All posts by Barbara Nevins Taylor

Protecting Veterans From Diploma Mills


President Obama signed an executive order aimed at protecting veterans and those still serving from misleading marketing of  for-profit colleges. 

The schools heavily recruit military personnel and according to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) offer little for the money they charge.  Those who sign up are often saddled with huge debt and find that their education is worthless. 

A report on the findings of a two year investigation by the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee led by Iowa Senator Tom Harkin found widespread problems in this industry.

For starters, tuition at for-profit colleges is six times higher than at community colleges and twice as high as you might find at a four-year public school. That might be okay if students benefited.

But the senate study of 30 for-profit schools found many students attracted by web marketing, TV and other heavy advertising don’t achieve academic success. Fifty-four percent of the students enrolled in the 2008-2009 school year withdrew by the summer of 2010.

Most of the students borrowed money to pay their tuition, and close to one in four defaulted on their federal student loans within three years of leaving school. Why should you care if you are not a student?

According to the report taxpayers invest more than $30 billion in these schools.  Most of the money comes from federal funds. 25% comes from Department of Education, 37% Post 9/11 G.I. Bill benefits, and 50% Department of Defense Tuition Assistance Funds.

Senator Harkin said, “In this report, you will find overwhelming documentation of overpriced tuition, predatory recruiting practices, sky-high dropout rates, billions of taxpayer dollars spent on aggressive marketing and advertising, and companies gaming regulations to maximize profits.  These practices are not the exception — they are the norm; they are systemic throughout the industry, with very few exceptions,”

In a news release on its website the Association for Private Sector Colleges and Universities says the senate report, “…continues in the tradition of ideology overriding reality. The report twists the facts to fit a narrative…”

 

Believe what you will and beware.

 watchmore
Payday and Auto Title Loans
 

Class Action Lawsuit Against Debt Collectors

More than 100,000 New Yorkers now can fight back in court against against debt collectors.  Federal Judge Denny Chinn granted class action status in a lawsuit brought by the Neighborhood Economic Development Advocacy Project (NEDAP), MFY Legal Services and Emery Celli Brinkerhoff & Abady.

The lawsuit claims that a law firm, a debt buying company, a processing company and others fraudulently won judgements against consumers in state court through a robot-signing type scheme.

The lawsuit charges that these companies bought up debt and engaged in “sewer service.”

They allegedly routinely failed to properly notify people that they owed money needed to appear at court hearings to defend themselves   Consequently, when the debt collectors went to court the consumers didn’t show up and judges ruled against them.

Susan Shin, a lawyer with NEDAP says,  “These abusive debt collection practices have devastating consequences for low income New Yorkers and communities.” The lawsuit names Mel Harris and Associates, LLC, one of New York’s largest debt collecting firms, and Samserv, Inc., a processing company, and Leucadia National Corporation a public company that buys debt for pennies on the dollar.

Watch Susan Shin’s video blog on ConsumerMojo.com and learn about your rights against debt collectors.

Veterans and Credit Repair


Check your credit report for free at annualcreditreport .com. You can do this for free 3 times a year.  If someone wants to charge you a fee to check your credit say, “No.”  If someone wants to charge you a fee to “fix your credit” say, “No.” The only thing on a credit report that can be “fixed” is inaccurate information, and you can fix that yourself. EquifaxExperian and TransUnion are the three private reporting companies that keep track of personal credit histories.

Student loans, credit card payment, late payment, car loans, mortgages and information about judgments against you are listed on the credit report.  Sometimes the information is wrong.

If the information is incorrect, write letters to the reporting agency and the creditor, with documentation that proves you paid your bill.  Explain there’s an error and you want it fixed.  Make sure to keep your original documents and send your letter by certified mail.

The credit reporting company must investigate.  It usually takes about 30 days, and if there is an error the company and the credit bureau must correct it.

 

watchmoreWhat’s Wrong With Payday Loans?

 

watchmore    How to Fix My Credit-No Lies

Easing Credit Card Rules for Stay-At-Home Moms and Spouses


A stay-at-home spouse or partner should get the benefit of the bread-winners access to credit.

That’s the message coming out of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), which proposed a rule to require financial institutions to consider shared income when a stay-home-spouse or partner applies for a credit card.  CFPB Director Richard Cordray said, “…CFPB is proposing common-sense changes that would facilitate credit access for spouses or partners who do not work outside of the home.”

