Wednesday, December 24, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. Tightens Payday Lending Practices, Protecting Most Vulnerable

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Jun, 2018 12:53 PM
    VICTORIA — New limits on fees for cashing cheques and high-cost loans will take effect on Sept. 1 in British Columbia.
     
     
    Solicitor General Mike Farnworth says in a statement the changes tighten the rules for payday-loan businesses and aim to protect people from paying high fees to cash cheques and borrow money.
     
     
    Farnworth says the changes will help some of B.C.'s most vulnerable people who use non-traditional lenders and credit providers to cash social assistance or disability cheques.
     
     
    The changes that go into effect Sept. 1 include: lowering the maximum fee to $15 for every $100 borrowed and capping the fee for cashing a social assistance or disability cheque at $2, plus one per cent of the value of the cheque, up to a maximum of $10.
     
     
    The minister says the changes also prohibit payday lenders from requiring, requesting or accepting consent to use or disclose the personal information of a borrower for anything other than arranging or providing a payday loan.
     
     
    B.C.'s social development ministry says people in B.C. took out 805,000 payday loans in 2016, for a total of $369 million at an average of $460 per individual loan.
     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Michelle Obama Talks Social Media And Raising Daughters At Vancouver Event

    VANCOUVER — Michelle Obama says social media magnifies feelings of political and cultural division, underlining a need for people to get out of their online silos.

    Michelle Obama Talks Social Media And Raising Daughters At Vancouver Event

    Burnaby Seeks Appeal Over Tree Cutting Permits Involving Trans Mountain Pipeline

    Burnaby Seeks Appeal Over Tree Cutting Permits Involving Trans Mountain Pipeline
    BURNABY, B.C. — The City of Burnaby wants to appeal a National Energy Board decision that exempts Kinder Morgan from local land and tree clearance bylaws in the expansion of the Trans Mountain pipeline.

    Burnaby Seeks Appeal Over Tree Cutting Permits Involving Trans Mountain Pipeline

    Justin Trudeau Won't Meet With Capt Amarinder Singh Behind Sikh Separatist Controversy

    Justin Trudeau Won't Meet With Capt Amarinder Singh Behind Sikh Separatist Controversy
    Capt was to accompany Trudeau to the temple and a nearby museum.

    Justin Trudeau Won't Meet With Capt Amarinder Singh Behind Sikh Separatist Controversy

    Pattullo Bridge To Be Replaced With Province-Owned $1.4 Billion Bridge

    Pattullo Bridge To Be Replaced With Province-Owned $1.4 Billion Bridge
    Replacing the Pattullo Bridge between Surrey and New Westminster will cost $1.37 billion and will be funded solely by the British Columbia government.

    Pattullo Bridge To Be Replaced With Province-Owned $1.4 Billion Bridge

    Vancouver Police Say The City's Sixth Homicide Of 2018 Was A Targeted Shooting

    Vancouver Police Say The City's Sixth Homicide Of 2018 Was A Targeted Shooting
    A 32-year-old Surrey man was found critically injured on a street in the city's Kerrisdale neighbourhood.

    Vancouver Police Say The City's Sixth Homicide Of 2018 Was A Targeted Shooting

    Wheels Up For India: Justin Trudeau Takes Wing On Trade Mission To India, Where Sikh Politics Loom

    Wheels Up For India: Justin Trudeau Takes Wing On Trade Mission To India, Where Sikh Politics Loom
    India is the world's second-largest country by population and one of the world's fastest growing economies -- one that's expected to overtake Great Britain later this year to become the fifth largest in the world.

    Wheels Up For India: Justin Trudeau Takes Wing On Trade Mission To India, Where Sikh Politics Loom