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body At long last, the U.S. Senate earlier today passed a bill aimed at righting the so-called injustices perpetrated by credit-card companies. The House is expected to endorse the measure later this week, and President Obama could see the bill on his desk before Memorial Day.

In the wake of the subprime mortgage crisis, sneaky rate increases, unexpected account closures and other punitive credit-card practices have been the subject of much media coverage of late. In this space alone, I have devoted no fewer than five columns and nearly 3,000 words to this topic in the past six months.

So what exactly emerged from all of this heated debate? Is what Congress has produced enough to provide real relief for struggling American consumers? That remains to be seen. But for now, here are 10 things you should know about the bill -- and what the legislation might mean for you:

1. Change won't occur overnight. The bill gives credit-card companies nine months to change their ways. Though this may not be the kind of quick fix many Americans need as they struggle to make ends meet, the timeline is a tad shorter than the one seen for a similar set of new Federal Reserve regulations, which won't take effect until July 2010.

2. Consider yourself warned. When the new rules are in place, credit-card companies will need to notify you 45 days in advance before increasing your interest rate. The good news: You'll see these increases coming and be able to plan accordingly. The bad news: You'll no longer be able to tell your spouse your card's rate suspiciously and mysteriously jumped without fair warning.

3. Paying your bill becomes free and easy. The legislation mandates that card companies accept Internet and telephone payments -- and that they would need to offer these services for free. This represents a significant change to the current state of affairs, where some card companies use online and phone payments to extract extra revenue from consumers.

4. Going retro will be more difficult. Once the rules take effect, card companies will no longer be able to penalize you immediately for being late through a higher interest rate. Card holders will have a 60-day grace period before the lender can retroactively apply a higher rate to existing balances.

5. Money saved for good behavior. Even if you do fall more than 60 days behind, you'll be able to put yourself back in the good graces of your lender, thanks to the new bill. Card companies will have to restore the previous, lower rate after the borrower has made his or her minimum payment on time for six consecutive months.

6. Bait-and-switch tactics are over. As The Wall Street Journal Online mentions in its Washington Wire blog, card issuers will not be allowed to raise rates during the first year an account is open; so-called "promotional" rates will still be allowed, though they'll need to last a minimum of six months.

7. 5 o'clock is quitting time again. Ever found it absurd that card companies require your payment to make it to them by 9 a.m. or 12 p.m. on the due date? I sure have. Thankfully, as Ron Lieber of the New York Times reports, the new rules state that if your payment arrives by 5 p.m. on the due date, it must be considered an on-time payment.

8. Giving credit the 'ol college try will become harder. The Senate bill requires those under 21 who want to open a credit-card account to first prove that they can repay the money -- or that a parent is willing to be on the hook for junior's debt. Say so long to those freebie towels and water bottles that had become staples of the on-campus experience.

9. Magnifying glass no longer required. Lieber's New York Times article notes an interesting provision of the House's credit-card bill. Though it isn't explicitly included in the Senate bill that passed today, it could end up in the final legislation that crosses the president's desk: No more fine print. Card companies will be required to print their applications and disclosure statements in 12-point type or larger.

10. New tricks and traps are just around the corner. Joshua Frank of the Center for Responsible Lending says it well, in an article published yesterday by Marketwatch's Ruth Mantell:
"I think we'll see more fee gimmicks and ways to get around the rules, adding fees to customers who card issuers are not finding as profitable as they want,"
After all, it's the American way...

What do you think of the new credit-card bill? Has Congress gone far enough, or do American consumers deserve even more relief? Sound off here.

