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One lender refused my loan, but another one said it was fine. How can this be?

There are two possible reasons. First, they may have been looking at reports from two different credit reporting agencies. A lender where you had a problem might have sent a report to one of those credit bureaus but not the other. Second, lenders have different criteria. Even when looking at the same report, they might reach different decisions.

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Santa’s sack may be smaller this Christmas as high street sales fall

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PayPAMS operations manager

"More and more parents have access to high speed Internet access and are getting familiar with online payments," says Dov Abramson, operations manager at PayPAMS (Payment Account Management System). The compnay contracts with school districts in 23 states, including Miami-Dade County, Fla., San Diego and Prince George's County, Md . "Four to five years from now, the majority of the parents will pay online not only for school lunch, but for all school activities." Four to five years from now, the majority of the parents will pay online not only for school lunch, but for all school activities. According to Galen Reigh, MySchoolAccount.com's system administrator and lead developer, each school district decides how it will allow parents to pay for lunches. "Some school districts do what we call ACH payments, and some school districts do credit card payments and some do both," Reigh says.

Parents like convenience

Parents say they like the peace of mind that cashless lunch payment brings because they know exactly how their money is being spent. Another automated lunch payment provider -- New Jersey-based PayPAMS.com -- allows parents to use its Web site to pay for more than just meals. School activities such as community education classes, after-school care, athletic events, donations, summer school and transportation are among the student payments that can be processed online. Johns, the Food Service Solutions CEO, says school districts pay $5,000 plus $1,000 per cafeteria in software fees to install his company's automated system and another $1,800 to $3,000 per cash register for hardware. Additionally, parents pay a transaction fee of between 3 percent and 6 percent to add funds to an account using a credit card, and a flat rate of $1.50 for all ACH debit transfers, regardless of the amount.

More privacy

Proponents of the payment systems point to another advantage of cashless cafeterias. How much each student pays for lunch is kept private. In districts where students from low-income families receive reduced priced or free lunches, they are scanned through checkout like all other students. Classmates in line behind them do not know these students are receiving reduced priced meals -- a potential source of embarrassment for some students and families. "It is certainly better than giving the children money to buy lunch," says Tom Miller, who enrolled a middle schooler in the PayPAMS program in Miami-Dade County schools, the nation's fourth largest school district.

Automated payments

Automated payments are not perfect, however. Students can still lose their ID cards or reveal their PIN to others who can fraudulently debit their accounts. The fingerprint scans help reduce the likelihood of these things happening. Both PayPAMS and Food Service Solutions say parents are spreading the word about their services and asking school districts to set up online lunch payment accounts. Says Reigh, the MySchoolAccount.com developer: "We're getting more and more calls from school districts that want to get in the system and as parents learn about it, they say, 'Hey, we want to do that too.'"

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