Catch 22 - Why Congress Must Modernize the TCPA

catch 22 cover Catch 22   Why Congress Must Modernize the TCPAJoseph Heller does not get enough credit for coining the term "Catch 22". How many authors can claim a phrase that conveys so much meaning in two little words, immediately understood as a shorter yet more eloquent version of "between a rock and a hard place"?

In the book by the same name, Catch 22 was a military rule that said the only way to get out of a dangerous mission was to prove you were insane, but that if you wanted to get out of such a mission, it proved you were sane so you had to go.

While Heller's setting was World War II, he could easily have placed his characters in a more modern setting. Instead of focusing on a military bureaucracy intent on keeping soldiers in perpetual service, he could have written of government regulations that force American businesses to choose between keeping their customers satisfied or breaking the law.

Consider an airline. They are required by the Department of Transportation (DOT-OST-2010-0140) to promptly notify passengers of flight delays at the airport, on their website and on their telephone reservation system. Some airlines try to go the extra mile by proactively notifying passengers using interactive voice messages. But if a passenger provides their cell phone number as their point of contact, the airline would be violating the FCC's rules implementing the Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA) if they send such a message to a passenger without their prior "express consent". Sounds easy if the ticket is booked on the airline's own website - just add a click box for consent to the check-out process. However, getting consent is not so easy if the flight is booked by an independent travel agent over the phone. Catch 22.

And what about a mortgage servicer? Under Fannie Mae's servicing guidelines, they are required to attempt phone contact with delinquent borrowers every three days. Fannie wants servicers to make every possible effort to assist borrowers in avoiding foreclosure by communicating all the loan modification programs the government has made available. But if the borrower has provided a mobile number (and for 30% of American households, that is the only number they have), in most cases the servicer would be at legal risk if they used automatic dialing technology to make these calls. That's because the original lender failed to obtain the necessary consent when the loan was issued. Catch 22.

I could go on. Prescription refill reminders, credit card fraud alerts, COD package delivery notifications - all good for the consumer, but risky for the business under the current TCPA. That's why a coalition of sixteen business associations ranging from the American Bankers to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce came together to draft an amendment to the TCPA that has now been sponsored as a bill by a bi-partisan group of congressional representatives.

This week I went to Washington, D.C., to lobby for this bill, HR 3035 "The Mobile Informational Call Act of 2011", the primary intent of which is to remove the distinctions made in the TCPA between landline and mobile service when using "assistive technlogy" (dialers and recorded messages) to communicate with customers for informational, not marketing, purposes.

We may not be flying dangerous missions over well-defended enemy territory when we try to do the right thing by contacting customers with information they need, but we would still have to be insane to keep doing it in the face of our own Catch 22. The only sane thing to do is change the rules.

Related posts:

  1. Finally! Congress considers updating the TCPA
  2. Court Rules Consumer can Revoke Consent to be Autodialed
  3. Collections and the Increasingly Mobile Consumer
  4. SMS messages as a response to winter storms
  5. Welcome Calls are Effective Relationship Building Tool
Brian is Executive Director, Collections Solutions for Varolii Corporation. He joined Varolii in 2001, bringing more than 25 years of experience in collections operations and technology to the company. Prior to Varolii, he was Executive Director of Channel Development for Lucent Technologies CRM Solutions. He joined Lucent in July 1999, when the company acquired Mosaix, where Brian established the Professional Services division to deliver consulting and systems integration services focused on the collections market.

4 Comments on "Catch 22 - Why Congress Must Modernize the TCPA"

  1. Brian Moore says:

    The Energy & Commerce committee heard testimony Friday, November 4th on HR 3035 "The Mobile Informational Call Act of 2011". You can read a summary of the hearing from the ACA (http://bit.ly/stuDmT) or the prepared comments of the witnesses on the committee's web page (http://1.usa.gov/v7y3Iw).

    So how did we do? There were three witnesses in support and two in opposition. One of those in support was Faith Schwartz, executive director of HOPE NOW who spoke of the benefits of borrower-lender communication in preventing mortgage foreclosure...and how the TCPA as it is today is a significant barrier to that communication. Now where have I heard that before?

  2. George Rooney says:

    It's unfair to expect companies to comply with conflicting government regulations and mandates, but it happens all the time. Collection agencies face this in spades with the FDCPA. Hopefully congress will take on that law next after they fix the TCPA.

  3. scott ross says:

    Actually Brian, I think you need to look at the issue again. In implimenting the TCPA, the FCC has looked at the issues that you bring up. Defining "express consent" the FCC ruled that if a consumer provides a cellular telephone number to a business, that provides express consent to call the number with as you call them "assistive technology".

    Under the current law, in all of the situations you list, there would be no violation of the TCPA. There is no Catch 22. If a consumer provides a telephone number to company, it provides express consent to be called at that number

    • Brian Moore says:

      Scott, I wish that were the case but when the FCC made their declaratory ruling that "provision equals consent" they spoke only in the context of creditor-borrower relationships. So relationships not based on the extension of credit don't benefit from this ruling. Even credit based relationships are not completely in the clear, as at least one federal district court has found fault with the FCC ruling (Leckler vs. CashCall). Although this court's decision was successfully appealed on jurisdictional grounds, it emphasized the need to change the TCPA.

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