Federal Home Loan Bank Boards of Directors: Eligibility and Elections, 55710-55722 [E8-22659]
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 188 / Friday, September 26, 2008 / Rules and Regulations
By order of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, September 19, 2008.
Jennifer J. Johnson,
Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. E8–22701 Filed 9–25–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6210–01–P
FEDERAL HOUSING FINANCE BOARD
12 CFR Part 915
FEDERAL HOUSING FINANCE
AGENCY
12 CFR Part 1261
RIN 2590–AA03
Federal Home Loan Bank Boards of
Directors: Eligibility and Elections
Federal Housing Finance
Board; Federal Housing Finance
Agency.
ACTION: Interim final rule with request
for comments.
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
AGENCIES:
SUMMARY: The Federal Housing Finance
Agency (FHFA) is issuing and seeking
comment on an interim final regulation
to implement section 1202 of the
Housing and Economic Recovery Act of
2008, which revises section 7 of the
Federal Home Loan Bank Act (Bank
Act). Section 7 governs the eligibility
and election of individuals to serve on
the boards of directors of the 12 Federal
Home Loan Banks (Banks).
DATES: This interim final rule is
effective on September 26, 2008. The
FHFA will accept written comments on
the interim final rule on or before
November 25, 2008.
ADDRESSES: Submit comments to the
FHFA using any one of the following
methods:
E-mail: comments@fhfb.gov. Please
include RIN 2590–AA03 in the subject
line of the message.
Fax: 202–408–2580.
Mail/Hand Delivery: Federal Housing
Finance Board, 1625 Eye Street, NW.,
Washington DC 20006, Attention: Public
Comments/RIN 2590–AA03.
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments. If
you submit your comment to the
Federal eRulemaking Portal, please also
send it by e-mail to the FHFA at
comments@fhfb.gov to ensure timely
receipt by the FHFA. Include the
following information in the subject line
of your submission: Federal Housing
Finance Agency. Interim Final Rule:
Federal Home Loan Bank Boards of
Directors: Eligibility and Elections. RIN
Number 2590–AA03.
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We will post all public comments we
receive without change, including any
personal information you provide, such
as your name and address, on the FHFA
Web site at https://www.fhfb.gov/
Default.aspx?Page=93&Top=93.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Thomas P. Jennings, Senior Attorney
Advisor (FHFB), jenningst@fhfb.gov,
(202) 408–2553; or Patricia L. Sweeney,
Management Analyst (FHFB),
sweeneyp@fhfb.gov or (202) 408–2872.
You can send regular mail to the Federal
Housing Finance Board, 1625 Eye
Street, NW., Washington DC 20006.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Statutory and Regulatory Background
Effective July 30, 2008, the Federal
Housing Finance Regulatory Reform Act
of 2008 (Act), Division A of the Housing
and Economic Recovery Act of 2008,
Public Law No. 110–289, 122 Stat. 2654
(2008), transferred the supervisory and
oversight responsibilities of the Office of
Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight
and the Federal Housing Finance Board
over the Federal National Mortgage
Association (Fannie Mae), Federal
Home Loan Mortgage Corporation
(Freddie Mac) (collectively,
Enterprises), and the Banks to a new
independent executive branch agency
known as the Federal Housing Finance
Agency (FHFA). The FHFA is
responsible for ensuring that the
Enterprises and the Banks operate in a
safe and sound manner, including being
capitalized adequately, and carry out
their public policy missions, including
fostering liquid, efficient, competitive,
and resilient national housing finance
markets. The Enterprises and the Banks
continue to operate under regulations
promulgated by OFHEO and the FHFB
until the FHFA issues its own
regulations.
Section 1101 of the Act revised
section 7 of the Bank Act. 12 U.S.C.
1427. The FHFB regulation
implementing section 7 is codified at 12
CFR part 915. Part 915 governed the
nomination and election only of those
directors who are chosen from among
the officers and directors of members of
the Banks, which this interim final rule
refers to as member directors. The Act
amended section 7(b) of the Bank Act,
12 U.S.C. 1427(b), to give the members
the right to also elect all of the other
directors on the boards of directors of
the Banks, which other directors are
referred to in this interim final rule as
independent directors. The FHFA has
kept the basic process of elections that
exists in part 915 as it applies to
member directorships, making changes
as necessary to comply with the
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amendments to section 7 of the Bank
Act. The FHFA has added provisions to
govern the process for nominating
individuals for independent
directorships and for conducting the
election of independent directors in
conjunction with the election of
member directors. The organizational
structure of part 915 also has been
revised.
Section 1201 of the Act (codified at 12
U.S.C. 4513(f)) requires the Director of
the FHFA to consider the differences
between the Banks and the Enterprises
in rulemakings that affect the Banks
with respect to the Banks’ cooperative
ownership structure, mission of
providing liquidity to members,
affordable housing and community
development mission, capital structure,
and joint and several liability. In
preparing the interim final rule, the
Director considered these factors and
determined that the rule is appropriate,
particularly because this interim final
rule implements a statutory provision of
the Bank Act that applies only to the
Banks. See 12 U.S.C. 1427.
II. Description of the Interim Final Rule
The interim final regulation removes
part 915 of the FHFB regulations and
establishes part 1261 of the FHFA
regulations, which will contain the rules
governing the eligibility and election of
Bank directors. The name of new part
1261 will read ‘‘Federal Home Loan
Bank Director Eligibility and Elections.’’
A. Definitions: Section 1261.1
The FHFA has made technical
changes to the definitions of ‘‘bona fide
resident,’’ ‘‘guaranteed directorship,’’
‘‘stock directorship,’’ and ‘‘voting state,’’
but their meanings remain the same as
they were in part 915. The meaning of
‘‘record date’’ has not changed. The
identification number for the Banks is
the same, except that it is now the
number assigned by the FHFA.
The Act’s amendments to section 7 of
the Bank Act, 12 U.S.C. 1427, divide the
directorships of the Banks into two
categories—member directorships and
independent directorships. Both types
of directorships are filled by a vote of
the members; however, elections for
member directors are held on a state-bystate basis, whereas independent
directors are elected at large by all the
members of a Bank without regard to
whether the members located in a
particular voting state may be voting on
member directors in any particular year.
The definitions of ‘‘independent
directorship’’ and ‘‘member
directorship’’ reflect that difference.
The definitions of ‘‘guaranteed
directorship’’ and ‘‘stock directorship’’
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reflect that there are two categories of
member directorships, because section
7(c) of the Bank Act, 12 U.S.C. 1417(c),
guarantees that directorships from
members located in some states will be
no fewer than the number that existed
on December 31, 1960, regardless of the
amount of voting stock located in those
states. The definition of ‘‘public interest
directorship’’ reflects the statutory
criteria that an independent director
must have in order to receive this
designation.
Section 7(c) of the Bank Act, 12 U.S.C.
1427(c), requires the Director of the
FHFA to determine the number of
member directorships based on the
approximate ratio of required stock held
by members located in particular states
in a Bank’s geographic region. The
method the FHFA uses is defined in this
section as the ‘‘method of equal
proportions.’’
B. General Provisions: Section 1261.2
Section 7(a) of the Bank Act, 12 U.S.C.
1427(a), sets the size of a Bank’s board
of directors at 13, or such other number
as the Director may determine, provided
the member directorships always
maintain a majority and the
independent directorships comprise at
least 40 percent of the entire board.
Section 1261.2(a) provides that the
FHFA Director annually will set the
number of directorships for each Bank,
and will designate the directorships as
either member directorships or
independent directorships. The rule
does not provide that the Director will
designate the independent directorships
as either public interest directorships or
other independent directorships. If the
Director does not further designate the
independent directorships, the board of
directors of a Bank will have the power,
through the nomination process, to
nominate any number of the
independent directorships as public
interest directorships, provided it so
designates at least two of the
independent directorships. The FHFA
requests comments on whether the
boards of the Banks or the FHFA
Director should establish the number of
public interest directorships.
Section 7(c) of the Bank Act, 12 U.S.C.
1427(c), continues to require that states
be grandfathered with the number of
directorships representing members in
the states on December 31, 1960,
notwithstanding any other provision in
section 7. Thus, in applying the
grandfather provision to the Banks
based on their current districts,
notwithstanding the Act’s apparent
default board size of 13, every Bank
must have a minimum of 14
directorships, 8 of which must be
member directorships. The Act amends
section 7(d) of the Bank Act, 12 U.S.C.
1427(d), to require that the term of office
of directors elected after July 30, 2008
be four years, except that the FHFA has
to adjust terms to achieve an
approximately equal staggering of the
years for the election of the members of
the board of directors of a Bank. Section
1261.2(b) addresses this requirement.
The Act also amends the Bank Act to
require that existing directorships that
do not expire on December 31, 2008
continue their existing terms, so the
FHFA has to adjust the terms of new
directorships beginning January 1, 2009
in order to achieve staggering.
Section 1261.2(c) carries forward the
requirement in section 915.3(a) that the
Banks are responsible for conducting
annual elections. Section 1261.2(d) and
(e) are based on the sections 915.3(d)
and 915.2, respectively, of the FHFB
rule.
C. Designation of Member Directorships:
Section 1261.3
Section 1261.3(a) continues the
requirement in section 915.4 of the
FHFB rule that each Bank must submit
a capital report. The FHFA will rely on
this information to designate stock
directorships among the voting states in
a Bank’s district. Each Bank also must
notify each of its members of its
minimum required stock holdings.
Section 1261.3(a)(2) applies only to the
Chicago Bank, whose capital plan is not
yet in effect.
Section 1261.3(b) and (c) of the
interim final rule carry forward the
requirements of section 915.3(b) of the
FHFB regulations. Section 1261.3(b)
specifies the methodology by which the
FHFA will make the allocation of
member directorships, and section
1261.3(c) provides that the FHFA will
follow the requirements in sections 7(b)
and (c) of the Bank Act in designating
member directorships to the states.
Annually, the FHFA will use the
method of equal proportions to
determine how member directorships
should be divided among the states in
a Bank’s district, based on the stock
holdings of the members located in each
state in the Bank’s district. The FHFA’s
annual allocation to each state will be
sufficient to meet the requirement in
section 7(c) of the Bank Act that the
number of member directorships in each
state be equal to the number of elective
directorships that it had on December
31, 1960 (the guaranteed directorships).
The effect of the so-called
‘‘grandfather’’ provision is that, based
on the present geographic districts of
the Banks, each Bank will have a
minimum of eight member
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directorships. Section 1261.3(c)
recognizes that some existing
directorships at a Bank may cease to
exist if, resulting from the Director’s
annual designation, the number of
directors is set at a number below the
size of the existing board, the number of
member directorships increases and the
number of independent directorships
decreases, or vice versa, or the
application of the method of equal
proportions causes any state to lose a
directorship to another state. If a state
loses a directorship through any of these
events, section 1261.3(c) provides that
the director sitting in that directorship
shall be ineligible to serve after
December 31 of that year.
Section 1261.3(d) continues the
notification provision in section
915.3(e) of the FHFB rule.
D. Director Eligibility: Section 1261.4
Section 1261.4(a) carries forward
section 915.7(b) of the FHFB rule
regarding the eligibility requirements of
member directors. Section 1261.4(b) sets
forth the eligibility requirements of
independent directors in section 7(a) of
the Bank Act.
Section 1261.4(c) describes situations
in which otherwise eligible individuals
would not be eligible to serve. The term
limit provisions of section 7(d) of the
Bank Act limit service of individuals
who have served all or part of three
consecutive full terms. Such individuals
are ineligible for the two years following
such service. For terms beginning after
the effective date of the Act, section
1261.4(c) deems only four year terms to
be full terms. The existing directorships
that do not end on December 31, 2008,
have three year terms, and those
directorships’ terms are full terms. If the
FHFA creates shorter than four year
terms for directorships that begin on or
after January 1, 2009, to effectively
stagger the directorships, those shorter
terms will not be deemed to be full
terms. Nonetheless, such shorter terms
will not be effective for purposes of
creating a break in service or avoiding
the three consecutive term count. In
other words, serving in three
consecutive three year elective
directorships ending December 31, 2008
will render an individual ineligible to
serve a shortened term beginning
January 1, 2009, and serving in one or
two three year elective directorships
ending December 31, 2008, a shortened
term beginning January 1, 2009, and one
or two four year terms immediately
thereafter, for a total of three full terms,
will render an individual ineligible to
again serve for two more years.
The FHFA seeks comment on its
application of the consecutive full-term
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limitation in section 7(d) of the Bank
Act. If a director serves in a term which
met the Bank Act’s requirement of a full
term at the time the director assumed
that directorship, no matter how long
the term is, should that term be
considered a full term? Should the
current terms and any prior terms
consecutive thereto of directors elected
prior to July 30, 2008, be deemed to be
full terms for purposes of the three
consecutive term rule in section 7(d) of
the Bank Act? Should the full terms of
the directors appointed by the Finance
Board be treated any differently from
how the terms of elective directors are
treated? Should the shorter term that the
FHFA creates for purposes of staggering
be considered a break between terms
before and after other terms of service,
for purposes of treating the other terms
as consecutive full terms?
Section 1261.4(d) deems a sitting
director to be ineligible on December 31
of the year in which that person’s
directorship is eliminated or
redesignated to another state through
the annual allocation under the method
of equal proportions. The FHFA is
required to do an annual allocation, and
changes in member stock ownership on
a state-by-state basis may cause a state
to lose one or more directorships.
Although an individual may have to
give up a directorship due to
reallocation or elimination, if the
individual does not complete a full term
due to such action, that term will not
count as a full term for purposes of
eligibility.
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E. Determination of Member Votes:
Section 1261.5
Section 1261.5 carries forward section
915.5 of the FHFB rule, which sets forth
how the Banks must determine the
number of votes of each member. For
those Banks that have more than one
class of stock, the Banks are required to
calculate the average number of shares
separately for each class and allow each
member to vote its combined average
number of shares. The average for each
class is calculated based on the total
number of members in each state, even
if a member holds no shares in a class
of stock. The number of votes allocated
to a member is the number of votes that
the member may vote for any
directorship, whether it is a member
directorship, independent public
interest directorship, or other
independent directorship.
F. Nominations for Member and
Independent Directorships: Section
1261.6
Section 915.6 of the FHFB regulation
set forth the requirements for member
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directorship nominations. Section
1261.6 carries forth these requirements
with some modifications and sets forth
how the Banks will nominate
independent directorship candidates.
Banks are not required to do so in any
particular mode of communication, so
long as they can demonstrate to the
FHFA their compliance with the
regulations.
As required by section 1261.6(a) of
the interim final rule, the Banks must
provide to each member a notice of the
commencement of the election process
in a reasonable time in advance of the
elections. As to member directorships,
the notice and nomination procedures
do not differ significantly from the
procedures set forth in the FHFB
regulation.
