Unfortunately, I don't have access their customer agreement, not even the current one. You may be able to appeal their decision, though, even if the 180-day clause was in the original contract you signed.
Try Getting Citi to Change Their Minds
Payment protection administrators do have the authority to grant you an exclusion to the 180-day provision. You should certainly make that request.
Here's the case you can make:
- You would have otherwise qualified for unemployment benefits
- You paid for the plan faithfully for 5+ years
- You are not asking for retroactive benefits, only to start covering your payment until you get a new job or for the remainder of the benefit period (6 or 18 months depending on which CitiCard protection plan you have).
- The six-month window in which to file a claim apparently wasn't part of the original agreement.
If they have any compassion for your situation and consideration for the fact that you've been covering your own payment all this time, they will grant you an exclusion.
Legal Contract Hidden from Public
The terms and conditions are extremely difficult to come by. You actually have to sign up for the program before you get the fine print. That's how I obtained the agreements you see on Knowzy: I actually signed up for each one of them and posted them as a public service.
It's unconscionable, in my opinion, that they expect you to enter into a legally binding agreement without the ability to find out what you're agreeing to.
I'm impressed your senator got you a copy. That's very commendable.
Since you got action through that route before, I would pursue it further if your appeal to Citi fails. This time, be very specific with what you're looking for:
- The customer agreement from when you signed up
- The customer agreement from when you became unemployed
- The date they changed their terms (assuming the rep you spoke with is correct).
If this were actually an insurance plan, you could write to your state Insurance Commissioner. Since it isn't, you are more or less on your own in dealing with this company.
Hard Lesson Learned
Yours is another glaring example of why credit card payment protection is such a bad idea: You spend thousands of dollars for peace of mind only to have the company use a technicality to deny you the benefits you paid for in your time of need. Had you put those thousands of dollars toward paying down your credit card debt instead, you might have been close to paying it off by now.
I'm sorry you had to learn the hard way.