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For-Profit Credit Counselors Are Cashing In on Housing Crisis, Consumer Groups Tell O'Malley

By Annapolis Notebook
Sunday, May 18, 2008

Consumer groups are urging Gov. Martin O'Malley to veto a bill that would allow a Columbia-based, for-profit credit counseling firm whose business practices are under review in multiple states to be licensed in Maryland.

The legislation, approved by the General Assembly during the recent legislative session, would allow AscendOne and businesses like it to operate in Maryland just as nonprofit debt counselors do. Supporters say for-profit counseling firms have helped many homeowners find financial security. But opponents who have fought the bill for two years say the for-profit firms are predators cashing in on vulnerable homeowners hit by the foreclosure crisis.

A veto would need to come by Thursday, when the governor is scheduled to sign a final batch of bills approved during the legislature's annual 90-day session.

"We ask you to pursue a leadership role and veto" the bill, leaders of the Maryland Consumer Rights Coalition and Maryland Public Interest Research Group wrote O'Malley (D). "Otherwise, this legislation will ensure that the most vulnerable in our communities will provide the 'profit' to the for-profit businesses in this industry. The empty pockets of credit-challenged individuals is not the proper foundation for business success."

O'Malley spokesman Rick Abbruzzese said the governor has not made a final decision on the bill. "There are a number of requests in for us to sign the legislation and to veto it," Abbruzzese said. "He's going through those."

Another controversial measure before the governor is one he was set to sign last month but pulled from the list after a last-minute push by public health advocates. That bill would classify as beer the popular fruity malt liquor drinks dubbed "alcopops" by detractors.

When they passed the bill, lawmakers overrode a recent opinion from Attorney General Douglas F. Gansler, who said the drinks are distilled spirits that should be taxed as liquor and sold only in liquor stores. Abbruzzese said the governor is weighing whether to sign the bill.

-- Lisa Rein

Groucho's Fiscal Policy

Gov. Martin O'Malley cited a scene from a 1935 Marx Brothers film last week in making the case that his administration had acted boldly to take responsibility for the state's fiscal challenges.

Speaking to a gathering of the Prince George's County Chamber of Commerce, O'Malley compared Maryland's past practices to a scene from "A Night at the Opera" in which a character played by Groucho Marx is given an inflated dinner bill by a waiter.

"This is an outrage!" the character says, handing the bill to a woman at the table. "If I were you, I wouldn't pay it!"

For too long, Maryland leaders had been "like Groucho Marx at the dinner table," passing along the state's fiscal challenges without really addressing them, O'Malley said.

He credited his administration with tackling a $1.7 billion structural deficit through a combination of spending cuts and tax increases, the latter of which have generated far more media attention.

"It was hard, and it was painful," O'Malley told the luncheon crowd, gathered in Ritchie Coliseum on the campus of the University of Maryland at College Park.

O'Malley said the effort had allowed the state to preserve its AAA bond rating and continue investing in priorities such as education and public safety.

The governor devoted the balance of his speech to talking about progress made in those and other areas, including minority contracting.

Among those in the audience was former Montgomery County executive Douglas M. Duncan (D), O'Malley's Democratic primary rival for governor in 2006. Duncan is now an administrator at the university.

"It's good to see you again," O'Malley said to Duncan.

-- John Wagner

No. 5 Out of 50

Gov. Martin O'Malley's approval ratings may have sagged in Maryland, but nationally he is among the most popular governors, according to a panel of "high-priced Los Angeles call girls" assembled by Playboy Radio.

O'Malley (D) ranked No. 5 on the panel's list, behind only California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger (R), former Florida governor Jeb Bush (R), Michigan Gov. Jennifer M. Granholm (D) and Iowa Gov. Chet Culver (D).

Former New York governor Eliot L. Spitzer (D), who resigned over a prostitution scandal this year, weighed in at No. 18.

-- John Wagner

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