The CFPB says credit worthy people have been denied credit cards under the current rules and cites Census figures that show 16 million married people don’t work outside of their homes. So if this goes into effect it will make it much easier for people over 21, with good credit, to get credit cards. There’s a 60 day comment period before the rule can go into effect and things could change.

 

Discover to Refund Cardholders

3.5 million current and former. Discover customers will receive refunds for credit card ad-ons sold by high-pressure telemarketers. The order comes from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC)  and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) and requires Discover Bank to refund $200 million to cardholders and pay a $14 million fine. 

The agencies say that Discover’s telemarketers used misleading scripts to push Payment Protection, a Credit Score Tracker, Theft Protection and Wallet Protection.  The telemarketers apparently misled consumers about fees, enrolled some without permission and promised they wouldn’t be enrolled in the plans until they received written material, which never materialized.

The settlement covers consumers who bought these services knowingly, or unknowingly from December 1, 2007 to August 31, 2011. You don’t have to do anything to get the refund from Discover. If you currently hold a Discover card, you’ll get a credit on your account.  If you no longer have a Discover credit card, you’ll get a check in the mail.

American Express To Repay Consumers $85 Million


American Express will refund $85 million to 250,000 consumers thanks to an order by federal banking regulators, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and the state of Utah. T

he CFPB says that 3 American Express subsidiaries violated consumer protection laws from 2003 to 2012 by misleading consumers when they offered a $300  sign-up bonus for the Blue Sky Credit Card.

Consumers never received the money.  In addition, regulators found the American Express companies charged unlawful late fees, discriminated against new account applicants over the age of 35 and misled people about paying off old debts and debt collection.

So a consent order worked out with the American Express requires the following:

Amex will have to give customers the $300 they were promised for signing up for a Blue Sky Credit Card.

Customers charged illegal late fees will receive reimbursements with interest.

Customers lured by deceptive promises to pay old debts will be reimbursed with interest.

Consumers promised their debt would be paid and were denied new American Express Cards will receive $100 and a pre-approval offer for a new card.

You don’t have to do anything if you are an affected card holder.  And if you’re no longer a customer, you’ll receive a check in the mail.

The American Express companies will also have to pay an addition $27.5 million in fines to government agencies.

Governor Cuomo Demands Quick Insurance Payments

If you are one of the 360,000 New Yorkers trying to get  insurance claims paid in the aftermath of Sandy this may help.  New York Governor Andrew Cuomo issued new regulations that require insurance companies to respond to claims within 6 days rather than 15 days.  And to avoid further health and safety issues, Cuomo’s orders allow you to repair essential systems like heating, hot water and electrical immediately without waiting for claims to be settled.

The state is also authorizing  qualified, out-of-state public adjusters  to get  temporary N.Y. licenses to work in the state.  More than 16,800 out-of-state adjusters have received temporary licenses.

Cuomo says his team will keep tabs on what the insurance companies do.  His Department of Financial Services, (DFS) will create report cards and publish them at  www.NYInsure.ny.gov. They’ll look at:

Number of claims and dollar amount of claims
Average time for an adjuster to inspect
Number of claims closed with and without payment so far
Total number of consumer complaints
Number of complaints as a percentage of number of claims

“In the wake of Hurricane Sandy, it is vital that New Yorkers receive their claim settlements as soon as possible, so that they can rebuild their homes, businesses and lives,” said Governor Cuomo. “There simply is no substitute for speed when it comes to insurance payouts after a storm. We must do everything possible to make sure we hold insurance companies accountable to their customers. Today’s actions do just that.”

You’ll also get a grace period for making insurance payments. New York’s Department of Financial Services will continue the moratorium barring insurance companies from cancelling or terminating homeowners’ and small business owners’ insurance policies in storm stricken areas for any reason, including non-payment of premiums, for an additional 21 days through December 15.

This executive order and moratorium applies to residents and business owners in Bronx, Kings, Nassau New York, Orange, Queens, Richmond, Rockland, Suffolk and Westchester counties.

These are the insurance companies that will be graded:

  • Nationwide
  • Liberty Mutual
  • Hartford
  • FM Global
  • Allstate
  • Chartis/AIG
  • State Farm
  • USAA
  • Utica National
  • Zurich
  • Metropolitan
  • Narraganset Bay Insurance Company
  • QBE
  • Arch
  • New York Central Mutual
  • Amtrust Financial
  • Travelers
  • Tower
  • Adirondack Insurance Exchange
  • Chubb
  • GEICO
  • Andover
  • Assurant
  • NYPIUA

 

No Job, No Health Insurance

A new report shows the link between the loss of your job and the loss of health insurance.  The Employee Benefit Research Institute found the percentage of workers with employment based health insurance is shrinking. The coverage rate dropped from 60.4 percent to 55.8 since the start of recession in December 2007.  And most who lost insurance didn’t self-insure because they couldn’t afford it.

