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That appears to me to be an irrelevant and erroneous alert that is unrelated to the status of your dispute.
The real issue is the required update to show that the dispute has been concluded, such as by stating that the dispute that the reporting was in compliance with the FCRA (i.e., was verified or corrected).
Any dispute has a required conclusion of reinvestigation of either 30 or 45 days, depending upon whether the consumer sent additional information to the CRA during the reinvestigation period. The CRA is then required to send a formal Notice of REsults of Reinvestigation to the consumer within 5 business days after termination of the period for reinvestigation.
A dispute filed in November would thus have necessarily required conclusion and sending of a Notice of Results of Reinvestigation no later than some time in January, 2018.
You thus have a dispute that must have been concluded with notice sent to you at least six months ago.
I would contact the CRA and request a copy of the apparently missing Notice of Results of Reinvestigation, and prompt update of the dispute flag to show that the dispute has been resolved, and its outcome.
If you send a good-will request to a furnisher and they report a pending dispute flag to a CRA, that is acknowlwdgement on their part that they have treated your communication as a direct dispute.
Any direct dispute requires, under the provisions of FCRA 623(a)(8) and the implementing regulations at 16 CFR 660.4, completion of their investigation of your dispute within 30 days, and sending of notice of their results of their investigation directly to you within 5 business days after conclusion of the investigation period. Thus, they MUST respond with formal results of their investigation within the statutory period.
Any dispute filed in November that they notified a CRA was being considered as a dispute must have been concluded by sending of a notice of results of their investigation prior to sometime near the end of December.
They cannot send notice to a CRA that you have filed a formal dispute under the FCRA, and then ignore their statutory obligation to process the dispute within the required time period. Furnishers only report disputes filed under the FCRA or FCBA, not other communications such as a good-will request.
You can thus file a formal complaint with the CFPB for their violation of the direct dispute process requirements of FCRA 623(a)(8), and their related requirement to them update any reported pending dispute flag by then providing the outcome of the dispute.
Of course, you dont consider it to be a dispute, but if they make that holding, they cannot have it both ways......
Unless a prior dispute related to the lack of update of the dispute code to show the outcome of the direct dispute, then any prior dispute would not be relevant to the issue of their lack of compliance with the resolution period requirements of FCRA 623(a)(8).
Yes, you can file a formal complaint with the CFPB relating to their lack of compliance with the direct dispute process at any time.
However, a CFPB complaint will not have a 30-day investigation time period, so you might choose to first file a dispute with the CRA over the lack of update of the dispute code, which is mandated upon conclusion of any direct dispute.
I would advise first filing a dispute with teh CRA before treating as an admin matter via a complaint to the CFPB.
The lack of reasonable investigation of that dispute could then also be included in a subsequent CFPB complaint, showing a repeated pattern of noncompliance with the FCRA.