National Association of Consumer Advocates Logo

The National Association of Consumer Advocates Joins the Protect MI Families Coalition

May 19, 20261 min read

Protect MI Families is excited to announce our next coalition partner: the National Association of Consumer Advocates.

The National Association of Consumer Advocates (NACA) is a non-profit made up of consumer attorneys and advocates across the United States. They are committed to representing the interests of consumers across the country and promoting justice for all consumers. They represent victims of predatory and exploitative business practices in court while providing support for their membership, including education, communication hubs, networking opportunities, and information-sharing. Their practice areas of focus range from auto, housing, lending, and more.

We are excited to have the support of this organization, as their work not only to ensure consumers have fair representation in court but to advocate for policies that uplift consumers has been critical. Their action items ask their members to share the stories of clients impacted by faults in consumer protection policy and to contact legislators to ensure consumers have fair tax treatment. As an organization, they are also committed to removing forced arbitration clauses from consumer contracts.

You can learn more about NACA on their website and Facebook.

Protect MI Families is a nonpartisan advocacy organization dedicated to protecting Michigan consumers and holding corporations accountable when they harm families. We fight for fair insurance practices, accountability for corporate negligence, and justice for those injured by dangerous products.

Protect MI Families

Protect MI Families is a nonpartisan advocacy organization dedicated to protecting Michigan consumers and holding corporations accountable when they harm families. We fight for fair insurance practices, accountability for corporate negligence, and justice for those injured by dangerous products.

LinkedIn logo icon
Back to Blog