Car Financing Program Could Help Credit-Challenged Drivers
Electronic Device Makes You Pay Before Driving
BOSTON -- For
anyone with nightmare credit, getting a loan to drive a dream car can be a
nearly impossible uphill battle.
But consumer reporter Susan Wornick found a financing plan that for
some could be the key to success.
Car dealer Roy LaCroix of Roger Williams Auto says there is a relatively
new financing program for people with credit problems. It's called
PassTime and it's based
on an electronic device which is attached to a vehicle -- a key of
sorts.
"It acts as an interrupt between the ignition and the starter on a
vehicle," said LaCroix. "If they turn the ignition on, it makes two
chirps. The vehicle starts right up."
When you get a PassTime loan, your car also won't start until you
punch in the right code. To get the right code, you have to make your car
payment.
"Everyone's supposed to pay their bills, and this allows us to make
sure they do so," said LaCroix.
You have to make your car payment, because if you don't, you don't
get the code and you can't start the car.
Passtime isn't cheap. The interest rate is 18 percent for two
years. But it's still a good deal if you can't get a decent car or loan
any other way.
Kevin Wallace is a good example of how PassTime works. Like many
young fathers, he ran up a lot of credit card debt and had few options
when he tried to buy a car. But after two years using PassTime, he
repaired his credit and was able to buy a Nissan recently, through a
credit union.
"If I didn't have Passtime you know, I wouldn't have a car," said
Wallace.
Wallace is a success story, but what happens if you forget to make
your payment or have an emergency? Is everything lost?
"If they don't make their payment, then their vehicle will not
start. We do give them two emergency codes per period. So, if they did
have an emergency, they could still use the vehicle," said LaCroix.
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