Almost a decade ago, Dallas became the first city in Texas to put some limitations on payday loans. These are small loans offered to folks with poor credit at annual percentage rates as high as 500%. Now, some faith leaders are saying it鈥檚 time to update the city鈥檚 rules to protect consumers from new loan products they call predatory.
Dallas鈥 2011 ordinance didn鈥檛 ban payday loans outright, but it added transparency and guard rails to keep loan companies from lending money on terms that made it more challenging to pay off, and often forced people into a spiral of endless re-financing and fees.
Even though the city鈥檚 rules didn鈥檛 cap fees on the loans, Minister Danielle Ayers of Friendship-West Baptist Church said Thursday that the ordinance made a difference, and more than 45 cities have since followed suit.
鈥淲e saw a decrease in the number of new loans, in the number of refinances, in the dollar amount of new loans,鈥 Ayers told a city council committee. 鈥淭he amount of fees decreased and the total number of vehicles repossessed also went down.鈥
Now, Ayers says those same payday loan companies are offering risky and unregulated new loan products, called signature loans or personal loans.
Last year, Attorney General Ken Paxton wrote in an that the new loans are legally different than payday loans. That means the city鈥檚 guard rails don鈥檛 apply to signature or personal loans, and they鈥檙e completely unregulated by the state.
But Ayers said signature loans are often sold by the same stores that sell payday loans. The companies that make the loans often require authorization to take money from a borrower鈥檚 bank account at a later date, the same as a payday loan.
Some contracts will even include fine print specifying that the signature loan is not a payday loan, Ayers said.
鈥淭hough they say it in print, they have the practice of doing just that. That creates a problem and a cycle of debt where borrowers are unable to pay the loan off, and that just puts them further and further behind,鈥 she said.
Ayers is part of a group of faith leaders in Dallas calling for a new ordinance that would apply guard rails to signature loans.
Rev. Gerald Britt from the Anti-Poverty Coalition of Greater Dallas told members of the city council time is of the essence, with an eviction moratorium set to expire by the end of the year.
鈥淒uring this age of COVID, we have residents who are particularly financially vulnerable, and who may fall pray to this predatory industry,鈥 Britt said.
The city of Austin tried to expand its payday loan ordinance to include personal and signature loans. It鈥檚 currently fighting a lawsuit from the industry that wants it overturned.
The Dallas City Council could take up a similar ordinance as early as January.
Got a tip? Christopher Connelly is 四虎影院's One Crisis Away Reporter, exploring life on the financial edge. Email Christopher at cconnelly@kera.org.You can follow Christopher on Twitter .
四虎影院 is made possible through the generosity of our members. If you find this reporting valuable, consider today. Thank you.