MyCRA Specialist Credit Repair Lawyers

Tag: Australian Retail Credit Association

  • New credit laws: the single best thing you can do to prevent bad credit

    change attitude to billsChange your attitude towards paying your bills, and change the likelihood you will suffer from bad credit. That is the single best thing you can do to prevent bad credit in the form of defaults, and now, the dreaded late payment notation. It’s not rocket science of course, but changing your financial attitude and stopping the crazy juggling act is one of those things I have seen in my time that most people on the slippery financial slope don’t do, that they could do to get themselves on the road to long term financial recovery long before they have defaults. Without defaults or late payment notations on your credit file, you score much better in the lender’s systems. You have a much better chance at securing credit in the future, including major credit like a home loan.

    By Graham Doessel, Non-Legal Director of MyCRA Lawyers www.mycralawyers.com.au.

    Although we would like to believe that the credit system is foolproof there are always going to be instances where Credit Providers make mistakes, and you cop bad credit unjustly or incorrectly. That you can’t help. T

    he type of bad credit I’m talking about is the bad credit which is directly attributed to you not paying your accounts on time. Instances where it’s either entirely or mostly your fault.

    With our new credit laws in place, it is quite likely that at some point most Credit Providers holding an Australian Credit Licence (eg banks and building societies) will sign on to comprehensive credit reporting and be able to access and report on your repayment history. So if you’re late by more than 14 days paying your credit card, personal loan or home loan, you run the risk of having a late payment notation recorded on your credit file and remain there for two years.

    A story yesterday from the Brisbane Times, Telcos and utilities could suffer under new credit rules quotes the Australian Retail Credit Association (ARCA)’s Damian Paull. ARCA are the guys that devised the Credit Reporting Code of Conduct, to go with our new Privacy Laws. Mr Paul said there is a danger that banks who chose not to report consumer repayments information and telcos and utilities – which are excluded from the new regime – could find there is a financial impact.

    “Once consumers get a sense of who is reporting, what’s going to happen?,” he said.
    “If I know bank X is reporting and Bank Y isn’t, what is going to happen to banks who do not report that information? What is going to happen to telcos and utilities?
    “Is that going to put pressure on these organisations and their payments – I think this is probably going to happen,” he told a conference organised by Informa in Sydney on Wednesday.

    These comments worry me, because it tells me that it is predicted that people who are struggling with their repayments will simply make their loan and credit card repayments on time, but miss the mobile or energy bill, because those are not subject to repayment history.

    Whilst this may be true, as someone who has been involved in the finance sector a long time, it is not a sentiment I want to accept.
    Fair enough, some months you may be a little short on cash. Yes, to avoid repayment history, you may want to pay your credit card, but leave your phone bill.

    But for those people who are consistently unable to meet all of their repayments on time – there was no mention in the article from any of those commenting, of what they should do, to get back on track.

    By acting early and taking advantage of new financial hardship laws, you can save yourself from mounting debt, late payment notations and defaults.

    If you are suddenly unemployed, fall ill, separate from your spouse or have a period of intense debt stress – you should know there are laws that may be able to help you through this difficult time. By putting your hand up early– before your accounts go into arrears – you could save your credit file. But why are there not more people aware of this?

    Time and again, I see people burying their heads in the sand, robbing Peter to pay Paul, until they are in so much debt it slaps them in the face. You should know that a bump in the road doesn’t have to mean you can’t borrow again, so long as you handle it the right way.

    New financial hardship laws brought out by the Government last year have been designed to protect consumers during times of temporary financial hardship.

    Last year, Steven Münchenberg, Chief Executive of the Australian Bankers Association, said in a statement to the media that only one in four bank customers knew that banks offered hardship assistance.

    As a company involved in credit dispute, MyCRA Laywers has helped many clients in the past dispute credit listings issued during a time of financial hardship.

    If the powers that be played a more proactive role in credit education, this issue would no longer be as prevalent.

    In the past consumers have not been offered hardship variations with their bank, or they have not been aware they have a right to request one and have been defaulted – this locks them out of mainstream credit for five years. If you are largely aware of your rights and obligations, then you might request a variation to your credit agreement early and potentially avoid the long term pain for what is often a very temporary issue.

    The earlier you act, the better off you will be. The key word here is ACT. Don’t hide from your Credit Providers and hope it will all go away. It never does.

    If you are experiencing temporary financial hardship you contact your bank or building society and ask to speak with the Financial Hardship Variation Team. Using the specific words ‘financial hardship’ will help make it clear to the bank what you need. Ideally, act before you fall into arrears on your account – to save your credit file when you recover from this difficult time.

    If you’re not at the point of needing a specific hardship variation with your bank, but you still struggle from time to time – don’t wait till everything goes belly up. There’s plenty of help out there for people who aren’t great juggling their finances or have found themselves over-committed. There are free financial counsellors out there who should be able to help you. Contact the Financial Counsellors of Australia www.fca.org.au for more help.

