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The Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act
of 2005 (Pub.L. 109-8, 119 Stat. 23, enacted 2005-04-20),
provided for significant changes in Bankruptcy in the United
States, was passed by the 109th United States Congress on
April 14, 2005 and signed into law by President George W.
Bush on April 20, 2005. The effective date for most of its
provisions apply to cases commenced on or after October 17,
2005. Referred to colloquially as the "New Bankruptcy Law",
the Act of Congress attempts to make it more difficult for
consumers to discharge debt by forcing more people to file
under Chapter 13 rather than Chapter 7.
Provisions
The Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act
made sweeping changes to American bankruptcy laws, affecting
both consumer and business bankruptcies. Many of the bill's
provisions were explicitly designed by the bill's
Congressional sponsors to make it "more difficult for people
to file for bankruptcy." [1] Some of the bill's more
significant provisions include the following:
[edit] Means test for Chapter 7
Although the intent of the law was to make it more difficult
for individuals to file for bankruptcy under Chapter 7,
under which most of their debts are forgiven (or discharged)
and to force individuals to file under Chapter 13 under
which part of all of the debts are repaid under a plan, it
has, in practice, not substantially made a large effect.
Approximately 85% of debtors are not subject to its "means
test" and a large percentgage of the rest are able to "pass"
the means test.
Under the old law, filers had a presumption of eligibility
to file under Chapter 7, with the final determination made
by bankruptcy judges, who evaluated the specific nature of
each bankruptcy. In lieu of this judicial discretion, the
new law substitutes a means test to determine whether filers
have enough income to pay some portion of their debts, and
thus file under Chapter 13.
The means test applies to filers whose gross income (based
on the six month period prior to filing), is above the
median income in their state (ranging from $72,451 in
Massachusetts to $42,290 in West Virginia, as of 2005).
Individuals whose incomes are below the median automatically
qualify for Chapter 7. Filers whose incomes are above the
median must then calculate their Disposable Monthly Income (DMI)
to determine whether they are able to make payments on their
debts sufficient to qualify them for Chapter 13. The DMI is
determined by subtracting priority debt payments, secured
debt payments, Internal Revenue Service determined expense
allowances, taxes and certain other expenses from a filer’s
monthly income. If the DMI is less than $100 per month, they
are permitted to file under Chapter 7. If the DMI is above
$100, they must file under Chapter 13.
This formula effectively rewards filers with assets that are
heavily mortgaged and debtors with larger amounts of
unsecured debt. Since alimony and child support payments are
"priority debts" it also has the effect of making it easier
for people who owe back domestic support obligations (such
as "deadbeat dads") to file under Chapter 7 than other
debtors (but the child support is not dischargable).
Additional requirements for filers
The new law adds a number of new requirements for bankruptcy
filers that attempt to make the filing process more
difficult and costly. These additional requirements include:
· Mandatory credit counseling and debtor education. All
potential bankruptcy filers must now undergo credit
counseling via an “approved nonprofit budget and credit
counseling agency” prior to filing for bankruptcy. Chapter
13 filers must also complete a course in “personal financial
management” prior to filing for bankruptcy.
· Additional filing requirements and fees. The new law
increases the amount of paperwork involved in filing and
raises the filing fees. The law also allows filing fees to
be waived for debtors earning below 150 percent of the
federal poverty level.
· Increased attorney liability and costs. Attorneys
representing bankruptcy filers are now required to conduct
an investigation of their clients' filings and can be held
personally liable for inaccuracies. Most bankruptcy
attorneys predicted that this will result in increased
attorneys fees and will make attorneys less likely to take
on some cases. In addition, bankruptcy filings are now
subject to audit in a manner similar to tax returns.
· Fewer automatic protections for filers. The new law
eliminates some of the protections bankruptcy filers
previously enjoyed, such as stopping or delaying evictions,
avoiding driver's license suspensions, and delaying child
support proceedings.
· Increased compliance requirements for small
businesses. The new law increases the bureaucratic
compliance obligations and shortens the deadline for Chapter
11 reorganizations involving small businesses, a series of
new requirements not applicable to larger businesses.
· Increased amount of debt repayment under Chapter 13.
The new law made several changes that effectively increased
the amount of debt that Chapter 13 filers will have to
repay. In addition, the "super discharge" provision, which
allows filers to discharge many of their debts under Chapter
13 in return for agreeing to a payment plan, is
significantly curtailed under the new law.
· Increased length of time between discharges. The new
law increases the length of time from six to eight years
between which a filer can receive a Chapter 7 discharge
after a prior Chapter 7 case.
[edit] Limits to the homestead exemption
Under the new law, the homestead exemption, which allows
bankruptcy filers in some states to exempt the value of
their homes from creditors, is limited in various ways. If a
filer acquired their home was acquired less than 1,215 days
(40 months), or if they have been convicted of security law
violations or been found guilty of certain crimes, they may
only exempt up to $125,000 (adjusted periodically),
regardless of a state's exemption allowance. Filers must
also wait 730 days before they are allowed to use their
state’s exemptions.
These provisions were largely intended to prevent filers
from forum shopping, i.e. moving assets and domiciles to a
state with more favorable exemptions and filing. It was
alleged that O.J. Simpson did this when he moved to Florida,
which has an unlimited homestead exemption, and bought a
multi-million-dollar residence and then filed for
bankruptcy. Definitions of federal exempt property and the
valuation rules for that property are also more precisely
defined in a manner favorable to creditors compared to
current law.
