AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON
(AP) -- To the dismay of consumer groups and the discomfort of Democrats,
President Barack Obama wants Congress to make it easier for private debt
collectors to call the cellphones of consumers delinquent on student loans and
other billions owed the federal government.
The
change "is expected to provide substantial increases in collections,
particularly as an increasing share of households no longer have landlines and
rely instead on cellphones," the administration wrote recently. The
little-noticed recommendation would apply only to cases in which money is owed
the government, and is tucked into the mammoth $3 trillion deficit-reduction
plan the president submitted to Congress.
Despite
the claim, the administration has not yet developed an estimate of how much the
government would collect, and critics reject the logic behind the
recommendation.
"Enabling
robo-calls (to cellphones) is just going to lead to more harassment and abuse,
and it's not going to help the government collect more money," said Lauren
Saunders of the Boston-based National Consumer Law Center. "People aren't
paying their student loans because they can't find a job."
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