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Petition against 'toxic swaps' from Grassroots Collaborative...

The campaign against so-called "toxic swaps" (variable rate government bond deals that cost millions of dollars if the rates go the wrong way -- and have) continued into July 2016, as Chicago's Grassroots Collaborative turned in a petition against the deals and demanding that the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) investigate the swaps.

According to a July 7 press release:

Press Release: Over 88,000 Petitioners Demand SEC Action on Toxic Swap Deals

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: July 7, 2016

Contact: Nathan Ryan 920-445-3920 / nathan@grassrootscollaborative.org

National Outcry on Same Bad Bank Deals That Could Cost Illinois Taxpayers $870 Million in November if No Action Taken

Photos available here

On Thursday, Grassroots Collaborative joined with organizations across the country including Americans for Financial Reform, CREDO Action, Rootstrikers and the Center for Popular Democracy to deliver a petition in which more than 80,000 Americans asked the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to investigate the toxic swap deals squeezing cities and states across the country.

The 80,000 petitions were delivered to the SEC’s Chicago Regional Office. At the delivery, State Representatives Chris Welch and Robert Martwick were joined by Alderman Carlos Rosa. Also present were over a dozen community leaders, teachers, and social service providers.

These toxic swap deals contributed to budget shortfalls that led to schools closing in Chicago, water shutoffs in Baltimore, and devastating environmental and health issues in Los Angeles. These same bad deals also helped lead to the bankruptcy of Jefferson County, Alabama and Detroit, Michigan. The state of Illinois has already lost over $684 million to Wall Street banks on these deals and could be on the hook for an additional $870 million on November 27th if action is not taken.

In many cases, it appears that banks misrepresented the risk of these deals to cities, or omitted key information, in violation of fair dealing rules. The SEC has the power to order Wall Street to give back any ill-gotten gains if it finds evidence of wrongdoing. On Thursday, taxpayers and elected officials will ask them to do just that.

“These toxic swap deals have cost taxpayers across the country billions of dollars,” said Saqib Bhatti, Director of the ReFund America Project. “Because elected officials like Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel have refused to lift a finger to recoup losses, the SEC must act as the last line of defense to protect taxpayers’ interests so that we can fully fund services in our communities.”

“Predatory Wall Street deals are costing Chicago and other American cities billions of dollars,” said CREDO Political Director Murshed Zaheed. “It is long past time for the Securities and Exchange Commission to stop sitting on the sidelines and start protecting our communities from big banks.”

“In many places around the country, big banks appear to have violated their legal obligations of ‘fair dealing’ by overstating the benefits and understating the risks of deals that are now leaching billions of dollars from taxpayers and communities,” said Lisa Donner, Executive Director of Americans for Financial Reform. “The SEC should use their authority to investigate these deals, and to order disgorgement of ill-gotten gains if it finds evidence of wrongdoing.”

“The toxic swaps Wall Street peddled to our cities and towns are part of a parasitic business model that drains wealth from the real economy rather than creating value,” said Kurt Walters, campaign director of the Rootstrikers project at Demand Progress. “The SEC must launch an immediate investigation into how these toxic deals were pushed on our cities and towns – and force bankers responsible for fraudulent sales to return all ill-gotten profits back to the public.”

Erica Rangel, with Enlace Chicago, which operates one of two remaining CeaseFire sites operating in the state of Illinois told the crowd, “Right now the state of Illinois is cutting life-saving programs like CeaseFire, LIHEAP, and Senior HomeCare. The money being used to pay out on these toxic swaps isn’t being pulled out of thin air - it is coming from our communities and our programs. We need the SEC to understand the deadly consequences of these swap deals, this last weekend in Chicago we had 64 shootings. How many shootings could funding of vital anti-violence and social services prevented?”

“Across the country, people are calling on the SEC to investigate a small clique of banks that have drained massive public resources through complicated and likely illegal interest rate swap deals,” Illinois State Senator Daniel (D-17) told Grassroots Collaborative prior to the delivery. “Governor Rauner should not voluntarily pay out on these deals and seek to renew letters of credit with the state to ensure that the SEC has enough time to launch a thorough investigation of these deals. Our money should be going to schools and services not Wall Street banks.”

Photos available here

The petition signatures come from:

CREDO Action (61,008 signers)

Americans for Financial Reform and the Center for Popular Democracy (12,818 signers)

Rootstrikers (13,041 signers)

Grassroots Collaborative (911 signatures)



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