Military leaders will press state legislators today to protect the hundreds of thousands of young and impressionable service members who are prime targets for payday loan centers, which can charge a maximum
annual rate of 459 percent. CHARLIE NEUMAN / Union-Tribune Military leaders plan to ask California lawmakers to help curb high-interest payday loans, which critics call predatory and unpatriotic. |
The armed forces' top commanders rarely speak out on controversial issues, preferring to find solutions behind the scenes with politicians and Pentagon officials. However, they see payday loans, in which consumers pay an upfront fee for an advance on their next paycheck, as an increasingly unpatriotic distraction from war operations.
The top commanders contend that service members are often financially
unsophisticated, which makes it easier for them to fall into a cycle of debt. Such financial troubles are creating challenges for morale and other aspects of war readiness, the military brass said.
For example, the Marine Corps and Navy denied security clearance to about 2,000 service members nationwide last year for fear that their indebtedness could compromise key operations.
“We've had to remove sailors from sensitive positions handling millions of dollars' worth of equipment until their financial problems can be taken care of,” said Navy Capt. Mark Patton, a Point Loma Naval Base commander who will represent 90,000 sailors at today's hearing.
Payday loans, which critics often call predatory loans, and other high-interest financial transactions are the subject of a joint Assembly and Senate hearing titled “Protecting Our Protectors: Confronting Consumer Scams Aimed at the Military.”
Active-duty personnel are three times
more likely than civilians to take out a payday loan, according to a 2005 report by the Center for Responsible Lending in Durham, N.C. It estimated that 225,000 service members nationwide had done so in 2004.
CHARLIE NEUMAN / Union-Tribune Maj. Gen. Mike R. Lehnert, commander of Camp Pendleton-based Marine Corps Installations West, displayed copies of payday loan contracts. Lehnert said the practice "is shameful and should be stopped." |
The number of payday lenders has exploded from fewer than 200 nationwide in 1990 to nearly 2,300 in California alone two years ago, Christopher Peterson, a law professor at the University of Florida, and Cal State Northridge
geography professor Steven Graves said in a study last year.
Many of these centers are located near military bases. The Oceanside area adjacent to Camp Pendleton has about 70 payday lenders, the highest concentration for any of the state's 1,661 ZIP codes. It's a similar situation in neighborhoods around the San Diego Naval Base at 32nd Street, the study by Peterson and Graves found.
By one barometer, financial problems linked to payday loans have grown rapidly.
In 2001, the Marine Corps Relief Society gave a total of about $5,800 to nine service members nationwide so they could pay off their debts stemming from payday loans. Last year, the group spent some $987,000 on 1,509 such clients.
“I'm trying to drum up some righteous indignation,” said Maj. Gen. Mike R. Lehnert, commander of Camp Pendleton-based Marine Corps Installations West, which consists of 65,000 Marines and sailors at seven bases in California and Arizona.
“Predatory payday lenders aiming at our military is shameful and should be stopped.”
The payday loan industry says it provides a valuable and straightforward way for people to make ends meet. A spokesman for the California Financial Service Providers, which represents payday lenders and check cashers, said members obey the law and don't force anyone to use their services.
“We are a competitive product for consumers . . . that is both convenient and oftentimes less expensive than other options, such as overdraft protection, late fees and interest charges on credit card debt,” said Greg Larsen, a spokesman for the providers group. “Our customer satisfaction level is very high.”
Patton, the captain at Point Loma Naval Base, strongly disagrees. He said it's no service to:
Mask the annual percentage rate by charging an upfront “service fee” scaled to the dollar
amount of a loan. For instance, customers might pay $15 for a two-week advance of $100. Taken as an annual percentage, that interest rate would be 390 percent.
Allow simultaneous borrowing from multiple lenders. California law requires a payday loan to be repaid before another is made, but there's no network to verify outstanding loans.
“There is no enemy that our Navy is more passionate about defeating than the one who targets our own sailors,” Patton said.
Most people who take payday loans are younger than 35, according to both independent studies and those commissioned by the payday loan industry. The biggest debt problems arise when the original loan isn't paid off and new loans are taken to cover the old ones, some of these surveys indicated.
In their study, titled “Predatory Lending and the Military: The Law and Geography of 'Payday' Loans in
Military Towns,” professors Peterson and Graves found that:
Last year, San Diego County had at least 238 payday loan centers. Its total was second only to Los Angeles County.
The 459 percent maximum for payday lenders in California is typical nationwide. For the 20 states analyzed in the study, payday interest rates ranged from 364 percent to 550 percent.
Even though payday lenders are a powerful special interest group, they can be regulated. New York imposes a maximum annual percentage rate of 16 percent and makes it a felony to charge more than 25 percent. North Carolina, a military hub like Southern California, has banned payday loans and capped other small loans at 36 percent APR.
As they urge legislators
nationwide to take action, top military commanders said they are redoubling their financial education programs and urging service members to seek financial help on base before going to a payday lender.
In San Diego County, Patton said, the Navy is in early negotiations with local banks and credit unions to find alternative ways for sailors to get short-term cash at much lower interest rates.
While he and Lehnert, the Marine general, aren't counting on legislators to pass lending laws favoring the military, there already has been an unexpected shift in Sacramento.
On Friday, the California Department of Corporations announced that it would close a decade-old loophole for out-of-state lenders starting June 30.
The agency, which exists largely to safeguard Californians from financial exploitation, chose this year to highlight its goal of protecting war-stressed military families from questionable monetary offers. It launched an
awareness campaign about high-interest loans and created a hotline for service members to lodge complaints.
Service members stationed in California have received fewer consumer protections than even ex-convicts because they weren't considered legal state residents.
For example, the Department of Corporations in 1996 gave Pioneer Services, a company then based in Kansas City, Mo., an exemption from state laws establishing caps on interest rates. It based its decision on a court ruling that it had decided not to appeal.
Pioneer has targeted military members who didn't list California as their home of record with loans that they couldn't legally make to state residents for a variety of reasons, including sky-high interest rates.
Susie Wong, a spokeswoman for the Department of Corporations, said her department has “no authority to regulate business conducted . . . by a company outside the state.” Pioneer follows the regulations
in its home state.
However, in a notice issued Friday, the agency said further analysis showed that California laws do apply to service members who are not legal state residents.
Rosemary Shahan, president of Consumers for Auto Reliability and Safety, had pushed for a repeal of the out-of-state exemption. Shahan said she'll be interested in hearing state legislators' views on high-interest lending to the military.
“(Our troops) should get the most protection that we can offer them,” she said.
Rick Rogers: (760) 476-8212;
rick.rogers@uniontrib.com