For Release:
April 2, 2001 FTC'S Northeast Regional Office
Hosts Forum on Predatory Lending
Illegal "predatory" lending practices that often exploit lower-income and
minority borrowers and frequently target elderly homeowners will be the focus of a public
forum on
April 3, 2001, at the Alexander Hamilton Custom House, 1 Bowling Green, New York City,
from 8:30 am - 5:00 pm. The Predatory Lending Forum, hosted by the Federal Trade
Commission's Northeast Regional Office, will bring together about 300 consumer advocates,
bankers, state and federal regulators, and New York homeowners and senior citizens to
explore legislative, legal and community-based initiatives that combat predatory lending.
Co-sponsors of the Predatory Lending Forum are the AARP, the Civil Rights Bureau of the
New York State Attorney General's Office, the Consumer Affairs Committee of the
Association of the Bar of the City of New York, the Better Business Bureau serving
Metropolitan New York, the Mortgage Bankers Association of America, the National Consumer
Law Center, the New York Bankers Association, the New York Urban League and the NAACP of
New York.
Speakers and panelists at the event include FTC Commissioner Mozelle Thompson, New York
Attorney General Eliot Spitzer, Jodie Bernstein, Director of the FTC's Bureau of Consumer
Protection, Michael Smith, President of the New York Bankers Association, E. Robert Levy,
Executive Director and Counsel of the Mortgage Bankers Association of New Jersey and Sarah
Ludwig, Executive Director of NY's Neighborhood Economic Development Advocacy Project.
Some of the topics covered will be:
- Recent changes in state regulations governing high risk loans in New York, Massachusetts
and North Carolina.
- FTC's recommendations to strengthen federal laws governing second-mortgage financing.
- Recent litigation against predatory lenders by federal and state enforcement officials
and the private bar.
- Creative initiatives by industry and public-private partnerships to increase access to
mainstream financing in minority and lower income neighborhoods.
The forum will conclude in a break-out session to develop a plan of further action for
a consumer education campaign among the forum's co-sponsors.
"This conference presents a terrific opportunity for consumers, industry and
government to join forces to address predatory lending practices," said Jodie
Bernstein, Director of the FTC's Bureau of Consumer Protection. "The information
exchanged and the ideas generated at this conference set the stage for meaningful
action." |