SB 896,
as amended, Correa. Finance lenders: nonprofit organizations:begin delete zero interestend deletebegin insert zero-interest, low-costend insert loans: exemptions.
Existing law, the California Finance Lenders Law, provides for the licensure and regulation of finance lenders and brokers by the Commissioner of Business Oversight who is the chief officer of the Department of Business Oversight.
Existing law prohibits a person from engaging in the business of a finance lender or broker without obtaining a license from the commissioner. Under existing law, a finance lender includes any person who is engaged in the business of making consumer loans or making commercial loans and the business of making those loans includes lending money and taking, in the name of the lender, or in any other name, in whole or in part, as security for a loan, any contract or obligation involving the forfeiture of rights in or to personal property, the use and possession of which property is retained by other than the mortgagee or lender, or any lien on, assignment of, or power of attorney relative to wages, salary, earnings, income, or commission. Under existing law, a broker includes any person who is engaged in the business of negotiating or performing any act as broker in connection with loans made by a finance lender.
Existing law makes certain persons and entities exempt from, or not subject to, the law if certain requirements are met. In any proceeding, under this law, the burden of proving an exemption is upon the person or entity claiming it.
This bill would make exempt from this law a nonprofit organization that facilitates one or morebegin delete zero interestend deletebegin insert zero-interest, low-costend insert loans with a minimum principal amount upon origination of $250 and a maximum
principal amount upon origination of $2,500 if certain requirements are met, including, among other things, that the organization is exempt from federal income taxes, no part of the net earnings of the organization inures to the benefit of private persons, and that the loan terms meet certain requirements. The bill would authorize any organization wishing to operate pursuant to an exemption to file a specified application with, and pay a fee in an amount to be determined by, the commissioner. The bill would authorize the commissioner to refuse to grant an exemption, or to suspend or revoke an exemption, if he or she makes a specified finding and finds that such action is in the best interests of the public.
The bill would require an organization granted an exemption, referred to as an exempt organization, to, among other things, offer a borrower abegin delete voluntaryend delete credit education program
or seminar at no cost to the borrower, report each borrower’s payment performance to at least one consumer reporting agency, and underwrite each loan and ensure that a loan is not made if the organization determines that the borrower’s total monthly debt service payments exceeds a specified amount.
This bill would make the law inapplicable to a nonprofit organization that partners with an exempt organization for the purpose of facilitatingbegin delete zero interestend deletebegin insert zero-interest, low-costend insert loans, if certain requirements are met, including, but not limited to, that this nonprofit organization, to be known as the partnering organization, meet specified requirements for federal income tax exemption, that no part of the net earnings of the organization shall inure to the benefit of private
persons, and that the loan terms meet certain requirements. The bill would require the partnership of each exempt organization and each partnering organization to be formalized through a specified written agreement to be provided to the commissioner upon his or her request.
The bill would require each exempt organization to provide the commissioner with notice and certain information upon entering into a written agreement with a partnering organization. Upon a determination that a partnering organization has acted in violation of certain requirements, the bill would authorize the commissioner to, among other things, disqualify that partnering organization from facilitatingbegin delete zero interestend deletebegin insert zero-interest, low-costend insert loans, bar that partnering organization from performing services at
one or more specific locations, terminate a written agreement, and prohibit the use of that partnering organization by all organizations granted exemptions if the commissioner determines it is in the public interest.
The bill would authorize the commissioner to examine each exempt organization and each partnering organization for compliance with these provisions upon reasonable notice. The bill would require any examined organization to make available to the commissioner all books and records requested by the commissioner. The bill would require the cost of any such examination to be paid by the exempt organization.
The bill would require every exempt organization whose exemption is approved to file an annual report with the commissioner on or before March 15 containing specified information. The bill would also require an exempt organization to include information regarding the loans facilitated by a partnering organization in this annual report.
On or before July 1 annually, the bill would require the commissioner to post a report on the department’s Internet Web site that summarizes information relating to exempt organizations, partnering organizations, and the facilitation of thesebegin delete zero interestend deletebegin insert zero-interest, low-costend insert loans including that information compiled by the commissioner from the annual reports submitted by the exempt organizations.
Existing constitutional provisions require that a statute that limits the right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies be adopted with findings demonstrating the interest protected by the limitation and the need for protecting that interest.
This bill would make legislative findings to that effect.
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: no.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
Section 22066 is added to the Financial Code, to
2read:
(a) The Legislature finds and declares that nonprofit
2organizations have an important role to play in helping individuals
3obtain access to affordable, credit-building small dollar loans.