Mortgage Help For Military Families


Here’s a sensible solution: If you’re in the military and you’re ordered to move you may still qualify for the FHA   Home Affordable Modification Program, or HAMP,  as of June 1st.  The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau  says, the regulations will change to allow you to list the residence you’re leaving as your permanent owner occupied residence, even though you’re not living there, so you can modify your mortgage.

If this sounds convoluted, it’s because current  FHA rules allow modification only for owner occupied, permanent residences. So the regulations hurt military families who are underwater because their homes are worth less than their mortgages.

There are a few criteria: You have to live in the home when you’re transferred.  You have to plan to return to live there in the future, and you can’t own any other single-family real estate.

Crackdown on Misleading Mortgage Ads

It’s easy to get fooled by advertising. And for the buyer, it’s potentially financially dangerous when ads don’t tell the truth about money products companies sell. There’s a slew of  questionable advertising about mortgages and financing a home.

If you are in the market for a mortgage or are considering refinancing your home, you’ve probably seen them.

That’s why the Federal Trade Commission and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau teamed up to go after companies and individuals that lure people into mortgages using misleading ads.

The ads often target older people and veterans.  Both agencies sent letters to more than 30 mortgage lenders, mortgage brokers, real estate professionals and lead generators warning that their ads may violate federal law.
“Misrepresentations in mortgage products can deprive consumers of important information while making one of the biggest financial decisions of their lives,” said CFPB Director Richard Cordray.  “Baiting consumers with false ads to buy into mortgage products would be illegal. We will conduct a fair and rigorous investigation into these issues and will take appropriate action for any violations we find.”

A review of about 800 ads found images, or text claiming a government affiliation that may be false,  alleged inaccurate information about interest rates and potentially misleading statements about the cost of reverse mortgages and the amount of cash or credit available to individuals.

There’s a lot of seriously bad information online and in advertising. It helps to arm yourself with the facts and consult experts who really have your best interests at heart.

 

watchmoreMortgage Modification 

Mortgage Modification Scams .

 

Why Refinancing Was So Hard For Homeowners In Trouble

by Jesse Eisinger ProPublica

Freddie Mac, the taxpayer-owned mortgage giant, made it harder for millions of Americans to refinance their high-interest-rate mortgages for fear it would cut into company profits, present and former Freddie Mac officials disclosed in recent interviews.

In closed door meetings, two Republican-leaning board members and at least one executive resisted a mass refi policy for an additional reason, according to the interviews: They regarded it as a backdoor economic stimulus.

Freddie’s policy was financially brutal: During the worst years of the Great Recession, when homeowners most needed the savings they could have gotten from refinancing to lower interest rates, Freddie helped keep millions of borrowers locked in high-interest-rate mortgages.

A more aggressive refi program by both Freddie and its sister company Fannie Mae would have helped an additional nine million homeowners to refinance, saving them nearly $75 billion in interest payments to date, Columbia University housing economist Christopher Mayer estimates. In addition, it would have prevented hundreds of thousands of delinquencies and foreclosures, he says.

Freddie’s resistance to refis highlights a central conflict of interest that plagues both Freddie and Fannie. That conflict is even more pronounced now that they are owned by taxpayers. The companies, which own or back about 60 percent of U.S. home mortgages, have a mandate to help expand homeownership and also to generate profits. These goals can work at cross purposes.

Freddie and Fannie maintained and erected barriers to refinancings when the Obama administration launched a program in early 2009 specifically designed to make refinancing more accessible u2014 the Home Affordable Refinance Program, or HARP. Freddie continued to hinder refinancings through a late 2011 relaunch of HARP designed to further slash refi costs and paperwork. At that point, Fannie began opening its gates more widely, but Freddie still kept barriers in place.

Only in the last few months, under a new chief executive, has Freddie loosened many of its restrictions on refinancing.

“Almost immediately after taxpayers bailed them out, Fannie and Freddie imposed unprecedented restrictions on refinancing, preventing millions of people from saving money on their mortgages and leaving hundreds of thousands of people to lose their homes unnecessarily,” says Mayer. Then after the 2011 HARP relaunch, “Freddie was worse” than Fannie, he said.

The Internal Debate

Now, interviews with former board members and an executive have revealed two reasons why Freddie dragged its feet.

