I rarely, if ever, get "outraged" - but this takes the cake. All you "seasoned citizens" might want to check this out. Letter to the editor.
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AARP / Hartford outrage â Warning.
I cannot believe what happened yesterday when I checked my AARP/Hartford auto policy renewal online. First off, my wife and I are in our 50s, good driving records, no claims during previous year. We are being severely penalized because we donât have the need for credit cards. We paid cash for our house and cars. We donât use credit cards (preferring debit cards, and âpay as you goâ), thus we have no record of a FICO score. Our premium was around $1600 for two cars this year. They show an increase of over $1,000 for next year. I was shocked, so I called Hartford. They said that in 2001, when I was eligible for AARP and started using their Hartford insurance, they checked my credit, and they received the same answer, nothing to report. They checked again in 2007, still nothing, but they âchanged their policy about giving neutral status to those who donât show up on credit reports.â
My wife and I are being penalized by our insurance carrier for not having run up credit card bills. I was told âyou should get a credit card, or finance purchases.â With all the sub-prime lenders causing excessive turmoil in our stock and fixed income markets, and with most of the U.S. citizenry up to their eyeballs in debt with little or no savings, weâre the âquestionableâ ones.
If you have AARP/Hartford, you better check your credit score, unbelievable. This is nonsense.
Don Bright
Henderson
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Don
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AARP / Hartford outrage â Warning.
I cannot believe what happened yesterday when I checked my AARP/Hartford auto policy renewal online. First off, my wife and I are in our 50s, good driving records, no claims during previous year. We are being severely penalized because we donât have the need for credit cards. We paid cash for our house and cars. We donât use credit cards (preferring debit cards, and âpay as you goâ), thus we have no record of a FICO score. Our premium was around $1600 for two cars this year. They show an increase of over $1,000 for next year. I was shocked, so I called Hartford. They said that in 2001, when I was eligible for AARP and started using their Hartford insurance, they checked my credit, and they received the same answer, nothing to report. They checked again in 2007, still nothing, but they âchanged their policy about giving neutral status to those who donât show up on credit reports.â
My wife and I are being penalized by our insurance carrier for not having run up credit card bills. I was told âyou should get a credit card, or finance purchases.â With all the sub-prime lenders causing excessive turmoil in our stock and fixed income markets, and with most of the U.S. citizenry up to their eyeballs in debt with little or no savings, weâre the âquestionableâ ones.
If you have AARP/Hartford, you better check your credit score, unbelievable. This is nonsense.
Don Bright
Henderson
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Don
