Search Results for agency_names:"Consumer Financial Protection Bureau"

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Search Results: agency_names:"Consumer Financial Protection Bureau"

  • Type:Rule
    Citation:90 FR 2434
    Reading Time:about 6 hours

    The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) has issued a final rule aimed at protecting consumers in Property Assessed Clean Energy (PACE) financing, a program that lets property owners fund energy-efficient home improvements through tax assessments. This rule ensures that consumers' ability to repay is considered before PACE loans are approved and includes new disclosure requirements to help consumers better understand their financial obligations. The rule includes adjustments specific to PACE loans to address their unique nature and excludes PACE loans from qualifying as "qualified mortgages," which typically have regulatory protections. The changes are meant to standardize practices across states, improve consumer understanding, and ultimately prevent unaffordable loans that could lead to financial difficulties.

    Simple Explanation

    The government's consumer protection folks made a new rule to keep people safe when they borrow money to make their homes more energy-efficient, like adding solar panels, through a special program that adds the payback amount to their tax bill. This rule makes sure people can afford these improvements and clearly understand the costs before they sign up, so they don't end up with money troubles.

  • Type:Notice
    Citation:90 FR 1974
    Reading Time:about 28 minutes

    The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) has issued a policy statement introducing the Compliance Assistance Sandbox (CAS) program. This initiative aims to facilitate innovation while ensuring ethical standards, transparency, and competition in consumer financial markets. The CAS program offers companies "Approvals" that provide a safe harbor under federal consumer financial laws if they comply with specified terms. To receive these Approvals, companies must demonstrate that their products solve unmet consumer needs and adhere to strict conditions to prevent market manipulation and maintain fairness.

    Simple Explanation

    The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has made a new set of rules that let companies safely try out new ideas for helping people with their money, as long as they follow some important rules. But, it's pretty complicated, which might make it hard for some smaller companies to join in.

  • Type:Rule
    Citation:90 FR 8173
    Reading Time:less than a minute

    The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau issued a correction to a previously published rule concerning the use of medical information by creditors and consumer reporting agencies. The correction changes the date mentioned in the DATES section from "March 17, 2024" to "March 17, 2025". This change was necessary to accurately reflect the intended implementation timeline. The correction was made on January 14, 2025.

    Simple Explanation

    The rule about how banks and companies use people's medical information had the start date wrong, so they changed it from 2024 to 2025. This means everyone affected has an extra year to get ready.

  • Type:Notice
    Citation:89 FR 105013
    Reading Time:about 31 minutes

    The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) has released the 36th edition of its Supervisory Highlights, focusing on significant findings in the student loan market. It highlights issues such as deceptive practices by private lenders that misled borrowers about losing federal loan benefits when refinancing, unfair denial of benefits like disability discharges, and misleading information about autopay discounts. The report also examines improper loan collection tactics and the handling of federal student loan services during the COVID-19 pandemic repayment pause, pointing out issues like long call wait times and inaccurate billing statements. The CFPB is calling for corrective actions to protect consumers and ensure fair practices.

    Simple Explanation

    The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) is telling people about some bad things happening with student loans, like private lenders not being honest about loan benefits, and making mistakes with payments during COVID-19. They want to fix these problems to help students have a fair chance with their loans.