4California law should refrain from creating statutory barriers that
5risk slowing the growth of these loans. This section shall be
6liberally construed to encourage nonprofit organizations to help
7facilitate the making of zero-interestbegin insert, low-costend insert loans, through
8lending circles and other programs and services that allow
9individuals to establish and build credit histories or to improve
10their credit scores.
11(b) For the purposes of this section, an organization described
12in subdivision (c) shall be known as an exempt organization, and
13an organization described in subdivision (d) shall be known as a
14partnering organization.
15(c) There shall be exempted from this division a nonprofit
16organization that facilitates one or more zero-interestbegin insert, low-costend insert
17 loans, provided all of the following conditions are met:
18(1) The organization is exempt from federal income taxes under
19Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code and is organized
20and operated exclusively for one or more of the purposes described
21in Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.
22(2) No part of the net earnings of the organization inures to the
23benefit of a private shareholder or individual.
24(3) No broker’s fee is paid in connection with the making of
25the loan that is facilitated by the organization.
26(4) Any organization wishing to operate pursuant to an
27exemption granted under this section shall file an application for
28exemption with the commissioner, in a manner prescribed by the
29commissioner, and shall pay a fee to the commissioner, in an
30amount calculated by the commissioner to cover his or her costs
31to administer this section and Section 22067. The commissioner
32may refuse to grant an exemption, or to suspend or revoke a
33previously issued exemption if he or she finds that one or more of
34the provisions of this section were not met or are not
being met
35by the organization and that denial, suspension, or revocation of
36the exemption is in the best interests of the public.
37(5) Every organization whose exemption is approved by the
38commissioner shall file an annual report with the commissioner
39on or before March 15 of each year, containing relevant information
40that the commissioner reasonably requires concerning lending
P5 1facilitated by the organization within the state during the preceding
2calendar year at all locations at which the organization facilitates
3lending. The commissioner shall compile the information submitted
4pursuant to this paragraph for use in preparing the report required
5by Section 22067.
6(6) Any loan made pursuant to this section shall comply with
7the following requirements:
8(A) The loan shall be unsecured.
9(B) No interest may be imposed.
10(C) An administrative fee may be charged in an amount not to
11exceed the following:
12(i) Seven percent of the principal amount, exclusive of the
13administrative fee, or ninety dollars ($90), whichever is less, on
14the first loan made to a borrower.
15(ii) Six percent of the principal amount, exclusive of the
16administrative fee, or seventy-five dollars ($75), whichever is less,
17on the second and subsequent loans made to that borrower.
18(D) An organization shall not charge the same borrower an
19administrative
fee more than once in any four-month period. Each
20administrative fee shall be fully earned immediately upon
21consummation of a loan agreement.
22(E) Notwithstanding subdivision (a) of Section 22320.5 and in
23lieu of any other type of delinquency fee or late fee, an organization
24may require reimbursement from a borrower of up to ten dollars
25($10) to cover an insufficient funds fee incurred by that
26organization due to actions of the borrower. No organization shall
27charge more than two insufficient funds fees to the same borrower
28in a single month.
29(F) The following information shall be disclosed to the consumer
30in writing, in a typeface no smaller than 12-point type, at the time
31of the loan application:
32(i) The amount to
be borrowed, the total dollar cost of the loan
33to the consumer if the loan is paid back on time, including the sum
34of the administrative fee and principal amount borrowed, the
35corresponding annual percentage rate, calculated in accordance
36with Federal Reserve Board Regulation Z (12 C.F.R. 226.1), the
37periodic payment amount, the payment frequency, and the
38insufficient funds fee, if applicable.
39(ii) An explanation of whether, and under what circumstances,
40a borrower may exit a loan agreement.
P6 1(G) The loan shall have a minimum principal amount upon
2origination of two hundred fifty dollars ($250) and a maximum
3principal amount upon origination of two thousand five hundred
4dollars ($2,500), and a term of not less than the following:
5(i) Ninety days for loans whose principal balance upon
6origination is less than five hundred dollars ($500).
7(ii) One hundred twenty days for loans whose principal balance
8upon origination is at least five hundred dollars ($500), but is less
9than one thousand five hundred dollars ($1,500).
10(iii) One hundred eighty days for loans whose principal balance
11upon origination is at least one thousand five hundred dollars
12($1,500).
13(H) The loan shall not be refinanced.
