A 10% Increase In Members
By Joyce Moed, Reporter

MERRIFIELD, Va.–One credit union is reporting a 10% increase in members looking for credit counseling during the past three months.

"January was a longtime high for us," Claudia Warszawski, manager of the personal finance management of Navy Federal CU here, said due to the current real estate market.

Warszawski said the goal of Navy FCU is not to keep members in its credit-counseling program.
"Our goal is they are in it for a couple of years," she said. "We counsel them, and figure out what their problems are. Our biggest focus is education."

Navy FCU offers three different types of counseling: proactive counseling for those wanting to re-evaluate their situation and make sure they stay out of financial trouble, preventive counseling for those expecting to have a problem in the near future, and remedial counseling "for those that hit a brick wall and do not know which way to turn," Warszawski said.

"I don’t think a program without education is a solution," Warszawski stressed. "They need support. They need guidance. And they need education."

Warszawski also warns members about risky places to go when seeking help.

"I think members need to be very careful about what programs they get into," she said, noting that some places that offer settlement services do not inform members that a settlement still gets written as a bad debt.

Warszawski said there are ways credit unions can recognize a member is having difficulties before the problems become out of hand.

"It’s difficult because it used to be only people of lower-income," she said. "That’s not the case anymore. Now it’s across the board. As a credit union, we need to look at the members very closely. If a member is asking for more loans out of the ordinary that should send up a red flag that something is going on. I also think that all credit unions should be very involved in the education process."

Navy FCU starts that education process early, by hosting budget classes for high school juniors and seniors.

"I think that all financial organizations have a responsibility to teach," Warszawski said. "They can’t get it at home if their parents are not financially savvy."

Allan Stevens, vice president and senior loan officer for the Franklin Mint Federal Credit Union in Broomall, Penn., said he is not seeing more members seeking credit counseling at present. But for the cases they do receive, they have a set up a way to help.

"A couple of years ago, we partnered with a local non-profit credit-counseling organization–Consumer Credit Counseling Service of Delaware Valley–so that we can directly refer members there," he said. "Members speak to certified counselors that assist with credit counseling, bankruptcy avoidance an construction of debt management plans, as needed."

Franklin Mint FCU also assists members who have loans with the credit union and are in financial distress by considering refinancing, terms modifications and other approaches to make payments consistent and manageable for those with reduced income or increase debt burdens, Stevens said. He said that there is no question that these options help members.

"We cannot help 100% of those we speak to, but clearly most members receive assistance from us," he said.

Stevens said the best way credit unions can identify a problem before it grows, is through its staff members.

"Train, train, train," he advised. "We continue to be challenged by having our member contact associates aware of what we and Consumer Credit Counseling Service of Delaware Valley can do for our members."

At BALANCE, a financial education and counseling service in San Francisco, an increase in credit unions members seeking credit counseling is apparent.

"Our phones are ringing a lot more," said Jeannine Moore, vice president of marketing at BALANCE. "In the past people would call to fix a situation so they could buy a home or new car. Now the calls are from people wanting to keep their house. We’re speaking to more people who have fewer options."

What can be done to help these members depends on the situation, Moore said.
"It’s an individual thing," she said. "We may be able to negotiate with a creditor or lender. In every case we weigh the pros and cons of all of their options."

On the plus side, Moore said, people are eager to fix their situations.

"We’re really seeing people open to making changes," she said. Now more than ever it’s important for people to know there is a place to turn."

 

www.navyfcu.org
www.fmfcu.org
www.balancepro.net









"I write for the same reason I breathe - because if I didn't I would die."
Isaac Asimov

"The only reason for being a professional writer is that you just can't help it."
Leo Rosten

"It is impossible to discourage the real writers - they don't give a damn what you say, they're going to write."
Sinclair Lewis

"To be a well-favoured man is the gift of fortune; but to write and read comes by nature."
William Shakespeare

"Writing became such a process of discovery that I couldn't wait to get to work in the morning: I wanted to know what I was going to say."
Sharon O'Brien

"If the doctor told me I had six minutes to live, I'd type a little faster."
Isaac Asimov

"A synonym is a word you use when you can't spell the other one."
Baltasar Gracian

"When something can be read without effort, great effort has gone into its writing."
Enrique Jardiel Poncela

"What no wife of a writer can ever understand is that a writer is working when he's staring out of the window."
Burton Rascoe

"Writing is a way of talking without being interrupted."
Jules Renard

"Writing is a form of therapy; sometimes I wonder how all those who do not write, compose orpaint can manage to escape the madness, the melancholia, the panic far whichis inherent in a human situation."
Graham Greene

"Rewriting is like scrubbing the basement floor with a toothbrush."
Pete Murphy

"Writing is putting words on the paper until the voices in your head shut up."
Frank Fradella



Joyce Moed Joyce Moed About Me My Resume Writing Samples Contact Me