    Image: Danilo Rizzuite/ www.FreeDigitalPhotos.net

  • New credit laws: journo tells it like it really is

    black mark credit reporting rulesAs consumer advocates interested in accurate credit reporting, rarely would we consider the press to have a great grasp of credit reporting and the issues consumers face, and even less so with the wider coverage of comprehensive credit reporting that has occurred to date. It’s not their fault really – but their views and ideas about fairness, and which are frequently conveyed to the general public are often shaped by players who have had a vested interest in this legislation. Sometimes what we read is not the whole picture of what’s really going on. That’s why it was refreshing to recently read columnist Jenna Price’s piece for the Canberra Times, titled Big black mark for new credit reporting rules. I have included it in this post in its entirety.

    By Graham Doessel, Non-Legal Director of MyCRA Lawyers www.mycralawyers.com.au.

    Big black mark for new credit reporting rules.

    By Jenna Price. Canberra Times.

    Hey. Your last credit card bill. Do you remember when you paid it? Did you check the date it was due? Or did you just pay it when you had the spare cash?

    And the one before that, say, the one that was due in December when you were busy spending and not paying bills?

    Okay, final question. What about the credit card bill you received in January last year. You know you were busy trying to reshuffle your finances after the mayhem of Christmas and New Year – but did you pay that bill on time?

    I only ask because from next month any time you are five days late on a bill from a licensed credit provider, that late payment will go as a little mark into your credit history file. A little black mark.

    Every. Single. Time.

    This new legislation sits in the Privacy Act (loosely named, really, since we don’t have any). From March there will be extensive changes to the credit reporting rules in that act and there will also be an accompanying code of practice, drawn up by the Australian Retail Credit Association.

    The association drafted the code but it will not be responsible for it. That’s the job of the regulator, the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner. Of course, both bodies called for submissions and consultations. And, of course, they ignored the majority of the input of consumer advocates with decades of experience.

    Credit card payments. Mortgage payments. Car loans. Personal loans. If you have a loan from a bank or mutual bank – or any other providers licensed to give you money – and you are just five days late, it will go straight to your repayment history. That history will be available for any lender to check out if you ever need money again.

    These dramatic changes are taking place and no one is telling us about them. There are no advertising campaigns. There is no education process. Just a daggy little website called Credit Smart run by ARCA, the peak body for those same lenders that will be running surveillance on your records. The animations. The script. Cringeworthy.

    When did ARCA launch the website? The press release says late January.

    What’s worse is that the scheme is retrospective. So it’s not as if you can decide to be meticulous from this very moment. Nope. From December 2012, if you were late it can be uploaded to your file.

    Nor do the banks or mutuals have to make a song and dance about it. Nope. They can just send you one of those bland terms and conditions emails or letters and you will not even recognise that you are about to be watched with an auditor’s eye.

    The way it’s been promoted by some is that this will mean those of us who pay on time will be able to get discounts.

    But Kat Lane, the experienced consumer credit advocate at the Consumer Credit Legal Centre NSW, said that overseas experience reveals punctual payers may not get benefits. Instead, the information will be used to target those who pay late. You can imagine, can’t you? There are lenders who will go after vulnerable consumers and charge them accordingly.

    Lane said consumers would certainly be able to use external dispute resolution if they want to challenge what is held on their files – but that may take months. The Financial Services Ombudsman is already a very busy agency.

    The fact is, this is all about the convenience and protection of lenders and not about the safety and security of consumers.

    Last year, the Australian Retail Credit Association conducted a survey on what Australians thought about credit reporting. Not much – in fact 60 per cent of us had no idea what that term meant. And those of us who did know something, thought of credit reporting as negative.

    Damian Paull is CEO of ARCA, which is charged with educating people on these changes. I asked him if he’d ever paid a bill late.

    He said: “I’m far more conscious now of tracking when my bills are due … my behaviour has changed and my consciousness has changed since I’ve become more aware.”

    Which is lucky for him, with plenty of notice and a wealth of understanding from years in the industry.

    The rest of us aren’t so lucky. And it won’t be long before utilities bills join home loans and credit card payments. I fear it will be telco bills. Telcos argued hard for repayment history.

    And I predict our – so far – safe and successful lending system will be riddled with the damage done to people persecuted by lenders with no hearts and no discernment, just their little black credit records.

    Bravo Ms Price, finally someone has seen these changes for what they really are…the certainty of MORE NEGATIVE for consumers, with a very vague promise of positives. And like Ms Price I agree that there has not been enough done to educate consumers about these changes before they were implemented. I too imagine a day when telcos and energy companies are able to report repayment history information and cringe at the ramifications this could bring to consumers.

    While the new Privacy amendments as a whole have some merits for consumers, I would consider it is not the fool-proof system that consumers are being led to believe – particularly in their application.

    Being involved in many credit dispute cases on behalf of consumers in the past has meant we have seen first-hand what consumers should be worried about within the framework of credit reporting.

