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Category: California News

Los Angeles, California - Attorney General Kamala D. Harris today issued a letter urging the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) to adopt regulations that strengthen protections against harmful payday and small-dollar lending practices. The CFPB is proposing to create the first nationwide regulatory floor for the payday lending industry that can work in harmony with California’s laws and regulations to further protect vulnerable consumers from falling into vicious cycles of debt.

“Together with California’s existing lending laws, the Bureau’s proposals would bring needed protections to vulnerable California consumers who take out small-dollar loans, which too often are predatory and create a debt trap for fixed- and low-income borrowers. Californians who need short-term emergency access to cash are getting stuck in a destructive and unaffordable cycle of repeat high-interest loans that they cannot afford to repay,” Attorney General Harris stated in the letter to the CFPB.

In 2014, 1.8 million California consumers took out 12.4 million payday loans, borrowing $3.38 billion.  There are over 2,000 licensed payday loan locations in California (substantially more than the number of McDonald’s restaurants).  Moreover, many locations are in counties with high poverty rates and low education levels, effectively targeting communities most in need of emergency access to cash and most at risk of becoming trapped in crippling cycles of debt.

In the letter, Attorney General Harris strongly supports the CFPB’s proposals to curb the abuse stemming from traditional, high-cost payday loans and collections and urges the CFPB to consider additional measures that would provide a meaningful alternative for Californians who need small-dollar loans.

Attorney General Kamala D. Harris’ Comments on the CFPB’s Proposed Actions