Cleveland Savings Plan Goes National
April 3, 2002 The Cleveland Plain Dealer by Elizabeth Auster
Washington - A savings program launched in Cleveland that offers free financial advice is being expanded nationwide.
The new program, run by the Consumer Federation of America and the
Financial Planning Association, will allow Americans anywhere to
arrange a free session with a financial planner by phone or e-mail, the
groups said.
The advice will generally be limited to about 30 minutes, and the
only cost will come in cases where a phone call cannot be arranged
locally, resulting in long-distance charges, the groups said. Although
the program is intended primarily to help poor and middle-income
people, it will be open to everyone, said Bob Barry, president of the
financial planning group. About 500 members of his group will volunteer
to handle calls, he said.
"We think it's critically important that all Americans, not only the
wealthy, have access to competent and ethical financial advice," Barry
said.
People interested in the program first would have to join America
Saves, a more modest national version of a pilot program known as
Cleveland Saves.
The Cleveland program, officially launched by the nonprofit consumer
group about a year ago, now has 1,400 participants who have agreed to
increase their savings in exchange for free coaching, advice and other
help.
To join the national program, people would have to complete a short
form in which they set a savings goal and agree to make a monthly
deposit or debt payment towards that goal. Forms are available at www.AmericaSaves.org.
People who sign up for the program will be eligible to arrange a consultation by calling 800-647-6340.
It may be possible in some instances to arrange a second session,
but the program is not meant to provide a full consultation that
includes a detailed analysis of a person's finances, said Stephen
Brobeck, executive director of the Consumer Federation of America.
(SEE CORRECTION NOTE)At a news conference yesterday, the two groups
also released results of a survey showing that 53 percent of Americans
believe it is more important to plan financially as a result of the
Sept. 11 attacks. The survey, conducted last month, showed that blacks
and Americans between the ages of 25 and 34 were most likely to say
that the events of Sept. 11 made financial planning more important.
CORRECTION-DATE: April 4, 2002
CORRECTION: Because of an editing error, a story on Page C3 of
yesterday's Business section contained ambiguous wording. The story,
which was continued from Page C1, should have quoted a survey as
showing that the two groups most likely to say that the events of Sept.
11 make financial planning more important were black Americans of all
ages and Americans of all races between the ages of 25 and 34.
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