Bill

BILL • US SENATE

SJRES 149

A joint resolution providing for congressional disapproval under chapter 8 of title 5, United States Code, of the rule submitted by the Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection relating to the withdrawal of the rule relating to "Truth in lending (Regulation Z); Consumer Protections for Home Sales Financed Under Contracts for Deed".

119th Congress
Introduced by Chuck Schumer,

Congressional effort to block CFPB's withdrawal of consumer protections for high-risk "contract for deed" home financing arrangements.

Introduced in Senate
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Bill Summary • SJRES 149

Legislative bill overview

This joint resolution seeks to block a Federal action through the Congressional Review Act (CRA), which allows Congress to disapprove of regulatory rules within 60 legislative days. Specifically, it targets the Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection's decision to withdraw protections for consumers purchasing homes through "contracts for deed"—alternative financing arrangements outside traditional mortgages.

Why is this important

Contracts for deed are high-risk financing arrangements where buyers make payments directly to sellers without traditional mortgage protections like title insurance, standardized disclosures, or regulatory oversight. The CFPB's original 2023 rule required lenders to provide Truth in Lending Act disclosures for these transactions. The withdrawal of this rule would eliminate these protections, potentially affecting thousands of lower-income buyers who use contracts for deed. This reflects a broader tension between regulatory consumer protection and deregulation efforts.

Potential points of contention

  • Regulatory authority debate: Whether the CFPB should have jurisdiction over non-traditional financing arrangements, or if this overreaches into state property law domains
  • Market impact: The rule's withdrawal could reduce lending costs and increase seller financing options, but simultaneously expose vulnerable borrowers to predatory terms without consumer protections
  • CRA procedure: Using the CRA is a blunt instrument—it blocks the entire rule without allowing partial modifications or alternative regulatory approaches

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