• Home
  • About
  • Links

Feeds:
Posts
Comments

San Francisco lawsuit: Odds stacked against consumers in arbitration cases

April 7, 2008 by Joe Newman

As someone who has spent a fair amount of time inside casinos, I know a little bit about the house odds and which games give me the best shot of coming out on top. Play the pass line on craps. Don’t play the bonus bet on Pai Gow and stay the hell away from the slot machines. Then consider these numbers from Nathan Koppel’s Wall Street Journal article about the city of San Francisco suing one of those arbitration companies that settles disputes between consumers and credit card companies: “From 2003 through March 31, 2007, 18,075 consumers’ arbitrations in California were resolved through hearings conducted by the NAF, according to the suit, citing data reported by the NAF. Thirty of the matters, or fewer than 0.2%, were won by consumers.” Talk about the odds being stacked in the house’s favor.

Kia Franklin at Tortdeform points out some links about the issue that have appeared on that blog. As Kia points out, many consumers don’t realize how much they’re giving up when they agree to the terms of service on credit cards that require binding arbitration as the method of settling disputes.

Yet despite all the whoops and hollers, it seems that many people are either a) unaware that binding mandatory arbitration agreements exist, and to such a pervasive extent, or b) unconvinced that binding mandatory arbitration poses fairness problems for the individuals who find themselves in a dispute and restricted to this forum for resolution of the dispute.

The San Francisco suit is picking up where a Public Citizen report released last year left off. Read the report and come to your own conclusions about a U.S. Chamber of Commerce survey released last week that says a majority of consumers would prefer to take their complaints to arbitration than to court.

The Chamber is trying to build its case against Arbitration Fairness Act (S. 1782/H.R. 3010), which would protect consumers by allowing them to have other choices besides binding arbitration.

Do you think the people who say they’d prefer arbitration would feel that way if they had all the facts about arbitration before answering the question? Don’t bet on it.

[Update: Here's the San Francisco Chronicle story on the lawsuit]

Posted in Consumer Protection | 3 Comments

3 Responses

  1. on April 7, 2008 at 9:37 pm Cindy

    RE: “Do you think they people who say they’d prefer arbitration would feel that way if they had all the facts about arbitration before answering the question?”

    No, I don’t think people would favor giving up a constitutional right of a jury trial in favor of a private, and often rigged, process that their opponent had set up before a dispute even arose. They also wouldn’t prefer it if they knew it could have undisclosed high costs. I seriously doubt any of the polled people knew much about arbitration at all. I also seriously doubt the poll was even conducted in a non slanted manner. Polls, surveys, and stastisics can skew the thruth. It’s something Corporate America pays real money for. They may call it a “study” or “public relations” but it’s just spin. What else can you expect from a business organization but business-protection?


  2. on April 15, 2008 at 11:06 am Kia Franklin

    Apparently Corporate America also pays big bucks to get editorials published in WaPo and other national papers to promote their bogus studies and pro-business (anti-people) policies. Yuck.

    Thanks for drawing attention to this!


  3. on May 29, 2008 at 2:42 pm Nothing fair about mandatory arbitration « citizenvox.org

    [...] arbitration system forced on consumers by credit card companies and other businesses. I’ve posted about mandatory binding arbitration but this report has an unbelievable example of how stacked the system is against consumers. These [...]



Comments are closed.

  • Follow Our Tweets!

    • Reposting this since the video didn't embed last time. Our facebook fans rock! Thank you for your support and happy... http://bit.ly/4zLikr 3 days ago
    • Happy holidays from Public Citizen! http://bit.ly/6f2kMa 5 days ago
  • Support Our Work

  • Socialize With Us

  • Categories

  • Recent Comments

    Jewell Geralds on Public Citizen rallies against…
    damar on The single-payer solution
    Collin on Happy holidays from Public…
    Barbara Feder Ostrov on This columnist will tell you w…
    More than 125,500 te… on End abuses by government defen…
  • Public Citizen Blogs

    • Citizen Energy
    • Consumer Law & Policy Blog
    • Eyes on Trade
    • Texas Vox
    • Watchdog Blog
  • Sites That Link Here

    • All Things Reform
    • Bankster
    • demosdemos
    • Mesothelioma
    • Neurodiversity Weblog
    • Senior Moments
    • Some Carolinian
    • Some Old Bird
    • The Pop Tort
    • The Punk Patriot
    • TortDeform
    • Truth to Power
  • Flickr Photos

    thank you

    'Don't Nuke the Climate' Street Theater

    'Don't Nuke the Climate' Street Theater

    More Photos
  • Watch videos at Vodpod and other videos from this collection.
  • Tags

    access to justice Activism arbitration bailout banking big oil big pharma Campaign Finance Citizens United Congress Consumer Protection corporate power credit cards Don't Get Rolled economics economy Energy energy & climate EPA Ethics fair trade FDA financial reform free trade fuel economy global warming government reform Halliburton Health health & safety health care health care delivery health care reform health reform lobbying and government ethics lobbyists money in politics NHTSA obama oil single-payer Supreme Court Transportation wall street wto
  • Archives

  • Meta

    • Log in
    • Entries RSS
    • Comments RSS
    • WordPress.com
  • Spam Blocked

    15,765 spam comments
    blocked by
    Akismet

Blog at WordPress.com.

Theme: Mistylook by Sadish.