As to independent directorships,
section 7 of the Bank Act requires each
Bank to nominate candidates, and the
election from among the candidates is
the right of the members of each Bank.
Under section 1261.6(d) of the interim
final rule, a Bank must consider anyone
who applies using an application form
prescribed by the FHFA and indicates
on the form that s/he meets the
eligibility requirements set forth in
section 1261.4(b), provided the
application form is delivered to the
Bank by a deadline set by the Bank and
the application form contains any of the
qualifications for independent directors
set forth in that section. Independent
directors may meet either the
requirements of public interest directors
or the requirements set forth in section
1261.6(e).
Section 1261.6(d) also requires that a
Bank’s board of directors consult with
the Bank’s Advisory Council before
nominating independent directors. The
FHFA requests comment on whether it
should require the Advisory Council to
play any specific role in the
consultation process and whether the
FHFA should prescribe procedures on
how the consultation should take place.
Section 7(a) of the Bank Act and
section 1261.6(d) of the interim final
rule require that public interest
directors have more than four years
experience in representing consumer or
community interests in banking
services, credit needs, housing, or
consumer financial protections. Prior to
the Act’s amendments to section 7(a), a
public interest director had to be from
an organization that had a history of
more than two years representing
consumer or community interests, but
the individual did not necessarily have
to have personal experience doing so.
Although the FHFA will impose the
Act’s requirements on newly chosen
independent directors, the FHFA will
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deem existing public interest directors
who qualified and were designated as
public interest directors under the Bank
Act before it was amended to be public
interest directors for the remainder of
their existing terms.
The FHFA requests comments on
whether it should apply the revised
experience requirements to existing
public interest directors and, if so,
whether it should require any Bank that
does not have two public interest
directors who meet the revised
requirements to nominate candidates
who do meet those requirements.
Section 1261.6(d)(3) requires the
Banks to establish the number of public
interest directorships from among the
number of independent directorships
established by the FHFA Director
pursuant to section 1261.3(c). It requires
the Banks to have at least two public
interest directors, as required by section
7(a) of the Bank Act. The boards of
directors of the Banks must nominate at
least as many individuals for public
interest directorships as there are
positions available. Any board may
nominate more individuals for public
interest directorship positions than
there are positions to be filled; however,
the Bank may fill only those vacant
positions that the board has designated
as public interest directorships with
public interest director nominees.
The rule permits a board of directors
to have only enough nominees to fill the
vacant positions, because the board of
directors of a Bank might determine that
the most highly qualified candidates
may not apply unless they are assured
of a seat after having been nominated.
The FHFA requests comment on
whether the board of directors of a Bank
should be required to nominate more
candidates for independent
directorships than there are positions to
be filled, if the board has determined
that there are sufficient applicants who
are both eligible and qualified.
Section 7(a) of the Bank Act sets forth
specific qualifications that independent
directors, other than public interest
directors, must have, and it authorizes
the FHFA Director to establish other
knowledge or experience that an
independent director may have in lieu
of the types of knowledge or experience
specified in section 7(a). Section
1261.6(e) provides that independent
directors may be qualified if they have
knowledge or experience in the law, in
addition to the statutorily prescribed
subjects of auditing or accounting,
derivatives, financial management,
organizational management, project
development or risk management
practices. In each case, a candidate’s
knowledge or experience must be
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commensurate with the knowledge or
experience needed to oversee a business
of the size and complexity of the Bank.
The FHFA solicits comment on whether
additional areas of expertise should be
added to the list.
Pursuant to section 1261.6(f) of the
interim final rule, Banks must verify the
eligibility of nominees for directorships
before placing their names on the
ballots. The FHFA will prescribe
eligibility certification forms for
member directors, and the Banks must
use information on those forms to verify
eligibility of nominees for member
directorships. The FHFA will prescribe
application forms and eligibility
certification forms for independent
directors. For new nominees for
independent directorships, the Banks
may use information on the application
forms. For incumbent nominees for
independent directorships, the Banks
may use information on eligibility
certification forms or on application
forms. As to independent directorship
nominees, both incumbent and new
nominees, the Banks must deliver the
names and contemporaneously executed
director application forms of the
nominees to the FHFA for its review
and comment before the names of any
such nominees can be placed on ballots.
The FHFA intends to review the
information submitted and, whenever it
has comments that might aid a Bank,
make comments to the Bank’s board of
directors about how any nominee’s
qualifications might serve the needs of
the Bank.
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G. Election Process: Section 1261.7
1. Ballots
Similar to the current election process
conducted by the Banks, the interim
final rule requires each Bank to prepare
a ballot for each voting state. A Bank
may not deliver ballots until after the
FHFA has commented on the
independent director nominees.
Independent director nominees are
elected on a district-wide basis, so all
states in the district will be voting states
in each annual election. The FHFA
contemplates that ballots will differ
from state to state, because a Bank likely
will not include on the ballots in one
state the member director nominees for
the other states in its district. The
ballots must include a closing date for
voting, which may not be sooner than
30 days after the ballots are delivered.
The ballots must contain the type of
minimum information on member
directorship nominees required in
section 915.8 of the FHFB rule. As to
independent directorship nominees, the
ballots must include information about
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their qualifications for the type of
directorship for which they are
nominated. All nominees must be listed
alphabetically and separately for each
type of directorship for which the
election is being held. A Bank may
include additional information it deems
appropriate, including a description of
the skills and experience of the member
director nominees. If, pursuant to
section 1261.9, a Bank has conducted an
assessment of the skills and experience
it needs on its board of directors and
included that information in its notice
required in section 1261.6, or
subsequently has revised that
assessment, the Bank may include a
statement of the most recent version of
its assessment with the ballots. The
interim final rule also requires the
Banks to include on the ballots a
statement that write-in candidates are
not permitted and a statement that the
Bank will not disclose how any member
votes its ballot.
2. Lack of Member Directorship
Nominees
In those instances where the number
of member nominees is not greater than
the number of member directorships to
be filled, section 1261.7(c) of the interim
final rule requires a Bank to declare the
seats filled by the eligible nominees,
first filling any guaranteed directorships
and then any remaining stock
directorships. If any member
directorship is not filled, or if the failure
to fill any directorship would cause the
number of member directors to be fewer
than a majority of the directors, then
such directorship will become vacant on
January 1 of the following year, and the
Bank’s board of directors at that time
may elect an individual to fill the
vacancy.
3. Voting
The interim final rule provides that a
member’s vote for a nominee is deemed
a vote in the amount of all the stock that
the member is required to hold as of the
record date. A member may not vote
more than the amount of its required
stock for any one nominee, no matter
how many directorships are being filled
by the election. A member may vote for
as many nominees as there are
directorships being filled by the
election, but a member may vote only
one time for any one nominee. A
member may vote at any time up until
the closing date, by which time it must
have delivered its ballot to the Bank.
4. Declaring Results
Section 1261.7(f) of the interim final
rule provides that the individual
receiving the highest number of votes is
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declared the winner of a member
directorship. If other member
directorships are being filled, the
individual receiving the next highest
number of votes also will be declared a
winner, and so on down the line. The
same rule applies to each type of
independent directorship, except that a
nominee who receives fewer than 20
percent of the number of votes eligible
to be cast may not be declared a winner.
If, for the last available directorship of
any type, there is a tie vote, and for an
independent directorship the tie vote is
at least 20 percent of the eligible votes,
then the disinterested members of the
Bank’s board of directors by majority
vote will determine the winner. At the
time of declaring winners and at the
time any director is seated, a Bank may
not have any reason to know that such
director is ineligible to serve.
The FHFA requests comment on
whether the rule should continue to
require that independent directors must
receive at least a minimum percentage
of votes cast in order to be elected and,
if so, what that minimum should be.
The FHFA believes that receiving at
least a minimum percentage of votes
affirms that the candidate is the choice
of the members, even when the number
of candidates does not exceed the
number of directorships to be filled. If
there is a minimum percentage, should
it be based on the number of shares
actually voting or on the number of
shares eligible to vote?
5. Report of Election
Section 1261.7(g) of the interim final
rule requires each Bank to promptly
report to its members, each nominee,
and the FHFA on the results of an
election. The report must contain the
number of voting members, the number
of votes cast, and the number of votes
received by each nominee. As to each
member director-elect, the Bank must
provide the same information required
in section 915.8(e) or the FHFB rule. As
to each public interest director, the
Bank must provide the consumer or
community interest represented and the
expiration date of the term of office. For
each other independent director-elect,
the Bank must provide the individual’s
qualifications under section 1261.6(e)
and the expiration date of the term of
office.
6. Failing To Fill All Independent
Directorships
If any independent directorship is not
filled for failure to receive 20 percent of
the eligible votes, section 1261.7(h) of
the interim final rule requires a Bank to
conduct another election for such
directorship, following the same
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procedures required for the initial
election. The Bank must continue
repeated election procedures until the
directorship is filled by a vote of 20
percent of the votes eligible to be voted.
The eligible votes remain the same for
each such repeat election.
H. Section 1261.8 Is Reserved for Future
Use
I. Action Affecting Director Elections:
Section 1261.9
Section 1261.9(a) of the interim final
rule continues the authorization to a
Bank’s board of directors to conduct an
annual assessment of the skills and
experience needed on a Bank’s board of
directors, as provided in section
915.9(a) of the FHFB rule. If such an
assessment identifies particular skills or
experience needed on the board, a Bank
may inform its members of those needs
in its notice of elections.
Section 1261.9(b) of the interim final
rule authorizes a Bank and any of its
directors, officers, attorneys, employees,
and agents, including the Bank’s board
of directors and Advisory Council, to
support any individual for nomination
and election to an independent
directorship. Such individuals, if acting
in their personal capacity, are not
prohibited from supporting the
nomination or election of any
individual for a member directorship.
The distinction between member
directorships and independent
directorships is that the Bank’s board of
directors nominates individuals for
independent directorships, and support
of the Bank’s nominees could benefit
the Bank without discriminating against
any member.
Except as allowed under section
1261.9(a) and (b), no director, officer,
employee, attorney, or agent of a Bank
may support or oppose the nomination
or election of any individual for any
directorship of the Bank, or take any
other action to influence the voting for
or against any such individual.
The FHFA seeks comment on whether
it is appropriate to distinguish between
member and independent directors
when establishing prohibitions on
actions that might influence others with
respect to any director. Comment also is
sought on whether there are other issues
that the FHFA should address in this
section.
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
J. Independent Director Conflict of
Interests: Section 1261.10
Section 7(a) of the Bank Act prohibits
an independent director from serving as
an officer of any Bank and from serving
as a director, officer, or employee of any
member of the Bank on whose board the
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director sits, or of any recipient of any
advances from that Bank. Section
1261.10 of the interim final rule sets
forth this prohibition and requires any
nominee for, and incumbent holding, an
independent directorship to disclose
such interests. Positions held in a
holding company that controls any
member or any recipient of advances,
are attributed to any member or
recipient of advances if the assets of all
members or recipients of advances
under the control of the holding
company equal at least 35 percent of the
assets of the holding company. Positions
in any other subsidiary or affiliate of the
holding company are not attributed to
the member or recipient of advances.
Positions held by an individual’s spouse
are attributed to the individual.
The FHA seeks comment on whether
the holding company attribution rule
should be set at a number other than 35
percent.
K. Conflict of Interests Policy for Bank
Directors: Section 1261.11
Section 1261.11(a) of the interim final
rule revises and restates the requirement
in section 915.11 of the FHFB rule that
Banks adopt a conflicts of interest
policy to apply to the members of their
boards of directors. The rule sets forth
the minimum contents of such a policy.
One requirement is that the policy must
require the board of directors to
administer the affairs of the Bank fairly
and impartially, without discriminating
in favor of or against any member. The
rule does not address nonmember
borrowers specifically, but the absence
of any reference to nonmember
borrowers does not prohibit a Bank from
addressing conflicts of interests with
respect to nonmember borrowers.
Section 1261.11(b) of the interim final
rule requires any director of a Bank to
disclose fully to the board of directors
of the Bank any financial interest that
the director or any immediate family
member or business associate has in any
business matter or proposed business
matter involving the Bank and to refrain
from any action in connection with the
matter. Section 1261.11(c) requires
directors to maintain the confidentiality
of confidential information obtained by
serving as a director and to refrain from
using that information for personal
benefit.
Section 1261.11(d) of the interim final
rule prohibits the acceptance of gifts to
influence the director’s actions as a
member of the board of directors of a
Bank. A director may not accept a gift,
no matter the value, if the director
believes, or would have reason to
believe, that the gift is given with the
intent to influence the director’s actions.
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A director may not accept a gift, no
matter the value, if acceptance would
have the appearance of the donor’s
intent to influence the director’s actions.
Although the prohibition does not
prohibit other gifts, the absence of a
specific prohibition does not prohibit a
Bank from addressing other situations in
its conflict of interest policy.
Section 1261.11(e) of the interim final
rule prohibits a director from accepting
compensation for service on the board
of a Bank from any source other than the
Bank. This prohibition does not prohibit
any director who is a salaried employee
from continuing to receive a salary even
when the time that the director devotes
to the Bank would otherwise be time
devoted to the employer.
L. Reporting Requirements for Bank
Directors: Section 1261.12
Pursuant to section 1261.12(a) of the
interim final rule, each sitting director
is required to execute an annual
eligibility certification form applicable
to the directorship held by the director.
The form, prescribed by the FHFA for
the purpose of identifying any changes
since a prior eligibility review, must be
executed and delivered to the Bank, and
the Bank must deliver a copy to the
FHFA.
Section 1261.12(b) of the interim final
rule requires any sitting director of a
Bank who believes or has reason to
believe that s/he no longer meets the
statutory or regulatory eligibility
requirements to notify promptly both
the Bank and the FHFA. Likewise, any
Bank that believes or has reason to
believe that any of its directors no
longer meets the eligibility requirements
must notify the FHFA promptly.
M. Ineligible Bank Directors: Section
1261.13
Section 7(f) of the Bank Act, prior to
the amendments made by the Act,
provided that an appointive
directorship would become vacant
whenever the director holding that
directorship failed to meet the eligibility
requirements set forth in the Bank Act,
but the director could continue to serve
until replaced. The amendments to
section 7(f) now require that all
directors who fail to meet their statutory
eligibility requirements immediately
must vacate their offices. Section
1261.13 of the interim final rule applies
these results whenever the FHFA or a
director’s Bank makes a determination
that the director has failed to meet any
eligibility requirement set forth in the
Bank Act or in part 1261 or has failed
to comply with the reporting
requirements in section 1261.12 of the
interim final rule. Section 1261.13 also
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requires a Bank to notify the FHFA
promptly after it has made such a
determination.
