Miller: Centralize lending oversight

U.S. Rep. Brad Miller wants to centralize lending oversight.

The Raleigh Democrat has co-sponsored a bill that would create a new Financial Product Safety Commission that would enforce consumer protection, evaluate lending practices, coordinate enforcement with state and federal regulators and issue public reports.

Currently, at least 10 different federal agencies have responsibility for loans and other consumer financial products. The new agency's name mimics the Consumer Product Safety Commission, an independent government agency that regulates safety of consumer products.

"Our economy is in a deep hole dug by the financial industry," Miller said in a statement. "For years they defended every consumer lending practice, regardless of how predatory the practice appeared on its face, as necessary to make credit available to ordinary Americans."

Miller played a key role in bankrupty reforms being considered by the Senate. He is working with Rep. Bill Delahunt of Massachusetts and Sens. Dick Durbin of Illinois, Chuck Schumer of New York and Ted Kennedy of Massachusetts on this bill.

The bill has been endorsed by over 55 national and state organizations, including labor unions, civil rights groups and consumer protection advocates such as the Center for Responsible Lending in Durham.

Miller pushes mortgage restructuring bill

U.S. Rep. Brad Miller of Raleigh held a news conference in Washington today to promote legislation that would allow home mortgages to be restructured in bankruptcy like other types of personal debt.

Miller appeared at the Capitol Visitors Center with U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois and representatives of a coalition of groups supporting the measure, including AARP, AFL-CIO, NAACP, Consumers Union and other civil rights, union and consumer groups.

The two said they would make passage of their bill, The Helping Families Save Their Homes in Bankruptcy Act, the first priority of the new Congress, according to Miller's office.

Durbin introduced the bill in October 2007, and Miller introduced a similar bill. Miller's office said he and Durbin, both Democrats, tried over the past year to pass the proposal over the resistance of the Mortgage Bankers of America and Senate Republicans.

"Middle-class families have seen their life’s savings evaporate with the collapse in the value of their homes," Miller said at the press conference. "We are not going to stop the downward spiral of our economy until we stop the collapse of home values. And, we are not going to stop the collapse of home values until we get control of foreclosures."

One in 10 homeowners, or roughly 4.6 million, are either delinquent in their mortgage payments or are in the process of foreclosure, Miller's office said.

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