Other changes
· The new law allows creditors to pursue collection
remedies without court permission in various circumstances
such as offsetting tax refunds, pursuing tax and domestic
relations litigation in all respects except the final
turnover of assets from the estate, establishing wage
assignments in domestic relations actions, repossessing
vehicles and personal property subject to loans or leases 45
days after the first meeting of creditors in cases where no
court action has been taken regarding that property, and
allowing evictions that completed the court process prior to
the filing of the petition or involve endangerment to
property or drug use to proceed. The law also makes it
easier for creditors who received preferential payments of
less than $5,000 from the debtor before bankruptcy to avoid
repaying such payments for the benefit of all creditors.
· The law improves the ability of the bankruptcy estate
to reclaim assets placed in asset protection trusts within
ten years of filing or paid as employment bonuses to
insiders within two years prior to filing.
· The law makes Chapter 12 bankruptcy (farm
reorganization) permanent while adding family fishermen,
overhauls the treatment of complex financial contracts
including many derivative contracts used by hedge funds, and
overhauls the treatment of ancillary foreign bankruptcy
proceedings.
· The law extends protection to non-ERISA pension plans
like private sector 403(b)s and some Individual Retirement
Account that ERISA plans had enjoyed thereby making these
plans more similar to ERISA plans.
Legislative history
The 2005 bankruptcy bill was actually first drafted in 1997
and first introduced in 1998. The United States House of
Representatives approved a version titled the "Bankruptcy
Reform Act of 1999" and the Senate approved a slightly
different version in 2000. After the differences in the
bills were reconciled, Congress passed the "Bankruptcy
Reform Act of 2000". President Clinton, however, employed
what is known as a "pocket veto" by waiting for the
lame-duck congressional session to adjourn without signing
the bill, a legislative maneuver tantamount to a veto.
In the years since 2000, the bill was introduced in each
Congress, but was repeatedly shelved due to threats of a
filibuster from its opponents and because of disagreements
over various amendments, including one backed by Senate
Democrats that would have made it harder for anti-abortion
groups to discharge court fines related to felony
convictions.
The increase in Republican majorities in the Senate and
House after the 2004 elections breathed new life into the
bill, which was introduced in its current form by the
chairman of the Finance Committee, Republican Senator Chuck
Grassley of Iowa. The bill was supported by President George
W. Bush. Tom DeLay also championed the controversial
legislation.
In the spring of 2005 a negative savings rate not seen since
the Great Depression had begun, and then the new bankruptcy
law was passed. The negative savings rate is highest for the
children. Legislation requiring Children's income be
attached to parents income results in children paying the
highest rate of income tax, highest negative savings rate
and parent(s) filing for bankruptcy most often.
Criticisms
The 2005 bankruptcy bill was opposed by a wide variety of
groups, including consumer advocates, legal scholars,
retired bankruptcy judges, and the editorial pages of many
national and regional newspapers. While criticisms of the
bill were wide ranging, the central objections of its
opponents focused on the bill's sponsors' contention that
bankruptcy fraud was widespread, the strict means test that
would force more debtors to file under Chapter 13 (under
which no debts are forgiven) as opposed to Chapter 7 (under
which some debts are forgiven), the additional penalties and
responsibilities the bill placed on debtors, and the bill's
many provisions favorable to credit card companies.
Opponents of the bill regularly pointed out that the credit
card industry spent more than $100 million lobbying for the
bill over the course of eight years.
One of the primary stated purposes of the bankruptcy bill
was to cut down on abusive or fraudulent uses of the
bankruptcy system. As Congressman F. James Sensenbrenner Jr.
(R-Wis), one of the bill's key supporters in the House,
argued, "This bill will help restore responsibility and
integrity to the bankruptcy system by cracking down on
fraudulent, abusive, and opportunistic bankruptcy claims."
Opponents of the bill argued that claims of bankruptcy abuse
and fraud were wildly overblown, and that the vast majority
of bankruptcies were related to medical expenses and job
losses. Their arguments were supported by an in-depth study
by Harvard University medical and legal scholars, which
found that more than half of bankruptcies were attributable
to unpaid medical bills.
Perhaps the most controversial provisions of the bill was
the strict means test it established to determine whether a
debtor's filing under Chapter 7 of the bankruptcy code would
be considered as an "abuse" and therefore subject to
dismissal. This decision was previously made by a bankruptcy
court judge, who would evaluate the particular circumstances
that led to a bankruptcy. Critics of the means test, which
is triggered if a debtor makes more than their state's
median income, argued that it ignored the many causes of
individual bankruptcies, including job loss, family
illnesses, and predatory lending, and would force debtors
seeking to challenge the test into costly litigation,
driving them even further into debt.
Besides the stricter means test, opponents of the bill also
objected to the many other obstacles the bill creates for
individuals seeking bankruptcy protection. These included
more detailed reporting requirements, higher fees, mandated
credit counseling, and the additional liability placed on
bankruptcy attorneys, which critics argued would drive up
attorneys fees and decrease the number of lawyers willing to
help consumers file. These criticisms have been borne out in
the months following the new law, as lawyers have reported
that the bankruptcy process has become significantly more
arduous, forcing them to charge higher fees and take fewer
clients.
The many provisions beneficial to credit card companies were
also a major target of the bill's opponents. In particular,
critics objected to the extension to eight years from six
the time before which debtors could liquidate their debts
through bankruptcy, and requirements that those who do file
for multiple bankruptcies to pay previous credit card debt
that would have been forgiven under the old law. The bill's
opponents were especially critical of provisions that
prioritize the repayment of credit card debt over unpaid
child support, forcing spouses owed alimony to fight with
credit card companies and other lenders for their unpaid
support. More broadly the bill's critics argued that the
legislation did nothing to curtail the predatory practices
of credit card companies, such as exorbitant interest rates,
rising and often hidden fees, and targeting minors and the
recently bankrupt for new cards. The bill's critics pointed
out that these practices are themselves significant
contributors to the growth of consumer bankruptcies
Source (Wikipedia) NationsCredit Solutions is
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