According to interviews, these officials feared that mass refinancing would hurt the company’s bottom line and therefore its ability to repay taxpayers, who had bailed out Freddie and Fannie in 2008 to the current tune of almost $142 billion. Fears that borrowers who got refis would suffer high rates of default anyway, costing Freddie, have not been borne out.

Internally, Freddie debated its compliance with HARP for years. Robert Glauber, who left Freddie’s board in March, contended in board meetings that aspects of the refinancing program were “designed to be a stimulus” for the economy, said John Koskinen, who served as Freddie Mac’s chairman from 2008 to 2011, during which time he also served briefly as its interim chief executive.

Glauber, director Linda Bammann and head of risk management Paige Wisdom resisted mass refis. One executive viewed their objections as colored by partisan unwillingness to help the economy recover, something that would benefit President Obama.

But Koskinen did not regard the discussion as partisan. “I don’t think we ever had a discussion of whether this was good for a Democratic administration.”

Glauber was a Republican appointee to the Treasury Department under President George H. W. Bush and has had a career in various Wall Street roles. In a brief email to ProPublica, he disputed a quotation attributed to him but did not comment on the substance of the internal debates. He wrote that “it is an outrage that what claim to be confidential discussions in the board room are aired in your publication.”

Bammann, who donated $250 to the National Republican Congressional Committee this year, declined to comment. Wisdom did not respond to requests for comment.

Freddie Mac declined to make an executive available. The company is “always trying to find a balance to stimulate borrowing on responsible terms at prices that protect us from risk,” a spokesman said. The new CEO, Donald Layton, has made it clear that making changes to the company’s refi program is “a major priority,” the spokesman said. And he pointed out that Freddie has streamlined its refi process outside of the HARP program as well.

The spokesman declined to comment on Freddie’s internal discussions.

HARP was intended to lower barriers to refinancing for borrowers, especially for those who have high loan balances or owe more than their homes are worth, known as being under water. But HARP has disappointed in part because of Freddie and Fannie’s restrictive refi rules.

When the program was overhauled late last year, Freddie retained more restrictions than Fannie, puzzling many housing experts.

Still, after the HARP overhaul, refis have risen. Freddie Mac has done more than 284,000 HARP refis this year through August, compared with 185,000 for all of last year. Fannie has done 334,000 in the same period, compared with 215,000 last year. In all, the two companies have done more than 1.6 million refis under the program. The administration’s initial goal was to help four to five million.

Concerns about providing a stimulus were not the only reason for Freddie’s restrictions. Several company executives and board members worried that doing mass refis would hurt Freddie Mac’s bottom line.

To appreciate this concern, it’s crucial to understand Freddie’s and Fannie’s business. The companies are two-headed beasts: One part is an insurance company with a public mission to help the housing market and the other is an investment fund that generates profits by trading mortgage investments. The investment side existed originally to keep the mortgage securities markets flowing. But as the portfolios grew in the years leading up to the financial crisis, the tail began to wag the dog. The huge profits from the portfolios inflated executives’ pay packages and began to overshadow the public mission of helping homeowners, critics say.

Refinancings can hurt the value of those portfolios. When a new, lower rate mortgage is issued, the old loan is paid off. The ultimate backer of that original loan u2014 in this case Freddie or Fannie u2014 takes a loss because the loan was “pre-paid,” meaning it was paid off earlier than expected. Mortgage securities make money from interest rates paid over time, so they decline in value if the flow of interest payments gets cut off, such as when a refi allows the original loan to get paid off early.

Glauber was concerned about Freddie incurring such losses, because taxpayers were ultimately on the hook. “Bob’s position would have been if it has a cost, it is not consistent with conservatorship,” Koskinen said.

Bammann, a former executive of JPMorgan Chase, and Wisdom voiced similar objections. Wisdom criticized the refi program, saying that it was “policy, not business,” according to the executive.

Board member Nicolas Retsinas, who served in various housing policy positions for the Clinton administration, argued consistently for an expansive refinancing policy, according to people familiar with the meetings. He argued that in calculating the costs of the refi program, Freddie should take into account the benefit from lowering defaults and foreclosures and the improved housing market and stronger economy that would come from refinancings.

Retsinas declined to comment.

Koskinen, a Democrat who served in the Clinton administration, said it was prudent for the board to discuss the costs of a refi program. “The board’s view was you could decide to categorize it or ignore it but couldn’t say it didn’t exist. The intellectually honest thing was to say, ‘How large was that cost?'” he said.

