February 8, 2012

Q&A: What would be so wrong about holding the banks accountable and creating more consumer protections?

Question by Shuthrower: What would be so wrong about holding the banks accountable and creating more consumer protections?
Last Friday, all 41 Republicans in the Senate announced that they would stand with the big banks to oppose Wall Street reform legislation. To me, that’s a smack in the face of every American who has been affected by all the fraud perpetrated on us. When you stand with special interests and then threaten to filibuster what you can’t defeat with a vote, your just a corporate puppet and you don’t deserve the honor of working in the “peoples house”.

Best answer:

Answer by Capitalist and proud of it
This is typical liberal argument. Why do you assume that because this bill stinks of special interest protections, etc., that we’re against reform? We just want it done right – not like Obamacare.

Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!

Student debt bubble about to explode

RT’s Anastasia Churkina reports on the record-high college loan debts that American graduates are faced with, exploring the real faces behind official statistics. What do you do if you owe over 100000 dollars, but don’t have a job?

Another Stompin Tom song
Video Rating: 5 / 5

Coming clean about baths

Green dead body
green

Image by Marind is waiting for les tambours de la pluie
"Green night album" is a serie composed with the talentuous Cyril F.

My grown-up kids come home for Christmas (lovely), but they seem to be addicted to hot water. How do I persuade them to comply with my eco standards and use less?

First we must trash a soapy tenet of the green-lifestyle movement: showers do not necessarily use less water than a bath. What? Listen and you will hear the sound of top tip number three, “Take a shower instead of a bath”, being hastily scratched from a zillion eco-living books.

A study into UK showering habits conducted by consumer-goods giant Unilever has kicked this eco myth into touch. A patented device attached to the shower heads of 100 households monitored water flow and duration of 2,600 showers over 10 days. Families also kept a shower diary (presumably on waterproof paper). The surprising results show we say that we spend far less time in the shower than we actually do. In fact, a typical British family spends more than a week in the shower every year, at a collective cost of £416 per annum. The average duration of each shower is eight minutes per person (not the five we usually admit to) and uses around 62 litres of hot water. A nation with a daily eight-minute shower habit adds up to one that uses 4.2m litres of hot water per day.

Meanwhile wallowing in a bath – previously frowned upon – uses around 80 litres of water. But the fastest-flowing shower in the study used 80 litres in just four minutes and 42 seconds. And power showers can use up 136 litres of hot water per scrub – the equivalent of almost two baths.

A heavy hot-water habit is not only costly (the power-shower scenario would set a family back £918 a year), it’s carbon hooliganism that slips under the radar. We each use 150 litres of water per person per day, equating to 35m tonnes of CO2 a year, mostly from heating water. This is so huge that new-build homes with insulation, efficient boilers and low-flow loos are still let down by hot-water emissions that exceed those for home heating.

I’m guessing your brood will not be up for sharing bath water. You could install a more efficient showerhead, flow regulator or tap aerators, but ultimately it’s all about timing. By taking a shower that is just one minute shorter, a family of four could save up to £100 a year.

A Water Pebble (waterpebble.com) will record your usage and give you traffic-light warning signals. Alternatively, try standing outside the door with a claxon, giving your guests a two-minute warning. That should get Christmas Day off to a dynamic start.

If you have an ethical dilemma, send an email to Lucy at lucy.siegle@observer.co.uk or visit guardian.co.uk/profile/lucysiegle to read all her articles in one place

Lucy Siegle


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Environment: Ethical and green living | guardian.co.uk

BBB Issues Warning About Veterans’ Day Scams

Posted on 11/9/2011 by

Arlington, VA – Some of the most cynical scams target service members, their families and veterans, warns the Better Business Bureau. Veterans’ Day is a key opportunity for scammers who would target those who are serving or have served their nation, especially elderly vets.

