Ohioans for Financial Freedom: Bill Faith should stop lies, disclose funding
August 22, 2008 | Bill Faith, COHHIO, Ohio, industry, industry critics, regulation, states | Comments (0)Here’s the hot off the press news release:
Committee Says Bill Faith Should Stop Perpetuation of Lies
Disclose Spending
Columbus― The Committee of Ohioans For Financial Freedom today responded to Bill Faith’s ongoing efforts to confuse Ohio voters.
“We have fully investigated these bogus allegations and yet Mr. Faith continues to perpetuate lies – especially about Butler County where we have documented evidence from the Secretary of State and Butler County Board of Elections, that our circulators were NOT there,” said Kim Norris spokesperson for Ohioans For Financial Freedom. “Rather than perpetuate lies, the public would be better served by knowing who is paying for Bill Faith’s campaign – he should report where the money is coming from.”
The Committee investigated this allegation of two homeless individuals allegedly being paid $1.00 for their signatures and found it to be completely false, and asked Bill Faith to immediately retract this false allegation, and any references to it on his website or any other website maintained by his organizations.
The Committee did not obtain the Attorney General’s certification of its summary of the law to be referred until late in the day on July 10, 2008. Circulation of the Committee’s referendum petition did not begin until July 12, 2008. It is impossible for either Mr. Schirmer or Ms. Smithers to have signed the Committee’s referendum petition in June, let alone to have been paid for doing so.
The Committee was required to collect at least 1,000 signatures for each of its three preliminary petitions submitted to the Secretary of State and the Attorney General for their certifications, all of which were submitted to the Secretary of State and the Attorney General on June 9, 25, and 27, 2008. The Committee reviewed the signatures collected for these preliminary petition efforts, and discovered that no signatures from Butler County were collected for any of these three preliminary petitions. This is consistent with the Secretary of State’s certifications for the Committee’s three preliminary petitions, all of which indicate that no signatures were submitted from Butler County for any of the preliminary petitions. So, neither Mr. Schirmer nor Ms. Smithers signed any of the Committee’s preliminary referendum petitions.
Also, the Committee has reviewed all of the part-petitions and signatures collected thus far from Butler County and neither Mr. Schirmer’s nor Ms. Smithers’ signature appears on any of the Committee’s part-petitions, at least through August 12, 2008, the date this allegation was made.
Ohioans For Financial Freedom is currently circulating petitions in Ohio with summary language approved by the Attorney General. It:
- Repeals section (3) of H.B. 545 offering consumers more lending options
- Allows for short-terms loans to be made under H.B. 545
Repealing Section 3 of H.B. 545 means protecting 6,000 good-paying jobs with benefits, protecting Ohioans’ financial freedom and protecting consumers’ rights to privacy about their personal financial choices.
-30-
(The Payday Pundit: If any of our readers know where Bill Faith and Ohio’s anti-payday lending crowd gets its money, please email us. The reporters in Ohio won’t do their jobs, so we’ll have to do it for them.)
Ohio update!
August 22, 2008 | Bill Faith, COHHIO, Ohio, industry, industry critics, media coverage, regulation, states | Comments (0)Too late to change referendum language. Read it here:
Ohio Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner won’t review the approved ballot language for a proposed referendum on the state’s new payday lending law, a spokesman from Brunner’s office said.
Ohio Ballot Board members William Morgan and state Sen. Keith Faber, R-Celina, Thursday had asked that Brunner convene an emergency meeting to review the ballot language. In a letter, Morgan and Faber complained that the ballot language adopted for Issue 5 could mislead or deceive voters.
Let’s sum up the Ohio payday lending battle
August 22, 2008 | Bill Faith, Columbus Dispatch, Ohio, industry, industry critics, media coverage, regulation, states | Comments (2)Never mind, this blogger at the Columbus Dispatch did it for us.
Toledo Blade has egg on its face
August 19, 2008 | Bill Faith, Ohio, Toledo Blade, industry, industry critics, media coverage, regulation, states | Comments (0)This nasty editorial about the signature gathering tactics of Ohioans for Financial Freedom was obviously written before the news that Bill Faith–Ohio’s anti-payday lending crusader–has been called on to retract his accusations. You can read the news release calling for a retraction here or the full text of the release two posts below.
Breaking News from Ohio
August 18, 2008 | Bill Faith, Ohio, local issues, regulation | Comments (0)Committee Calls on Bill Faith To Retract False Statement
Columbus― The Committee of Ohioans For Financial Freedom today demanded Bill Faith immediately retract completely false allegations he made about circulators allegedly paying two individuals $1.00 to sign a petition, or face serious legal actions.