Freddie Frustrates Its Regulator

Early in the Great Recession, support for a mass refi program was bipartisan. Refis help borrowers who are current on their loans, scoring them prevailing rates.

Columbia economist Glenn Hubbard, now an economic advisor to Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney, co-authored op-eds in the Wall Street Journal and later in the New York Times with his colleague Mayer, proposing a mass refi program. Many congressional Republicans supported it.

But the Wall Street Journal editorialized against it in February 2009, arguing a mass refi program amounted to undue government interference with the marketplace and would cause huge losses for taxpayers. Republicans turned against it.

The Obama administration and the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), which oversees Fannie and Freddie, didn’t fix HARP for years.

Under conservatorship, the FHFA has the responsibility to regulate the companies and to approve their major business decisions. Ed DeMarco, the acting head of the agency, has become a political lightning rod, criticized for having been too timid in helping the housing market. Critics contend he underestimated how much such an overall improvement would eventually help Fannie and Freddie’s bottom lines.

At the same time, DeMarco has been frustrated by Freddie Mac, according to people who are familiar with his tenure.

“Freddie is the party of ‘no.’ Fannie is the party of u2018let’s make it work,'” said a person familiar with DeMarco and the FHFA.

The FHFA was frustrated when Freddie Mac announced its guidelines in November 2011 because they restricted refis more tightly than Fannie’s did.

One example: Freddie was not going to allow certain well-situated borrowers into HARP, borrowers with a “loan-to-value” ratio of 80 or below. In other words, if a borrower had a $100,000 home and had a mortgage loan of $80,000 or less, he or she would not be eligible.

That wasn’t the only restriction. Freddie sometimes required properties to be re-appraised, which added cost and delay. And it hindered the ability for borrowers to get a refi from a new bank rather than from the one that had given them the original loan. “We were adding barriers to the homeowner,” says the Freddie executive.

Freddie’s risk management operation, the division in charge of making sure Freddie doesn’t take decisions likely to incur heavy losses, was particularly active in raising concerns over allowing more refis. For example, when Freddie insures a mortgage, it retains the right to void its guarantee and force the bank that made the loan to be responsible for it under certain circumstances, such as if the bank had done poor underwriting and the borrower’s income was misrepresented. Facilitating refis under HARP could require giving up those rights. Wisdom, the risk officer, argued that Freddie should not give up such rights lightly, because surrendering them could cost Freddie dearly.

But since many borrowers on these Freddie-backed loans had been making regular payments for a number of years, others argued there would likely be only a relatively small number of cases in which Freddie would need to force banks to take back loans. Thus, Freddie wouldn’t be giving up anything of much value.

Freddie Mac produced a memo in the fall of 2011, which was described to ProPublica, estimating that HARP would cause hundreds of millions of dollars in losses. The memo estimated big losses on the portfolio as well as from giving up the rights to return the loans. It minimized the benefits to Freddie’s insurance business from an improved housing market and improved economy. It also minimized the costs to the company of trapping homeowners in mortgages with interest rates so high they would eventually default.

That analysis appears to have been overly cautious. A recent New York Federal Reserve study estimated how much refinancings can help reduce future defaults and found that the benefits were greater than expected. “We were too conservative and that’s been subsequently borne out,” says the Freddie executive.

DeMarco has said he instructed Freddie and Fannie not to take into consideration portfolio losses. In a letter to Sen. Robert Menendez (D-NJ) in May, DeMarco wrote that “FHFA specifically directed both [Fannie and Freddie] to exclude from consideration changes in their own investment income as part of the HARP evaluation process.”

The existence of the memo raises a question of whether Freddie ignored that instruction from its regulator. It also raises the question of why FHFA did not act immediately to prevent Freddie from imposing its tighter rules.

DeMarco and the FHFA did not respond to requests for comment.

Freddie’s 80 percent loan-to-value barrier had spillover effects. Mortgage experts say it led banks to reject out of hand borrowers who were close to that threshold. If a borrower initially appeared to qualify for a refi, but then the appraisal of the home pushed him below the barrier, Freddie would reject the refi and the mortgage company would have wasted time and money. So banks avoided a wide swath of homeowners whose loan-to-value ratio was near 80 percent.

At the FHFA, “nobody was happy with Freddie under 80 percent but we decided to deal with it later. And we dealt with it,” says a person familiar with the FHFA’s efforts.

Today, more refis are being done under HARP and the barriers at Freddie have started to come down. The new CEO, Donald Layton, deserves some credit, says the Freddie executive: “Don made important changes in the program and is willing to override narrow risk management. He took a broader view of the benefits and wasn’t focused wholly on the costs.”

