Millions of Americans are still grappling with debt they've accumulated since the recession hit. And new numbers out Monday show many are having a tougher time than you might think.

One in 10 working Americans between the ages of 35 and 44 are getting their wages garnished. That means their pay is being docked — often over an old credit card debt, medical bill or student loan.

That striking figure comes out of a collaboration between NPR and ProPublica. The reporting offers the first available national numbers on wage garnishment.

A 'Roundhouse' Punch

Back in 2009, Kevin Evans was one of millions of Americans blindsided by the recession. He had a 25-year career selling office furniture, but suddenly, companies stopped buying furniture. His income collapsed. He sold his three-bedroom home outside Kansas City that he could no longer afford.

For the next several years he worked a string of low-wage jobs: at a lumber yard, at a 24-hour fitness center. He rented a room from a friend. He never collected unemployment. But with a daughter in college and basic living expenses, he ended up with a $7,000 credit card debt that he says he couldn't pay. Evans, 58, had fallen from middle-class life into basic subsistence living.

Then late last year, he found a better-paying, full-time customer service job in Springfield, Mo. Things were finally getting better, until early this year, when he opened his paycheck and found a quarter of it missing. His credit card lender, Capital One, had garnished his wages.

Twice a month, whether he could afford it or not, 25 percent of his pay — the legal limit — would go to his debt, which had ballooned with interest and fees to more than $15,000. "It was a roundhouse from the right that just knocks you down and out," Evans says.

The recession and its aftermath have fueled an explosion of cases like Evans'. Creditors and collectors have pursued struggling cardholders and other debtors in court, securing judgments that allow them to seize a chunk of even meager earnings. The financial blow can be devastating — more than half of U.S. states allow creditors to take a quarter of after-tax wages. But despite the rise in garnishments, the number of Americans affected has remained unknown.

At the request of ProPublica, ADP, the nation's largest payroll services provider, undertook a study of payroll records for 13 million employees. ADP's report, released Monday, shows that among employees in the prime working ages of 35 to 44 who had their wages garnished in 2013, roughly half, unsurprisingly, owed child support. But a sizable number had their earnings docked for consumer debts, such as credit cards, medical bills and student loans.

Actually, for workers earning $25,000 to $40,000 a year, more people were garnished for consumer debt than for child support. This marks a dramatic change. In the past, the vast majority of wage garnishments went to secure child support payments or to collect on unpaid taxes. In recent years, though, debt collectors have been filing millions of lawsuits against people for just basic consumer debt: medical bills, student loans and credit card debt.

Extended to the entire population of U.S. employees, ADP's findings indicate that 4 million workers — about 3 percent of all employees — had wages taken for a consumer debt in 2013. People in some geographic regions and income groups had twice that rate of garnishment.

Carolyn Carter of the National Consumer Law Center says these findings are "alarming."

"States and the federal government should look on reforming our wage garnishment laws with some urgency," she says.

The increase in consumer debt seizures is "a big change," largely invisible to researchers because of the lack of data, says Michael Collins, faculty director of the Center for Financial Security at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. The potential financial hardship imposed by these seizures and their sheer number should grab the attention of policymakers, he says. "It is something we should care about."

High Garnishment Rates In The Midwest

ADP's study, the first large-scale look at how many employees are having their wages garnished and why, reveals what has been a hidden burden for working-class families. Wage seizures were most common among middle-aged, blue-collar workers and lower-income employees.

Nearly 5 percent of those earning between $25,000 and $40,000 per year had a portion of their wages diverted to pay down consumer debts alone in 2013, ADP found. More people in that income group were garnished to pay off consumer debt than to pay child support.

Perhaps due to the struggling economy in the region, the rate was highest in the Midwest. There, more than 6 percent of employees earning between $25,000 and $40,000 — 1 in 16 — had wages seized over consumer debt. Employees in the Northeast had the lowest rate. The statistics were not broken down by race.

Currently, debtors' fates depend significantly on where they happen to live. State laws vary widely. Four states — Texas, Pennsylvania, North Carolina and South Carolina — largely prohibit wage garnishment stemming from consumer debt.

Most states, however, allow creditors to seize a quarter of a debtor's wages — the highest rate permitted under federal law. Evans had the misfortune to live in Missouri, which not only allows creditors to seize 25 percent, but also allows them to continue to charge a high interest rate even after a judgment.