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
N. Vacant Bank Directorships: Section
1261.14
Section 1261.14(a) of the interim final
rule implements the requirements in
section 7(f) of the Bank Act that any
individual who fills a vacancy on the
board of a Bank be elected by a majority
vote of the remaining directors.
Section 1261.14(b) of the interim final
rule requires the board of directors of a
Bank to fill any vacancy with an
individual who meets the eligibility and
qualification requirements applicable to
any individual who was the predecessor
in that position; however, if a Bank
continues to have at least two public
interest directors, the board of directors
of the Bank may fill the vacant
directorship with an individual who
meets the eligibility and qualification
requirements for any independent
directorship. The eligibility
requirements for both member and
independent directors are set forth in
section 1261.4 of the interim final rule.
The eligibility requirements for
independent public interest directors
and for other independent directors are
the same. The qualification
requirements for independent public
interest directors and for other
independent directors are set forth in
section 1261.6 of the interim final rule.
The Bank must verify eligibility before
allowing any director elected by the
board to assume office, and the Bank
must deliver the individual’s
application form to the FHFA for review
and comment before the individual is
allowed to assume office.
Section 1261.14(c) of the interim final
rule requires a Bank to provide a notice
to the FHFA and to each member of the
Bank that includes specified
information about any individual who
has been elected by the directors of the
Bank.
O. Minimum Number of Member
Directorships: Section 1261.15
Section 1261.15 designates the
grandfathered directorships that apply
at the present time to the 12 Banks. The
section also provides that the
grandfathering of directorships for any
two or more Banks that merge does not
apply to those Banks that are a part of
the merger, as required by an
amendment to section 7(c) of the Bank
Act.
P. 2008 Temporary Schedule for
Election of Directors: Section 1261.16
Section 1261.16 of the interim final
rule requires each Bank to set a
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reasonable schedule for the nomination
and election of directors in 2008 only.
This temporary director election
schedule will cease to be effective after
December 31, 2008.
III. Notice and Public Participation
The notice and comment procedure
required by the Administrative
Procedure Act is inapplicable to this
interim final rule because it is in the
public interest to implement the
requirements of the Act as soon as it is
practicable to do so: The Banks need to
conduct elections and install directors
in compliance with the new law by
January 1, 2009, when a number of
terms of existing directors expire. See 5
U.S.C. 553(b)(3)(B). However, because
the FHFA believes that public
comments are valuable, it encourages
comments on this interim final rule, and
will consider all comments received on
or before November 25, 2008 in
promulgating a final rule.
IV. Effective Date
V. Paperwork Reduction Act
The interim final rule will have no
substantive effect on any collection of
information covered by the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA). See 44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq. Therefore, the FHFA
has not submitted this interim final rule
to the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) for review. The Finance Board
used application forms to collect
information on prospective appointive
directors, and those forms had been
assigned control number 3069–0002 by
the OMB. The FHFA will direct the
Banks to use those forms, which will be
amended as appropriate but the changes
to the forms will not materially modify
the approved information collection.
Consequently, the FHFA has not
submitted any information to OMB for
review under the PRA.
VI. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The FHFA is adopting this regulation
in the form of an interim final rule and
not as a proposed rule. Therefore, the
provisions of the Regulatory Flexibility
Act do not apply. See 5 U.S.C. 601(2)
and 603(a).
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Parts 915 and
1261
Banks, Banking, Conflicts of interest,
Elections, Ethical conduct, Federal
home loan banks, Financial disclosure,
Frm 00033
Fmt 4700
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
■ For the reasons stated in the preamble,
under the authority of 12 U.S.C. 1319(G)
and 12 U.S.C. 1426, 1427 and 1432, the
FHFA proposes to amend chapters IX
and XII of title 12 of the Code of Federal
Regulations as follows:
CHAPTER IX—FEDERAL HOUSING
FINANCE BOARD
PART 915—BANK DIRECTOR
ELIGIBILITY AND ELECTIONS
■
1. Remove 12 CFR part 915.
CHAPTER XII—FEDERAL HOUSING
FINANCE AGENCY
2. Add and reserve subchapters A and
C to 12 CFR Chapter XII.
■ 3. Add subchapter B to 12 CFR
chapter XII, and transfer part 1231 to
subchapter B.
■ 4. Amend title 12 CFR chapter XII by
establishing subchapter D to read as
follows:
■
Subchapter D—Federal Home Loan Banks
For the reasons stated in part III
above, the FHFA for good cause finds
that the interim final rule should
become effective on September 26,
2008. See 5 U.S.C. 553(d)(3).
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Sfmt 4700
5. Add part 1261 to subchapter D to
read as follows:
■
PART 1261—FEDERAL HOME LOAN
BANK DIRECTOR ELIGIBILITY AND
ELECTIONS
Sec.
1261.1 Definitions.
1261.2 General provisions.
1261.3 Designation of member
directorships.
1261.4 Director eligibility.
1261.5 Determination of member votes.
1261.6 Nominations for member and
independent directorships.
1261.7 Election process.
1261.8 [Reserved].
1261.9 Actions affecting director elections.
1261.10 Independent director conflict of
interests.
1261.11 Conflict of interests policy for Bank
directors.
1261.12 Reporting requirements for Bank
directors.
1261.13 Ineligible Bank directors.
1261.14 Vacant Bank directorships
1261.15 Minimum number of member
directorships.
1261.16 Temporary rule for 2008 election of
directors.
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1426, 1427, and 1432.
§ 1261.1
Definitions.
For purposes of this part:
Act means the Federal Home Loan
Bank Act, as amended (12 U.S.C. 1421
through 1449).
Bank, written in title case, means a
Federal Home Loan Bank established
under section 12 of the Act (12 U.S.C.
1432).
Bona fide resident of a Bank district
means an individual who:
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(1) Maintains a principal residence in
the Bank district; or
(2) If serving as an independent
director, owns or leases in his or her
own name a residence in the Bank
district and is employed in a voting
state in the Bank district.
Director means the Director of the
Federal Housing Finance Agency.
FHFA means the Federal Housing
Finance Agency.
FHFA ID number means the number
assigned to a member by the FHFA and
used by the FHFA and the Banks to
identify a particular member.
Guaranteed directorship means a
member directorship that is required by
section 7(c) of the Act (12 U.S.C 1427(c))
to be designated as representing Bank
members that are located in a particular
state, other than a stock directorship.
Independent directorship means a
directorship, as defined by section
7(a)(4)(A) of the Act, 12 U.S.C.
1427(a)(4)(A), that is filled by a plurality
vote of the members at large by a person
having the qualifications specified by
section 7(a)(3)(B)(i) or (ii), 12 U.S.C.
1427(a)(3)(B)(i) or (ii).
Member directorship means a
directorship, as defined by section
7(a)(4)(A) of the Act, 12 U.S.C.
1427(a)(4)(A), that is filled by a plurality
vote of the members located in a
particular state by a person who is an
officer or director of a member located
in that state, and includes guaranteed
directorships and stock directorships.
Method of equal proportions means
the mathematical formula used by the
FHFA to allocate member directorships
among the states in a Bank’s district
based on the relative amounts of Bank
stock required to be held as of the
record date by members located in each
state.
Public interest director means a
person serving in a public interest
directorship.
Public interest directorship means an
independent directorship filled by an
individual with more than four years
experience representing consumer or
community interests in banking
services, credit needs, housing or
consumer financial protections.
Record date means December 31 of
the calendar year immediately
preceding the election year.
Stock directorship means a member
directorship that is designated by the
FHFA as representing the members
located in a particular voting state based
on the amount of Bank stock held
required to be held by the members in
that state as of the record date, other
than a guaranteed directorship.
Voting state means the District of
Columbia, Puerto Rico, or the state of
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Jkt 214001
the United States in which a member’s
principal place of business, as
determined in accordance with 12 CFR
part 925, is located as of the record date.
The voting state of a member with a
principal place of business located in
the U.S. Virgin Islands as of the record
date is Puerto Rico, and the voting state
of a member with a principal place of
business located in American Samoa,
Guam, or the Commonwealth of the
Northern Mariana Islands as of the
record date is Hawaii.
§ 1261.2
General provisions.
(a) Board size and composition.
Annually, the FHFA Director will
determine the size of the board of
directors for each Bank and will
designate at least a majority, but no
more than 60 percent, of the
directorships as member directorships
and the remainder as independent
directorships.
(b) Term of directorships. The term of
office of each directorship commencing
on or after January 1, 2009 shall be four
years, except as adjusted pursuant to
section 7(d) of the Act (12 U.S.C
1427(d)) to achieve a staggered board,
and shall commence on January 1 of the
calendar year so designated by the
FHFA.
(c) Annual elections. Each Bank
annually shall conduct an election the
purpose of which is to fill all
directorships designated by the FHFA as
commencing on January 1 of the
calendar year immediately following
such election. Subject to the provisions
of the Act and in accordance with the
requirements of this part, the
disinterested members of the board of
directors of each Bank, or a committee
of disinterested directors, shall
administer and conduct the annual
election of directors. In so doing, the
disinterested directors may use Bank
staff or independent contractors to
perform ministerial and administrative
functions concerning the elections
process.
(d) Location of members. In
accordance with section 7(c) of the Act
(12 U.S.C 1427(c)), for purposes of the
election of member directors, a member
is deemed to be located in its voting
state, unless otherwise designated by
the Director.
(e) Dates. If any date specified in this
part for action by a Bank, or specified
by a Bank pursuant to this part, falls on
a Saturday, Sunday, or Federal holiday,
the relevant time period is deemed to be
extended to the next calendar day that
is not a Saturday, Sunday, or Federal
holiday.
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§ 1261.3 Designation of member
directorships.
(a) Determination of voting stock. (1)
On or before April 10 of each year, each
Bank shall deliver to the FHFA a capital
stock report that indicates, as of the
record date, the number of members
located in each voting state in the
Bank’s district, the number of shares of
Bank stock that each member (identified
by its FHFA ID number) was required to
hold, and the number of shares of Bank
stock that all members located in each
voting state were required to hold. If a
Bank has issued more than one class of
stock, it shall report the total shares of
stock of all classes required to be held
by the members. The Bank shall certify
to the FHFA that, to the best of its
knowledge, the information provided in
the capital stock report is accurate and
complete, and that it has notified each
member of its minimum capital stock
holdings.
(2) If a Bank’s capital plan was not in
effect as of the record date, the number
of shares of Bank stock that any member
is required to hold as of the record date
shall be determined in accordance with
12 CFR 925.20 and 925.22. If a Bank’s
capital plan was in effect as of the
record date, the number of shares of
Bank stock that any member was
required to hold as of that date shall be
determined in accordance with the
minimum investment established by the
capital plan for that Bank; however, for
any member whose Bank stock is less
than the minimum investment during a
transition period, the amount of Bank
stock to be reported shall be the number
of shares of Bank stock actually owned
by the member as of the record date.
(b) Designation of member
directorships as stock directorships. The
Director annually will conduct a
designation of member directorships for
each Bank based on the number of
shares of Bank stock required to be held
by the members in each state as of
December 31 of the preceding calendar
year, using the method of equal
proportions. If a Bank has issued more
than one class of stock, the Director will
designate the directorships for each
state in that Bank district based on the
combined number of shares required to
be held by the members in that state.
For purposes of conducting the
designation, if a Bank’s capital plan was
not in effect on the immediately
preceding December 31, the number of
shares of Bank stock required to be held
by members as of that date shall be
determined in accordance with 12 CFR
925.20 and 925.22. If a Bank’s capital
plan was in effect on the immediately
preceding December 31, the number of
shares of Bank stock required to be held
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by members as of that date shall be
determined in accordance with the
minimum investment established by
such capital plan; however, for any
members whose Bank stock is less than
the minimum investment during a
transition period, the amount of stock to
be used in the designation of
directorships shall be the number of
shares of Bank stock actually owned by
those members as of that December 31.
In all cases, the Director will designate
the directorships by using the
information provided by each Bank in
its capital stock report required by
paragraph (a)(1) of this section.
(c) Allocation of directorships. (1) The
member directorships designated by the
Director will be allocated among the
states by the Director in accordance
with sections 7(b) and (c) of the Act.
(2) If the designation of directorships
conducted by the Director under
paragraph (c)(1) of this section
eliminates any existing directorship, or
if the allocation of directorships under
this paragraph (c) designates any
existing stock directorship to another
state, the director elected or appointed
to that existing directorship shall not be
eligible to serve after the close of
business on the immediately following
December 31.
(d) Notification. On or before June 1
of each year, the FHFA will notify each
Bank in writing of the total number of
directorships established for the Bank
and the number of member
directorships designated as representing
the members in each voting state in the
Bank district. If the annual designation
of member directorships results in an
existing directorship being redesignated
as representing members in a different
state, the directorship shall be deemed
to become vacant as of December 31 of
that year, and thereafter shall filled by
the board of directors of the Bank with
an eligible person who is an officer or
director of a member located in the
newly designated state, regardless of
whether the term for the incumbent
director would have expired by that
date.
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§ 1261.4
Director eligibility.
(a) Eligibility requirements for
member directors. Each member
director, and each nominee to a member
directorship, shall be:
(1) A citizen of the United States; and
(2) An officer or director of a member
that is located in the voting state to be
represented by the member directorship,
that was a member of the Bank as of the
record date, and that meets all
minimum capital requirements
established by its appropriate Federal
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Jkt 214001
banking agency or appropriate state
regulator.
(b) Eligibility requirements for
independent directors. Each
independent director, and each nominee
to an independent directorship, shall be:
(1) A citizen of the United States; and
(2) A bona fide resident of the district
in which the Bank is located.
(c) Restrictions. (1) A nominee is not
eligible if he or she:
(i) Is an incumbent director, unless:
(A) The incumbent director’s term of
office would expire before the new term
of office would begin; and
(B) The new term of office would not
be barred by the term limit provision of
section 7(d) of the Act (12 U.S.C.
1427(d)); or
(ii) Is a former director whose service
would be barred by the term limit
provision of section 7(d) of the Act.
(2) For purposes of applying the term
limit provision of section 7(d) of the Act
(12 U.S.C. 1427(d)):
(i) A term of office that is adjusted
after July 30, 2008 to a period of fewer
than four years shall not be deemed to
be a full term;
(ii) Any three year term of office
ending immediately before a term of
office that is adjusted after July 30, 2008
to a period of fewer than four years and
any term of office commencing
immediately following such adjusted
term of office shall constitute
consecutive full terms of office; and
(iii) Any member director’s service
through election to any directorship
with a three year term of office existing
on or before July 30, 2008 shall be
deemed to be service in a full term
directorship to which the director has
been elected.