 

Refinancing Rush

Homeowners took advantage of low refinancing interest rates last week and are about to reap the benefits.  The Mortgage Bankers Association Weekly Applications Survey showed applications spiked to the highest level in more than three years.  And there’s a good reason why. Interest rates are at record lows according to the survey. For a 30-year-fixed rate mortgage for a home of $417,500 or less, the interest rate was 3.53% with upfront fees, or points, costing 0.35. For pricier property the interest rate was 3.82% with upfront fees at  0.36.  And FHA mortgage rates for a 30-year-fixed rate mortgage were 3.37%

Allegra Fexofenadine Scary Side Effects

 

Updated October 12, 2020

by Barbara Nevins Taylor 

The changing  season encouraged us to check up on our post and republish to make sure readers have a chance to find the information. 

If you find your eyes itchy and watering, your nose dripping and feel tempted to reach for an antihistamine, you might want to check the side effects, especially if you are an older adult. 

While antihistamines work wonders for millions, some find they trigger adverse effects including muscle pain.

I discovered fexofenadine, the active ingredient in Allegra, can cause scary side effects. When the fexofenadine side effects kicked in, I felt extraordinary back and leg pain.

A dermatologist suggested I take Allegra, an over-the-counter antihistamine, to combat seasonal hives. I bought a box of Allegra 24-hour gelcaps, and took one. A few hours later, I had trouble getting up from my desk chair and blamed the stiffness in my hip on too much sitting.

But that night, as I began to make dinner, I felt a hammering muscle pain in my mid-back close to my spine. Every movement I made triggered sharp jabs that seemed like hockey pucks banging the muscles and fibers along the right side of the spinal column.

I abandoned dinner, eased myself on to the floor and rested flat for the evening. Several hours later, the back pain subsided. But I gasped out loud when I stood up. My right hamstring and iliotibial band wouldn’t bend and wouldn’t hold me up. The slightest pressure triggered what felt like hammering in the muscles and joints in the back of my thigh and on the right side of my leg to just above the ankle. When I woke up the next morning, I still couldn’t bend my right leg and pain coursed down the leg and on the outside of the knee.

Nothing I did the day before would have caused the back or leg pain. I get backaches from time to time, but this felt entirely different.  I searched my memory for the slightest thing that I did that might have caused it. Taking the one Allegra gelcap stood out.

The package label didn’t suggest that Allegra caused back pain. It says, “Adults and children 12 years of age and over take one 180 mg tablet with water once a day.” It warns, “Adults 65 years of age and older: ask a doctor.”

When I looked up the side effects for Allegra and fexofenadine, back pain, body aches and soreness showed up as “less common” side effects on a number of health websites including the MayoClinic.org, which says back pain, body aches or pain, joint pain, muscle pains or stiffness, pain in arms or legs and difficulty moving can occur as side effects.

The Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) prescribing information says “clinical studies of Allegra tablets and capsules did not include sufficient numbers of subjects aged 65 years and older to determine whether this population responds differently from younger patients.” 

But for a 180 milligram daily dose, the FDA lists back pain as the number three contraindication, experienced by 2.8 percent of the testing group.

So I had information. But eight days later, I still couldn’t bend my right leg and had to sit with it stretched out. I worried about permanent damage and went to see Dr. Andrew Feldman, an orthopedist. He sympathized because he’d experienced contraindications and muscle weakness after taking another drug manufactured by a different company.

He examined me, found nothing broken or torn, and said, “You’ll have to wait until the drug clears your body.” He recommended physical therapy.

The pain subsided, but even with the excellent help of physical therapists at Kima (now Knosis Center for Physiotherapy and Wellness), which offers manual manipulation treatment, the stiffness in my hamstring and behind my knee remained for over three weeks. And even more disturbing, a gushing waterfall of tingling in my right thigh woke me throughout the night. The nerve tingling continued after the other symptoms disappeared, although it eventually calmed down.

Months after I took one Allegra gelcap, Dr. Alfred Ogden, a neurosurgeon at Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center, suggested that the gushing in my thigh may still be a side effect of the drug.

Bottom Line

Dealing with the side effects of Allegra’s fexofenadine, eliminating the pain and muscle stiffness and nerve tingling required doctor visits, physical therapy and a lot of time and money to cure problems I shouldn’t have had.  So what about the drug company?

