March 8, 2024

This past week NCAJ released the Consumer Debt Litigation Index, a new tool for use by advocates, reformers, scholars, legislators, judges and other stakeholders in pursuing reform initiatives to promote fairness in consumer debt litigation. To learn more about the new Index, see this new article in Law 360, Most States Allow Abusive Debt Collection, Report Says, and check out NCAJ's news-post. Today, we are reaching out to invite all who are interested in fairness in consumer debt litigation to register for the National Consumer Law Center (NCLC)'s national webinar on March 14, 2024 at 2pm. The webinar will introduce NCAJ's new Index alongside the Center for Public Health Law Research at Temple University Beasley School of Law (CPHLR)'s new Dataset containing an overview of state statutes, regulations, and court rules governing debt collection lawsuits, and alongside NCLC's new report, “No Fresh Start 2023: Will States Let Debt Collectors Push Families Into Poverty as the Cost of Necessities Soars?”, containing a comparison of state post-judgment exemption laws that protect wages, bank accounts, homes, cars, and household goods. If you would like to sign up for this NCLC Webinar, please REGISTER HERE and join us on the 14th.

Recent Articles

Watch the Videos from NCAJ's Access to Justice Solutions Symposium of February 9, 2024

On February 9th, 2024, more than 500 peopled gathered or tuned in via stream to the AtJ Solutions Symposium. The sessions were videotaped that day. If you'd like to re-see what you saw, or see the sessions for the first time, you can do so at the links, below. Take a look, consider the progress of the access to justice movement, and join in the work to increase access to justice in America.

New “Consumer Debt Litigation Index” Ranks States on Best Policies for Access to Justice

The National Center for Access to Justice (NCAJ) at Fordham Law School today announced the release of the Consumer Debt Litigation Index, an on-line resource that demonstrates that every U.S. state and the District of Columbia lack essential legal standards to protect consumers from wrongful, abusive debt collection tactics that can lead to homelessness, family breakup, overwhelming stress and other devastating consequences for families and individuals. There are signs of progress and many states are trying to improve, but every state has a long way to go.