    Credit providers make mistakes, and in other cases they try to ‘get away’ with not doing what they should be doing to protect consumer rights. This can affect thousands of consumers.

    And as mentioned by Kat Lane in the above article, it can take months to challenge a listing via an EDR scheme like an Ombudsman Service. In some cases in the past we have also found that Ombudsmen haven’t investigated cases fully for the consumer – due to points of law being out of their scope of investigation. We have found this can be detrimental to successful dispute resolution.

    In the area of correction, consumers are being told if they have a problem with a credit listing, they can fix it themselves. This is across the board on many websites – including the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner and ARCA. Consumers have been urged to “watch out for” credit repair companies, and told if there are errors on their credit file, they don’t have to pay anyone to fix them.

    In my opinion it is dangerous to tell consumers with little to no knowledge of Privacy legislation that the only way to dispute their credit listing is through the internal systems. Certainly, we would not deter anyone from fixing their own credit listing if they chose to do so – indeed, it would be preferable for them to try it themselves rather than engage with a ‘dodgy’ company performing credit repair.

    On the other hand, consumers should not be entirely discouraged from seeking advice on their own behalf in a dispute matter which results in them engaging with a reputable credit repairer or a good lawyer well-versed in credit law. We liken it in some ways to doing your tax returns. You can do your own – certainly yes. But you can also pay your accountant to complete it for you. Both are valid options. The difference is – the ATO is not telling consumers they can’t use an accountant to complete their tax return.

    Image: stockimages/www.FreeDigitalPhotos.net

     

  • Widespread education campaign needed to save Australian credit ratings.

    Media Release

    repayment historyWidespread education campaign needed to save Australian credit ratings.

    4 December 2013

    A consumer advocate has welcomed Australian Retail Credit Association (ARCA) plans to educate consumers about new credit laws, but says full and immediate help from other key players within both the finance industry and government is essential to reach the millions of Australians whose credit ratings are currently at risk.

    Credit repair pioneer Graham Doessel, who is now Non-Legal Director of MyCRA Lawyers – a firm focusing on credit reporting law – says the powers that be have failed to ensure consumers were educated about new credit laws which are impacting them now.

    “From December 2012, information about consumer repayment history to licenced creditors – which includes credit card and loan repayments have been recorded – and the details of any repayments made past the due date will show on credit files as of March 2014,” Mr Doessel says.

    He goes on to say, “There has not been enough education to date about this important change, and possibly millions of Australians who have not been diligent with making payments by the due date could be affected.”

    The extent of consumer ignorance on new credit laws has been acknowledged by the Australian Retail Credit Association (ARCA), who announced last week they were developing a website aimed at helping consumers better understand credit reporting.

    ARCA’s own research revealed 59 per cent of people had not heard of the term “credit reporting.” Credit reporting agency Veda Advantage also recently published results of a survey showing that 80 per cent of people have never checked their credit history and 53 per cent were not aware that they could ask for a copy of their credit file. (1)

    ARCA’s chief executive, Damian Paull told Banking Day that ARCA’s new website, which he hopes to launch in the New Year, will explain the changes to the credit reporting system; explain how people can get access to their credit files; go through the issues that contribute to a good or bad credit report; and detail the financial hardship obligations of credit providers. (2)

    Mr Paull said ARCA members would be encouraged to provide links on their websites to the new site.

    Mr Doessel says ARCA’S approach – whilst positive, needs more than ‘encouragement’ – but massive national assistance to appropriately address the magnitude of the problems potentially facing Australian consumers.

    “With over 16.5 million consumer credit files held by Veda Advantage alone, we’re talking millions of Australians who need to be reached to prevent lax repayment habits impacting their future.”

    “The fact of the matter is – many Australians outside finance circles don’t know ARCA, let alone what comprehensive credit reporting is,” he says.

    He recommends both the financial sectors and the appropriate government bodies take up the education campaign.

    “I would like to see plans to incorporate a brief warning statement, plus direction for where consumers can go for further information on many standard Government letters such as Centrelink, Department of Transport and Australian Tax Office correspondence, in addition to warnings on all licenced credit statements,” Mr Doessel says.

    About MyCRA Lawyers
    : MyCRA Lawyers is an Incorporated Legal Practice focused on credit file consultancy and credit disputes. MyCRA Lawyers means business when it comes to helping those disadvantaged by credit rating mistakes.

    /ENDS.

    Please contact:

    Graham Doessel – Non-Legal Director MyCRA Lawyers Ph 3124 7133

    Lisa Brewster – Media Relations 
    media@mycra.com.au

    www.mycra.com.au  www.mycra.com.au/blog

    MyCRA Lawyers 
    246 Stafford Rd, STAFFORD Qld Ph 07 3124 7133


    (1) http://www.veda.com.au/sites/default/files/images/ycai_launch_infographic_final_190913.pdf

    (2) http://www.bankingday.com/nl06_news_selected.php?act=2&selkey=15884


    Image: David Castillo/ www.FreeDigitalPhotos.net