Para informacion en espanol,
visite
www.ftc.gov/credit
o escribe a la FTC Consumer Response Center, Room 130-A 600
Pennsylvania Ave. N.W., Washington, D.C. 20580.
A Summary of Your
Rights Under the Fair Credit Reporting Act
The federal Fair
Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) promotes the accuracy, fairness, and
privacy of information in the files of consumer reporting agencies.
There are many types of consumer reporting agencies, including
credit bureaus and specialty agencies (such as agencies that sell
information about check writing histories, medical records, and
rental history records). Here is a summary of your major rights
under the FCRA. For more information, including information
about additional rights, go to
www.ftc.gov/credit or write to:
Consumer Response
Center, Room 130-A, Federal Trade Commission, 600 Pennsylvania Ave.
N.W., Washington, D.C. 20580.
�
You
must be told if information in your file has been used against you.
Anyone who
uses a credit report or another type of consumer report to deny your
application for credit, insurance, or employment � or to take
another adverse action against you � must tell you, and must give
you the name, address, and phone number of the agency that provided
the information.
�
You
have the right to know what is in your file.
You may request and
obtain all the information about you in the files of a consumer
reporting agency (your �file disclosure�). You will be required to
provide proper identification, which may include your Social
Security number. In many cases, the disclosure will be free. You
are entitled to a free file disclosure if:
�
a person has taken
adverse action against you because of information in your credit
report;
�
you are the victim of
identify theft and place a fraud alert in your file;
�
your file contains
inaccurate information as a result of fraud;
��
you are on public
assistance;
�
you are unemployed but
expect to apply for employment within 60 days.
In addition, by September 2005 all
consumers will be entitled to one free disclosure every 12 months
upon request from each nationwide credit bureau and from nationwide
specialty consumer reporting agencies. See www.ftc.gov/credit
for additional information.
�
You
have the right to ask for a credit score.
Credit scores are numerical summaries of your credit-worthiness
based on information from credit bureaus. You may request a credit
score from consumer reporting agencies that create scores or
distribute scores used in residential real property loans, but you
will have to pay for it. In some mortgage transactions, you will
receive credit score information for free from the mortgage lender.
�
You
have the right to dispute incomplete or inaccurate information.
If you
identify information in your file that is incomplete or inaccurate,
and report it to the consumer reporting agency, the agency must
investigate unless your dispute is frivolous. See
www.ftc.gov/credit for an explanation of dispute procedures.
�
Consumer reporting
agencies must correct or delete inaccurate, incomplete, or
unverifiable information.
Inaccurate, incomplete or
unverifiable information must be removed or corrected, usually
within 30 days. However, a consumer reporting agency may continue
to report information it has verified as accurate.
�
Consumer reporting
agencies may not report outdated negative information.
In most
cases, a consumer reporting agency
may not report negative information that is more than seven
years
old, or bankruptcies that are more than 10 years old.
�
Access to your file
is limited. A consumer
reporting agency may provide information about
you only to people with a valid need
-- usually to consider an application with a creditor,
insurer, employer, landlord, or
other business. The FCRA specifies those with a valid need for
access.
�
You must give your
consent for reports to be provided to employers.
A consumer reporting agency may not
give out information about you to your employer, or a potential
employer, without your written consent given to the employer.
Written consent generally is not required in the trucking industry.
For more information, go to
www.ftc.gov/credit.
�
You
may limit �prescreened� offers of credit and insurance you get based
on information
in your credit report.
Unsolicited
�prescreened� offers for credit and insurance must include
a toll-free phone
number you can call if you choose to remove your name and address
from the
lists these offers are based on. You
may opt-out with the nationwide credit bureaus at 1-888-567-8688.
�
You
may seek damages from violators.
If a consumer
reporting agency, or, in some cases, a
user of consumer
reports or a furnisher of information to a consumer reporting agency
violates
the FCRA, you may be
able to sue in state or federal court.
�
Identity theft victims and active duty military personnel have
additional rights.
For more information, visit
www.ftc.gov/credit.
States may enforce the FCRA, and
many states have their own consumer reporting laws. In some cases,
you may have more rights under state law. For more information,
contact your state or local consumer protection agency or your state
Attorney General. Federal enforcers are:
|
TYPE OF
BUSINESS: |
CONTACT:
|
|
Consumer
reporting agencies, creditors and others not listed below
|
Federal Trade
Commission:
Consumer
Response Center - FCRA |
|
|
Washington,
DC
20580
1-877-382-4357 |
|
National banks,
federal branches/agencies of foreign banks (word |
Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency |
|
"National" or
initials "N.A." appear in or after bank's name) |
Compliance
Management, Mail Stop 6-6 |
|
|
Washington,
DC
20219
800-613-6743 |
|
Federal Reserve
System member banks (except national banks, and |
Federal Reserve
Board |
|
federal
branches/agencies of foreign banks) |
Division of
Consumer & Community Affairs |
|
|
Washington,
DC
20551
202-452-3693 |
|
Savings
associations and federally chartered savings banks (word
|
Office of Thrift
Supervision |
|
"Federal" or
initials "F.S.B." appear in federal institution's name)
|
Consumer
Complaints |
|
|
Washington,
DC
20552
800-842-6929 |
|
Federal credit
unions (words "Federal Credit Union" appear in |
National Credit
Union Administration |
|
institution's
name) |
1775 Duke Street
|
|
|
Alexandria,
VA
22314
703-519-4600 |
|
State-chartered
banks that are not members of the Federal Reserve |
Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation |
|
System
|
Consumer
Response
Center,
2345 Grand Avenue, Suite 100 |
|
|
Kansas City,
Missouri
64108-2638
1-877-275-3342 |
|
Air, surface, or
rail common carriers regulated by former Civil |
Department of
Transportation, Office of Financial Management |
|
Aeronautics
Board or Interstate Commerce Commission |
Washington,
DC
20590
202-366-1306 |
|
Activities
subject to the Packers and Stockyards Act, 1921 |
Department of
Agriculture Office of Deputy Administrator - GIPSA Washington,
DC 20250 202-720-7051 |