that's insane!!!  Isn't it bad enough that these people don't have jobs?  

hmmm..........apparently not!
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: [email protected] 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Saturday, March 14, 2009 8:48 PM
  Subject: {Dawgs/Dittos} Good Grief



  Another twist for the unemployed: Debit card fees

  By Drew Griffin and David Fitzpatrick
  CNN Special Investigations Unit

  PHILADELPHIA, Pennsylvania (CNN) -- If you*re out of work like Steve
  Lippe, who was laid off from his job as a salesman in January, you know
  you already have problems. But looking at the fine print that came with
  his new unemployment debit card, he became livid.

  "A $1.50 [fee] here, a $1.50 there," he said. "Forty cents for a balance
  inquiry. Fifty cents to have your card denied. Thirty-five cents to have
  your account accessed by telephone."

  He was quoting fees listed in a brochure that goes out to every
  unemployed person in Pennsylvania who chooses to receive benefits via
  debit card. He was given the option when he filed for jobless payments:
  Wait 10 days for a check or get the card immediately. Like most of the
  925,000 state residents who received unemployment benefits in February
  in Pennsylvania, he chose the debit card and only then, he says, did he
  learn about the fees.

  "I was outraged by it," he told CNN. "I was very noisy about it. I just
  couldn*t believe it. An outrage is just too weak a word. It*s obscene."

  According to the U.S. Department of Labor, 30 states offer direct
  deposit cards to the unemployed. Many of the nation*s biggest banks have
  contracts with the individual states. JP Morgan Chase, for instance, has
  contracts with seven states and has pending deals with two others,
  according to Chase spokesman John T. Murray. About 10 states, the Labor
  Department says, pay by check only.

  The National Consumer Law Center says fees range from 40 cents to a high
  of $3 per transaction, if the debit card is used at an out-of-network
  ATM. Most banks give jobless debit card users one free withdrawal per
  deposit period, which averages every other week in most states. But
  consumer advocates, including the Law Center, say the unemployed "should
  be able to obtain cash and perform basic functions with no fees."

  A key Democratic member of the House Financial Services Committee, which
  oversees bank regulation and theTroubled Asset Relief Program (TARP),
  told CNN she agrees wholeheartedly.

  "Fees should not be attached to unemployment benefits that the taxpayers
  are paying to help Americans," Rep. Carolyn Maloney, D-New York, told
  CNN. 
  "Particularly, these fees should not be attached by banks that are
  getting TARP money and are being supported by taxpayer dollars."

  CNN asked some of the major banks involved in the debit card program for
  a response. Spokesmen for JP Morgan Chase, Wachovia, Bank of America and
  Wells Fargo all directed us to the individual state governments for
  comment.

  The acting secretary of labor and industry for Pennsylvania is Sandi
  Vito. Via e-mail, her staff invited CNN reporters to Allentown,
  Pennsylvania, where she was taking part at a public meeting at an
  elementary school. Afterward, she said, she would answer questions about
  the debit card fees.

  But when the meeting ended, her staff said she was too busy to talk.
  Her spokesman, Troy A. Thompson, spoke with CNN after Vito left.
  "The distribution system for people getting their benefits has been
  improved by the use of debit cards, way above and beyond the
  distribution by check," he said.

  The U.S. Department of Labor provided what it called "talking points" to
  CNN when asked for comment on the fee structure.

  "States can do a better job negotiating fees with banks," the department
  said. "Many states have obtained terms far more favorable to claimants
  than those described in media reports."

  In addition, according to the talking points, the Labor Department said
  it was aware states are offering unemployment debit cards for good
  reasons:

  • It is less expensive for claimants without bank accounts because
  they don*t need to pay check cashing fees.

  • Claimants can use the card free at merchants and therefore don*t
  need to carry excess cash.

  • Generally, these cards are safer and more secure than checks.

  "We will be working with states as they gain experience with debit cards
  to resolve these problems related to fees," the Labor Department said.


  



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