14(I) Neither the organization nor any of its wholly owned
15subsidiaries shallbegin delete attempt to collect a delinquent payment for a begin insert
sell or assignend insert unpaid debt to an
16period of at least 30 days following the start of the delinquency
17before selling or assigning thatend delete
18independent party for collectionbegin insert before at least 90 has passed since
19the start of the delinquencyend insert.
20(7) Prior to disbursement of loan proceeds, the organization
21shall either (A) offer a credit education program or seminar to the
22borrower that has been previously reviewed and approved by the
23commissioner for use in complying with this section, or (B) invite
24the borrower to a credit education program or seminar offered by
25an independent third party that has been previously reviewed and
26approved by the commissioner for use in complying with this
27section. A credit education program or seminar offered pursuant
28to this paragraph shall be provided at no cost to the
borrower.
29(8) The organization shall report each borrower’s payment
30performance to at least one consumer reporting agency that
31compiles and maintains files on consumers on a nationwide basis,
32upon acceptance as a data furnisher by that consumer reporting
33agency. For purposes of this section, a consumer reporting agency
34that compiles and maintains files on consumers on a nationwide
35basis is one that meets the definition in Section 603(p) of the
36federal Fair Credit Reporting Act (15 U.S.C. Sec. 1681a(p)). Any
37organization that is accepted as a data furnisher after being granted
38an exemption by the commissioner pursuant to this subdivision
39shall report all borrower payment performance since its inception
40of lending under the program, as soon as practicable after its
P7 1acceptance into the program, but in no event more than six months
2after
its acceptance into the program.
3(9) The organization shall underwrite each loan and shall ensure
4that a loan is not made if, through its underwriting, the organization
5determines that the borrower’s total monthly debt service payments,
6at the time of loan origination, including the loan for which the
7borrower is being considered, and across all outstanding forms of
8credit that can be independently verified by the organization,
9exceed 50 percent of the borrower’s gross monthly household
10income except as specified in clause (iii) of subparagraph (D).
11(A) The organization shall seek information and documentation
12pertaining to all of a borrower’s outstanding debt obligations during
13the loan application and underwriting process, including loans that
14are self-reported by the borrower but not
available through
15independent verification. The organization shall verify that
16information using a credit report from at least one consumer
17reporting agency that compiles and maintains files on consumers
18on a nationwide basis or through other available electronic debt
19verification services that provide reliable evidence of a borrower’s
20outstanding debt obligations.
21(B) The organization shall also request from the borrower and
22include all information obtained from the borrower regarding
23outstanding deferred deposit transactions in the calculation of the
24borrower’s outstanding debt obligations.
25(C) The organization shall not be required to consider, for
26purposes of debt-to-income ratio evaluation, loans from friends or
27family.
28(D) The organization shall also verify the borrower’s household
29income that the organization relies on to determine the borrower’s
30debt-to-income ratio using information from any of the following:
31(i) Electronic means or services that provide reliable evidence
32of the borrower’s actual income.
33(ii) Internal Revenue Service Form W-2, tax returns, payroll
34receipts, bank statements, or other third-party documents that
35provide reasonably reliable evidence of the borrower’s actual
36income.
37(iii) A signed statement from the borrower stating sources and
38amounts of income, if the borrower’s actual income cannot be
39independently verified using electronic means or services, Internal
40Revenue Service forms, tax returns,
payroll receipts, bank
P8 1statements, or other third-party documents. If income is verified
2using a signed statement from a borrower, a loan shall not be made
3if the borrower’s total monthly debt service payments, at the time
4of loan origination, including the loan for which the borrower is
5being considered, and across all outstanding forms of credit, exceed
625 percent of the borrower’s gross monthly household income.
7(10) The organization shall notify each borrower, at least two
8days prior to each payment due date, informing the borrower of
9the amount due and the payment due date. Notification may be
10provided by any means mutually acceptable to the borrower and
11the organization. A borrower shall have the right to opt out of this
12notification at any time, upon electronic or written request to the
13organization. The organization shall notify each
borrower of this
14right prior to disbursing loan proceeds.
15(11) Notwithstanding Sections 22311 to 22315, inclusive, no
16organization, in connection with, or incidental to, the facilitating
17of any loan made pursuant to this section, may offer, sell, or require
18a borrower to contract for “credit insurance” as defined in
19paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) of Section 22314 or insurance on
20tangible personal or real property of the type specified in Section
2122313.