(d) Loss of eligibility. (1) A director
shall become ineligible to remain in
office if, during his or her term of office,
the directorship to which he or she has
been elected is eliminated or, with
respect to a member directorship, is
redesignated by the FHFA as
representing members located in
another state, in accordance with
§ 1261.3(c)(2). The incumbent director
shall become ineligible after the close of
business on December 31 of the year in
which the directorship is redesignated
or eliminated. Any directorship ceasing
through elimination or redesignation
shall not be deemed to be a full-term
directorship for purposes of the section.
(2) In the case of a redesignation to
another state, the redesignated
directorship shall be filled by a majority
vote of the remaining Bank directors,
sitting as a board, regardless of whether
the remaining directors constitute a
quorum of the board.
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§ 1261.5
55717
Determination of member votes.
(a) In general. Each Bank shall
determine, in accordance with this
section, the number of votes that each
member of the Bank may cast for each
directorship that is to be filled by the
vote of the members.
(b) Number of votes. For each member
directorship and each independent
directorship that is to be filled in an
election, each member shall be entitled
to cast one vote for each share of Bank
stock that the member was required to
hold as of the record date.
Notwithstanding the preceding
sentence, the number of votes that any
member may cast for any one
directorship shall not exceed the
average number of shares of Bank stock
required to be held as of the record date
by all members located in the same state
as of the record date. If a Bank has
issued more than one class of stock, it
shall calculate the average number of
shares separately for each class of stock,
using the total number of members in a
state as the denominator, and shall
apply those limits separately in
determining the maximum number of
votes that any member owning that class
of stock may cast in the election. If a
Bank’s capital plan was not in effect as
of the record date, the number of shares
of Bank stock that a member was
required to hold as of the record date
shall be determined in accordance with
12 CFR 925.20 and 925.22. If a Bank’s
capital plan was in effect as of the
record date, the number of shares of
Bank stock that a member was required
to hold as of the record date shall be
determined in accordance with the
minimum investment requirement
established by the Bank’s capital plan;
however, for any member whose Bank
stock is less than the minimum
investment during a transition period,
the amount of Bank stock to be used
shall be the number of shares of Bank
stock actually owned by the member as
of the record date.
(c) Voting preferences. If the board of
directors of a Bank includes any voting
preferences as part of its approved
capital plan, those preferences shall
supersede the provisions of paragraph
(b) of this section that otherwise would
allow a member to cast one vote for each
share of Bank stock it was required to
hold as of the record date. If a Bank
establishes a voting preference for a
class of stock, the members with voting
rights shall remain subject to the
provisions of section 7(b) of the Act (12
U.S.C. 1427(b)) that prohibit any
member from casting any vote in excess
of the average number of shares of stock
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required to be held by all members in
its state.
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
§ 1261.6 Nominations for member and
independent directorships.
(a) Election announcement. Within a
reasonable time in advance of an
election, a Bank shall notify each
member in its district of the
commencement of the election process.
Such notice shall include:
(1) The number of member
directorships designated for each voting
state in the Bank district and the
number of independent directorships
for the Bank;
(2) The name of each incumbent Bank
director, the name and location of the
member at which each member director
serves, and the name and location of the
organization with which each
independent director is affiliated, if any,
and the expiration date of each Bank
director’s term of office;
(3) A brief statement describing the
skills and experience the Bank believes
are most likely to add strength to the
board of directors, provided that the
Bank previously has conducted the
annual assessment permitted by
§ 1261.9 and the Bank has elected to
provide the results of the assessment to
the members;
(4) An attachment indicating the
name, location, and FHFA ID number of
every member in the member’s voting
state, and the number of votes each such
member may cast for each directorship
to be filled by such members, as
determined in accordance with § 1261.5;
and
(5) A nominating certificate.
(b) Member directorship nominations.
(1) Any member that is entitled to vote
in the election may nominate an eligible
individual to fill each available member
directorship for its voting state by
delivering to its Bank, prior to a
deadline to be established by the Bank
and set forth in the notice required in
paragraph (a) of this section, a
nominating certificate duly adopted by
the member’s governing body or by an
individual authorized by the member’s
governing body to act on its behalf.
(2) The nominating certificate shall
include the name of the nominee and
the name, location, and FHFA ID
number of the member the nominee
serves as an officer or director.
(3) The Bank shall establish a
deadline for delivery of nominating
certificates, which shall be no earlier
than 30 calendar days after the date on
which the Bank delivers the notice
required by paragraph (a) of this section,
and the Bank shall not accept
certificates received after that deadline.
The Bank shall retain all accepted
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nominating certificates for at least two
years after the date of the election.
(c) Accepting member directorship
nominations. A Bank shall notify in
writing any person nominated for a
member directorship promptly upon
receipt of the nominating certificate. A
person may accept the nomination only
by delivering to the Bank, prior to a
deadline established by the Bank and
set forth in its notice, an executed
director eligibility certification form
prescribed by the FHFA. A Bank shall
allow each nominee at least 30 calendar
days after the date the Bank delivered
the notice of nomination within which
to deliver the executed form. A nominee
may decline the nomination by so
advising the Bank in writing, or by
failing to deliver a properly executed
director eligibility certification form
prior to the deadline. Each Bank shall
retain all information received under
this paragraph for at least two years after
the date of the election.
(d) Independent directorship
nominations. (1) Any individual who
seeks to be an independent director of
the board of directors of a Bank may
deliver to the Bank, on or before the
deadline set by the Bank for delivery of
nominating certificates, an executed
independent director application form
prescribed by the FHFA that
demonstrates that the individual both is
eligible and has either of the following
qualifications:
(i) More than four years experience
representing consumer or community
interests in banking services, credit
needs, housing, or consumer financial
protections; or
(ii) Knowledge of or experience in one
or more of the areas set forth in
paragraph (e) of this section.
(2) Any other interested party may
recommend to the Bank that it consider
a particular individual as a nominee for
an independent directorship, but the
Bank shall not nominate any individual
unless the individual has delivered to
the Bank, on or before the date the Bank
has set for delivery of nominating
certificates, an executed independent
director application form prescribed by
the FHFA. The application form
prescribed by the FHFA will provide a
means by which an individual can
indicate an intent to be considered for
a public interest directorship. Only
individuals who indicate on the form
that they wish to be considered for a
public interest directorship may be
nominated for such directorships. The
board of directors of the Bank may
consider any individual for any
independent directorship nomination,
provided it has determined that the
individual is eligible and qualified. The
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board of directors of the Bank shall
consult with the Bank’s Advisory
Council before nominating any
individual for any independent
directorship. Each Bank shall include in
its bylaws the procedures it intends to
use for the nomination and election of
the independent directors, and shall
retain all information received under
this paragraph for at least two years after
the date of the election.
(3) Each Bank shall determine the
number of public interest directorships
to be included among its authorized
independent directorships, provided
that each Bank shall at all times have at
least two such directorships, and shall
announce that number to its members in
the notice required by paragraph (a) of
this section. In submitting nominations
to its members, each Bank shall
nominate at least as many individuals as
there are independent directorships to
be filled in that year’s election.
(e) Independent director
qualifications. Any independent
director or nominee for an independent
directorship, other than a public interest
director, shall submit to the Bank an
independent director application form
that includes information demonstrating
how that person satisfies the
requirement that he or she have
experience in, or knowledge of, one or
more of the following areas: Auditing
and accounting; derivatives; financial
management; organizational
management; project development; risk
management practices; and the law. In
considering the qualifications of each
such nominee for an independent
directorship, the board of directors of a
Bank shall consider that the nominee’s
knowledge or experience musts be
commensurate with that needed to
oversee a financial institution with a
size and complexity that is comparable
to that of the Bank.
(f) Eligibility verification. Using the
information provided on the director
eligibility certification forms and on the
independent director application forms
prescribed by the FHFA, a Bank shall
verify that each nominee for each
member directorship and independent
directorship meets all of the eligibility
requirements for such directorship, as
set forth in the Act and this part. Before
announcing any independent director
nominee, the Bank shall deliver to the
FHFA a copy of the independent
director application forms executed by
the individuals proposed to be
nominated for independent
directorships by the board of directors
of the Bank.
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§ 1261.7
Election process.
(a) Ballots. Promptly after verifying
the eligibility of all nominees in
accordance with with § 1261.6(f), and if,
within two weeks of the delivery of
nominee application forms to the FHFA,
the FHFA has not informed a Bank of
any objection to the nomination of any
independent director nominee, a Bank
shall prepare and deliver a ballot to all
members that were members as of the
record date. The Bank shall include
with each ballot a closing date for the
Bank’s receipt of voted ballots, which
date shall be no earlier than 30 calendar
days after the date such ballot is
delivered to the member.
(1) A ballot shall include at least the
following provisions:
(i) For states in which one or more
member directorships are to be filled in
the election, an alphabetical listing of
the names of each nominee for such
directorship, the name, location, and
FHFA ID number of the member each
nominee serves, the nominee’s title or
position with the member, and the
number of member directorships to be
filled by the members in that voting
state in the election;
(ii) An alphabetical listing of the
names of each nominee for a public
interest directorship and a brief
description of each nominee’s
experience representing consumer and
community interests;
(iii) An alphabetical listing of the
names nominee for the other
independent directorships and a brief
description of each nominee’s
qualifications, including his or her
knowledge or experience in the areas of
financial management, auditing and
accounting, risk management practices,
derivatives, project development,
organizational management and any
other area of knowledge or experience
set forth in § 1261.6(e);
(iv) A statement that write-in
candidates are not permitted; and
(v) A confidentiality statement
prohibiting the Banks from disclosing
how a member voted.
(2) At the election of the Bank, a
ballot also may include, in the body or
as an attachment, a brief description of
the skills and experience of each
nominee for a member directorship.
(b) Statement on skills and
experience. If a Bank has conducted an
annual assessment permitted by
§ 1261.9 and has included the results of
the assessment as part of the notice to
members required in § 1261.6(a), it may
include with each ballot a statement of
the results of that assessment or any
subsequent assessment. If the statement
differs from the statement provided
under § 1261.6(a)(3), the Bank also shall
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Jkt 214001
include an explanation of why the
statements differ.
(c) Lack of member directorship
nominees. If, for any voting state, the
number of nominees for the member
directorships for that state is equal to or
fewer than the number of such
directorships to be filled in that year’s
election, the Bank shall deliver a notice
to the members in the affected voting
state (in lieu of providing a ballot) that
such nominees shall be deemed elected
without further action, due to a lack of
nominees. Thereafter, the Bank shall
declare elected all eligible nominees
and in doing so may designate
particular nominees to guaranteed
directorships or stock directorships,
respectively, if necessary. The directors
declared elected shall be included as
directors-elect in the report of election
required under paragraph (g) of this
section. Any member directorship that
is not filled due to a lack of nominees
shall be deemed vacant as of January 1
of the following year and shall be filled
by the Bank’s board of directors in
accordance with § 1261.14(a).
(d) Voting. For each directorship to be
filled, a member may cast the number of
votes determined by the Bank pursuant
to § 1261.5. A member may not split its
votes among multiple nominees for a
single directorship, and, where there are
multiple directorships to be filled,
either within the member’s voting state
or at large, in the case of independent
directorships, a member may not
cumulatively vote for a single nominee.
If any member votes, it shall by
resolution of its governing body either
authorize the voting for specific
nominees or delegate to an individual
the authority to vote for specific
nominees. To vote, a member shall:
(1) Mark on the ballot the name of not
more than one of the nominees for each
directorship to be filled. Each nominee
so selected shall receive all of the votes
that the member is entitled to cast.
(2) Execute and deliver the ballot to
the Bank on or before the closing date.
A Bank shall not allow a member to
change a ballot after it has been
delivered to the Bank.
(e) Counting ballots. A Bank shall not
review any ballot until after the closing
date, and shall not include in the
election results any ballot received after
the closing date. Promptly after the
closing date, each Bank shall tabulate
the votes cast in the election: for the
member directorships, the Bank shall
tabulate votes by each voting state; for
the independent directorships, the Bank
shall tabulate votes for the district atlarge. Any ballots cast in violation of
paragraph (d) of this section shall be
void.
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55719
(f) Declaring results. (1) For a member
directorship, the Bank shall declare
elected the nominee receiving the
highest number of votes. If more than
one member directorship is to be filled
for a particular state, the Bank shall
declare elected each successive nominee
receiving the next highest number of
votes until all such open directorships
are filled.
(2) For an independent directorship,
the Bank shall declare elected the
nominee that has received the highest
number of votes and has received at
least 20 per cent of the number of votes
eligible to be cast in the election. If more
than one independent directorship is to
be filled, the Bank shall declare elected
each successive nominee receiving the
next highest number of votes for such
directorship until all such open
directorships are filled, provided such
successive nominee has received at least
20 per cent of the number of votes
eligible to be cast in the election.
(3) In the event of a tie for the last
available directorship, the disinterested
incumbent members of the board of
directors of the Bank, by a majority vote,
shall declare elected one of the
nominees for whom the number of votes
cast was tied.
(4) A Bank shall not declare elected a
nominee that it has reason to know is
ineligible to serve, nor shall it seat a
director-elect that it has reason to know
is ineligible to serve.
(5) The Bank shall retain all ballots it
receives for at least two years after the
date of the election, and shall not
disclose how any member voted.
(g) Report of election. Promptly
following the election, each Bank shall
deliver a notice to its members, to each
nominee, and to the FHFA that contains
the following information:
(1) For each member directorship, the
name of the director-elect, the name and
location of the member at which he or
she serves, his or her title or position at
the member, the voting state
represented, the expiration date of the
term of office, and the number of votes
cast for each nominee;
(2) For each independent
directorship, the name of the directorelect, whether the director-elect will fill
a public interest directorship and, if so,
the consumer or community interest
represented by such directorship, any
qualifications under § 1261.6(e), the
expiration date of the term of office and
the number of votes cast for each
nominee;
(3) The number of members voting in
the election and the total number of
votes cast for each nominee for the
member directorships, which shall be
reported by state, and the total number
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of votes cast for each nominee for the
independent directorships, which shall
be reported for the district at large.
(h) Failing to fill all independent
directorships. If any independent
directorship of a Bank is not filled
through the initial election process set
forth in this section, the board of
directors of the Bank shall identify
additional nominee and shall conduct
additional election for the directorship,
following the election process set forth
in this section. In any such election a
nominee shall not be elected unless he
or she receives at least 20 percent of the
votes eligible to be cast.
§ 1261.8
[Reserved].
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
§ 1261.9 Action affecting director
elections.
(a) Banks. Each Bank, acting through
its board of directors, may conduct an
annual assessment of the skills and
experience possessed by the members of
its board of directors as a whole and
may determine whether the capabilities
of the board would be enhanced through
the addition of individuals with
particular skills and experience. If the
board of directors determines that the
Bank could benefit by the addition to
the board of directors of individuals
with particular qualifications, such as
auditing and accounting, derivatives,
financial management, organizational
management, project development, risk
management practices, or the law , it
may identify those qualifications and so
inform the members as part of its
announcement of elections pursuant to
§ 1261.6(a).
