Mandatory Arbitration News
H.R. 3010/S. 1782 - The Arbitration Fairness Act of 2007
Protect Consumers from Abusive Binding Mandatory Arbitration Clauses!
Buried in the fine print of a credit card billing insert, employee handbook, health insurance plan, or franchise agreement, binding mandatory arbitration clauses eliminate a consumer’s access to the courts, and force them into a costly private legal system that favors corporations.
Read more.
Small Print, Big Problem
Corporations are imposing mandatory arbitration clauses on consumers
and small businesses in everything from car dealer contracts to
health care treatment release forms. When a dispute over services
or goods arises, these clauses mandate that buyers give up their
right to go to court, and force them to pay arbitration companies
to hear claims.
Unlike other forms of Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR), mandatory
arbitration clauses can take away people's rights to trial without
their knowing consent and can cost plaintiffs thousands of
dollars more to have their cases heard than going to court.
Top 5 Ways You Can Protect Your
Legal Rights (Apr 2005)
Background
Mandatory Arbitration: Taking Away
Big Rights with Small Print (Apr 2005)
AARP-Backed
Group on the Dangers of Binding Mandatory Arbitration (Launched
Spring 2005)