“It is unconscionable that one of the most dedicated and selfless segments of our population would be targeted by unscrupulous businesses, but they are,” said Brenda Linnington, director of BBB Military Line. “At BBB, we believe our military consumers deserve the level of respect and support commensurate with the effort they make every day on behalf of the rest of us – and we’ll do our utmost on their behalf by promoting a safe and ethical marketplace for all military consumers.” BBB Military Line provides free financial literacy and consumer protection services to the military community, as well as information on the latest scams, schemes, and ID theft tactics that threaten them.

Among the scams to watch out for:

  • Posing as the Veterans Administration and contacting vets to say they need to update their credit card, bank or other financial records with the VA;
  • Charging veterans for services they could get for free or less expensively elsewhere, such as military records;
  • Fraudulent investment schemes that convince veterans to transfer their assets into an irrevocable trust;
  • Offering “instant approval” military loans (“no credit check,” “all ranks approved”) that can have high interest rates and hidden fees;
  • Advertising housing online with military discounts and incentives, and then bilking service personnel out of the security deposit;
  • Trying to sell things like security systems to spouses of deployed military personnel by saying the service member ordered it to protect his or her family;
  • Selling stolen vehicles at low prices by claiming to be soldiers who need to sell fast because they’ve been deployed;
  • Posing as government contractors recruiting veterans and then asking for a copy of the job applicants’ passport (which contains a lot of personal information);
  • Posing on online dating services as a lonely service member in a remote part of Iraq or Afghanistan, and then asking for money to be wired to a third party for some emergency.

Another caution is to watch out for questionable charity appeals that raise funds on behalf of military organizations. “Telephone solicitors will call and say they are with a group that is helping veterans, service members or their families,” says Art Taylor, president and CEO of the BBB Wise Giving Alliance. “As with all charity appeals, before you donate, check out the organization with the BBB to verify that the charity meets BBB charity standards.”

BBB advises service members, veterans and all consumers never to give personal identification information (Social Security, bank account, military identification or credit card numbers, etc.) to anyone who contacts you by phone or e-mail, and to be wary of any solicitations that involve purchasing something or transferring money. Consumers can check out businesses and charities for free at www.bbb.org. Military personnel and veterans who need assistance should contact the United Service Organizations (www.uso.org), their state office of veterans’ affairs, or the Veterans’ Administration.

About BBB
As the leader in advancing marketplace trust, Better Business Bureau is an unbiased non-profit organization that sets and upholds high standards for fair and honest business behavior. Every year, more than 87 million consumers rely on BBB.

For more information, please contact Katherine Hutt at 703-247-9345 or khutt@council.bbb.org.

BBB Blog RSS Feed

BBB Issues Warning About Veterans’ Day Scams

Posted on 11/9/2011 by

Arlington, VA – Some of the most cynical scams target service members, their families and veterans, warns the Better Business Bureau. Veterans’ Day is a key opportunity for scammers who would target those who are serving or have served their nation, especially elderly vets.

“It is unconscionable that one of the most dedicated and selfless segments of our population would be targeted by unscrupulous businesses, but they are,” said Brenda Linnington, director of BBB Military Line. “At BBB, we believe our military consumers deserve the level of respect and support commensurate with the effort they make every day on behalf of the rest of us – and we’ll do our utmost on their behalf by promoting a safe and ethical marketplace for all military consumers.” BBB Military Line provides free financial literacy and consumer protection services to the military community, as well as information on the latest scams, schemes, and ID theft tactics that threaten them.