(b) Support for nomination or
election. (1) A Bank director, officer,
attorney, employee, or agent, acting in
his or her personal capacity, may
support the nomination or election of
any individual for a member
directorship, provided that no such
director may purport to represent the
views of the Bank or its board of
directors in doing so.
(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (b)(1)
of this section, a Bank director, officer,
attorney, employee or agent and the
board of directors and Advisory Council
of a Bank may support the candidacy of
any person nominated by the board of
directors for election to an independent
directorship.
(c) Prohibition. Except as provided in
paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section, no
director, officer, attorney, employee, or
agent of a Bank may:
(1) Communicate in any manner that
a director, officer, attorney, employee,
or agent of a Bank, directly or indirectly,
supports or opposes the nomination or
election of a particular individual for a
directorship; or
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Jkt 214001
(2) Take any other action to influence
the voting with respect to any particular
individual.
§ 1261.10 Independent director conflict of
interests.
(a) Employment interests. During any
independent director’s term of service,
such director may not serve as an
officer, employee, or director of any
member of the Bank on whose board the
individual sits, or of any recipient of
advances from such Bank, and may not
serve as an officer of any Bank. An
independent director or nominee for
any independent directorship shall
disclose all such interests to the Bank
on whose board of directors the
individual serves or which is
considering the individual for
nomination to its board of directors.
(b) Holding companies. Service as an
officer, employee, or director of a
holding company that controls one or
more members of, or one or more
recipients of advances from, any Bank is
not deemed to be service as an officer,
employee or director of a member or
recipient of advances if the assets of all
such members or all such recipients of
advances constitute less than 35 percent
of the assets of the holding company, on
a consolidated basis.
(c) Attribution. For purposes of
determining compliance with this
section, a Bank shall attribute to the
independent director any officer
position, employee position, or
directorship of the director’s spouse.
§ 1261.11 Conflict of interests policy for
Bank directors.
(a) Adoption of conflict of interests
policy. Each Bank shall adopt a written
conflict of interests policy that applies
to all members of its board of directors.
At a minimum, the conflict of interests
policy of each Bank shall:
(1) Require the directors to administer
the affairs of the Bank fairly and
impartially and without discrimination
in favor of or against any member;
(2) Require independent directors to
comply with § 1261.10(a);
(3) Prohibit the use of a director’s
official position for personal gain;
(4) Require directors to disclose actual
or apparent conflicts of interest and
establish procedures for addressing such
conflicts;
(5) Provide internal controls to ensure
that reports are filed and that conflicts
are disclosed and resolved; and
(6) Establish procedures to monitor
compliance with the conflict of interests
policy.
(b) Disclosure and recusal. A director
shall disclose to the Bank’s board of
directors any financial interests he or
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
she has, as well as any financial
interests known to the director of any
immediate family member or business
associate of the director, in any matter
to be considered by the Bank’s board of
directors and in any other business
matter or proposed business matter
involving the Bank and any other
person or entity. A director shall
disclose fully the nature of his or her
interests in the matter and shall provide
to the Bank’s board of directors any
information requested to aid in its
consideration of the director’s interest.
A director shall refrain from considering
or voting on any issue in which the
director, any immediate family member,
or any business associate has any
financial interest.
(c) Confidential Information. Directors
shall not disclose or use confidential
information they receive solely by
reason of their position with the Bank
to obtain any benefit for themselves or
for any other individual or entity.
(d) Gifts. Directors shall not accept,
and shall discourage their immediate
family members from accepting, any gift
that the director believes or has reason
to believe is given with the intent to
influence the director’s actions as a
member of the Bank’s board of directors,
or where acceptance of such gift would
have the appearance of intending to
influence the director’s actions as a
member of the board.
(e) Compensation. Directors shall not
accept compensation for services
performed for the Bank from any source
other than the Bank for which the
services are performed.
(f) Definitions. For purposes of this
section:
(1) Immediate family member means
parent, sibling, spouse, child, or
dependent, or any relative sharing the
same residence as the director.
(2) Financial interest means a direct
or indirect financial interest in any
activity, transaction, property, or
relationship that involves receiving or
providing something of monetary value,
and includes, but is not limited to any
right, contractual or otherwise, to the
payment of money, whether contingent
or fixed. It does not include a deposit or
savings account maintained with a
member, nor does it include a loan or
extension of credit obtained from a
member in the normal course of
business on terms that are available
generally to the public.
(3) Business associate means any
individual or entity with whom a
director has a business relationship,
including, but not limited to:
(i) Any corporation or organization of
which the director is an officer or
partner, or in which the director
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beneficially owns ten percent or more of
any class of equity security, including
subordinated debt;
(ii) Any other partner, officer, or
beneficial owner of ten percent or more
of any class of equity security, including
subordinated debt, of any such
corporation or organization; and
(iii) Any trust or other estate in which
a director has a substantial beneficial
interest or as to which the director
serves as trustee or in a similar fiduciary
capacity.
§ 1261.12 Reporting requirements for Bank
directors.
(a) Annual reporting. Annually, each
Bank shall require each of its directors
to execute and deliver to the Bank the
appropriate director eligibility
certification form prescribed by the
FHFA for the type of directorship held
by such director. The Bank promptly
shall deliver to the FHFA a copy of the
certification form delivered to it by each
director.
(b) Report of noncompliance. At any
time that any director believes or has
reason to believe that he or she no
longer meets the eligibility requirements
set forth in the Act or this part, the
director promptly shall so notify the
Bank and the FHFA in writing. At any
time that a Bank believes or has reason
to believe that any director no longer
meets the eligibility requirements set
forth in the Act or this part, the Bank
promptly shall notify the FHFA in
writing.
§ 1261.13
Ineligible Bank directors.
Upon a determination by the FHFA or
a Bank that any director of the Bank no
longer satisfies the eligibility
requirements set forth in the Act or this
part, or has failed to comply with the
reporting requirements of § 1261.12, the
directorship shall immediately become
vacant. Any director that is determined
to have failed to comply with the
eligibility or reporting requirements
shall not continue to serve as a Bank
director. Whenever a Bank makes such
a determination, the Bank promptly
shall notify the Bank director and the
FHFA in writing.
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
§ 1261.14
Vacant Bank directorships.
(a) Filling unexpired terms. As soon as
practicable after any vacancy occurs, the
board of directors of a Bank shall elect,
by a majority vote of the remaining Bank
directors sitting as a board, an
individual to fill the unexpired term of
office of the vacant directorship,
regardless of whether the remaining
Bank directors constitute a quorum of
the Bank’s board of directors.
(b) Verifying eligibility. The board of
directors of a Bank shall elect to a
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Jkt 214001
vacant directorship an individual who
satisfies all of the eligibility
requirements and any of the
qualification requirements set forth in
the Act and this part that were
applicable to his or her predecessor,
except that if the vacant directorship is
a public interest directorship and the
Bank has at least two other public
interest directorships that are not
vacant, the board of directors of the
Bank may elect any individual who is
eligible and qualified for any
independent directorship. The Bank
shall obtain an executed director
eligibility certification form prescribed
by the FHFA from the individual filling
a member directorship. The Bank shall
obtain an executed independent director
application form prescribed by the
FHFA from the individual filling an
independent directorship. The Bank
shall verify the individual’s eligibility
and shall deliver any independent
director application form to the FHFA
for its review and comment before
allowing the individual to assume the
directorship. The Bank shall retain the
information it receives in accordance
with § 1261.6.
(c) Notification. Promptly after
allowing the individual to assume the
directorship, as provided in paragraph
(b) of this section, a Bank shall notify
the FHFA and each member located in
the Bank’s district in writing of the
following:
(1) For each member directorship
filled by the board of a Bank, the name
of the director, the name, location, and
FHFA ID number of the member the
director serves, the director’s title or
position with the member, the voting
state that the director represents, and
the expiration date of the director’s term
of office; and
(2) For each independent directorship
filled by the board of a Bank, the name
of the director, the name and location of
the organization with which the director
is affiliated, if any, the director’s title or
position with such organization, and the
expiration date of the director’s term of
office.
§ 1261.15 Minimum number of member
directorships.
Except with respect to member
directorships of a Bank resulting from
the merger of any two or more Banks,
the number of member directorships
allocated to each state shall not be less
than the number of directorships
allocated to that state on December 31,
1960. The following list sets forth the
states whose members held more than
one directorship on December 31, 1960:
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State
California ...................
Colorado ...................
Illinois ........................
Indiana ......................
Iowa ..........................
Kansas ......................
Kentucky ...................
Louisiana ..................
Massachusetts ..........
Michigan ...................
Minnesota .................
Missouri ....................
New Jersey ...............
New York ..................
Ohio ..........................
Oklahoma .................
Pennsylvania ............
Tennessee ................
Texas ........................
Wisconsin .................
55721
Number of elective
directorships on
December 31, 1960
3
2
4
5
2
3
2
2
3
3
2
2
4
4
4
2
6
2
3
4
§ 1261.16 Temporary rule for 2008 election
of directors.
(a) This section applies to the
scheduling provisions for the election of
directors of the Banks during calendar
year 2008. Each Bank shall schedule its
elections to allow a reasonable time to
accomplish each act and complete the
election process by December 31, 2008.
As described herein, this section
operates in conjunction with §§ 1261.3,
1261.6 and 1261.7, which govern
generally the election of directors. The
special provisions of this section govern
the process for the 2008 elections for
Bank directorships in the case of any
conflict with the provisions of the other
sections of this part.
(b) Each Bank shall notify its members
of the commencement of the election
process and shall establish a reasonable
deadline after delivery of such notice
within which nominating certificates
must be received by the Bank, pursuant
to the requirements of § 1261.6.
(c) After a Bank has accepted member
directorship nominations, the Bank
shall take the actions specified in
§ 1261.6(c) within a reasonable time.
(d) No Bank shall accept any
completed and executed director
eligibility certification form or any
independent director application form
referred to in § 1261.6(c) and (d) beyond
a reasonable deadline established by the
Bank.
(e) Each Bank shall deliver to each of
its voting members a set of ballot
materials, pursuant to the requirements
of § 1261.7(a), and shall establish a
reasonable period of time for the voting
of ballots.
(f) After the closing date established
by a Bank, the Bank shall commence the
counting of ballots pursuant to the
requirements of § 1261.7(e).
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55722
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 188 / Friday, September 26, 2008 / Rules and Regulations
(g) Not later than December 31, 2008,
each Bank shall declare the results of its
election and report the results, pursuant
to § 1261.7(f) and (g).
(h) For any Bank that began a 2008
elective directorship election process
after having received the Federal
Housing Finance Board’s Resolution
titled 2008 Designation of Federal Home
Loan Bank Directorships, Resolution
No. 2008–10 dated May 14, 2008, if the
number of elective directorships
designated for election in 2008 in that
Resolution for any state is the same as,
or is more than, the number of member
directorships designated for election in
the state in 2008 in the Order of the
FHFA Director dated September 8, 2008,
then, as to such states to the extent that
the Bank has completed the election
process for such directorships in
accordance with Federal Housing
Finance Board rules up through and
including verification of eligibility of
nominees, the Bank’s election process
for member directorships shall be
deemed to be in compliance with
paragraphs (a), (b), (c) and (d) of this
section, as applicable.
(i) This section is effective from
September 26, 2008 through December
31, 2008.
Background
Dated: September 22, 2008.
James B. Lockhart, III,
Director, Federal Housing Finance Agency.
[FR Doc. E8–22659 Filed 9–25–08; 8:45 am]
Justification for Immediate Adoption
BILLING CODE 8070–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
On January 3, 2005, FAA published a
final rule revising the regulations
concerning registering aircraft and
recording security documents (70 FR
245). These revisions were required by
the Cape Town Treaty Implementation
Act of 2004. The Cape Town Treaty
established a new International Registry
for registering interests against certain
aircraft and aircraft engines. The rule
also made unrelated technical changes
to other portions of the regulations.
One of the technical changes affected
14 CFR 47.35. The amendment should
have revised paragraph (a) introductory
text, in order to revise an outdated
reference to an Act. However, the entire
paragraph (a) was inadvertently revised,
which resulted in the loss of paragraphs
(a)(1) and (a)(2). The information in
paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2) was still
necessary and should have remained in
the section.
This technical amendment merely
reinstates paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2) to
14 CFR 47.35. The text of these
paragraphs remains as it was at the time
of their inadvertent removal.
Because this action reinstates
paragraphs that were never intended to
be removed, the FAA finds that notice
and public comment under 5 U.S.C.
553(b) is unnecessary. For the same
reason, the FAA finds that good cause
exists under 5 U.S.C. 553(d) for making
this rule effective upon publication.
List of Subjects in 14 CFR Part 47
14 CFR Part 47
Aircraft, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
The Amendment
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), DOT.
ACTION: Final rule; technical
amendment.
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
AGENCY:
In consideration of the foregoing, the
Federal Aviation Administration
amends Chapter I of Title 14, Code of
Federal Regulations, part 47, as follows:
■
SUMMARY: This final rule corrects a
previously published rule. In the
original document, an amendment
inadvertently removed two paragraphs
relating to the registration of certain
aircraft. This rule reinstates those two
paragraphs in their original form.
DATES: This rule is effective September
26, 2008.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Walter Binkley, Civil Aviation Registry,
AFS–750, Mike Monroney Aeronautical
Center, 6500 South MacArthur
Boulevard, Oklahoma City, OK 73169;
Telephone (405) 954–3131.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
VerDate Aug<31>2005
18:25 Sep 25, 2008
Jkt 214001
PART 47–AIRCRAFT REGISTRATION
1. The authority citation for part 47
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 4 U.S.T. 1830; Pub. L. 108–297,
118 Stat. 1095 (49 U.S.C. 40101 note, 49
U.S.C. 44101 note); 49 U.S.C. 106(g), 40113–
40114, 44101–44108, 44110–44113, 44703–
44704, 44713, 45302, 46104, 46301.
2. Amend § 47.35 by adding
paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2) to read as
follows:
■
§ 47.35 Aircraft last previously registered
in the United States.
(a) * * *
PO 00000
Frm 00040
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
Issued in Washington, DC, on September
22, 2008.
Pamela Hamilton-Powell,
Director, Office of Rulemaking.
[FR Doc. E8–22586 Filed 9–25–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Part 71
Technical Amendment
Federal Aviation Administration
Cape Town Treaty Implementation
(1) If the applicant bought the aircraft
from the last registered owner, the
conveyance must be from that owner to
the applicant.
(2) If the applicant did not buy the
aircraft from the last registered owner,
he must submit conveyances or other
instruments showing consecutive
transactions from the last registered
owner through each intervening owner
to the applicant.
