In Missouri, for instance, 94,883 people claimed unemployment benefits through debit cards from Central Bank. Analysts say a recipient uses a card an average of six to 10 times a month. If each cardholder makes three withdrawals at an out-of-network ATM, at a fee of $1.75, the bank would collect nearly $500,000. If half of the cardholders also dial customer service three times in any given week (the first time is free; after that, it's 25 cents a call), the bank's revenue would jump to more than $521,000. That would yield $6.3 million a year.
Rachel Storch, a Democratic state representative, received a wave of complaints about the fees from autoworkers laid off from a suburban St. Louis Chrysler plant. She recently urged Gov. Jay Nixon to review the state's contract with Central Bank with an eye toward reducing the fees.
"I think the contract is unfair and potentially illegal to unemployment recipients," she said.
The easiest way to avoid fees is to withdraw all funds at once from a debit card account, then deposit the money in your regular checking account. Link -via Cynical-C
(image credit: Free Digital Photos)
They're getting benefits stolen from others, so they're lucky to be getting anything.
lucky?..
And what's worse than being very poor is being a working poor.
HOWEVER, I don't understand why they waste postage to inform me every time I claim on a holiday week that I don't get benefits for holidays. I know that, I'm the one who said I had a holiday when I claimed for the week!
My state (Michigan) has the option to go to direct deposit, but no matter how hard I try I can't seem to get it switched, which is a giant pain because out of all my bills, I can only pay one with a credit card, and that bill is going away soon anyway.
Who dials customer service three times a year?
And charging anything for customer service is just plain wrong, if you are a customer then it is their obligation to help you with anything related to the business transaction... I feel sorry for those in states that do everything possible to keep them from opting out of scams like this.