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Erasing Debts In Bankruptcy
May Get Harder
by Marcy Gordon
Associated Press
March 9, 2005
Erasing medical bills,
credit card charges and other debts in bankruptcy soon will become
more difficult under landmark legislation that has vaulted its last
major hurdle before Senate passage.
The legislation gliding
toward congressional passage following Tuesday's procedural vote in
the Senate would constitute the most sweeping overhaul of U.S.
bankruptcy laws in a quarter-century.
Senate passage this week
and likely House approval of that bill next month would deliver to
President Bush the second of his pro-business legislative priorities
after Republicans fattened their majorities in both chambers in
November's elections.
Congress sent Bush a law
last month placing most large multistate class action lawsuits under
federal court jurisdiction, making it harder for plaintiffs to join
together and win multimillion-dollar judgments in state courts.
Banks, credit card issuers
and retailers have pushed for eight years for bankruptcy revisions
that would force more people to repay at least part of their debt.
It nearly passed in 2002 - failing when the Senate accepted, but
House Republicans rejected, a Democratic amendment barring
protesters from using bankruptcy to avoid paying court fines for
blocking abortion clinics.
This year, with four more
Republican senators, the abortion provision was rejected Tuesday on
a 53-46 vote. Later the Senate voted 69-31 to limit further
amendments, close the debate and hold a final vote this week.
The bill would set up a new
test for measuring a debtor's ability to pay.
Those with insufficient
assets or income could still file a Chapter 7 bankruptcy, which if
approved by a judge erases debts entirely after certain assets are
forfeited. But those with income above the state's median income who
can pay at least $6,000 over five years - $100 a month - would be
forced into Chapter 13, where a judge would then order a repayment
plan.
Critics say that's unfair
because many people who file for bankruptcy have lost their jobs, or
are going to lose them.
According to current law, a
bankruptcy judge determines under which chapter of the bankruptcy
code a person falls - whether they have to repay some or all of
their debt.
Sensing a long-elusive
victory at hand, Republican backers exulted Tuesday and urged
colleagues to move speedily through remaining Senate deliberations.
"The sooner we finish work
in the Senate and get the bill to the House, the sooner our
bankruptcy system will be focused as it should be on helping those
with real need, and less vulnerable to abuse by consumers who have
the ability to repay their debts," said Sen. Charles Grassley,
R-Iowa, the bill's primary author.
The bill's supporters
argued that bankruptcy frequently is the last refuge of gamblers,
impulsive shoppers, divorced or separated fathers avoiding child
support, and multimillionaires, often celebrities, who buy mansions
in states with liberal homestead exemptions to shelter assets from
creditors.
Opponents, too, have a
litany of stories. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., speaks of Zoraya
Marrero, a single mother with three children from Woodbridge, Va.,
the eldest of whom has spina bifida. Having had to return $60,000 in
state disability benefits and medical coverage for the child, and
paying medical expenses, Marrero recently filed for bankruptcy.
Most applicants "did not
seek bankruptcy relief willingly," Kennedy says. "Millions of ...
Americans in similar situations have filed for bankruptcy only after
exhausting all other options."
A recent Harvard University
study found that costly illnesses led to about half of all personal
bankruptcies and that most people who file for bankruptcy protection
because of medical problems have health insurance.
Consumer and civil rights
groups and unions say the legislation is unfair to low-income
working people, single mothers, minorities and the elderly and would
remove a safety net for those who have lost their jobs or face
mounting medical bills. They say it would turn the bankruptcy courts
into collection agencies for the credit card companies.
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