USSVI Veterans News Postings - Year 2003 News
Posting Date: 06 December 2003
From: John Dudas
Subject: President Bush Signs Fair & Accurate Credit Transactions
Act of 2003
Fact Sheet:
President Bush Signs
the Fair & Accurate Credit Transactions Act of 2003
Today's Presidential Action: Please
note extra protection for members of the military serving overseas.
Today at the White House, the President
signed into law the Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act of 2003,
ensuring that all citizens are treated fairly when they apply for a mortgage
or other form of credit.
The legislation will provide consumers,
companies, consumer reporting agencies, and regulators with important new
tools that expand access to credit and other financial services for all
Americans, enhance the accuracy of consumers' financial information, and
help fight identity theft. These reforms make permanent the uniform national
standards of our credit markets, and institute new, strong consumer protections.
Background on Today's Presidential Action
The Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act of 2003 will accomplish the
following key Administration priorities
to help ensure that all Americans, of every income level and background,
are able to build good credit and confront the problem of identify theft:
Ensuring that lenders make decisions
on loans based on full and fair credit histories, and not on discriminatory
stereotypes.
In 1996, uniform national standards
were established to set clear rules on what credit agencies were entitled
to include in individual credit reports, and now more than a million Americans
have credit as a result.
This legislation makes those national
standards permanent.
- Improving the quality of credit information,
and protecting consumers against identity theft.
- Giving every consumer the right to
their credit report free of charge every year. Consumers will be able to
review a free report every year for unauthorized activity, including activity
that might be the result of identity theft.
- Helping prevent identity theft before
it occurs by requiring merchants to leave all but the last five digits
of a credit card number off store receipts. This law will make sure that
slips of paper that most people throw away do not contain their credit
card number, a key to their financial identities.
- Creating a national system of fraud
detection to make identity thieves more likely to be caught. Previously,
victims would have to make phone calls to all of their credit card companies
and three major credit rating agencies to alert them to the crime. Now
consumers will only need to make one call to receive advice, set off a
nationwide fraud alert, and protect their credit standing.
- Establishing a nationwide system of
fraud alerts for consumers to place on their credit files. Credit reporting
agencies that receive such alerts from customers will now be obliged to
follow procedures to ensure that any future requests are by the true consumer,
not an identity thief posing as the consumer. The law also will enable
active duty military personnel to place special alerts on their files when
they are deployed overseas.
- Requiring regulators to devise a list
of red flag indicators of identity theft, drawn from the patterns and practices
of identity thieves. Regulators will be required to evaluate the use of
these red flag indicators in their compliance
examinations of financial institutions, and impose fines where disregard
of red flags has resulted in losses to customers.
- Requiring lenders and credit agencies
to take action before a victim even knows a crime has occurred. With oversight
by bank regulators, the credit agencies will draw up a set of guidelines
to identify patterns common to identity theft, and develop methods to stop
identity theft before it can cause major damage.
This legislation gives consumers unprecedented
tools to fight identity theft and continued access to the most dynamic
credit markets in the world. With a free credit report and powerful new
tools to fight fraud, consumers have the ability to better protect themselves
and their families.
Bruce G. Nitsche
Veterans Liaison to the Secretary
Department of Veterans Affairs
Office of Intergovernmental Affairs
3033 Winkler Extension
Room 747
Fort Myers, FL 33916
(239) 931-6135 (voice)
(239) 851-0057 (cell)
(239) 931-6136 (fax)
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