Consumers Council Supports Credit Cardholders’ Bill of Rights

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009

    The House of Representatives recently passed the Credit Cardholders’ Bill of Rights.  This land mark legislation is now in the Senate.  Consumers Council of Missouri has signed on as a supporter of the Dodd/Shelby substitute to the bill which will curb some of the most arbitrary, abusive and unfair credit card lending practices that trap consumers in a vicious cycle of debt.

The bill prohibits:

*  Applying unfair interest rate hikes retroactively to balances incurred under old rates;

* Assessing hidden and unjustified interest charges on balances already paid off;

* Piling on the debt that consumers owe by requiring them to pay off balances with lower interest rates before those with higher rates;

* Charging late fees even though consumers mail their payments seven days in advance of the due date; and

* Charging excessive upfront fees to subprime cards targeted at consumers with blemished credit histories.

Nuclear Plant Bill Worrisome for Consumers

Friday, January 23rd, 2009

Missouri’s energy debate is about to go nuclear.

A state lawmaker filed a bill in the Legislature on Thursday that sets the stage for a battle between utility interests who want to build a new nuclear plant and consumer groups that are leery of the costs.

The action comes the day after AmerenUE chief executive Tom Voss visited key decision makers in the Capitol to lobby for the bill.  Click here to read the entire St. Louis Post-Dispatch article which includes quotes from John Coffman, our lobbyist.

In Memory of Consumers Council Founder Alberta Slavin

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH, Michael Sorkin10/28/2008
Alberta Slavin, who founded the consumer movement in Missouri 40 years ago with a group of housewives angry over grocery prices, died Monday (Oct. 27, 2008) at St. Louis University Hospital after a lengthy illness. She was 78 and a longtime Clayton resident.
Her Housewives Elect Lower Prices (HELP) group gained national prominence in 1967 targeting supermarkets over high prices in inner city neighborhoods. She then formed the Utility Consumers Council of Missouri after the phone company cut off her service because she wasn’t using a company-approved telephone.Gov. Joe Teasdale named her in 1977 to the Missouri Public Service Commission, calling her the first consumer advocate to head it.For nearly seven years in the 1980s, she was the “On Your Side” reporter at KMOV-TV.

In 2001, Attorney General Jay Nixon named her to the board of directors of the new Missouri Health Foundation and she became its president. Today, the foundation has more than $1 billion on hand to help Missourians improve their health.

In 2006, Mrs. Slavin again became concerned at what she considered the lack of consumer influence to counter utilities and their allies in Jefferson City. She formed the Consumers Council of Missouri, a budding statewide group that speaks for consumers. Today, the group is fighting an effort by AmerenUE to reverse a state law preventing electric companies from charging customers for power plants before they become operational.

Missouri voters approved the law in 1976 and Mrs. Slavin and her first consumers council led the fight.Mrs. Slavin remained president of the newly reconstituted group until her death. “She was Ms. Consumer in Missouri for decades,” said Sen. Joan Bray, D-University City.  Please click here to read the entire article.

Consumers Council hosts annual meeting

Friday, November 30th, 2007

‘It’s not a fair fight,’ former utilities regulator says

Excerpt from the St. Louis Post-Distpach 

By Michael D. Sorkin

ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH 

To hear Steve Gaw tell it, consumers have little influence these days in the halls of government.  Legislators, even the good ones, don’t understand the arcane issues in regulating big electric, natural gas, telephone and water companies.  For the full story, click here.

Join Consumers Council, says consumer advocate

Friday, November 16th, 2007

excerpt from an article by . . .
By Michael D. Sorkin
ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH

Where can consumers turn for help?

There’s the Office of the Missouri Public Counsel, a small state agency which represents consumers and has been flexing its muscles lately. And there’s the Consumers Council of Missouri, a tiny group with big ambitions.

Membership in the consumers council costs $10 a year. The group’s second annual meeting is at 7 p.m. on Wednesday, Nov. 28, at the Brentwood Community Center, 2505 South Brentwood Boulevard in Brentwood. Guest speaker is Steve Gaw, former speaker of the Missouri House and until recently, a commissioner on the Public Service Commission.

For the full article, click here.