From Deseret News archives:
Payday loan stores dodge interest cap
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Utah law does not allow extending payday loans for more than 12 weeks, but some lenders work around that by persuading customers to take out "new" loans to pay off the initial extended one. That helps them to delay possible default penalties.
Credit counselors and advocacy groups for the poor say that payday loans are designed to trap and financially drain the desperate or unsophisticated. But payday lenders say they offer emergency help to people with no credit, and their loans are cheaper than paying fees for bounced checks or for restoring disconnected utilities.
Even without the interest cap, the payday loan industry still opposes Hogue's bill.
Kip Cashmore, vice president of the Utah Consumer Lenders Association, testified that restrictions Hogue proposes are not needed because most consumers are happy with payday loans. "Out of all the hundreds of thousands of transactions that the companies did last year, the (state) registered 22 complaints. That's phenomenal," he said.
But James Evans owner of Check Line and Check Action, and chairman of the Salt Lake County Republican Party said he opposes Mayne's bill and Hogue's. He has been lobbying hard against any changes, saying they are coming only because the Morning News series on payday lenders inflamed passions.
"I am fundamentally opposed to any bills this session because they are based on a premise that there's something wrong with the industry. And that premise is basically based on the articles you wrote," Evans told the Morning News, adding he believes stories were slanted against the industry.
Evans may have an advantage that many lobbyists do not. As chairman of the Salt Lake County Republican Party (besides being a payday lender), he helps oversee how much money and support his party may give to the same lawmakers he lobbies.
When asked how much power he has on such issues, Evans said, "That is an unfair question. . . . It's no different than the majority leader in the House or Senate sponsoring a bill who have control over their own caucus PAC (political action committee)."
Of note, the recent Morning News series on payday lenders found that Utah has more payday loan stores than 7-Elevens, McDonald's, Burger Kings and Subway stores combined. Utah has some of the friendliest laws of any state for the payday loan industry, which has attracted some national online payday lenders here.
While Utah's payday lenders face relatively few regulations, Morning News visits to 67 stores last year showed that about a quarter of them broke at least one of those easy rules. Several lenders also made misleading claims to a reporter about loans, and they included fine print terms in contracts that could easily lead to financial disaster.
The News also found that payday loan stores are concentrated in areas that are poorer, heavily Hispanic or are near the large Hill Air Force Base (where members of the military tend to have low salaries).
E-mail: lee@desnews.com
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