For
Immediate Release:
June 17, 2004 |
For
More Information:
Ed Mierzwinski
Jen Mueller
(202) 546-9707
|
One In Four Credit Reports Contains Errors Serious Enough To Wreak Havoc
For Consumers
WASHINGTON,D.C.One
in four credit reports contains errors serious enough to cause consumers to
be denied credit, a loan, an apartment or home loan or even a job, according
to a new survey
released today by U.S. PIRG.
"The big credit bureaus
and big business tolerate big mistakes in credit reports," said Ed Mierzwinski
, U.S. PIRG Consumer Program Director. "But those mistakes ruin the financial
reputations of hardworking Americans."
Three national credit bureaus,
Equifax, Experian, and Trans Union, collect and compile information about consumer
creditworthiness from banks, creditors and from public records such as lawsuits,
tax liens and bankruptcy filings. The so-called "Big Three" each maintains
a file on nearly every adult American. The resulting credit report amounts to
a consumer's financial résumé. The credit score calculated from
this report is a consumer's financial SAT.
Over the last decade, the
state PIRGs and other consumer organizations have issued numerous reports showing
that sloppy credit bureau practices are at fault for errors in consumer credit
reports.
"It is outrageous that
inaccurate credit reports could damage 1 in 4 consumer's ability to buy a home,
rent an apartment, obtain credit, open a bank account, or even get a job,"
said Mierzwinski.
U.S. PIRG collected 200
surveys from adults in 30 states who reviewed their credit reports for accuracy.
Key findings include:
- Twenty-five percent (25%)
of the credit reports contained errors serious enough to result in the denial
of credit;
- Seventy-nine percent (79%)
of the credit reports contained mistakes of some kind;
- Fifty-four percent (54%)
of the credit reports contained personal demographic identifying information
that was misspelled, long-outdated, belonged to a stranger, or was otherwise
incorrect;
- Thirty percent (30%) of
the credit reports contained credit accounts that had been closed by the consumer
but incorrectly remained listed as open.
In December 2003, Congress
passed the Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act (FACT Act), which included
the right to a free annual credit report on request and a number of provisions
designed to improve the accuracy of credit reports.
On June 4, the Federal Trade
Commission finalized its rule for implementing the new consumer right to a free
credit report, rolling it out over a nine-month period, beginning on the west
coast in December 2004 and finishing on the east coast in September 2005.
"In the last five years
the FTC has fined the Big Three credit bureaus millions of dollars for not helping
consumers clean up inaccurate reports, yet recently allowed the credit bureaus
to roll out the new right to a free credit report at a snail's pace," said
Mierzwinski. "It's shocking that most of the country needs to wait until
next year to get the important rights Congress promised them last year."
Regardless of the delay,
PIRG recommended that consumers examine all three credit reports at least once
each year, before they apply for credit. Consumers can already get free reports
in Colorado, Georgia, Maryland, Maine, Massachusetts, New Jersey and Vermont.
Consumers who have recently been denied credit, are unemployed or collecting
benefits, or believe themselves to be victims of identity theft or fraud may
also receive a free copy of their report. In other circumstances, consumers
will pay about nine dollars for a report until the Federal Trade Commission
fully implements the new law.
U.S. PIRG also called on
Congress and state legislatures to finish the job and to go beyond the FACT
Act to protect consumers' financial privacy and ensure the accuracy of credit
reports. Specifically, U.S. PIRG called on Congress and state legislatures to
strengthen a consumer's private right of action to seek redress through the
courts when a credit bureau or a creditor fails to protect personal information
or to comply with an investigation; limit or prohibit the use of a consumer's
Social Security number; and give consumers more control over who has access
to their credit reports and when.
U.S. PIRG is the national
lobbying office for state Public Interest Research Groups. State PIRGs are public
interest advocacy organizations with offices around the country. U.S. PIRG's
consumer webpage is at http://www.pirg.org/consumer .