Va. remains one of two states lacking class action process

State class actions in Virginia are not happening yet. This week, Va. Gov. Abigail Spanberger vetoed SB229/HB449, a bill that finally would have established a state-level class action process. Although Va. consumers can participate in federal class actions, the bill would have filled a gap for them to band together to pursue claims that are […]

Mourning Barney Frank

Barney Frank, whose name graces the Dodd-Frank Act, which created the CFPB and enacted multiple consumer protections, has died at the age of 86. As long as the CFPB protects consumers (it will rise again!), the CFPB and the Consumer Financial Protection Act stand as a memorial to Frank’s important work to protect Americans.

Ellengold & Laing article on the use of government to collect private debts

Kate Elengold of UNC and Sophie Laing Pine Tree Legal Assistance, Inc. have written Offsetting Justice: Using Government Power To Collect Private Debts, 175 Penn. L. Rev. (forthcoming 2027). Here’s the abstract: Private creditors regularly hire third-party debt collectors to recoup debt on their behalf by contacting, coercing, and suing consumer debtors. Scholars, advocates, and policymakers […]

New report on judges in “business courts”

A new report from the The People’s Parity Project examines the backgrounds of judges on state “business courts.” Sixty-three percent of Americans live in a state with a business court. Although business courts are intended to hear cases between businesses, a significant number of states hear cases that include workers and consumers, typically relating to […]

The FTC’s inadequate Kochava proposed privacy settlement

Back in 2022, the FTC accused Kochava of engaging in unfair practices because it sold vast amounts of data obtained from smart phones, including geolocation data (where the phones were); profiles of consumers, including their marital status, ethnicity, gender identity, political association, employment; what phone apps they had and how much time they spent on […]

Blasie paper on the legal system’s foundational delusion: that ordinary people can understand the laws and legal documents that govern them

Michael Blasie of Seattle has written Information Poverty and the Right to Understand. Here is the abstract: Legal systems around the world, and particularly in the United States, rest on a foundational delusion: that ordinary people can understand the laws and legal documents that govern them. Despite the growing focus on “access to justice,” most […]