Among the scams to watch out for:

  • Posing as the Veterans Administration and contacting vets to say they need to update their credit card, bank or other financial records with the VA;
  • Charging veterans for services they could get for free or less expensively elsewhere, such as military records;
  • Fraudulent investment schemes that convince veterans to transfer their assets into an irrevocable trust;
  • Offering “instant approval” military loans (“no credit check,” “all ranks approved”) that can have high interest rates and hidden fees;
  • Advertising housing online with military discounts and incentives, and then bilking service personnel out of the security deposit;
  • Trying to sell things like security systems to spouses of deployed military personnel by saying the service member ordered it to protect his or her family;
  • Selling stolen vehicles at low prices by claiming to be soldiers who need to sell fast because they’ve been deployed;
  • Posing as government contractors recruiting veterans and then asking for a copy of the job applicants’ passport (which contains a lot of personal information);
  • Posing on online dating services as a lonely service member in a remote part of Iraq or Afghanistan, and then asking for money to be wired to a third party for some emergency.

Another caution is to watch out for questionable charity appeals that raise funds on behalf of military organizations. “Telephone solicitors will call and say they are with a group that is helping veterans, service members or their families,” says Art Taylor, president and CEO of the BBB Wise Giving Alliance. “As with all charity appeals, before you donate, check out the organization with the BBB to verify that the charity meets BBB charity standards.”

BBB advises service members, veterans and all consumers never to give personal identification information (Social Security, bank account, military identification or credit card numbers, etc.) to anyone who contacts you by phone or e-mail, and to be wary of any solicitations that involve purchasing something or transferring money. Consumers can check out businesses and charities for free at www.bbb.org. Military personnel and veterans who need assistance should contact the United Service Organizations (www.uso.org), their state office of veterans’ affairs, or the Veterans’ Administration.

About BBB
As the leader in advancing marketplace trust, Better Business Bureau is an unbiased non-profit organization that sets and upholds high standards for fair and honest business behavior. Every year, more than 87 million consumers rely on BBB.

For more information, please contact Katherine Hutt at 703-247-9345 or khutt@council.bbb.org.

BBB Blog RSS Feed

Q&A: Where can I find information about consumer trends in purchasing a vehicle?

Question by Maj: Where can I find information about consumer trends in purchasing a vehicle?
I am currently studying consumer values in purchasing a vehicle and I need some information about current statistics.
Please can anyone help?!?
Many thanks in advance!

Best answer:

Answer by kollector
Consumer Reports magazine. consumerreports.org

Add your own answer in the comments!

The Truth About Consumer Spending

Today’s Money with George Chamberlin
Video Rating: 0 / 5

Children want to learn about the environment, survey finds

green bird
green

Image by Rakka
i heart green.

i heart birds.

i heart green birds!

Pupils would rather study green issues than traditional subjects such as science and history, data from the Co-operative shows

Children are so concerned about the environment they would rather learn about it than traditional subjects such as science and history, a survey found today.

And while parents struggle to answer their children’s questions on environmental problems, they are bending to pester power to be more green, the research from the Co-operative showed.

The survey of 1,027 youngsters aged seven to 14 revealed that 82% of children rated learning about green issues as important, putting it ahead of science, history, IT and art, and only slightly behind English and maths.

Two-thirds want to learn more about wildlife and nature, almost as many (62%) want to learn about green issues, and almost half (47%) want to learn more about where food comes from.

This compares with just 37% who want to learn more about art, 36% for IT and 35% for science, the survey found.

Almost all the children (96%) were either very or a little bit worried about people damaging the planet, and almost as many (93%) said they recycled, while 85% turn off the tap when they brush their teeth and three-quarters (77%) turn off lights and appliances.

Almost two-thirds (64%) say they have an influence on their parents’ green behaviour and a poll of 1,002 adults who have children aged seven to 14 suggests the children are right.

Six out of 10 parents say their children persuade them to be greener.

But with 41% of parents saying they did not learn about the environment at all when at school, half of those quizzed struggle to answer their children’s queries on the subject.

And parents are confused about what causes climate change, with two-thirds thinking it is the result of the hole in the ozone layer, more than half (55%) think carbon monoxide is involved and 34% think acid rain has a role.

The Co-operative released the findings to mark the official launch of its Green Schools Revolution education programme which will give signed-up schools access to a wide range of classroom resources and activities.