By early 2010, Evans had fallen so far behind that Capital One suspended his card. For months, he made monthly $200 payments toward his $7,000 debt, according to statements reviewed by NPR and ProPublica. But by this time, the payments barely kept pace with the interest piling on at 26 percent. In 2011, when Evans could no longer keep up, Capital One filed suit. Court records show that Evans was served a summons, but he says he didn't understand that the stack of paperwork he received included a summons with a hearing date to appear in court.

If Evans had lived in neighboring Illinois, the interest rate on his debt would have dropped to below 10 percent after his creditor had won a judgment in court. But in Missouri, creditors can continue to add the contractual rate of interest for the life of the debt, so Evans' bill kept mounting. Missouri law also allowed Capital One to tack on a $1,200 attorney fee. Some other states cap such fees to no more than a few hundred dollars.

Evans has involuntarily paid over $6,000 this year on his old debt, an average of about $480 each paycheck, but he still owes more than $10,000. "It's my debt. I want to pay it," Evans says. But "I need to come up with large quantities of money so I don't just keep getting pummeled."

Capital One says in a statement that legal action is always a last resort. The company says it tried to work with Evans but that he was unable to keep up with the payments on a payment plan that he had agreed to.

The Garnishment Process

Companies can also seize funds from a borrower's bank account. There is no data on how frequently this happens, even though it is a common recourse for collectors. Among the people interviewed by NPR and ProPublica who were having their wages garnished, more often than not, debt collectors had also made attempts to seize money from their bank accounts. Some people we interviewed say they had stopped keeping money in banks as a result.

The garnishment process for most debts begins in local courts. A company can file suit as soon as a few months after a debtor falls behind. A ProPublica review of court records in eight states shows the bulk of lawsuits are filed by just a few types of creditors and companies. Besides major credit card lenders such as Capital One, medical debt is a major source of such suits. High-cost lenders who deal in payday and installment loans also file suits by the thousands. And finally, an outsized portion comes from debt buyers — companies that purchase mostly unpaid credit card bills.

When these creditors and collectors go to court, they are almost always represented by an attorney. Defendants — usually in tough financial straits or unfamiliar with the court system — almost never are.

In Clay County, Mo., where Capital One brought its suit against Evans in 2011, only 7 percent of defendants in debt collection cases have their own attorneys, according to ProPublica's review of state court data. Often the debtors don't show up to court at all: The most common outcome of a debt collection lawsuit in Missouri (and any other state) is a judgment by default.

Millions of debt collection lawsuits are filed every year in local courts. In 2011, for instance, the year Capital One went to court against Evans, more than 100,000 such suits were filed in Missouri alone.

Despite these numbers, creditors and debt collectors say they only pursue lawsuits and garnishments against consumers after other collection attempts fail. "Litigation is a very high-cost mechanism for trying to collect a debt," says Rob Foehl, general counsel at the Association of Credit and Collection Professionals. "It's really only a small percentage of outstanding debts that go through the process."

Experts in garnishment say they've seen a clear shift in the type of debts that are pursued. A decade ago, child support accounted for the overwhelming majority of pay seizures, said Amy Bryant, a consultant who advises employers on payroll issues and has written a book on garnishment laws.

"The emphasis is now on creditor garnishments," she says.

Bryant also says the rise in garnishments has become an unanticipated burden for employers.

"It becomes very complicated," she says, particularly for national employers who must navigate the differences in state laws. "It's very easy to make a mistake in the process." If an employer does not correctly handle a garnishment order, she says, it can become liable for a portion or even the entirety of the debt in some states.

The burden was enough to prompt the American Payroll Association to request in 2011 that the Uniform Law Commission draft a model state law on wage garnishment. Bryant said employers are hoping that the new law, which is still being drafted, will be adopted by a large number of states and reduce complications.

What's it like for a family trying to live on wages reduced by old debts? On Tuesday, NPR and ProPublica will examine how much creditors and debt collectors are allowed to take from debtors' wages and bank accounts, and how it impacts their lives.

If you have first-hand experience being sued over a debt, NPR and ProPublica would love to hear from you. Use this form to send a tip confidentially. A reporter may follow up with you.

Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Transcript

STEVE INSKEEP, HOST:

Millions of Americans are still paying off debts from the Great Recession, whether they want to or not. Maybe you've had that experience of deciding which bill needs to be paid first; some people have that decision taken out of their hands. One out of 10 working Americans between the ages of 35 and 44 are getting their wages garnished. That means their pay is being docked, often over an old credit card debt or medical bill or student loan. That striking figure comes out of a collaboration between NPR News and ProPublica. The reporting offers the first available national numbers on wage garnishment, and we're going to talk about that this morning with NPR's Chris Arnold. Welcome to the program, Chris.

CHRIS ARNOLD, BYLINE: Thanks, Steve.

INSKEEP: And also with us, Paul Kiel. He is a reporter for ProPublica. Welcome to you.

PAUL KIEL: Thanks.

INSKEEP: So what's happening?

ARNOLD: Well, Steve, for decades, wage garnishment has been out there as a way that if people get divorced and you want to make sure the father's going to pay the child support, the court will insist that the wages be garnished. So that has to happen. That still goes on. It's a big chunk of what goes on, but what's new here is that nobody understood how much this now is being used for just regular, old consumer debt, like you said - credit cards, medical debt. And even national experts, people who track this stuff, who study consumer finance, we took this to them, and they were pretty taken aback by the numbers that we turned up here.

INSKEEP: So, Paul, you're saying that instead of calling you and trying to negotiate with you or urging you to pay your debt, the company gets the power to simply grab assets of yours and take them as its own?

KIEL: Right. And what happens first, though, is they have to go to court - they see you in court - and during the years of the recession particularly, there was just explosion of these types of suits filed in court. And what happens most of the time is people don't show up for a variety of reasons, but once they have that judgment then, they can go and get the wages at any time.

INSKEEP: Are there limits on what a company could take from you? Could they just empty your bank account, for example, or take all of your paycheck?

KIEL: There are. About half the states in the country rely on a federal law - which some would say is outdated; it goes back to 1968 - it caps garnishments at 25 percent of your after-tax income.

Now, for half of America who might have trouble paying to get their car fixed, 25 percent of your paycheck week after week, month after month, sometimes this goes on for years, arguably that is very tough to afford, but the ability to afford this is not something that's taking into consideration.

INSKEEP: And let's make sure we're clear here - we are talking about people who have debts. There's been a court judgment in fact that it seems to be a legitimate debt, but you're saying that people may have their financial future taken away from them and not even quite realize what's happening?

KIEL: Right. A lot of the people we talk to, and Paul can talk about this, too, they want to pay. It's just they're being asked to pay too much.

INSKEEP: So, Paul, how did you measure exactly how many Americans are in this situation? How did you find this 1 out of 10 figure for people in their 30s and 40s?

ARNOLD: Right, so there's a company called ADP, which is the largest payroll services provider in the country and also handle garnishment issues for companies. And so we approached them since they have this massive database to ask them to do an analysis. And this, you know, is particularly important because there's just no numbers on this on a national level at all. And so what they did is they looked at payroll data for 13 million employees. It was their database. It was a very large sample. And today they are releasing the report with these new numbers.

KIEL: And we actually have some tape here from Ahu Yildirmaz, and she heads up the ADP Research Institute. They did the study, and here we asked her to sort of extrapolate, OK, what does this mean for all of America?

AHU YILDIRMAZ: We would estimate 9 to 10 million people, employees, are being garnished today, and these employees are primarily blue-collar workers. Garnishment rates were highest among those earning between 25,000 to 40,000 per year.

INSKEEP: Oh, so we're talking about people for the most part who are below the median income in this country already struggling. And, Paul, is this more people having their wages garnished than would've been true a few years ago?

KIEL: Yes. It's definitely the case. We've spoken to people who've have dealt with payroll for decades, and they said there's really been a sea change in the last 10 years or so.

INSKEEP: Well, Chris, I understand you've been talking to some of the people who've been in this situation. Can you tell us a story?

ARNOLD: Sure. What we're going to hear today and tomorrow from some of those people - and first we're going to hear from Kevin Evans who was making about $75,000 a year as a sales manager. This was back before the recession. He lives in Missouri, and he'd been in that line of work selling office furniture for 25 years. He owned a nice three-bedroom house outside of Kansas City, Missouri.