Back at the beginning of it all, in the thick of my discomfort and fury about not being fully informed by the pharmaceutical company, I reached out to the media relations department of Sanofi-Aventis, Allegra’s manufacturer. I posed a series of questions and Heather Levis Guzzi, a senior communications specialist, responded.

Sanofi-Aventis Response

“For the past 15 years, Allegra has been providing allergy sufferers with relief of symptoms from indoor and outdoor allergies. Allegra Allergy is indicated in adults and children 12 years of age and over for temporary relief of the following symptoms due to hay fever or other upper respiratory allergies: runny nose, itchy, watery eyes, sneezing, itching of the nose or throat. Allegra’s label has been approved in accordance with FDA requirements. Contact a physician or pharmacist with questions regarding the content of the Drug Facts.”

After that pro-forma response, I still had questions.

1. Why aren’t the possible side effects of muscle pain, etc. listed in a prominent way?

The side effects listed in the Drug Facts label originate in the prescription label. The entire label undergoes extensive review by FDA before the label is approved as part of the overall switch from prescription to over-the-counter (OTC) status.

2. If a consumer suffers a side effect of muscle and joint point, is there an antidote?

There is no known antidote to antihistamine products.

3. If people over 60 are more likely to have a problem with Allegra, why not mention that?

The Drug Facts label, under “Directions” section, includes a statement to ask a doctor — before taking Allegra – if you are an adult 65 years of age or older.

4. How long should it take to clear the system?

The elimination half-life of Allegra is approximately 14 hours. Therefore, one dose of Allegra would theoretically be eliminated by the 3rd day post-dose in a normal healthy adult.

5. What is the chemical interaction that causes the problem of muscle and joint pain? I looked for research and couldn’t find it.

Back pain and pain in the extremities are reported side effects of fexofenadine. When conducting clinical studies, the drug manufacturer is required to report all side effects, even if the causality is not established and the mechanism is not known.

Follow-up

Almost three months after I complained to Sanofi-Aventis, I received a letter asking me to fill out a pharmacovigiliance consumer questionnaire that will find its way to the FDA. The pharmaceutical company indicated it would query my doctor for this report.

So if you are older, think twice before taking fexofendadine even in the middle of allergy season.  

 

How Do I Find the Best Mortgage Deals





It’s the American dream to own a home and government programs work to make the dream come true.  The federal government insures mortgage loans to give banks an incentive to lend you the money to buy that home. 

Mike Copley, Executive Vice President of TD Bank says, “The FHA is the most popular type of program for the first-time homebuyer.”  But the loans are popular even if it’s not your first home.  

“FHA loans are good for anybody who wants to buy a house,” explains Manny Alvarado, a housing specialist with HUD, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, which oversees FHA. HUD encourages home ownership, and an FHA mortgage helps potential homeowners by keeping down-payment requirements low.  For an FHA mortgage, you need only 3.5 percent down if your credit rating is good

TD Bank’s Copley cautions that your credit score must meet the criteria,  “If you want to go with 3.5 percent down, your FICO score has to be a minimum of 580.  If it is below that you have to come in with 10 percent.”  You can learn about what goes into a FICO score and its importance in ConsumerMojo.com’s Credit Smart video and the accompanying PDF.

 DOWN PAYMENT

You can get help from others to assemble the down payment.  “It could be gifted funds from friends and relatives.  But it has to be gifted funds. It can’t be monies borrowed against a credit card,” says HUD’s Alvarado.  HUD uses a formula to determine if you have enough income to make your monthly payments.  You can’t spend more than 31 percent of your monthly income on mortgage payments.  But if others will share the mortgage and financial responsibility with you, their income can be included in the calculation of that 31 percent.  “You can have up to four people on an application.  But they all have to be contributing the household,” says Alvarado.

 FHA INSURANCE

 Bankers like FHA mortgages because the loans are insured, and there’s no risk to the bank if you can’t make your payments and default.But to cover the cost of that insurance, FHA mortgages carry higher fees than most other types of mortgage loans.   2.25 percent – an upfront premium is added to the loan.  So, if you borrow $100,000 you have to pay another $2,250 back over time.

FHA officials insist their mortgages are competitive.  HUD’s Alvarado says, “If you go to a lender and you come in with less than 20 percent, they are going to say you have to have private mortgage insurance.  With us, we call it the mortgage insurance premium and it’s comparable to anybody else.”

FHA does not finance high-end homes.  It limits the price of the home you can buy, and that number varies from community to community.  Go to www.hud.gov and click on “Buy a Home” to find what FHA will finance in your area.

