The legislation would make it illegal for private debt collectors to garnish the stimulus payments that came as part of the American Rescue Plan (ARP), as well as add special coding to any new payments directly deposited to accounts so banks can identify them as not up for garnishment. Those who receive their payments before the bill passes—which is a lot of us—can request that their bank set aside the amount of their stimulus payment as exempt from garnishment. The IRS and Department of Treasury have sent out approximately 90 million stimulus payments in the first week since President Joe Biden signed ARP into law. The new bill does not make it clear what would happen should someone have their stimulus payment taken from them by debt collectors before protections are put in place. A spokesperson for the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs had no immediate comment. The second round of stimulus checks passed in December included protections against garnishment, such as the identifying coding on direct deposits. However, because Democrats used a procedural loophole called “budget reconciliation” to pass the ARP (narrowly), protections against private debt collectors could not be added. Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Oregon), the chair of the Senate Finance Committee and co-sponsor of the bill, promised in the days before ARP became law that those protections would come in separate legislation. On Wednesday, Wyden called for the Senate to pass the legislation as soon as possible. “Relief payments are intended for struggling families, not predatory private debt collectors,” he said, in a statement. “Our legislation would ensure help gets to the folks who need it to pay rent and buy groceries. Senate Republicans supported this critical protection in the December relief package, and we hope to pass our bill right away.” The legislation was also sponsored by Sens. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio and chairman of the U.S. Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs), Bob Menendez (D-N.J.), and Chris Van Hollen (D-Maryland). The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) also vowed to step in on Wednesday. Acting director Dave Uejio said the CFPB and financial industry trade associations have discussed proactive measures financial institutions can take to ensure that consumers hold on to their full stimulus payments. And, should private debt collectors seize the payments, financial institutions have pledged to promptly restore the funds to the people who should receive them, Uejio said. “We appreciate these efforts, which recognize the extraordinary nature of this crisis and the extraordinary financial challenges facing so many families across the country,” he said in the statement.