Many lenders are thinking about the new Fair Debt Collection Practices Act ("FDCPA"), currently scheduled to take effect November 30, 2021, and wondering how to implement it. One component of the new FDCPA is the “Safe Harbor for Limited Content Messages.”
Leaving a message for a consumer in default has always been tricky under the FDCPA. However, the new FDCPA provide a safe harbor in that a “limited content messages” (“LCM”) is not deemed a communication. Specifically, a LCM is: “A voicemail message for a consumer that includes all of the content described in §1006.2(j)(1), that may include any of the content described in § 1006.2(j)(2), and that includes no other content.” 12 CFR § 1006.2(j). “If a voicemail message includes content other than the specific items described, and such other content directly or indirectly conveys any information about a debt, the message is a communication” (i.e. not a LCM). Comment §1006.2(j)-1.
Under the Safe Harbor, a LCM is:
The CFPB has also provided sample LCM messages as follows.
Lenders should note the examples provided by the CFPB do not include the name of the consumer.
If you need help understanding your rights in the complicated world of lending, contact the experienced banking attorneys at Goosmann Law in our Sioux City, Sioux Falls, and Omaha offices.