Classes will also have the opportunity to visit a Co-operative windfarm to see renewable energy in action, and seven Co-operative farms to see firsthand how food grows and how to cook it.


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Environment: Ethical and green living | guardian.co.uk

Operation Halted that Allegedly Made Bogus Claims about Eliminating Consumers’ Debt

The Consumers
consumer

Image by ghwpix
The Consumers
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Spartanburg, SC
Spring Fling 2009
Saturday, May 2

LadyJusticeAs part of its continuing crackdown on scams that target consumers in financial distress, the Federal Trade Commission settled charges against a debt relief operation that allegedly lured consumers nationwide into paying thousands of dollars in up-front fees, but in most cases failed to actually reduce their credit card debts, and in many cases left them even deeper in debt. The proposed FTC settlement orders ban the company, Debt Relief USA, Inc., from doing further business, and ban company principals James Wojcik and Valerie Leath from marketing any financial products and services.  Litigation continues against the two other principals, Kelly Reilly and Alvin Bell.

According to the FTC’s complaint, Debt Relief USA and its principals made deceptive claims that consumers who enrolled in their program could eliminate 40 to 60 percent of their credit card debt and be out of debt in 24 to 48 months.  The FTC complaint charges that few consumers received the promised results.

Under the proposed settlements, Debt Relief USA, Wojcik, and Leath are required to protect and properly dispose of customers’ personal information. They also are prohibited from misrepresenting relevant facts to consumers.

The proposed settlements also impose a .7 million judgment against Wojcik and Leath, which will be suspended because of their inability to pay.  If it is determined that the financial information they gave the FTC was untruthful, the full amount of the judgment will become due.

Debt Relief USA has declared bankruptcy. Through settlement of a separate action brought against Debt Relief USA by the Attorney General of Texas, consumers have received .7 million in refunds from the company’s bankruptcy estate and will receive additional distributions soon.  The FTC participated in the bankruptcy proceeding and worked with the Attorney General of Texas to ensure maximum benefit for consumers.  Because the Texas settlement recovered available company funds and provided refunds to consumers, the Commission’s settlement with the company does not involve monetary relief.

Consumers looking for help with credit card debt should be wary of anyone who tells them to stop paying their bills, to pay someone other than their creditors, or to stop talking to their creditors.  Consumers should also be careful about paying for financial assistance before they receive it.  For more information on dealing with debt, including public service announcements about avoiding debt relief scams, see the Debt Relief Services  page of the FTC’s Money Matters website for consumers.

Changes made last year to the FTC’s Telemarketing Sales Rule prohibit companies that sell debt relief services over the telephone from charging fees before they settle or reduce a customer’s credit card or other unsecured debt.  This ban on advance fees protects all consumers who have enrolled in a debt relief service since October 27, 2010.  For more information about the advance fee ban see:  Debt Relief Companies Prohibited From Collecting Advance Fees Under FTC RuleFor guidance to businesses on how to comply with the new Rule, see Debt Relief Services & the Telemarketing Sales Rule: A Guide for Business.

Source: FTC

Federal Trade Commission, Plaintiff, v. Debt Relief USA, Inc., Kelly Reilly, Alvin Bell, James Wojcik, and Valerie Leath, Defendants
(United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas, Dallas Division)
FTC File No. 0923052
Case No. 3:11-cv-02059-N

FMD Consumer News

Consumers Warned About Price Gouging During Hurricane Irene – Hartford Courant


7Online.com
Consumers Warned About Price Gouging During Hurricane Irene
Hartford Courant
With panicked consumers scrambling for crucial supplies in the final hours before Hurricane Irene reaches Connecticut, officials are warning both consumers and businesses about the state laws against price gouging. The state Senate passed a new,
Conn. price-gouging laws take effect in emergencyHouston Chronicle
State Warns 'Price Gougers' Not to Take Advantage of IreneThe Lincoln Tribune

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