Arkansas News Bureau
  A Stephens Media Company
Thu, Nov. 20, 2008 Partners Information

CONTENT
FRONT PAGE
NEWS
COLUMNISTS
  John Brummett
  Dennis Byrd
  David Sanders
  Doug Thompson
  Harry King (Sports)
  Roby Brock (Business)
  Joe Mosby (Outdoors)
  Micki Bare (Lifestyles)
HARVILLE'S CARTOONS
WASHINGTON D.C. BUREAU
Political Blog
From the Stephens Media team in Arkansas and Washington D.C.

Today's Vic Harville Cartoon


Click on image for a larger view or more cartoons

Hutchinson would push to repeal payday lending law
Friday, Apr 7, 2006

By Wesley Brown
Arkansas News Bureau

LITTLE ROCK - Republican gubernatorial candidate Asa Hutchinson said Thursday that he would lead efforts to repeal Arkansas' payday lending law if elected the state chief executive.

The 1999 Check Cashiers Act opened the door for predatory payday lending practices in Arkansas to grow, Hutchinson told senior citizens in a speech to a local AARP group.

"It's past time for somebody to step up and do away with this exploitative practice," he said. "Predatory payday lending is a trap for the unwary that becomes a financial ball and chain around the necks of our working families and our most vulnerable citizens."

The AARP and other payday lending opponents say current law allows predatory payday lender and check cashing storefronts to circumvent the state constitution's 17 percent interest limit and charge more than 400 percent interest on loans, costing the average payday loan borrower $800 for a $350 loan.

Industry supporters say payday lending provides banking alternatives for people who have little access to traditional lending institutions.

Hutchinson stance comes two weeks after the state Republican party adopted its "Blueprint for Reform" party platform, which proposes to end payday lending business altogether.

Hutchinson, a former congressman and federal Department of Homeland Security undersecretary, faces Democrat Mike Beebe, the state attorney general, in the Nov. 7 general election.

Beebe spokesman Zac Wright said eliminating payday lenders is not a new issue for the attorney general, who voted as a state senator in 2001 to repeal the 1999 law.

"He's taken action. He voted to repeal the law five years ago. He would get rid of it as governor. This is not a new position for him," Wright said. "As governor, he'd go a step further because repealing it is not enough. He'd support legislation specifically targeted at curbing the practice."

The gubernatorial candidates join a long list of candidates for statewide office that have proposed plans to amend or abolish the 1999 act, or to enforce provisions in the state constitution that limit usurious transactions.

"The system worked well before 1999 when we had usury limits in place," Hutchinson said Thursday. "It was the 1999 act that opened the barn door to abusive payday lending practices."

Besides pushing to repeal the law, Hutchinson said also would propose fining payday lenders who charge more than constitutionally established 17 percent annual interest rate for consumer loans.

State Sen. Tracy Steele, D-North Little Rock, has drafted legislation for the 2007 regular session that would amend the act. He also sponsored one of two bills to abolish the law in the 2005 regular session. Both measures failed.

Also, Rep. Jay Martin, D-Little Rock, and Sen. Tim Wooldridge, D-Paragould, both lieutenant governor candidates, are also promoting a bill that would enforce a provision in the state constitution that would make any usurious transaction illegal.

Both are term-limited, running for lieutenant governor and won't be in the Legislature next year.

Some lawmakers criticized the proposal at a recent legislative committee because it exempts banks, credit unions and savings and loans that charge high fees for bounced checks from any enforcement actions.

Candidates for attorney general also have taken up the payday lending issue.

Democrat Robert Herzfeld announced a plan several weeks ago that he said would "close loopholes" in current law.

Republican Gunner DeLay also released a plan earlier this year, but Herzfeld, the Saline County prosecutor, criticized DeLay for voting for the 1999 act and later voting twice not to repeal it while he was in the state Senate. DeLay accused Herzfeld of running a "me too" campaign.





Copyright © Arkansas News Bureau, 2003 -