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California Governor Signs Law Banning Medical Debt From Credit Reports

Californians with medical debt will no longer have to worry about unpaid medical bills showing up on their credit reports under legislation signed Tuesday by Gov. Gavin Newsom, adding the nations most populous state to a growing effort to protect consumers squeezed by unaffordable medical bills.

The (D-Santa Barbara) and backed by Democratic Attorney General Rob Bonta, will block health care providers, as well as any contracted collection agency, from sharing a patients medical debt with credit reporting agencies. At least eight states have banned medical bills from consumer credit reports in the past two years. In June, the Biden administration proposed similar federal protections, but its unclear when the rules will be enacted or, if former President Donald Trump is elected again, if they will be at all.

Nobody chooses to get sick, and then your credit gets ruined, said Chi Chi Wu, a senior attorney with the National Consumer Law Center. Thats why we encourage states to keep adopting laws. In case something goes wrong at the federal level, the states could protect their own consumers.

When Californias new law goes into effect in January, it will extend these protections to credit reports used for employment and tenant screening, Wu said. This is in addition to the proposed federal ban on reporting to credit agencies that inform credit card companies and mortgage lenders.

California lawmakers noted that medical debt unlike other kinds of debt of credit risk, and its inclusion can depress credit scores and make it hard for people to get a job, rent an apartment, or secure a car loan.

But California lawmakers have left a glaring loophole. Patients who pay hospital bills using medical credit cards or medical specialty loans which can come with interest rates wont get that debt taken off their credit report, as residents of , , and do. It's a through late-in-the-game hostile amendments, which influential entities opposed to the measure prevailed in including, Lim籀n said. In a 2022 , 15% of adults said they had used a medical credit card.

Kelly Parsons-OBrien, legislative chair of the California Association of Collectors, which represents collection agencies, said the exemptions were essential because medical credit card holders can buy nonmedical items and medical loans can be refinanced with nonmedical debt, making it impossible for creditors to know whats actually a medical charge.

More consumers will get into situations where they cannot afford to pay, and lenders will be operating in the dark, Parsons-OBrien said.

The three largest U.S. credit agencies Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion said they would stop listing some medical debt, including paid-off debts and those less than $500, but millions of patients were left with bigger medical bills on their credit reports. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau that 15 million Americans still had medical bills on their credit reports.

About report carrying some type of medical debt, which disproportionately affects low-income, Black, and Latino patients, according to the California Health Care Foundation.

have enacted legislation to protect consumers from surprise billing and medical debt, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. Newsom, a Democrat, also signed legislation on Tuesday on all real property owned by Californians who typically earn less than 400% of the federal poverty level. It expands current state law that protects a patients home from debt collectors.

A 窪蹋勛圖厙 News analysis found that credit reporting is the most common collection tactic used by hospitals to get patients to pay their bills. A credit score ban might make it more difficult for hospitals to collect.

When Sacramento resident Sonia Hayden and her boyfriend applied for a home loan last year, she discovered her credit score had dropped about a hundred points. It had been downgraded because of an approximately $200 emergency room charge after a car accident years ago.

The 44-year-old said her insurance covered tens of thousands of dollars in medical bills but that the hospital miscoded the $200 charge and she never received a bill for it. That, she said, should also have been charged to insurance.

Hayden tried unsuccessfully for over a year to resolve the issue with her health insurer. Its still on her credit report. She was eventually able to get a home loan, but her interest rates were higher because of her credit score.

Medical bills, they're not on purpose, you know? said Hayden, who testified in support of the legislation. It was already a super traumatic accident. I almost died. And then to have this super stressful medical bill nobodys asking for that. It shouldnt affect your credit.

This article was produced by 窪蹋勛圖厙 News, which publishes , an editorially independent service of the .

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