KEVIN EVANS: Not fancy or anything, but nice and middle-class and all that. And you just figure, you know, you're going to be there forever.

ARNOLD: The house cost $112,000 - so affordable for Evans, but then the recession hit. And, Steve, as you might imagine nobody buys office furniture in the middle of a recession, and Evans' income dropped by half.

EVANS: And at the same time, my daughter was going away to college, and so my expenses were increasing.

ARNOLD: Then Evans lost his job completely.

EVANS: Frankly, I never assumed much debt.

ARNOLD: And he didn't want to, so he sold his house. And he showed us around his tiny apartment that he's renting these days in Springfield, Missouri.

EVANS: I now live in a one-bedroom, efficiency apartment that the living room and kitchen is one. I literally have my kayak on one end in the kitchen.

ARNOLD: The kayak's kind of leaning up against the stove.

EVANS: In front of the stove.

ARNOLD: And so, Steve, during Evans' fall from happy, middle-class life, he worked a series of low-wage jobs - at a lumber yard, at a 24-hour fitness - he never collected unemployment. But along the way, he ended up with about $7,000 on a Capital One credit card. By the end of 2009, he'd fallen behind on those payments and Capital One closed his account in 2010.

EVANS: I'm not blaming my situation on anybody else. It was my debt. I want to pay it. I always did want to pay it. I thought, you know, no problem.

ARNOLD: Now, as the economy's recovered, starting about a year ago, Kevin's actually getting better paying jobs again - some sales jobs. It's not what he was making, but he's sort of on his way back. And so that's when Capital One's debt collectors started garnishing 25 percent of his paycheck for that old debt, and that old debt had been ballooning in size. And credit cards tend to do this. So the $7,000 he owed in 2010, that grew to $15,000 late last year because of the interests. And the lawyers' fees, and Evans was running around, doing all kinds of stuff, trying to manage his life when he saw that he was shocked.

EVANS: It's still racking up almost 30 percent interest rate, and I need to somehow come up with large quantities of money to pay this down as fast as possible so that I don't just keep getting pummeled, just beaten.

ARNOLD: Capital One said in a statement to NPR and ProPublica that legal action is always a last resort and that it tried to work with Evans, but he didn't complete a payment plan that they'd agreed to. Also court records show that Kevin Evans was served with a summons to appear in court when Capital One sued him. Kevin says if it was a summons, he didn't understand that. In any case, when defendants don't show up in court, things don't tend to go their way.

(SOUNDBITE OF COURT HEARING)

UNIDENTIFIED MAN #1: Capital One Bank versus a fellow parolee.

ARNOLD: So ProPublica's Paul Kiel and I were just in Missouri. We sat in on one of these hearings. This one was at the Clay County District Court House outside Kansas City and Associate Circuit Judge Lewis Angliss (ph) presided over a long docket of credit card companies and hospitals and other outfits suing people over debts. Most people who were getting sued didn't show up in court, but the lawyers for the plaintiffs of course did show up in court.

(SOUNDBITE OF COURT HEARING)

LEWIS ANGLISS: New Liberty Hospital versus Stephen Rorrick (ph) and Michelle Rorrick (ph).

MAN #1: I'd ask for a default judgment.

ARNOLD: It's all very clerical, actually - it's like default judgment after default judgment, papers shuffling around, but in each one of these cases, there's a person who now stands to get their wages garnished or in some cases their entire bank account seized.

KARI FIOTI: You've taken everything I have. You're not just taking a portion of it. You're taking my livelihood.

ARNOLD: That's Kari Fioti (ph) who lives near Omaha, Nebraska. Debt collectors seized everything in her checking account over a medical debt. She broke her wrist and says she couldn't afford the hospital bills. We'll hear from her and other people's stories tomorrow, and we're going to look at the rules governing just how much debt collectors are allowed to take from people after they get a court judgment against them.

INSKEEP: Chris, thanks very much.

ARNOLD: Thanks, Steve.

INSKEEP: That NPR's Chris Arnold. We also heard from Paul Kiel of ProPublica. Thanks to you.

KIEL: Thank you. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

300x250 Ad

Support quality journalism, like the story above, with your gift right now.

Donate