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  1. #1
    Senior Member American-ized's Avatar
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    CA-Program aims to help low-income Angelenos open bank accou

    Please go to this site and COMMENT HEAVILY to criticize Antonio Villaraigosa

    Program aims to help low-income Angelenos open bank accounts

    12:37 PM | March 24, 2009

    Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa today announced a new initiative aimed at helping at least 10,000 low-income households open bank accounts at mainstream financial institutions every year.

    Villaraigosa said at a news conference this morning that nearly 300,000 households in Los Angeles do not have checking or savings accounts, and a single households spends up to $1,000 a year in check cashing fees and other transactions that are normally free at a bank. The new program is called Bank on Los Angeles.

    "Bank on L.A. will offer all Angelenos the tools [to] open bank accounts, save for the future, climb another rung on the economic ladder and punch their ticket to economic growth for years to come," Villaraigosa said.

    Banks that have signed up with the program, including Bank of America, Citibank and Kinecta Federal Credit Union, have agreed to waive regular checking account fees or offer low-cost accounts for participants. The program will include a bilingual marketing and education campaign touting the benefits of opening checking accounts and describing how the banking system works.

    Officials said some people do not have bank accounts (illegals) because they lack a Social Security number. To resolve that issue, participating banks will accept other forms of recognized identification, including the matricula consular, an identification card issued by the Mexican government.

    -- Alexandra Zavis

    http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2 ... ng-la.html

  2. #2
    Senior Member SOSADFORUS's Avatar
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    They didn't learn a think from the bail outs!! this is proof possitive!!

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  3. #3
    Senior Member miguelina's Avatar
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    Bank of America already does this, so what's his point?

    NO one gets free checking, why should lawbreakers get another break?!?!?!
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)
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  4. #4
    Administrator Jean's Avatar
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    New program encourages low-income L.A. residents to open bank accounts

    The initiative aims to help 10,000 people end their dependence on check-cashing outlets before the end of the year by reducing the cost and simplifying the process of banking.
    By Alexandra Zavis
    March 25, 2009

    Juan Murillo used to spend hundreds of dollars a year at check-cashing outlets because he was too intimidated by the U.S. banking system to open an account and did not speak enough English to write a check himself.

    When he finally summoned the courage to open a checking account at Bank of America, he found that he could withdraw cash, write checks and transfer money to his family in Mexico at no additional cost. And the best part, he said, is that "my tax refund is deposited directly into my account."


    Nearly 300,000 Los Angeles households do not have a bank account, more than in any other U.S. city, Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa acknowledged at a news briefing Tuesday. Without these tools, low-income families can't put money away for their children's education or the down payment on a home, establish a credit record or pay their bills without giving up a large portion of their salaries to storefront check-cashing outlets, payday loan operations and pawnshops.

    It is a problem common to many U.S. cities, especially ones with large numbers of illegal immigrants who do not have the paperwork to open an account and are fearful of mainstream banks. But even individuals who are here legally sometimes find that they can't open an account because they don't have a Social Security number.

    A new initiative announced at Tuesday's briefing aims to help 10,000 low-income Angelenos enter the financial mainstream before the end of the year by reducing the cost and simplifying the process of banking.


    Dubbed "Bank on Los Angeles," the initiative "will offer all Angelenos the tools to open bank accounts, save for the future, climb another rung on the economic ladder and punch their ticket to economic growth for years to come," Villaraigosa said.

    At least a dozen financial institutions have signed up, agreeing to waive the usual fees for a checking account or offer a low-cost alternative for an average of about $5 a month. They include big names such as Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase/WAMU, Citibank and Wells Fargo/Wachovia, as well as community banks and credit unions.

    Bank representatives at Tuesday's launch said expanding their operations in low-income neighborhoods would help raise the profile of their institutions and build relationships that could yield dividends as families start to save and invest.

    "These are customers for now and, most importantly, for the future," said Lynn Fernandez, a Bank of America region executive in Los Angeles.

    Although many cities have tried to drive out storefront financial operations, which they say prey on the poor, few have come up with an alternative for families looking for a loan to carry them through to the next paycheck and other short-term services. But when San Francisco launched a similar initiative in September 2006, about 16,000 people opened accounts within the first two years, according to a strategy paper prepared for Villaraigosa's office and United Way of Greater Los Angeles by Manuel Pastor, director of the USC Program for Environmental and Regional Equity.

    Banks have been slow to open branches in low-income neighborhoods, where storefront operations have proliferated in their place. According to research by the Pew Charitable Trust, these high-cost alternatives now outnumber traditional banking institutions in Los Angeles, with 944 check-cashing outlets, 312 payday lenders and 85 pawnshops identified in 2006, compared with 694 bank and credit union branches.

    Such services can cost a typical user up to $1,000 a year, according to a 2008 study for the Brookings Institution Metropolitan Policy Program.

    Murillo, a father of three who cooks at a Mexican restaurant in Torrance, gave up 1% of his $357 weekly salary to cash his paycheck at a local supermarket. Other services proved even more costly. A $45 parking fine increased to $100 when his money order disappeared in the mail and he could not prove he had sent it. Still, for 18 years, Murillo did not dare open a checking account because he found the whole process "mystifying."

    The new initiative, which Murillo is helping to promote, will include a multilingual marketing and education campaign, in which local nonprofits such as United Way and the Community Financial Resource Center in South Los Angeles will tout the benefits of banking and teach families how to manage an account.

    Instead of a Social Security number, participating banks in Boyle Heights, Vernon-Central, Westlake and Pacoima will accept other forms of identification, such as consular IDs issued by Mexico, Guatemala and other countries. If successful, officials hope to take the program citywide.

    www.latimes.com
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  5. #5
    MW
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    Senior Member MW's Avatar
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    Another move by "all for the race" Villaraigosa to legitimize illegal aliens in Lost Angeles.

    "The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing" ** Edmund Burke**

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