“The Committee has investigated this allegation of two homeless individuals allegedly being paid $1.00 for their signatures and found it to be completely false, and so we have asked Bill Faith to immediately retract this false allegation, and any references to it on his website or any other website maintained by his organizations,” said Ohioans For Financial Freedom’s Kim Norris.
In a letter to Bill Faith from William Todd, representing the Committee, Todd says, “The Committee has diligently investigated this allegation and has determined that it is completely and utterly false and without any foundation in fact. As you are acutely aware, the Committee did not obtain the Attorney General’s certification of its summary of the law to be referred until late in the day on July 10, 2008. Consequently, allowing time for the printing of the petition forms, circulation of the Committee’s referendum petition did not begin until July 12, 2008. It was, therefore, impossible for either Mr. Schirmer or Ms. Smithers to have signed the Committee’s referendum petition in June, let alone to have been paid for doing so.”
The letter points out that the Committee was required to collect at least 1,000 signatures for each of its three preliminary petitions submitted to the Secretary of State and the Attorney General for their certifications, all of which were submitted to the Secretary of State and the Attorney General on June 9, 25, and 27, 2008. The Committee reviewed the signatures collected for these preliminary petition efforts, and discovered that no signatures from Butler County were collected for any of these three preliminary petitions. This is consistent with the Secretary of State’s certifications for the Committee’s three preliminary petitions, all of which indicate that no signatures were submitted from Butler County for any of the preliminary petitions. So, neither Mr. Schirmer nor Ms. Smithers signed any of the Committee’s preliminary referendum petitions.
Also, the Committee has reviewed all of the part-petitions and signatures collected thus far from Butler County and neither Mr. Schirmer’s nor Ms. Smithers’ signature appears on any of the Committee’s part-petitions, at least through August 12, 2008, the date this allegation was made.
Ohioans For Financial Freedom is currently circulating petitions in Ohio with summary language approved by the Attorney General. It:
- Repeals section (3) of H.B. 545 offering consumers more lending options
- Allows for short-terms loans to be made under H.B. 545
Repealing Section 3 of H.B. 545 means protecting 6,000 good-paying jobs with benefits, protecting Ohioans’ financial freedom and protecting consumers’ rights to privacy about their personal financial choices.
Leave the sarcasm to us
August 17, 2008 | Akron Beacon Journal, Bill Faith, COHHIO, Ohio, industry, industry critics, media coverage, regulation, states | Comments (1)We believe that we can do sarcasm better than any newspaper, especially this one. It think it’s fair to say a Pulitizer Prize is not in this publication’s future.
This must have hurt
August 15, 2008 | Bill Faith, Cleveland Plain Dealer, Columbus Dispatch, Ohio, industry, industry critics, media coverage, regulation, states | Comments (0)The Cleveland Plain Dealer, the most vehemently anti-payday lending paper in Ohio, had to write this headline and lead this morning:
Payday Lenders Win Fight on Ballot Language to overturn reforms
Columbus–Chalk one up for the payday lending industry.
Read the rest of the article here.
And the Columbus Dispatch story is here.
Comment of the day II
August 13, 2008 | Bill Faith, COHHIO, Ohio, industry, regulation, states | Comments (0)In response to our Blah, Blah, Blah post about the accusation of activist groups against petition gatherers, we received this comment from CJ:
Liberal media strikes again. No proof. No nothin’. Is the Gov. of Ohio THAT afraid of letting this issue be put on the ballot for THE PEOPLE to decide??????
Strip club spokeswoman leading charge against payday lenders in Ohio
August 13, 2008 | Bill Faith, COHHIO, Columbus Dispatch, Ohio, customers, employees, industry, industry critics, media coverage, regulation, states | Comments (2)Last year, Sandy Thies was the spokesman for a strip club referendum in Ohio, according to this story. In that capacity, she defended the industry against charges that petition gatherers were not telling the truth. Now she’s out there accusing RejectHB545 petition gathers of being misleading. Can she be taken seriously?
Update: We were just informed that Sandy is a female. Note the pronoun changes.
Blah, blah, blah in Ohio
August 13, 2008 | Bill Faith, COHHIO, Ohio, industry, industry critics, media coverage, regulation, states | Comments (2)The anti-payday lending mob in Ohio may have found one referendum signature gatherer who crossed the line. They’re trying to make a federal case of it. This is typical of the tactics used during referendum campaigns. Next, they will be challenging the signatures. Here are a few stories on the issue: WCPO,WHIO, Middleton Journal.