22(12) No organization shall require, as a condition of making a
23loan, that a borrower waive any right, penalty, remedy, forum, or
24procedure provided for in any law applicable to the loan, including
25the right to file and pursue a civil action or file a complaint with
26or otherwise communicate with the commissioner or any court or
27other
public entity, or that the borrower agree to resolve disputes
28in a jurisdiction outside of California or to the application of laws
29other than those of California, as provided by law. Any waiver by
30a borrower must be knowing, voluntary, and in writing, and
31expressly not made a condition of doing business with the
32organization. Any waiver that is required as a condition of doing
33business with the organization shall be presumed involuntary,
34unconscionable, against public policy, and unenforceable. The
35organization has the burden of proving that a waiver of any rights,
36penalties, forums, or procedures was knowing, voluntary, and not
37made a condition of the contract with the borrower.
38(13) No organization shall refuse to do business with or
39discriminate against a borrower or applicant on the basis that the
40borrower or applicant refuses to waive
any right, penalty, remedy,
P9 1forum, or procedure, including the right to file and pursue a civil
2action or complaint with, or otherwise notify, the commissioner
3or any court or other public entity. The exercise of a person’s right
4to refuse to waive any right, penalty, remedy, forum, or procedure,
5including a rejection of a contract requiring a waiver, shall not
6affect any otherwise legal terms of a contract or an agreement.
7(14) This section shall not apply to any agreement to waive any
8right, penalty, remedy, forum, or procedure, including any
9agreement to arbitrate a claim or dispute, after a claim or dispute
10has arisen. Nothing in this section shall affect the enforceability
11or validity of any other provision of the contract.
12(d) This division does not apply to a nonprofit organization
that
13partners with an organization granted an exemption pursuant to
14subdivision (c) for the purpose of facilitating zero-interestbegin insert, low-costend insert
15 loans, provided that the requirements of paragraphs (6) to (14),
16inclusive, of subdivision (c), and the following additional
17conditions are met:
18(1) The partnership of each exempt organization and each
19partnering organization shall be formalized through a written
20agreement that specifies the obligations of each party. Each written
21agreement shall contain a provision establishing that the partnering
22organization agrees to comply with the provisions of this section
23and any regulations that may be adopted by the commissioner
24pursuant to this section. Each such agreement shall be provided
25to the commissioner
upon request.
26(2) Each partnering organization shall meet the requirements
27for federal income tax exemption under Section 501(c)(3) of the
28Internal Revenue Code and shall be organized and operated
29exclusively for one or more of the purposes described in Section
30501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.
31(3) No part of the net earnings of the partnering organization
32shall inure to the benefit of a private shareholder or individual.
33(4) Each exempt organization shall notify the commissioner
34within 30 days of entering into a written agreement with a
35partnering organization, on such form and in such manner as the
36commissioner may prescribe. At a minimum, this notification shall
37include the name of the partnering organization, the
contact
38information for a person responsible for the lending activities
39
facilitated by that partnering organization, and the address or
40addresses at which the organization facilitates lending activities.
P10 1(5) Upon a determination that a partnering organization has
2acted in violation of this section or any regulation adopted
3thereunder, the commissioner may disqualify that partnering
4organization from performing services under this section, bar that
5organization from performing services at one or more specific
6locations of that organization, terminate a written agreement
7between a partnering organization and an exempt organization,
8and, if the commissioner deems such action to be in the public
9interest, prohibit the use of that partnering organization by all
10organizations granted exemptions by the commissioner pursuant
11to subdivision (c).
12(6) The exempt organization shall include information regarding
13the loans facilitated by the partnering organization in the annual
14report required pursuant to paragraph (5) of subdivision (c).
15(e) The commissioner may examine each exempt organization
16and each partnering organization for compliance with the
17provisions of this section, upon reasonable notice to the party
18responsible for the lending activities facilitated by that
19organization. Any organization so examined shall make available
20to the commissioner or his or her representative all books and
21records requested by the commissioner related to the lending
22activities facilitated by that organization. The cost of any such
23examination shall be paid by the exempt organization.
24(f) This section shall not apply to any loan
of a bona fide
25principal amount of two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500)
26or more as determined in accordance with Section 22251. For
27purposes of this subdivision, “bona fide principal amount” shall
28be determined in accordance with Section 22251.
Section 22067 is added to the Financial Code, to read:
(a) On or before July 1 of each year, the commissioner
31shall post a report on the department’s Internet Web site
32summarizing the information described in subdivision (b). The
33information disclosed to the commissioner for the commissioner’s
34use in preparing the report described in this section is exempted
35from any requirement of public disclosure by paragraph (2) of
36subdivision (d) of Section 6254 of the Government Code.
