ACA International explained

ACA International
Type:Trade association
Status:Not-for-profit organisation
Purpose:Be the voice and provide resources to the receivables management industry.
Location City:Edina, Minnesota
Location Country:United States
Region Served:Worldwide
Services:Advocacy for the industry, members handbook and code of conduct
Language:English
Leader Title:President
Leader Name:Tim Haag
Funding:Membership fees
Formerly:American Collectors Association

ACA International is a trade group located in the United States representing debt collection agencies, creditors, debt buyers, collection attorneys, and debt collection industry service providers.

ACA International is based in Minneapolis and Washington, D.C. with members located throughout the U.S. and more than 60 other countries. The organization, through its members, representing more than 230,000 industry employees.[1]

History

In June 1939, the Pacific Coast Association of Collection Agencies and California Association of Collectors, held a joint convention in Oakland, California and launched the American Collectors Association with 273 members. The organization changed its name to ACA International in 2001.[2]

Industry overview

Collection agency services to their clients include billing, customer service, insurance verification, training, data clearinghouse services, and debt purchasing.

In 2010, third-party collection agencies recovered $54.8 billion on behalf of creditors, according to an economic impact survey conducted by Ernst & Young. These agencies help employ more than 300,000 employees with a payroll of $10 billion. In addition, third-party collection agencies contributed more than $85 million to charitable organizations and volunteered more than 650,000 hours in 2010.[3]

As the trade association representing these businesses, ACA International lobbies for public policy favorable to its members, provides training and credentialing resources, establishes ethical standards and promotes the value of the industry to businesses, policymakers and consumers.

Code of conduct

ACA members agree to abide by a code of conduct. The code establishes standards of conduct for the industry. The code requires members to treat consumers with dignity and respect, and to appoint an officer with authority to handle consumer complaints.[4] Under the code, ACA ceased the practice of investigating consumer complaints against members. Now, it instead forwards the complaint to the company with no follow-up or investigation.[5]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: About ACA International . 26 July 2016.
  2. Web site: An Abridged History of ACA . December 18, 2019 . ACA International .
  3. Web site: Impact of Third-Party Debt Collection on the National and State Economies. ACA. 19 March 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20140319012729/http://www.acainternational.org/economicimpact.aspx. 19 March 2014. dead.
  4. Web site: ACA Code of Conduct. https://web.archive.org/web/20160712213618/http://www.acainternational.org/about-aca-international-code-of-conduct-12909.aspx. 2016-07-12. dead.
  5. 2012. Dumping the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act. Journal of Consumer and Commercial Law.