Washington (AP) - Bill collectors are exploiting a legal loophole to
seize Social Security and veterans' benefits even though federal law is
supposed to protect the payments from creditors.
Lawmakers from both parties who have been pressing the Treasury Department for
years to close the loophole with new regulations are growing impatient. The
Obama administration is now promising action but has offered no timetable for
developing the new rules.
Federal law has long protected Social Security and veterans benefits from most
creditors, with a few exceptions for child support, alimony, unpaid federal
taxes and debts to other federal agencies. But creditors have been seizing the
payments anyway by getting court orders to freeze and garnish bank accounts
that receive the benefits through direct deposit.
Activists say the issue has festered for years, but has intensified as more
recipients get their benefits deposited directly into bank accounts.
Many people who receive Social Security or veterans benefits can't afford to
have their bank accounts frozen for even a short period of time, said Margot
Saunders of the National Consumer Law Center. It's hard to hire a lawyer to
get your money back when all your resources are frozen, she said.
"They take all your money, and they take it illegally," Saunders said. "But
when you live on $700 or $800 a month and have all that money garnished,
there's very little recourse."
Over a 12-month period in 2006-2007, an estimated $178 million was garnished
from bank accounts that included a mixture of Social Security benefits and
other deposits, according to the Social Security Administration's inspector
general.
"Some banks are doing the right thing to protect their customers by denying
creditors' requests to freeze and garnish accounts with Social Security funds,
but too many banks are not," Sen. Herb Kohl, D-Wisc., chairman of the Senate
Special Committee on Aging, said this week.
"We need our banking regulatory agencies to recognize this widespread problem
and start enforcing the law," he said.
Kohl and other lawmakers have introduced a bill that would stop further
promotion of the direct deposit programs for Social Security and veterans'
benefits until the Treasury Department issues rules to protect the benefits
from creditors. More than 80 percent of the 51 million Social Security
recipients get their payments through direct deposit.
Assistant Treasury Secretary Michael Barr was asked by lawmakers to commit to
new regulations last month, before he was confirmed by the Senate.
"I am fully committed to ensuring that federal anti-garnishment statutes are
given full force and effect," Barr said in a written response to questions
from Kohl. But he said he also wanted to do it "without imposing burdens or
shifting liabilities to financial institutions."
A Treasury official said this week the department has already reached policy
agreements with the agencies that issue protected benefits. The next step is
to write formal rules, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity
because she was not authorized to publicly discuss the rulemaking process.
In a related issue, the California Supreme Court ruled Monday that Bank of
America could recoup overdrafts and insufficient funds fees from accounts that
include Social Security payments. The court said it based its ruling on state
law.
The American Bankers Association said in a letter submitted for the inspector
general's report that banks are often confronted with court orders to freeze
or garnish accounts that include deposits from multiple sources - including
money that is not protected from creditors.
Under the current system, the only "fair" response is for banks to freeze or
hold the disputed amount to "provide the parties with time to work things
out," the trade association said.
"Banks would welcome clear rules," the letter said.