*
*
*
*
*
[Docket No. FAA–2008–0610; Airspace
Docket No. 08–ASW–10]
Establishment of Class E Airspace;
Pampa, TX
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), DOT.
ACTION: Direct final rule; confirmation of
effective date; correction.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: This action confirms the
effective date and makes a correction to
the direct final rule that establishes
Class E airspace at Pampa, Mesa Vista
Ranch Airport, TX, published in the
Federal Register July 7, 2008 (73 FR
38314) Docket No. FAA–2008–0610.
This action corrects the final rule by
adding ‘‘Mesa Vista Ranch Airport’’ to
more clearly define the airport name in
the airport description.
DATES: Effective Date: 0901 UTC
September 25, 2008. The Director of the
Federal Register approves this
incorporation by reference action under
Title 1, Code of Federal Regulations,
part 51, subject to the annual revision of
FAA Order 7400.9 and publication of
conforming amendments.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Gary
Mallett, Central Service Center, System
Support Group, Federal Aviation
Administration, Southwest Region, 2601
Meacham Blvd, Fort Worth, TX, 76193–
0530; telephone (817) 222–4949.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
History
The FAA published a direct final rule
with request for comments in the
Federal Register July 7, 2008, (73 FR
38314), Docket No. FAA–2008–0610.
E:\FR\FM\26SER1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 188 (Friday, September 26, 2008)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 55710-55722]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-22659]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERAL HOUSING FINANCE BOARD
12 CFR Part 915
FEDERAL HOUSING FINANCE AGENCY
12 CFR Part 1261
RIN 2590-AA03
Federal Home Loan Bank Boards of Directors: Eligibility and
Elections
AGENCIES: Federal Housing Finance Board; Federal Housing Finance
Agency.
ACTION: Interim final rule with request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) is issuing and
seeking comment on an interim final regulation to implement section
1202 of the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008, which revises
section 7 of the Federal Home Loan Bank Act (Bank Act). Section 7
governs the eligibility and election of individuals to serve on the
boards of directors of the 12 Federal Home Loan Banks (Banks).
DATES: This interim final rule is effective on September 26, 2008. The
FHFA will accept written comments on the interim final rule on or
before November 25, 2008.
ADDRESSES: Submit comments to the FHFA using any one of the following
methods:
E-mail: comments@fhfb.gov. Please include RIN 2590-AA03 in the
subject line of the message.
Fax: 202-408-2580.
Mail/Hand Delivery: Federal Housing Finance Board, 1625 Eye Street,
NW., Washington DC 20006, Attention: Public Comments/RIN 2590-AA03.
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments. If you submit your comment to the
Federal eRulemaking Portal, please also send it by e-mail to the FHFA
at comments@fhfb.gov to ensure timely receipt by the FHFA. Include the
following information in the subject line of your submission: Federal
Housing Finance Agency. Interim Final Rule: Federal Home Loan Bank
Boards of Directors: Eligibility and Elections. RIN Number 2590-AA03.
We will post all public comments we receive without change,
including any personal information you provide, such as your name and
address, on the FHFA Web site at https://www.fhfb.gov/
Default.aspx?Page=93&Top=93.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Thomas P. Jennings, Senior Attorney
Advisor (FHFB), jenningst@fhfb.gov, (202) 408-2553; or Patricia L.
Sweeney, Management Analyst (FHFB), sweeneyp@fhfb.gov or (202) 408-
2872. You can send regular mail to the Federal Housing Finance Board,
1625 Eye Street, NW., Washington DC 20006.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Statutory and Regulatory Background
Effective July 30, 2008, the Federal Housing Finance Regulatory
Reform Act of 2008 (Act), Division A of the Housing and Economic
Recovery Act of 2008, Public Law No. 110-289, 122 Stat. 2654 (2008),
transferred the supervisory and oversight responsibilities of the
Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight and the Federal Housing
Finance Board over the Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie
Mae), Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (Freddie Mac)
(collectively, Enterprises), and the Banks to a new independent
executive branch agency known as the Federal Housing Finance Agency
(FHFA). The FHFA is responsible for ensuring that the Enterprises and
the Banks operate in a safe and sound manner, including being
capitalized adequately, and carry out their public policy missions,
including fostering liquid, efficient, competitive, and resilient
national housing finance markets. The Enterprises and the Banks
continue to operate under regulations promulgated by OFHEO and the FHFB
until the FHFA issues its own regulations.
Section 1101 of the Act revised section 7 of the Bank Act. 12
U.S.C. 1427. The FHFB regulation implementing section 7 is codified at
12 CFR part 915. Part 915 governed the nomination and election only of
those directors who are chosen from among the officers and directors of
members of the Banks, which this interim final rule refers to as member
directors. The Act amended section 7(b) of the Bank Act, 12 U.S.C.
1427(b), to give the members the right to also elect all of the other
directors on the boards of directors of the Banks, which other
directors are referred to in this interim final rule as independent
directors. The FHFA has kept the basic process of elections that exists
in part 915 as it applies to member directorships, making changes as
necessary to comply with the amendments to section 7 of the Bank Act.
The FHFA has added provisions to govern the process for nominating
individuals for independent directorships and for conducting the
election of independent directors in conjunction with the election of
member directors. The organizational structure of part 915 also has
been revised.
Section 1201 of the Act (codified at 12 U.S.C. 4513(f)) requires
the Director of the FHFA to consider the differences between the Banks
and the Enterprises in rulemakings that affect the Banks with respect
to the Banks' cooperative ownership structure, mission of providing
liquidity to members, affordable housing and community development
mission, capital structure, and joint and several liability. In
preparing the interim final rule, the Director considered these factors
and determined that the rule is appropriate, particularly because this
interim final rule implements a statutory provision of the Bank Act
that applies only to the Banks. See 12 U.S.C. 1427.
II. Description of the Interim Final Rule
The interim final regulation removes part 915 of the FHFB
regulations and establishes part 1261 of the FHFA regulations, which
will contain the rules governing the eligibility and election of Bank
directors. The name of new part 1261 will read ``Federal Home Loan Bank
Director Eligibility and Elections.''
A. Definitions: Section 1261.1
The FHFA has made technical changes to the definitions of ``bona
fide resident,'' ``guaranteed directorship,'' ``stock directorship,''
and ``voting state,'' but their meanings remain the same as they were
in part 915. The meaning of ``record date'' has not changed. The
identification number for the Banks is the same, except that it is now
the number assigned by the FHFA.
The Act's amendments to section 7 of the Bank Act, 12 U.S.C. 1427,
divide the directorships of the Banks into two categories--member
directorships and independent directorships. Both types of
directorships are filled by a vote of the members; however, elections
for member directors are held on a state-by-state basis, whereas
independent directors are elected at large by all the members of a Bank
without regard to whether the members located in a particular voting
state may be voting on member directors in any particular year. The
definitions of ``independent directorship'' and ``member directorship''
reflect that difference.
The definitions of ``guaranteed directorship'' and ``stock
directorship''
[[Page 55711]]
reflect that there are two categories of member directorships, because
section 7(c) of the Bank Act, 12 U.S.C. 1417(c), guarantees that
directorships from members located in some states will be no fewer than
the number that existed on December 31, 1960, regardless of the amount
of voting stock located in those states. The definition of ``public
interest directorship'' reflects the statutory criteria that an
independent director must have in order to receive this designation.
Section 7(c) of the Bank Act, 12 U.S.C. 1427(c), requires the
Director of the FHFA to determine the number of member directorships
based on the approximate ratio of required stock held by members
located in particular states in a Bank's geographic region. The method
the FHFA uses is defined in this section as the ``method of equal
proportions.''
B. General Provisions: Section 1261.2
Section 7(a) of the Bank Act, 12 U.S.C. 1427(a), sets the size of a
Bank's board of directors at 13, or such other number as the Director
may determine, provided the member directorships always maintain a
majority and the independent directorships comprise at least 40 percent
of the entire board. Section 1261.2(a) provides that the FHFA Director
annually will set the number of directorships for each Bank, and will
designate the directorships as either member directorships or
independent directorships. The rule does not provide that the Director
will designate the independent directorships as either public interest
directorships or other independent directorships. If the Director does
not further designate the independent directorships, the board of
directors of a Bank will have the power, through the nomination
process, to nominate any number of the independent directorships as
public interest directorships, provided it so designates at least two
of the independent directorships. The FHFA requests comments on whether
the boards of the Banks or the FHFA Director should establish the
number of public interest directorships.
Section 7(c) of the Bank Act, 12 U.S.C. 1427(c), continues to
require that states be grandfathered with the number of directorships
representing members in the states on December 31, 1960,
notwithstanding any other provision in section 7. Thus, in applying the
grandfather provision to the Banks based on their current districts,
notwithstanding the Act's apparent default board size of 13, every Bank
must have a minimum of 14 directorships, 8 of which must be member
directorships. The Act amends section 7(d) of the Bank Act, 12 U.S.C.
1427(d), to require that the term of office of directors elected after
July 30, 2008 be four years, except that the FHFA has to adjust terms
to achieve an approximately equal staggering of the years for the
election of the members of the board of directors of a Bank. Section
1261.2(b) addresses this requirement. The Act also amends the Bank Act
to require that existing directorships that do not expire on December
31, 2008 continue their existing terms, so the FHFA has to adjust the
terms of new directorships beginning January 1, 2009 in order to
achieve staggering.
Section 1261.2(c) carries forward the requirement in section
915.3(a) that the Banks are responsible for conducting annual
elections. Section 1261.2(d) and (e) are based on the sections 915.3(d)
and 915.2, respectively, of the FHFB rule.
C. Designation of Member Directorships: Section 1261.3
Section 1261.3(a) continues the requirement in section 915.4 of the
FHFB rule that each Bank must submit a capital report. The FHFA will
rely on this information to designate stock directorships among the
voting states in a Bank's district. Each Bank also must notify each of
its members of its minimum required stock holdings. Section
1261.3(a)(2) applies only to the Chicago Bank, whose capital plan is
not yet in effect.
Section 1261.3(b) and (c) of the interim final rule carry forward
the requirements of section 915.3(b) of the FHFB regulations. Section
1261.3(b) specifies the methodology by which the FHFA will make the
allocation of member directorships, and section 1261.3(c) provides that
the FHFA will follow the requirements in sections 7(b) and (c) of the
Bank Act in designating member directorships to the states. Annually,
the FHFA will use the method of equal proportions to determine how
member directorships should be divided among the states in a Bank's
district, based on the stock holdings of the members located in each
state in the Bank's district. The FHFA's annual allocation to each
state will be sufficient to meet the requirement in section 7(c) of the
Bank Act that the number of member directorships in each state be equal
to the number of elective directorships that it had on December 31,
1960 (the guaranteed directorships).
The effect of the so-called ``grandfather'' provision is that,
based on the present geographic districts of the Banks, each Bank will
have a minimum of eight member directorships. Section 1261.3(c)
recognizes that some existing directorships at a Bank may cease to
exist if, resulting from the Director's annual designation, the number
of directors is set at a number below the size of the existing board,
the number of member directorships increases and the number of
independent directorships decreases, or vice versa, or the application
of the method of equal proportions causes any state to lose a
directorship to another state. If a state loses a directorship through
any of these events, section 1261.3(c) provides that the director
sitting in that directorship shall be ineligible to serve after
December 31 of that year.
Section 1261.3(d) continues the notification provision in section
915.3(e) of the FHFB rule.
D. Director Eligibility: Section 1261.4
Section 1261.4(a) carries forward section 915.7(b) of the FHFB rule
regarding the eligibility requirements of member directors. Section
1261.4(b) sets forth the eligibility requirements of independent
directors in section 7(a) of the Bank Act.
Section 1261.4(c) describes situations in which otherwise eligible
individuals would not be eligible to serve. The term limit provisions
of section 7(d) of the Bank Act limit service of individuals who have
served all or part of three consecutive full terms. Such individuals
are ineligible for the two years following such service. For terms
beginning after the effective date of the Act, section 1261.4(c) deems
only four year terms to be full terms. The existing directorships that
do not end on December 31, 2008, have three year terms, and those
directorships' terms are full terms. If the FHFA creates shorter than
four year terms for directorships that begin on or after January 1,
2009, to effectively stagger the directorships, those shorter terms
will not be deemed to be full terms. Nonetheless, such shorter terms
will not be effective for purposes of creating a break in service or
avoiding the three consecutive term count. In other words, serving in
three consecutive three year elective directorships ending December 31,
2008 will render an individual ineligible to serve a shortened term
beginning January 1, 2009, and serving in one or two three year
elective directorships ending December 31, 2008, a shortened term
beginning January 1, 2009, and one or two four year terms immediately
thereafter, for a total of three full terms, will render an individual
ineligible to again serve for two more years.
The FHFA seeks comment on its application of the consecutive full-
term
[[Page 55712]]
limitation in section 7(d) of the Bank Act. If a director serves in a
term which met the Bank Act's requirement of a full term at the time
the director assumed that directorship, no matter how long the term is,
should that term be considered a full term? Should the current terms
and any prior terms consecutive thereto of directors elected prior to
July 30, 2008, be deemed to be full terms for purposes of the three
consecutive term rule in section 7(d) of the Bank Act? Should the full
terms of the directors appointed by the Finance Board be treated any
differently from how the terms of elective directors are treated?
Should the shorter term that the FHFA creates for purposes of
staggering be considered a break between terms before and after other
terms of service, for purposes of treating the other terms as
consecutive full terms?
Section 1261.4(d) deems a sitting director to be ineligible on
December 31 of the year in which that person's directorship is
eliminated or redesignated to another state through the annual
allocation under the method of equal proportions. The FHFA is required
to do an annual allocation, and changes in member stock ownership on a
state-by-state basis may cause a state to lose one or more
directorships. Although an individual may have to give up a
directorship due to reallocation or elimination, if the individual does
not complete a full term due to such action, that term will not count
as a full term for purposes of eligibility.
E. Determination of Member Votes: Section 1261.5
Section 1261.5 carries forward section 915.5 of the FHFB rule,
which sets forth how the Banks must determine the number of votes of
each member. For those Banks that have more than one class of stock,
the Banks are required to calculate the average number of shares
separately for each class and allow each member to vote its combined
average number of shares. The average for each class is calculated
based on the total number of members in each state, even if a member
holds no shares in a class of stock. The number of votes allocated to a
member is the number of votes that the member may vote for any
directorship, whether it is a member directorship, independent public
interest directorship, or other independent directorship.
F. Nominations for Member and Independent Directorships: Section 1261.6
Section 915.6 of the FHFB regulation set forth the requirements for
member directorship nominations. Section 1261.6 carries forth these
requirements with some modifications and sets forth how the Banks will
nominate independent directorship candidates. Banks are not required to
do so in any particular mode of communication, so long as they can
demonstrate to the FHFA their compliance with the regulations.
