose. How can advocates and regulators push back against the “scam economy” that is eroding consumer wellbeing?
Moderator
Herb Weisbaum
Contributing Editor
Checkbook.org
Panelists: CFA Issue Area Experts
Corey Frayer
Director of Investor Protection
Courtney Griffin
Director of Consumer Product Safety
Thomas Gremillion
Director of Food Policy
Karim Marshall
Director of Climate & Energy Policy
Emily Peterson-Cassin
Director of Competition & Marketplace Fairness
10:30 AM
Networking Break
10:45 AM
Tomato, Tomahto: Understanding Surveillance Pricing and Data-Driven Pricing
People feel tracked, and people feel like they’re being treated unfairly – unfortunately, both are true in the confusing world of data-driven pricing practices. Panelists will describe differences and similarities of the practices referred to as algorithmic pricing, surveillance pricing, personalized pricing, dynamic pricing, surge pricing, and why they all matter. Further, the panel will discuss how it’s affecting the prices for goods and services all throughout the economy while things are as unaffordable as ever. Lastly, the panelists will discuss the myriad of regulatory and legislative approaches that have been taken to address the issue in 2025 and 2026.
Moderator
Grace Gedye
Policy Analyst
Consumer Reports
Panelists
Emma Lurie
Postdoctoral Researcher
University of Pennsylvania
Rachel Lyons
Legislative Director
United Food & Commercial Workers International Union (UFCW)
Thomas McBrian
Counsel
Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC)
Marceline White
Executive Director
Economic Action Maryland
11:45 AM
Luncheon
12:30 PM
Luncheon Address: Comptroller Brooke E. Lierman
Comptroller for the State of Maryland
1:00 PM
Networking Break
1:15 PM
Protecting Young Consumers from Predatory Fintech Practices
With the high cost of homeownership and post-secondary education, many young people feel anxious about their ability to achieve financial stability. In this environment, fintech companies actively take advantage of young people’s financial desperation to push risky products on them. Even those who are younger are vulnerable to exploitation, such as minors who purchase virtual currency on gaming platforms. Attend this panel to hear a discussion of the emerging dynamic in which some fintechs exploit audiences at the early stages of their financial journey.
Moderator
Adam Rust
Director of Financial Services
Consumer Federation of America
Panelists
Les Bernal
Executive Director
Stop Predatory Gambling
Elizabeth Bond
Visiting Tech Fellow
Duke University Sanford School of Public Policy
Aaron Stephens
Senior Legislative Strategist
P Street Project
2:15 PM
REDLINED: Confronting Persistent Inequalities in Home Insurance Pricing in Communities of Color
Insurance provides essential protection for American homeowners and is a critical tool for community resilience, especially as climate change threatens more severe weather-related disasters. Coverage is also required of every homeowner with a mortgage. Forthcoming research by the Consumer Federation of America reveals that homeowners are charged significantly higher insurance premiums in America’s Hispanic and Black communities, even after controlling for risk differences. This means that our nation’s home insurance crisis is disproportionately impacting communities of color, and placing further strain on families’ ability to afford housing, to become homeowners, and build wealth. This panel will discuss the implications of the racial premium gap and consider public policy approaches to address the persistent redlining that continues to place barriers to sustainable home ownership in communities across the country.
Moderator
Douglas Heller
Director of Insurance
Consumer Federation of America
Data Presentation
Ethan Weiland
Research Associate
Consumer Federation of America
Panelists
Dorothy Andrews
Senior Behavioral Data Scientist and Actuary
National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC)
Keisha Bross
Director – NAACP, Opportunity, Race and Justice
NAACP
Amy Nelson
Executive Director
Fair Housing Center of Central Indiana (FHCCI)
3:15 PM
Networking Break
3:30 PM
Between Renting and Owning: Cooperative and Shared-Equity Housing Models
As homeownership has grown increasingly out of reach for many families, new housing models are gaining attention that offer alternatives to either traditional renting or homeownership. These approaches – such as limited equity cooperatives, community land trusts, and shared equity homeownership – offer many of the benefits of owning a home, such as stability and resident control, while seeking to keep housing affordable for future generations too. This session will introduce these models in clear, accessible terms, with a focus on what makes them work for consumers. Panelists will explain how these approaches differ from both renting and homeownership, while also drawing distinctions from emerging for-profit investment products that are often marketed in similar terms, but carry few consumer protections and can be predatory. This panel will conclude by zooming in on key targets for federal and state-level consumer advocacy, including what advocates can do to better support these housing models in their own states.
