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Getting
Around ChexSystems
Resources to help those who are caught
in Chexsystems
What is ChexSystems?
Answer: ChexSystems is a service provided
to banks by Deluxe Corporation. Their database keeps track of negative
information regarding checking and savings accounts. Negative information
usually consists of NSF (non-sufficient funds), which is also known
as bouncing checks. Unpaid overdrafts are also a major contributor
to the database.
Minor
mistake, major consequences
Sometimes it doesn't take much to land on
ChexSystems' list of naughty account-holders. A vocal critic of
the agency says his former bank reported him to ChexSystems after
an insurance company automatically debited $60 from a closed account.
On the other end of the spectrum, ChexSystems alerts a bank when
an account applicant furnishes a phony Social Security number or
when the applicant has a history of fraudulent check-kiting schemes.
Critics
complain that financial institutions use ChexSystems
indiscriminately, weeding out not only checking-account applicants
who intend to commit fraud, but also law-abiding people who wrote
a bad check or two by mistake, or who were irresponsible with their
checking accounts but have since learned their lesson. They want
Congress to specify which offenses merit reporting to the agency.
A
negative ChexSystems report stays in the database for five years
and can doom your chances of getting a checking account for that
period. ChexSystems has records of 19 million accounts closed for
cause. That's one record of a closed account for every 14 U.S. residents.
Eighty
percent of U.S. banks and credit unions belong to the ChexSystems
network, which testifies to the agency's importance in preventing
fraud and losses to hot-check writers. Financial institutions lose
$15 billion a year because of check fraud and abuse, according to
ChexSystems. The agency estimates that every dollar spent on fraud
protection saves $6 in administrative costs, a savings of hundreds
of millions of dollars a year.
Speaking
softly, carrying a big stick
For all its clout, ChexSystems wields its
power quietly. Many people who ended up in its database never heard
of it until they tried to open a checking account and were turned
down because of their ChexSystems file. Most have much difficulty
finding a bank that will let them open an account because someone
with a ChexSystems file is considered more likely to be a fraud
risk.
If
you are reported to ChexSystems
- Don't
close any savings accounts or other checking accounts, and keep
the balances in the black.
- Pay
all overdraft fees as soon as you can.
Make
good on the checks
Once you have paid the overdraft
fees and you have satisfied everyone who received a bounced check,
get a short explanation inserted into your ChexSystems file. Thomas
Bledsoe, questions the fairness of the file hanging around for five
years like a stale but juicy rumor. "My
life has been a living hell because of ChexSystems," he says,
although he acknowledges that he shares the blame: "The reason
I am in ChexSystems is best summed up by irresponsibility of youth,"
he admits.
Bledsoe
wrote a host of bad checks when he was 19. He says he paid his overdraft
fees immediately and paid the recipients of the bounced checks.
His mother persuaded him to close the account so he wouldn't wreck
her financial future. Three years later, Thomas tried to open a
checking account. Banks rejected him based on his record of bad
checks on file with ChexSystems. Thomas believes that ChexSystems
performs a valuable function by protecting banks from the unscrupulous,
but he is angry at the agency for keeping files on people for half
a decade after making honest mistakes.
"I
do think that five years is a little harsh and maybe they should
shorten it to one or two years," he says. Only by making repeated
calls did he persuade the bank to report to ChexSystems that he
had repaid the $60 and overdraft penalties. "I had gray hair
and no fingernails after a week of this," he says. Thomas criticize
ChexSystems for what he says is a lack of accountability to consumers,
although they have no kind words for their banks, either.
Try,
try again
Theoretically, at least, bank and credit union managers have the
option of letting customers open accounts even if they are listed
in the ChexSystems database.
You
can always try to convince the new-accounts manager that your business
is worth the risk. Keep in mind, though, that one of the products
that ChexSystems offers is Audit Check, which tracks cases in which
managers overrode a negative report from ChexSystems and let a customer
open an account anyway. With upper management peering over the new-account
manager's shoulder, you might not be worth the potential hassle.
Finally, you can try to find a bank or credit union that doesn't
use ChexSystems through our service. Studies show 80 percent of
financial institutions use ChexSystems; so ferreting out an institution
that doesn't use ChexSystems can be a challenge.
Finding
a "gem" of a bank
An institution that doesn't use ChexSystems is so hard to find "that
it's a gem when you uncover it," says Thomas. Thomas feels
that he found a gem with our service. In September he began looking
for a bank where he could open a checking account, and he finally
found one with our help. "The
bank iCreditCentral.com
found me didn't use ChexSystems!" Thomas stated. "Things
went well with the Bank," he says. "I didn't have any
problems." There is one final irony: the bank we found for
him did not let him choose which company would print his checks.
"No problem", said Thomas, "I felt blessed just to
get the checking account open!"
What
You're About to Learn
How to get a new checking account if you are currently listed in
ChexSystems. We keep a fresh updated list of over 100+ FDIC Insured
Banks nationwide that have been known to give checking accounts
to people in ChexSystems, complete with contact information. Many
have online applications and offer Visa Check Cards and/or ATM Cards.
There
is only one requirement for our information to work if you are listed
in ChexSystems. You must have two valid forms of identification,
such as:
1.
A Driver's License or State ID.
2. A Social Security Card.
3. Get
Started today!
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