Coalition of Consumer Groups urge CFPB to Revoke Permission Granted Credit Reporting Agencies

WASHINGTON—A coalition of 21 consumer, faith, and advocacy groups have sent a letter to CFPB Director Kathy Kraninger urging her to revoke the permission that the Bureau granted the credit reporting industry to violate the 30-day deadline imposed by the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) for investigating disputes.

In its April 1, 2020 guidance, the CFPB had permitted credit and consumer reporting agencies (CRAs) -- and the banks, lenders and debt collectors that report information to the CRAs -- to exceed the 30 days due to “reductions in staff, difficulty intaking disputes, or lack of access to necessary information.”

In the letter, the groups called on Kraninger to rescind the permission to exceed the 30-day deadline in part because of a dramatic increase in complaints to the CFPB from consumers alleging delays in resolving their disputes.

“From the time period of April 1 to September 23, 2020, there were 6,864 complaints in the credit reporting category that are in the subcategory ‘Was not notified of investigation status or results,’ there were 6,262 complaints in the subcategory ‘Investigation took more than 30 days,’” the letter reads. “Thus, consumers have lodged over 13,000 complaints just in the past six months alleging that their disputes have not been addressed within the FCRA deadline, if addressed at all. In comparison, there were only 2,000 complaints in both of these two subcategories cumulatively for the same time period in 2019.  This means there has been a 550% increase--likely as a result of the CFPB guidance.”

Alternative is Proposed

In a statement,attorney Chi Chi Wu of the aid National Consumer Law Center, said,It’s been almost six months since we’ve been in the ‘new normal’ and the credit industry should have adjusted like every other industry.  Given the severe financial difficulties that the COVID-19 pandemic has inflicted on millions of American consumers, it’s more important than ever that credit reporting disputes are resolved in a timely manner.” 

The groups’ letter proposed, as an alternative to revoking the guidance, that the CFPB should limit the extra time provided to the credit industry to 15 or 30 days.  

Section: Standard
Word Count: 443
Copyright Holder: CUToday.info
Copyright Year: 2026
Is Based On:
URL: https://cuto-admin.flux5.ccplatform.net/Fresh-Today/Coalition-of-Consumer-Groups-urge-CFPB-to-Revoke-Permission-Granted-Credit-Reporting-Agencies