Message Edited by Anthony_Catalano on 05-19-2009 06:17 PM
Comments
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body IF PEOPLE WOULD SPEND LESS TIME WATCHING THOSE STUPID "REALITY SHOWS" AND SPEND THAT TIME GETTING INVOLVED MAYBE WE COULD DO SOMETHING IN THIS COUNTRY
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  • comment number 11
  • date 05-19-2009 07:44 PM
  • author 32073 writes:
body I carry no cash and use CC daily as a convenience. Always pay in full @ the EOM. With respect to CC firms, as the ole saying goes, we must screw each other cause there ain't no one else. I believe they refer to me as
a deadbeat because I do not pay them interest. george-
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body Congress hasn't gone far enough. To allow credit card companies to charge the interest they do is absurd. The loan sharks have nothing on the credit card companies. If a private citizen tried to charge 19 to 26 % interest on a loan, he would be in jail for usury. Why are the credit card companies allowed to get away with it.
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  • comment number 13
  • date 05-19-2009 07:49 PM
  • author fedup22 writes:
body Put a reasonable cap on the the interest rate a credit card company can charge. Credit card companies set it up so you will never be able to pay your card off. Most americans can pay a reasonable rate. But not when credit card companies triple or quadruple you interest rate for being a day late once or twice. After all it's really our money they are lending us. Credit card companies borrow money from the Federal Reserve at a very low rate. Then they charge us five or six times the rate they borrowed. It's a license to steal. Federal Reserve get it's money from the taxpayers. This is a form of slavery. Slavery was outlawed over two hundred years ago. Yet congress allows credit card companies to charge whatever interest rate they want. Interest rates should be regulated by the goverment. They use to be. But now no regulation means credit card companies are free to do whatever they want. A license to steal from poor hard working americans. Congress should go farther regulate these crooks that we bailed out. If congress truley wants to help lower the interest these credit card company ( theives) charge for borrowing our own money. Thank You!!!
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  • comment number 14
  • date 05-19-2009 07:54 PM
  • author ciaotebaldi writes:
body The American Consumer doesn't need relief.... we need integrity from our legislators and our laws. Our laws not are not about right and wrong, they are about who can afford to have the best lawyers enough money to hold out for a positive decision. Our leaders of Government have bee selling us down the river for years, and some of us are too STUPID to do anything about it. What are they putting in our water? Florine?
Bah! and Shame to Politics and politicians! I don't know how they sleep at night. They will be the downfall of the U.S and it's not far away.
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  • comment number 15
  • date 05-19-2009 08:06 PM
  • author swaved77 writes:
body Amen to that!
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  • comment number 16
  • date 05-19-2009 08:13 PM
  • author bdeehumble writes:
body The interest amount should be tied to prime rate. A 45 day notice of arbitrary rate changes is small comfort if your current balance limits your options to take your business elsewhere.
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  • comment number 17
  • date 05-19-2009 08:15 PM
  • author swaved77 writes:
body In retospect I believe that reversing the current bankruptcy law would do the American Public more justice than this bill does.
These banks are very smart and very creative when it comes to finding ways to stick it to you. They always find loop holes in any law, so I don't expect to see much difference in the way they operate.
But change the bankruptcy law and now the bank becomes the one on the hoop for selling you a home they knew you couldn't afford and extending you credit that they knew you could not pay back with the viscious interest rates that are charged.
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  • comment number 18
  • date 05-19-2009 08:26 PM
  • author d1988 writes:
body
Yes, lower rates will help those having a hard time paying. It will lower their payment and make it easier to pay. The other point you made about not using cards if you don't like it. That would be nice but the main issue is with the card company that has an interest rate of 4% and then jacks it to 16.9 % after you've made your charges and you do not have the money to pay in full. You are then stuck with a payment you can not handle. That is happening all over. People could make their payments but they went up with the new Bill passed by Congress to pay cards off sooner(big help that was). So then people are a day or two late the interest doubles, triples and now they can't pay at all. Or the card company just thinks it's time for your rate to change so now they double the interest rate which raises your debt and payment. That is what needs to change.

The interest should not increase over the rate it was when you made the purchase unless you are pass due 30 or more days. If they want to raise it on new items that's ok then you have the choise to use the card or not.

Message Edited by d1988 on 05-19-2009 08:30 PM

Message Edited by d1988 on 05-19-2009 08:34 PM
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  • comment number 19
  • date 05-19-2009 08:29 PM
  • author bobb1088 writes:
body This bill is "tossing the consumer a little bone." It is a few "crumbs." After what the CC company's have gotten away with for so long, "We, the American People," deserve better that this.
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