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WHEREAS, the Senate of the Pennsylvania General Assembly is currently considering Senate Bill 975, which would enable widespread predatory payday loans to be made to residents of the Commonwealth; and
WHEREAS, SB 975 would weaken Pennsylvania's usury laws at the sole behest and for the sole benefit of out-of-state payday lending corporations; and
WHEREAS, SB 975 would enable payday lenders to levy finance charges in excess of 300% APR; and
WHEREAS, SB 975 does not require payday lenders to implement sensible underwriting standards to ensure that loan repayment is affordable for the borrower; and
WHEREAS, SB 975 would enable lenders to require a one-time balloon repayment of all principal, finance charges, and fees associated with the loan upon the borrower receiving his or her next paycheck; and
WHEREAS, for a borrower who is paid every two weeks, SB 975 would enable payday lenders, by statute, to levy repayment terms against the borrower's next paycheck of an amount in excess of 50%; and
WHEREAS, a loan repayment that consumes 50% of each paycheck before the consumer has paid rent or mortgage, utilities, and other basic living expenses, is by definition unaffordable; and
WHEREAS, the required single balloon payment is designed to encourage borrowers to immediately take another two-week loan to cover basic living expenses, encouraging a cycle of re-borrowing; and
WHEREAS, a 2011 report produced for the State of Florida by Veritec Data Solutions, a database vendor providing statistics on payday lending, shows that customers receive an average of nine payday loans per year, typically in consecutive succession, and that 77% of all payday loans are made to borrowers who took out more than nine loans per year; and
WHEREAS, in an effort to quell criticism of long-term consecutive loans, SB 975 contains requirements to cap the number of transactions to an individual borrower at eight consecutive loans but also includes definitions and loo...
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