Free Credit Report
To opt out from receiving solicitations (garbage mail) from credit
card companies and other vendors that use the credit bureaus to
pre-screen applications, call 1-888-567-8688 or go to www.optoutprescreen.com.
The Idaho Statesman
Article Published
November 25, 2004
Idahoans can get free credit report
How to check your credit reports
In coordination with the FTC, the three credit bureaus have started
a collaborative program to deliver the reports:
• Online: Consumers will be able to go to a single Web site, www.annualcredit
report.com, where they can request their reports.
• By phone: Or they'll be able to call a toll-free number, (877)
322-8228.
• By mail: Or they can mail a request to Annual Credit Report Request
Service, P.O. Box 105281, Atlanta, Ga., 30348-5281.
Eileen Alt Powell
The Associated Press
Edition Date: 11-25-2004
NEW YORK — Millions of Americans will soon be able to get
free annual copies of their credit reports.
Starting Dec. 1, residents of Idaho and other Western states,
along with Alaska and Hawaii, will be able to get free copies of
their reports every year from the three major credit agencies — Equifax,
Experian and TransUnion.
People in the Midwest can begin ordering theirs March 1, while
those in the South start June 1. Residents of Eastern states, the
District of Columbia and U.S. territories are last, starting Sept.
1.
The public's access to free copies of their reports, which track
the amount of debt consumers have and whether they pay their bills
on time, was mandated by the Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions
Act of 2003. The law, better known as the FACT Act, was designed
to help Americans better monitor the reports that are used by banks
and merchants to determine if they'll lend to a consumer, and at
what interest rate.
Joel Winston, associate director of the financial practices division
at the Federal Trade Commission in Washington, D.C., said Congress
had two main goals in passing the law.
"The first was to help consumers spot identity theft," Winston
said. "The rationale was that the more consumers are familiar
with their credit reports, the more they're likely to spot things
showing up related to ID theft."
The second, he said, was a rising number of complaints about inaccuracies
in the reports.
"There were concerns that errors could mean consumers would
be denied credit, or would get it only at higher rates," Winston
said. "Getting their reports regularly should enhance consumers'
ability to find those errors and get them corrected."
The reason the program is being launched region by region is that
the credit reporting agencies have no way to gauge what public
demand will be for the free reports, said Colleen Martin, spokeswoman
for TransUnion LLC, which is based in Chicago.
"That's the great unknown," she said. "We want
to ensure that all consumers have the best possible experience,
so we want to make sure we have the proper scale built up."
In the past, only residents of a handful of states with special
laws could get free credit reports. In addition, consumers who
were turned down for loans because of something negative in their
reports also had free access.
Consumer advocates are urging Americans to take advantage of the
new service.
Some suggest consumers get all three bureau reports at once to
check them for accuracy. Others advocate getting one every four
months so they can monitor changes over time.
Whichever strategy a consumer adopts, Liz Pulliam Weston, author
of "Your Credit Score," said checking a credit report
is the best way to spot ID theft early and contain the damage.
And checking a report also should give families a place to start
if they want to improve their credit scores, which are three-digit
numbers that lenders use to set interest rates.
She suggests that consumers look for:
• Accounts that aren't theirs.
• Any delinquencies that are still on the report after the
seven-year time limit has passed.
• Notices of late payments that the consumer believes were
on time.
• Multiple collection agency notices for a single debt.
David Rubinger, spokesman for Equifax Inc., based in Atlanta,
said consumers who use the new online request site will be asked
for personal information so the credit agencies can match them
accurately with their reports. This will include name, date of
birth, Social Security number, current address and previous address.
"The site is specially encrypted, so it's private and secure," Rubinger
said.
Once the information is verified, the consumer's report will pop
up on the screen.
Rubinger recommends consumers print them out "to give yourself
more time to study the details."
While consumers will have access to their reports from the centralized
site, they won't be able to use it to fix errors.
Instead, they'll have to go to the site of whichever credit agency
created the report and deal directly with that agency.
Their sites are at www.experian.com, www.equifax.com, and www.transunion.com
Weston notes that consumers may also have to deal with the financial
institution or retailer that reported a problem to the credit agency.
"Do everything in writing and keep good records," she
said. "You have to be a warrior about this. Consumers can
be told it's taken care of, and it's not. Or something is removed,
and it pops up again later."
Americans can also get advice about dealing with their credit
reports from a coalition of consumer groups that are putting tips
up on their sites.
They include the Privacy Rights Clearinghouse at www.privacyrights.org,
Consumers Union at www.consumersunion.org, the Identify Theft Resource
Center at www.idtheftcenter.org and the California Public Interest
Research Group, www.calpirg.org.
|