As required by section 1261.6(a) of the interim final rule, the
Banks must provide to each member a notice of the commencement of the
election process in a reasonable time in advance of the elections. As
to member directorships, the notice and nomination procedures do not
differ significantly from the procedures set forth in the FHFB
regulation.
As to independent directorships, section 7 of the Bank Act requires
each Bank to nominate candidates, and the election from among the
candidates is the right of the members of each Bank. Under section
1261.6(d) of the interim final rule, a Bank must consider anyone who
applies using an application form prescribed by the FHFA and indicates
on the form that s/he meets the eligibility requirements set forth in
section 1261.4(b), provided the application form is delivered to the
Bank by a deadline set by the Bank and the application form contains
any of the qualifications for independent directors set forth in that
section. Independent directors may meet either the requirements of
public interest directors or the requirements set forth in section
1261.6(e).
Section 1261.6(d) also requires that a Bank's board of directors
consult with the Bank's Advisory Council before nominating independent
directors. The FHFA requests comment on whether it should require the
Advisory Council to play any specific role in the consultation process
and whether the FHFA should prescribe procedures on how the
consultation should take place.
Section 7(a) of the Bank Act and section 1261.6(d) of the interim
final rule require that public interest directors have more than four
years experience in representing consumer or community interests in
banking services, credit needs, housing, or consumer financial
protections. Prior to the Act's amendments to section 7(a), a public
interest director had to be from an organization that had a history of
more than two years representing consumer or community interests, but
the individual did not necessarily have to have personal experience
doing so. Although the FHFA will impose the Act's requirements on newly
chosen independent directors, the FHFA will deem existing public
interest directors who qualified and were designated as public interest
directors under the Bank Act before it was amended to be public
interest directors for the remainder of their existing terms.
The FHFA requests comments on whether it should apply the revised
experience requirements to existing public interest directors and, if
so, whether it should require any Bank that does not have two public
interest directors who meet the revised requirements to nominate
candidates who do meet those requirements.
Section 1261.6(d)(3) requires the Banks to establish the number of
public interest directorships from among the number of independent
directorships established by the FHFA Director pursuant to section
1261.3(c). It requires the Banks to have at least two public interest
directors, as required by section 7(a) of the Bank Act. The boards of
directors of the Banks must nominate at least as many individuals for
public interest directorships as there are positions available. Any
board may nominate more individuals for public interest directorship
positions than there are positions to be filled; however, the Bank may
fill only those vacant positions that the board has designated as
public interest directorships with public interest director nominees.
The rule permits a board of directors to have only enough nominees
to fill the vacant positions, because the board of directors of a Bank
might determine that the most highly qualified candidates may not apply
unless they are assured of a seat after having been nominated. The FHFA
requests comment on whether the board of directors of a Bank should be
required to nominate more candidates for independent directorships than
there are positions to be filled, if the board has determined that
there are sufficient applicants who are both eligible and qualified.
Section 7(a) of the Bank Act sets forth specific qualifications
that independent directors, other than public interest directors, must
have, and it authorizes the FHFA Director to establish other knowledge
or experience that an independent director may have in lieu of the
types of knowledge or experience specified in section 7(a). Section
1261.6(e) provides that independent directors may be qualified if they
have knowledge or experience in the law, in addition to the statutorily
prescribed subjects of auditing or accounting, derivatives, financial
management, organizational management, project development or risk
management practices. In each case, a candidate's knowledge or
experience must be
[[Page 55713]]
commensurate with the knowledge or experience needed to oversee a
business of the size and complexity of the Bank. The FHFA solicits
comment on whether additional areas of expertise should be added to the
list.
Pursuant to section 1261.6(f) of the interim final rule, Banks must
verify the eligibility of nominees for directorships before placing
their names on the ballots. The FHFA will prescribe eligibility
certification forms for member directors, and the Banks must use
information on those forms to verify eligibility of nominees for member
directorships. The FHFA will prescribe application forms and
eligibility certification forms for independent directors. For new
nominees for independent directorships, the Banks may use information
on the application forms. For incumbent nominees for independent
directorships, the Banks may use information on eligibility
certification forms or on application forms. As to independent
directorship nominees, both incumbent and new nominees, the Banks must
deliver the names and contemporaneously executed director application
forms of the nominees to the FHFA for its review and comment before the
names of any such nominees can be placed on ballots. The FHFA intends
to review the information submitted and, whenever it has comments that
might aid a Bank, make comments to the Bank's board of directors about
how any nominee's qualifications might serve the needs of the Bank.
G. Election Process: Section 1261.7
1. Ballots
Similar to the current election process conducted by the Banks, the
interim final rule requires each Bank to prepare a ballot for each
voting state. A Bank may not deliver ballots until after the FHFA has
commented on the independent director nominees. Independent director
nominees are elected on a district-wide basis, so all states in the
district will be voting states in each annual election. The FHFA
contemplates that ballots will differ from state to state, because a
Bank likely will not include on the ballots in one state the member
director nominees for the other states in its district. The ballots
must include a closing date for voting, which may not be sooner than 30
days after the ballots are delivered.
The ballots must contain the type of minimum information on member
directorship nominees required in section 915.8 of the FHFB rule. As to
independent directorship nominees, the ballots must include information
about their qualifications for the type of directorship for which they
are nominated. All nominees must be listed alphabetically and
separately for each type of directorship for which the election is
being held. A Bank may include additional information it deems
appropriate, including a description of the skills and experience of
the member director nominees. If, pursuant to section 1261.9, a Bank
has conducted an assessment of the skills and experience it needs on
its board of directors and included that information in its notice
required in section 1261.6, or subsequently has revised that
assessment, the Bank may include a statement of the most recent version
of its assessment with the ballots. The interim final rule also
requires the Banks to include on the ballots a statement that write-in
candidates are not permitted and a statement that the Bank will not
disclose how any member votes its ballot.
2. Lack of Member Directorship Nominees
In those instances where the number of member nominees is not
greater than the number of member directorships to be filled, section
1261.7(c) of the interim final rule requires a Bank to declare the
seats filled by the eligible nominees, first filling any guaranteed
directorships and then any remaining stock directorships. If any member
directorship is not filled, or if the failure to fill any directorship
would cause the number of member directors to be fewer than a majority
of the directors, then such directorship will become vacant on January
1 of the following year, and the Bank's board of directors at that time
may elect an individual to fill the vacancy.
3. Voting
The interim final rule provides that a member's vote for a nominee
is deemed a vote in the amount of all the stock that the member is
required to hold as of the record date. A member may not vote more than
the amount of its required stock for any one nominee, no matter how
many directorships are being filled by the election. A member may vote
for as many nominees as there are directorships being filled by the
election, but a member may vote only one time for any one nominee. A
member may vote at any time up until the closing date, by which time it
must have delivered its ballot to the Bank.
4. Declaring Results
Section 1261.7(f) of the interim final rule provides that the
individual receiving the highest number of votes is declared the winner
of a member directorship. If other member directorships are being
filled, the individual receiving the next highest number of votes also
will be declared a winner, and so on down the line. The same rule
applies to each type of independent directorship, except that a nominee
who receives fewer than 20 percent of the number of votes eligible to
be cast may not be declared a winner. If, for the last available
directorship of any type, there is a tie vote, and for an independent
directorship the tie vote is at least 20 percent of the eligible votes,
then the disinterested members of the Bank's board of directors by
majority vote will determine the winner. At the time of declaring
winners and at the time any director is seated, a Bank may not have any
reason to know that such director is ineligible to serve.
The FHFA requests comment on whether the rule should continue to
require that independent directors must receive at least a minimum
percentage of votes cast in order to be elected and, if so, what that
minimum should be. The FHFA believes that receiving at least a minimum
percentage of votes affirms that the candidate is the choice of the
members, even when the number of candidates does not exceed the number
of directorships to be filled. If there is a minimum percentage, should
it be based on the number of shares actually voting or on the number of
shares eligible to vote?
5. Report of Election
Section 1261.7(g) of the interim final rule requires each Bank to
promptly report to its members, each nominee, and the FHFA on the
results of an election. The report must contain the number of voting
members, the number of votes cast, and the number of votes received by
each nominee. As to each member director-elect, the Bank must provide
the same information required in section 915.8(e) or the FHFB rule. As
to each public interest director, the Bank must provide the consumer or
community interest represented and the expiration date of the term of
office. For each other independent director-elect, the Bank must
provide the individual's qualifications under section 1261.6(e) and the
expiration date of the term of office.
6. Failing To Fill All Independent Directorships
If any independent directorship is not filled for failure to
receive 20 percent of the eligible votes, section 1261.7(h) of the
interim final rule requires a Bank to conduct another election for such
directorship, following the same
[[Page 55714]]
procedures required for the initial election. The Bank must continue
repeated election procedures until the directorship is filled by a vote
of 20 percent of the votes eligible to be voted. The eligible votes
remain the same for each such repeat election.
H. Section 1261.8 Is Reserved for Future Use
I. Action Affecting Director Elections: Section 1261.9
Section 1261.9(a) of the interim final rule continues the
authorization to a Bank's board of directors to conduct an annual
assessment of the skills and experience needed on a Bank's board of
directors, as provided in section 915.9(a) of the FHFB rule. If such an
assessment identifies particular skills or experience needed on the
board, a Bank may inform its members of those needs in its notice of
elections.
Section 1261.9(b) of the interim final rule authorizes a Bank and
any of its directors, officers, attorneys, employees, and agents,
including the Bank's board of directors and Advisory Council, to
support any individual for nomination and election to an independent
directorship. Such individuals, if acting in their personal capacity,
are not prohibited from supporting the nomination or election of any
individual for a member directorship. The distinction between member
directorships and independent directorships is that the Bank's board of
directors nominates individuals for independent directorships, and
support of the Bank's nominees could benefit the Bank without
discriminating against any member.
Except as allowed under section 1261.9(a) and (b), no director,
officer, employee, attorney, or agent of a Bank may support or oppose
the nomination or election of any individual for any directorship of
the Bank, or take any other action to influence the voting for or
against any such individual.
The FHFA seeks comment on whether it is appropriate to distinguish
between member and independent directors when establishing prohibitions
on actions that might influence others with respect to any director.
Comment also is sought on whether there are other issues that the FHFA
should address in this section.
J. Independent Director Conflict of Interests: Section 1261.10
Section 7(a) of the Bank Act prohibits an independent director from
serving as an officer of any Bank and from serving as a director,
officer, or employee of any member of the Bank on whose board the
director sits, or of any recipient of any advances from that Bank.
Section 1261.10 of the interim final rule sets forth this prohibition
and requires any nominee for, and incumbent holding, an independent
directorship to disclose such interests. Positions held in a holding
company that controls any member or any recipient of advances, are
attributed to any member or recipient of advances if the assets of all
members or recipients of advances under the control of the holding
company equal at least 35 percent of the assets of the holding company.
Positions in any other subsidiary or affiliate of the holding company
are not attributed to the member or recipient of advances. Positions
held by an individual's spouse are attributed to the individual.
The FHA seeks comment on whether the holding company attribution
rule should be set at a number other than 35 percent.
K. Conflict of Interests Policy for Bank Directors: Section 1261.11
Section 1261.11(a) of the interim final rule revises and restates
the requirement in section 915.11 of the FHFB rule that Banks adopt a
conflicts of interest policy to apply to the members of their boards of
directors. The rule sets forth the minimum contents of such a policy.
One requirement is that the policy must require the board of directors
to administer the affairs of the Bank fairly and impartially, without
discriminating in favor of or against any member. The rule does not
address nonmember borrowers specifically, but the absence of any
reference to nonmember borrowers does not prohibit a Bank from
addressing conflicts of interests with respect to nonmember borrowers.
Section 1261.11(b) of the interim final rule requires any director
of a Bank to disclose fully to the board of directors of the Bank any
financial interest that the director or any immediate family member or
business associate has in any business matter or proposed business
matter involving the Bank and to refrain from any action in connection
with the matter. Section 1261.11(c) requires directors to maintain the
confidentiality of confidential information obtained by serving as a
director and to refrain from using that information for personal
benefit.
Section 1261.11(d) of the interim final rule prohibits the
acceptance of gifts to influence the director's actions as a member of
the board of directors of a Bank. A director may not accept a gift, no
matter the value, if the director believes, or would have reason to
believe, that the gift is given with the intent to influence the
director's actions. A director may not accept a gift, no matter the
value, if acceptance would have the appearance of the donor's intent to
influence the director's actions. Although the prohibition does not
prohibit other gifts, the absence of a specific prohibition does not
prohibit a Bank from addressing other situations in its conflict of
interest policy.
Section 1261.11(e) of the interim final rule prohibits a director
from accepting compensation for service on the board of a Bank from any
source other than the Bank. This prohibition does not prohibit any
director who is a salaried employee from continuing to receive a salary
even when the time that the director devotes to the Bank would
otherwise be time devoted to the employer.
L. Reporting Requirements for Bank Directors: Section 1261.12
Pursuant to section 1261.12(a) of the interim final rule, each
sitting director is required to execute an annual eligibility
certification form applicable to the directorship held by the director.
The form, prescribed by the FHFA for the purpose of identifying any
changes since a prior eligibility review, must be executed and
delivered to the Bank, and the Bank must deliver a copy to the FHFA.
Section 1261.12(b) of the interim final rule requires any sitting
director of a Bank who believes or has reason to believe that s/he no
longer meets the statutory or regulatory eligibility requirements to
notify promptly both the Bank and the FHFA. Likewise, any Bank that
believes or has reason to believe that any of its directors no longer
meets the eligibility requirements must notify the FHFA promptly.
M. Ineligible Bank Directors: Section 1261.13
Section 7(f) of the Bank Act, prior to the amendments made by the
Act, provided that an appointive directorship would become vacant
whenever the director holding that directorship failed to meet the
eligibility requirements set forth in the Bank Act, but the director
could continue to serve until replaced. The amendments to section 7(f)
now require that all directors who fail to meet their statutory
eligibility requirements immediately must vacate their offices. Section
1261.13 of the interim final rule applies these results whenever the
FHFA or a director's Bank makes a determination that the director has
failed to meet any eligibility requirement set forth in the Bank Act or
in part 1261 or has failed to comply with the reporting requirements in
section 1261.12 of the interim final rule. Section 1261.13 also
[[Page 55715]]
requires a Bank to notify the FHFA promptly after it has made such a
determination.
N. Vacant Bank Directorships: Section 1261.14
Section 1261.14(a) of the interim final rule implements the
requirements in section 7(f) of the Bank Act that any individual who
fills a vacancy on the board of a Bank be elected by a majority vote of
the remaining directors.
