HR 833 · 106th Congress · Finance and Financial Sector

Bankruptcy Reform Act of 2000

Introduced 1999-02-24· Sponsored by Rep. Gekas, George W. [R-PA-17]· House

Bill Progress

1
Introduced
Committee
House Vote
4
Senate
5
Enacted
Latest: Senate insisted on its amendment, requested a conference.(2000-02-02)

Recorded Votes

PassedSenate · 2000-02-02
Roll #5
Yea 83Nay 14
PassedSenate · 2000-02-02
Roll #5
Yea 83Nay 14
PassedHouse · 1999-05-05
Roll #115
Yea 313Nay 108
Democrats
96 Yea·107 Nay
Republicans
217 Yea·0 Nay
PassedHouse · 1999-05-05
Roll #115
Yea 313Nay 108
Democrats
96 Yea·107 Nay
Republicans
217 Yea·0 Nay

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Plain Language Summary

[AI summary unavailable — showing source text] Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1999 - Title I: Consumer Bankruptcy Provisions - Subtitle A: Needs Based Bankruptcy - Amends Federal bankruptcy law to revamp guidelines governing dismissal or conversion of a Chapter 7 liquidation petition (complete relief in bankruptcy), to one under Chapter 13 (Adjustment of Debts of an Individual with Regular Income). Allows a bankruptcy panel trustee and any party in interest to move for such dismissal or conversion (current law prohibits such party in interest from such motions). Lowers the "substantial abuse" standard for dismissal or conversion to one of simple abuse. Replaces the presumption in favor of granting the relief sought by the debtor with a presumption that abuse exists if the debtor's current monthly income exceeds specified formulae. Provides that the presumption of abuse may be rebutted only with detailed documentation of extraordinary circumstances requiring additional expenses or adjustment of currently monthly total income. (Sec. 102) Requires debtor's counsel to: (1) reimburse the bankruptcy trustee for legal fees in prosecuting a dismissal or conversion motion if the court finds that counsel's filing under chapter 7 was not substa…

Summarized by Claude AI · Non-partisan · For informational purposes only

CBO Cost Estimate

Congressional Budget Office

H.R. 833, Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1999

May 5, 1999

Cost estimate for the bill as ordered reported by the House Committee on the Judiciary on April 28, 1999

Full CBO report ↗

Official non-partisan budget analysis by the Congressional Budget Office

Cosponsors (20)

7 Democrats13 Republicans