HUD also encourages homebuyers to visit its website to find a local housing counselor at a not-for-profit agency to help navigate the home buying process.  You can find a list of housing counselors at www.hud.gov. Click on resources and there’s a link to housing counselors.

 VA LOANS

The Department of Veterans Affairs also insures mortgages. This is great deal, if you qualify, because you don’t put any money down.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture also insures loans in rural communities. This program is similar to what the VA offers.  You put no money down and you get 100 percent financing.

GRANTS

State and local governments often offer grants for down payment assistance and closing costs.  In some areas a homebuyer can get as much as $25,000 toward the purchase of a home.

FREE MONEY

Some banks including giants like HSBC, and regional and local banks like Astoria Federal Savings Bank in New York, and Metchuen Savings Bank in New Jersey offer free money through a program called The First Home Club.  

It was created by the Federal Home Loan Bank of New York, and you can find a complete list of participating banks in New York, New Jersey, Ohio and Connecticut at FHLBNY.  Kenneth Totten, Vice President and Chief Lending Officer of Metuchen Savings Bank, explains how it works at his bank and at others: “You set up a savings account and for every dollar that you save on a monthly basis there’s a four-to-one matching grant.”  

Banks use The First Home Club to get you to bank and borrow with them.  It works well for those who qualify.  If you save $200 a month for ten months you get a grant of $7500 from the bank.  “That money is interest-free and it is forgivable over a five-year time frame.  If you sell it (the home), you have to pay a portion of the money back, but only the principle. There is no interest being charged,” Totten explains.

You are required to take a homeownership course at a HUD-certified not-for-profit counseling agency to get the money.  

The participating banks want to make sure you know what homeownership entails.  “Many people don’t know what they are getting into.  They don’t know the expense of owning a home.  It’s not just taxes, principal and insurance.  Those are big-ticket items.  You also have to pay for heat, water and electricity.  If you own a house, if something breaks you have to fix it,”  HUD’s Manny Alvarado points out.  Housing counselors provide a reality check, and give you the information you need to succeed as a homeowner.

When They Say No Money Down

by Barbara Nevins Taylor

An ad promotes “No Money Down,” for financing a laptop. 

I understand the marketing and I get the need. But these ads are scary because they can lead you down the path to financial hell.  

No money down allows you to “buy” something right away.  But a purchase without a down payment frequently means you’ll  pay more interest than you should. Generally, when you don’t put any cash down the interest rates are the highest levels that can legally be charged.

That means the interest adds up and up and you often pay more in interest than the price of thing you’re buying. There’s also the chance that your interest payments will  pull you further and further into debt.  Making it even worse, by the time you finish paying, the stuff is often obsolete or broken.

Right now “Gaming laptops,” seem like the big no money down lure. 

Generally no money down deals involve real estate, educational courses, cars, furniture, TV’s appliances of all kinds and any relatively big-ticket item that will command  a high interest payment. 

While any customer will do, a subset of   these deals specifically target members of the military.  And that’s particularly creepy.

Our advice–Say, “No,” and steer clear of “No Money Down,” deals.

If you have trouble making a down payment, or a purchase  because your credit isn’t good, our videos on credit can help you begin to build a decent credit history.  We’re happy answer any questions you have.

 

How to Fix My Credit-No Lies

Beware Tech Support Scams.


Seven out of ten times the phone rings, it’s a robocall, or sales person with a phony pitch. Sometimes they wear us down, but it’s important to beware of these tech support scams.

And sometimes, they get you at the right time. If you’re having trouble with your computer or a device and a caller offers to fix it remotely, think more than twice before you agree to his or her plan.

A Federal Trade Commission (FTC) alert warns about the tech support scammers who call to convince us that we need their software to fix some mystery virus on our computers. The FTC says,  “At best, the software is worthless or available elsewhere for free. At worst, it could be malware — software designed to give criminals access to your computer and your personal information.”

These creeps pretend that they’re from well-known companies and ask you to perform a series of tasks on your computer. They try to scare you into thinking you need help and explain that they can help you if you give them remote access to your computer.

Do not do this. They can install malware on your computer and steal sensitive information.

They also frequently ask for credit card information and bill you for phony products, or things you can get for free.

Do not give out credit card information, passwords or any private information.

If You Fell For It:

  • 1. Use legitimate security software to get rid of malware. You can download this from the Internet.
  • 2. Change your passwords and accounts that are compromised.
  • 3. Ask credit card companies to reverse the charges.
  • 4. Visit the FTC’s identity theft website and file a complaint with the FTC at FTC.gov/complaint.