37(b) The report required by this section shall specify the time
38period to which the report corresponds, and shall include, but not
39be limited to, the following for that time period:
P11 1(1) The
number of organizations that applied for exemptions
2pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 22066, and the number of
3organizations that entered into partnerships with exempt
4organizations in accordance with subdivision (d) of Section 22066.
5(2) The number of organizations granted exemptions and the
6types of exemptions granted.
7(3) The reason or reasons for denying applications for
8exemptions, if applicable. This information shall be provided in a
9manner that does not identify the entity or entities denied.
10(4) The number of borrowers who applied for loans through
11exempt or partnering organizations, the number of borrowers
12granted loans facilitated by exempt or partnering organizations,
13the total amount loaned, and the
distribution of loan lengths upon
14origination.
15(5) The number of borrowers who obtained more than one loan
16
through an exempt or partnering organization and the distribution
17of the number of loans per borrower.
18(6) Of the number of borrowers who obtained more than one
19loan facilitated by an exempt or a partnering organization, the
20percentage of those borrowers whose credit scores increased
21between successive loans, based on information from at least one
22major credit bureau, and the average size of the increase.
23(7) The income distribution of borrowers upon loan origination,
24including the number of borrowers who obtained at least one loan
25and who resided in a low-to-moderate-income census tract at the
26time of their loan application.
27(8) The number of borrowers who obtained loans facilitated by
28an exempt or a
partnering organization for the following purposes,
29based on borrower responses at the time of their loan applications
30indicating the primary purpose for which the loan was obtained:
31(A) Medical.
32(B) Other emergency.
33(C) Vehicle repair.
34(D) Vehicle purchase.
35(E) To pay bills.
36(F) To consolidate debt.
37(G) To build or repair credit history.
38(H) To finance a purchase of goods or services other than a
39vehicle.
40(I) For other than personal, family, or household purposes.
P12 1(J) Other.
2(9) The number of borrowers who self-report that they had a
3bank account at the time of their loan application, the number of
4borrowers who self-report that they had a bank account and used
5check-cashing services, and the number of borrowers who
6self-report that they did not have a bank account at the time of
7their loan application.
8(10) The performance of loans under Section 22066, as reflected
9by all of the following:
10(A) The number and percentage of borrowers who experienced
11at least one late payment lasting between 7 and 29
days and who
12subsequently brought his or her loan current, and the distribution
13of principal loan amounts corresponding to those late payments.
14(B) The number and percentage of borrowers who experienced
15at least one late payment lasting between 30 and 59 days and who
16subsequently brought his or her loan current, and the distribution
17of principal loan amounts corresponding to those late payments.
18(C) The number and percentage of borrowers who experienced
19at least one late payment lasting 60 days or more and who
20subsequently brought his or her loan current, and the distribution
21of principal loan amounts corresponding to those late payments.
22(D) The number and percentage of borrowers who experienced
23at least one late payment
of greater than seven days and who did
24not subsequently bring his or her loan current.
25(E) Among loans that were ever late for seven days or more,
26the average number of times borrowers experienced a late payment
27of seven days or more.
28(11) The number and types of violations of Section 22066 by
29exempt organizations, which were documented by the
30commissioner.
31(12) The number and types of violations of Section 22066 by
32partnering organizations, which were documented by the
33commissioner.
34(13) The number of times the commissioner suspended or
35revoked an exemption granted to an exempt organization pursuant
36to paragraph (4) of subdivision (c) of Section
22066 and the
37number of times a partnering organization was sanctioned by the
38commissioner pursuant to paragraph (5) of subdivision (d) of
39Section 22066.
P13 1(14) The number of complaints received by the commissioner
2about an exempt organization or a partnering organization, and
3the nature of those complaints.
4(15) Recommendations, if any, for improving the program.
The Legislature finds and declares that Section 2 of
6this act imposes a limitation on the public’s right of access to the
7meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and
8agencies within the meaning of Section 3 of Article I of the
9California Constitution. Pursuant to that constitutional provision,
10the Legislature makes the following findings to demonstrate the
11interest protected by this limitation and the need for protecting
12that interest:
13In order to allow the Commissioner of Business Oversight of
14the Department of Business Oversight to fully accomplish his or
15her goals, it is imperative to protect the interests of those persons
16submitting
information to the department to ensure that any
17personal or sensitive business information that this act requires
18those persons to submit is protected as confidential information.
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