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Our special guest is Jeff Sovern, Professor at the University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law. In March 2022, the CFPB announced that it had revised its exam manual to instruct its examiners to apply the “unfairness” standard under the Consumer Financial Protection Act to conduct considered to be discriminatory, whether or not it is covered by federal laws that expressly prohibit discrimination. The changes were subsequently vacated by a federal district court in a lawsuit brought by several trade groups challenging the changes and the Fifth Circuit has stayed the CFPB’s appeal from that decision pending the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in CFSA v. CFPB. In this episode, we first review the background of the exam manual changes, the industry response, and the district court’s decision. We then take a close look at the key arguments both in support of and against upholding the decision. We conclude with a discussion of the use of disparate impact in applying the unfairness standard to discriminatory conduct and the appropriateness of the CFPB’s use of changes to its exam manual to announce its new interpretation of the standard.
Alan Kaplinsky, Senior Counsel in Ballard Spahr’s Consumer Financial Services Group, leads the discussion, joined by Richard Andreano, a Partner in the Group and Practice Leader of the firm’s Mortgage Banking Group.
Professor Sovern’s recent research paper, “Is Discrimination Unfair?,” is available here.
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