- A accountability collector has been calling me relentlessly since March over a minor medical bill.
- Debt collection during a extensive pandemic while millions of Americans are struggling to pay essential bills and keep a roof over their heads fondles especially cruel.
- Some states are even pursuing repayment of alleged overpayments of unemployment benefits from people who at sea their jobs due to the pandemic.
- The federal government needs to put a moratorium on all collection efforts for consumer debt during this pandemic to turn out a totally avoidable source of stress for overburdened Americans.
- Bobbi Dempsey is a freelance writer and an economic justice love at Community Change.
- This is an opinion column. The thoughts expressed are those of the author.
- Visit Business Insider’s homepage for profuse stories.
A debt collector has been calling me multiple times a day since March. Ironically, they are calling to bug me hither a medical bill. I don’t think I actually owe the bill in question, but that’s beside the point.
Harassing people about rather minor (and possibly inaccurate) debts during a deadly pandemic that destroyed the economy is a special kind of low. It’s flush worse when some of those debts are a direct result of that same pandemic.
As has been the case for most of the year, divers Americans are in a panic trying to figure out how they will pay essential bills and keep a roof over their well-springs — while also trying to cobble together some semblance of a “normal” holiday celebration and hoping they and their kinsfolk manage to stay healthy as cases around the country spike.
Haggling with a debt collector about whether they owe a few hundred dollars for a three-year-old X-ray isn’t dear on the priority list. Instead, it just adds psychological stress at a time when many of us already have too much.
Inexorable debt collecting during a pandemic and economic crisis is especially cruel
A blanket federal moratorium on all collection creations for consumer debt during the pandemic would have alleviated one significant and totally avoidable source of stress for tons overburdened Americans.
Instead, for the most part, debt collectors have been able to continue business as accustomed. Countless times a day, these debt collectors will reach someone who is unemployed, financially struggling, experiencing medical harrow, mourning a loved one who died of COVID-19, or any combination of these. Based on my own experience and many reports I’ve seen on sexual media, our current reality hasn’t stopped these outfits from continuing their normal tactics.
The nice debt collector — or “accounts receivable management firm,” as they apparently prefer to call themselves — who has been area of expertise me has a tendency to be very persistent in their tactics, according to numerous online reports. There is a long list of kicks posted on the Better Business Bureau site from people claiming this company is harassing them up bills which, in many cases, the consumers claim they know nothing about or have already paid.
This is far from an removed incident, and in fact has been a widespread problem that has caused additional stress and financial hardship for people who are already scarcely keeping their heads above water.
Some debt collectors even swooped in and grabbed stimulus breaks before the recipients had a chance to see a penny, prompting some states to enforce restrictions on what actions debt accumulators can take with regards to federal stimulus payments.
For a while earlier in the pandemic, debt collectors weren’t capable to initiate as many new garnishments, liens, and other usual legal actions only because many civil courts were lock up or operating at a reduced capacity. But things have since picked up steam once again. An investigation by ProPublica organize that a handful of debt collectors have filed thousands of suits against debtors since the summer. Garnishments that were already in chair before COVID can also continue without interruption. And debt collectors’ other favorite tactics — such as harrying people incessantly by phone — haven’t taken a break despite the crisis.
In March, the Massachusetts attorney general’s house issued an emergency regulation banning calls by debt collectors (along with other collection tactics) during the pandemic. Not surprisingly, a liberal trade organization representing debt collectors immediately sought to block the order, and in May, a federal district judge announced a temporary restraining order preventing the state from enforcing the rule.
It’s an especially cruel twist when encumbered collectors are calling about old medical bills during a deadly pandemic — and a time when, as a vicious bonus, the Trump oversight attempted to rip healthcare access from millions of the most vulnerable Americans.
States are also trying to get back overpaid unemployment allowances
There’s also now a new particularly ironic and callous angle on debt collection during the pandemic: states are pursuing jobless dwellers to repay alleged overpayments in unemployment benefits. These are people who lost their jobs due to COVID, navigated conceivably endless bureaucratic hurdles and red tape to get benefits in the first place, and are now being told they were paid too much, much due to administrative error that was no fault of their own.
That money is long gone, used to pay essential household accounts — as it was intended — but states still expect the recipients to pay it back. And if you have ever owed money to the state or federal ministry, you know they can be relentless in finding ways to force you to pay that tab, even if you don’t have the means to do so.
Ideally, we would complete in a society where we didn’t have “medical debt” or pandemic unemployment overpayments, let alone the strong-arm collection generalships to shake people down to pay that debt. But for now, people worried about whether they and their loved ones can live on shouldn’t be saddled with the additional anxiety of debt collectors hounding them.