Moderator
Brian Stromberg
Shared Equity Homeownership Expert
Panelists
Alys Cohen
Director of Federal Housing Advocacy
National Consumer Law Center
Peter Dean
Director of National Services
Urban Homesteading Assistance Board (UHAB)
Aaliyah Nedd
Director of Government Affairs
NCBA/CLUSA
4:30 PM
Reception
6:00 PM
Adjourn
Times listed are Eastern Time Zone
8:00 AM
Breakfast Dialogue: Affordability in the States
Moderator
Susan Weinstock
President & CEO
Consumer Federation of America
Panelists
Tracy Rezvani
Administrator
Howard County Office of Consumer Protection
Michael Tiger
General Counsel
NYC Department of Consumer and Worker Protection
Kevin Vermillion
Director, Office of Consumer Protection
Office of the Attorney General for the District of Columbia
9:00 AM
Welcome
Speaker
Susan Weinstock
President & CEO
Consumer Federation of America
9:05 AM
Fireside Chat: Congresswoman Deborah Ross
United States House of Representatives
Moderator
Adam Rust
Financial Services Director
Consumer Federation of America
9:30 AM
Prediction Markets – Gambling with Consumer Protection
A panel of experts will discuss the rapidly growing business of prediction markets and the challenge they pose to federal and state regulators. The session will cover topics from preemption of state gaming laws and industry concentration; activities that already fall under the jurisdiction of the FTC, SEC and CFTC; as well as insider trading and ethics rules for senior government officials.
Moderator
Lydia Beyoud
Reporter
Bloomberg News
Panelists
Kellan Grenier
Director of Strategy
Underdog
Joshua Miller
Director of Congress Watch
Public Citizen
Yevgeny Shrago
Senior Director for Regulatory Policy
Conference of State Bank Supervisors
10:30 AM
Powering Fairness: Protecting Consumers in the Age of Volatile Energy Markets
As energy prices continue to fluctuate, driven by market deregulation, supply chain disruptions, extreme weather events, unprecedented demand from data centers, fossil fuel supply constraints, a slowdown in green energy deployment, and shifting federal policy, consumers across the income spectrum are facing mounting utility burdens with limited recourse. From natural gas shortages and greater capacity bottlenecks to stalled renewable energy projects and the uneven rollout of domestic energy production, supply side pressures are increasingly being passed down to households with little warning and even less protection as the promised cost benefits of the clean energy transition have been purposely delayed and disrupted questions of who bears the burden of energy production and who has shielded from it have become ever more urgent. This panel brings together voices from law, policy, advocacy, and industry to examine the state of consumer protection in the United States energy market and explore what stronger safeguards might look like.
Moderator
Karim Marshall
Director of Climate & Energy
Consumer Federation of America
Panelists
Lori Murphy Lee
Sr. Manager, Regulatory and Legislative Affairs
PJM Interconnection
Ted Trabue Jr.
Commissioner
Public Service Commission of the District of Columbia (DCPSC)
Jackie Wong
Senior Vice President, Climate & Energy
Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC)
Edward Yim
Director of Clean Energy
Lawyers for Good Government
11:30 AM
Perspectives on Private Credit
A dialogue with a former regulator and industry representative on the state of the private credit markets. The session will explore how private credit markets grew, their risks and benefits, the current state of the market, and how retirement savers should evaluate potential investment decisions.
Moderator
Corey Frayer
Director of Investor Protection
Consumer Federation of America
Panelists
William Birdthistle
Professor from Practice
University of Chicago Law School
Michael Spratt
Associate General Counsel
Investment Company Institute