Section 1261.14(b) of the interim final rule requires the board of
directors of a Bank to fill any vacancy with an individual who meets
the eligibility and qualification requirements applicable to any
individual who was the predecessor in that position; however, if a Bank
continues to have at least two public interest directors, the board of
directors of the Bank may fill the vacant directorship with an
individual who meets the eligibility and qualification requirements for
any independent directorship. The eligibility requirements for both
member and independent directors are set forth in section 1261.4 of the
interim final rule. The eligibility requirements for independent public
interest directors and for other independent directors are the same.
The qualification requirements for independent public interest
directors and for other independent directors are set forth in section
1261.6 of the interim final rule. The Bank must verify eligibility
before allowing any director elected by the board to assume office, and
the Bank must deliver the individual's application form to the FHFA for
review and comment before the individual is allowed to assume office.
Section 1261.14(c) of the interim final rule requires a Bank to
provide a notice to the FHFA and to each member of the Bank that
includes specified information about any individual who has been
elected by the directors of the Bank.
O. Minimum Number of Member Directorships: Section 1261.15
Section 1261.15 designates the grandfathered directorships that
apply at the present time to the 12 Banks. The section also provides
that the grandfathering of directorships for any two or more Banks that
merge does not apply to those Banks that are a part of the merger, as
required by an amendment to section 7(c) of the Bank Act.
P. 2008 Temporary Schedule for Election of Directors: Section 1261.16
Section 1261.16 of the interim final rule requires each Bank to set
a reasonable schedule for the nomination and election of directors in
2008 only.
This temporary director election schedule will cease to be
effective after December 31, 2008.
III. Notice and Public Participation
The notice and comment procedure required by the Administrative
Procedure Act is inapplicable to this interim final rule because it is
in the public interest to implement the requirements of the Act as soon
as it is practicable to do so: The Banks need to conduct elections and
install directors in compliance with the new law by January 1, 2009,
when a number of terms of existing directors expire. See 5 U.S.C.
553(b)(3)(B). However, because the FHFA believes that public comments
are valuable, it encourages comments on this interim final rule, and
will consider all comments received on or before November 25, 2008 in
promulgating a final rule.
IV. Effective Date
For the reasons stated in part III above, the FHFA for good cause
finds that the interim final rule should become effective on September
26, 2008. See 5 U.S.C. 553(d)(3).
V. Paperwork Reduction Act
The interim final rule will have no substantive effect on any
collection of information covered by the Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995 (PRA). See 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. Therefore, the FHFA has not
submitted this interim final rule to the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) for review. The Finance Board used application forms to
collect information on prospective appointive directors, and those
forms had been assigned control number 3069-0002 by the OMB. The FHFA
will direct the Banks to use those forms, which will be amended as
appropriate but the changes to the forms will not materially modify the
approved information collection. Consequently, the FHFA has not
submitted any information to OMB for review under the PRA.
VI. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The FHFA is adopting this regulation in the form of an interim
final rule and not as a proposed rule. Therefore, the provisions of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act do not apply. See 5 U.S.C. 601(2) and
603(a).
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Parts 915 and 1261
Banks, Banking, Conflicts of interest, Elections, Ethical conduct,
Federal home loan banks, Financial disclosure, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
0
For the reasons stated in the preamble, under the authority of 12
U.S.C. 1319(G) and 12 U.S.C. 1426, 1427 and 1432, the FHFA proposes to
amend chapters IX and XII of title 12 of the Code of Federal
Regulations as follows:
CHAPTER IX--FEDERAL HOUSING FINANCE BOARD
PART 915--BANK DIRECTOR ELIGIBILITY AND ELECTIONS
0
1. Remove 12 CFR part 915.
CHAPTER XII--FEDERAL HOUSING FINANCE AGENCY
0
2. Add and reserve subchapters A and C to 12 CFR Chapter XII.
0
3. Add subchapter B to 12 CFR chapter XII, and transfer part 1231 to
subchapter B.
0
4. Amend title 12 CFR chapter XII by establishing subchapter D to read
as follows:
Subchapter D--Federal Home Loan Banks
0
5. Add part 1261 to subchapter D to read as follows:
PART 1261--FEDERAL HOME LOAN BANK DIRECTOR ELIGIBILITY AND
ELECTIONS
Sec.
1261.1 Definitions.
1261.2 General provisions.
1261.3 Designation of member directorships.
1261.4 Director eligibility.
1261.5 Determination of member votes.
1261.6 Nominations for member and independent directorships.
1261.7 Election process.
1261.8 [Reserved].
1261.9 Actions affecting director elections.
1261.10 Independent director conflict of interests.
1261.11 Conflict of interests policy for Bank directors.
1261.12 Reporting requirements for Bank directors.
1261.13 Ineligible Bank directors.
1261.14 Vacant Bank directorships
1261.15 Minimum number of member directorships.
1261.16 Temporary rule for 2008 election of directors.
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1426, 1427, and 1432.
Sec. 1261.1 Definitions.
For purposes of this part:
Act means the Federal Home Loan Bank Act, as amended (12 U.S.C.
1421 through 1449).
Bank, written in title case, means a Federal Home Loan Bank
established under section 12 of the Act (12 U.S.C. 1432).
Bona fide resident of a Bank district means an individual who:
[[Page 55716]]
(1) Maintains a principal residence in the Bank district; or
(2) If serving as an independent director, owns or leases in his or
her own name a residence in the Bank district and is employed in a
voting state in the Bank district.
Director means the Director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency.
FHFA means the Federal Housing Finance Agency.
FHFA ID number means the number assigned to a member by the FHFA
and used by the FHFA and the Banks to identify a particular member.
Guaranteed directorship means a member directorship that is
required by section 7(c) of the Act (12 U.S.C 1427(c)) to be designated
as representing Bank members that are located in a particular state,
other than a stock directorship.
Independent directorship means a directorship, as defined by
section 7(a)(4)(A) of the Act, 12 U.S.C. 1427(a)(4)(A), that is filled
by a plurality vote of the members at large by a person having the
qualifications specified by section 7(a)(3)(B)(i) or (ii), 12 U.S.C.
1427(a)(3)(B)(i) or (ii).
Member directorship means a directorship, as defined by section
7(a)(4)(A) of the Act, 12 U.S.C. 1427(a)(4)(A), that is filled by a
plurality vote of the members located in a particular state by a person
who is an officer or director of a member located in that state, and
includes guaranteed directorships and stock directorships.
Method of equal proportions means the mathematical formula used by
the FHFA to allocate member directorships among the states in a Bank's
district based on the relative amounts of Bank stock required to be
held as of the record date by members located in each state.
Public interest director means a person serving in a public
interest directorship.
Public interest directorship means an independent directorship
filled by an individual with more than four years experience
representing consumer or community interests in banking services,
credit needs, housing or consumer financial protections.
Record date means December 31 of the calendar year immediately
preceding the election year.
Stock directorship means a member directorship that is designated
by the FHFA as representing the members located in a particular voting
state based on the amount of Bank stock held required to be held by the
members in that state as of the record date, other than a guaranteed
directorship.
Voting state means the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, or the
state of the United States in which a member's principal place of
business, as determined in accordance with 12 CFR part 925, is located
as of the record date. The voting state of a member with a principal
place of business located in the U.S. Virgin Islands as of the record
date is Puerto Rico, and the voting state of a member with a principal
place of business located in American Samoa, Guam, or the Commonwealth
of the Northern Mariana Islands as of the record date is Hawaii.
Sec. 1261.2 General provisions.
(a) Board size and composition. Annually, the FHFA Director will
determine the size of the board of directors for each Bank and will
designate at least a majority, but no more than 60 percent, of the
directorships as member directorships and the remainder as independent
directorships.
(b) Term of directorships. The term of office of each directorship
commencing on or after January 1, 2009 shall be four years, except as
adjusted pursuant to section 7(d) of the Act (12 U.S.C 1427(d)) to
achieve a staggered board, and shall commence on January 1 of the
calendar year so designated by the FHFA.
(c) Annual elections. Each Bank annually shall conduct an election
the purpose of which is to fill all directorships designated by the
FHFA as commencing on January 1 of the calendar year immediately
following such election. Subject to the provisions of the Act and in
accordance with the requirements of this part, the disinterested
members of the board of directors of each Bank, or a committee of
disinterested directors, shall administer and conduct the annual
election of directors. In so doing, the disinterested directors may use
Bank staff or independent contractors to perform ministerial and
administrative functions concerning the elections process.
(d) Location of members. In accordance with section 7(c) of the Act
(12 U.S.C 1427(c)), for purposes of the election of member directors, a
member is deemed to be located in its voting state, unless otherwise
designated by the Director.
(e) Dates. If any date specified in this part for action by a Bank,
or specified by a Bank pursuant to this part, falls on a Saturday,
Sunday, or Federal holiday, the relevant time period is deemed to be
extended to the next calendar day that is not a Saturday, Sunday, or
Federal holiday.
Sec. 1261.3 Designation of member directorships.
(a) Determination of voting stock. (1) On or before April 10 of
each year, each Bank shall deliver to the FHFA a capital stock report
that indicates, as of the record date, the number of members located in
each voting state in the Bank's district, the number of shares of Bank
stock that each member (identified by its FHFA ID number) was required
to hold, and the number of shares of Bank stock that all members
located in each voting state were required to hold. If a Bank has
issued more than one class of stock, it shall report the total shares
of stock of all classes required to be held by the members. The Bank
shall certify to the FHFA that, to the best of its knowledge, the
information provided in the capital stock report is accurate and
complete, and that it has notified each member of its minimum capital
stock holdings.
(2) If a Bank's capital plan was not in effect as of the record
date, the number of shares of Bank stock that any member is required to
hold as of the record date shall be determined in accordance with 12
CFR 925.20 and 925.22. If a Bank's capital plan was in effect as of the
record date, the number of shares of Bank stock that any member was
required to hold as of that date shall be determined in accordance with
the minimum investment established by the capital plan for that Bank;
however, for any member whose Bank stock is less than the minimum
investment during a transition period, the amount of Bank stock to be
reported shall be the number of shares of Bank stock actually owned by
the member as of the record date.
(b) Designation of member directorships as stock directorships. The
Director annually will conduct a designation of member directorships
for each Bank based on the number of shares of Bank stock required to
be held by the members in each state as of December 31 of the preceding
calendar year, using the method of equal proportions. If a Bank has
issued more than one class of stock, the Director will designate the
directorships for each state in that Bank district based on the
combined number of shares required to be held by the members in that
state. For purposes of conducting the designation, if a Bank's capital
plan was not in effect on the immediately preceding December 31, the
number of shares of Bank stock required to be held by members as of
that date shall be determined in accordance with 12 CFR 925.20 and
925.22. If a Bank's capital plan was in effect on the immediately
preceding December 31, the number of shares of Bank stock required to
be held
[[Page 55717]]
by members as of that date shall be determined in accordance with the
minimum investment established by such capital plan; however, for any
members whose Bank stock is less than the minimum investment during a
transition period, the amount of stock to be used in the designation of
directorships shall be the number of shares of Bank stock actually
owned by those members as of that December 31. In all cases, the
Director will designate the directorships by using the information
provided by each Bank in its capital stock report required by paragraph
(a)(1) of this section.
(c) Allocation of directorships. (1) The member directorships
designated by the Director will be allocated among the states by the
Director in accordance with sections 7(b) and (c) of the Act.
(2) If the designation of directorships conducted by the Director
under paragraph (c)(1) of this section eliminates any existing
directorship, or if the allocation of directorships under this
paragraph (c) designates any existing stock directorship to another
state, the director elected or appointed to that existing directorship
shall not be eligible to serve after the close of business on the
immediately following December 31.
(d) Notification. On or before June 1 of each year, the FHFA will
notify each Bank in writing of the total number of directorships
established for the Bank and the number of member directorships
designated as representing the members in each voting state in the Bank
district. If the annual designation of member directorships results in
an existing directorship being redesignated as representing members in
a different state, the directorship shall be deemed to become vacant as
of December 31 of that year, and thereafter shall filled by the board
of directors of the Bank with an eligible person who is an officer or
director of a member located in the newly designated state, regardless
of whether the term for the incumbent director would have expired by
that date.
Sec. 1261.4 Director eligibility.
(a) Eligibility requirements for member directors. Each member
director, and each nominee to a member directorship, shall be:
(1) A citizen of the United States; and
(2) An officer or director of a member that is located in the
voting state to be represented by the member directorship, that was a
member of the Bank as of the record date, and that meets all minimum
capital requirements established by its appropriate Federal banking
agency or appropriate state regulator.
(b) Eligibility requirements for independent directors. Each
independent director, and each nominee to an independent directorship,
shall be:
(1) A citizen of the United States; and
(2) A bona fide resident of the district in which the Bank is
located.
(c) Restrictions. (1) A nominee is not eligible if he or she:
(i) Is an incumbent director, unless:
(A) The incumbent director's term of office would expire before the
new term of office would begin; and
(B) The new term of office would not be barred by the term limit
provision of section 7(d) of the Act (12 U.S.C. 1427(d)); or
(ii) Is a former director whose service would be barred by the term
limit provision of section 7(d) of the Act.
(2) For purposes of applying the term limit provision of section
7(d) of the Act (12 U.S.C. 1427(d)):
(i) A term of office that is adjusted after July 30, 2008 to a
period of fewer than four years shall not be deemed to be a full term;
(ii) Any three year term of office ending immediately before a term
of office that is adjusted after July 30, 2008 to a period of fewer
than four years and any term of office commencing immediately following
such adjusted term of office shall constitute consecutive full terms of
office; and
(iii) Any member director's service through election to any
directorship with a three year term of office existing on or before
July 30, 2008 shall be deemed to be service in a full term directorship
to which the director has been elected.
(d) Loss of eligibility. (1) A director shall become ineligible to
remain in office if, during his or her term of office, the directorship
to which he or she has been elected is eliminated or, with respect to a
member directorship, is redesignated by the FHFA as representing
members located in another state, in accordance with Sec.
1261.3(c)(2). The incumbent director shall become ineligible after the
close of business on December 31 of the year in which the directorship
is redesignated or eliminated. Any directorship ceasing through
elimination or redesignation shall not be deemed to be a full-term
directorship for purposes of the section.
(2) In the case of a redesignation to another state, the
redesignated directorship shall be filled by a majority vote of the
remaining Bank directors, sitting as a board, regardless of whether the
remaining directors constitute a quorum of the board.
Sec. 1261.5 Determination of member votes.
(a) In general. Each Bank shall determine, in accordance with this
section, the number of votes that each member of the Bank may cast for
each directorship that is to be filled by the vote of the members.
(b) Number of votes. For each member directorship and each
independent directorship that is to be filled in an election, each
member shall be entitled to cast one vote for each share of Bank stock
that the member was required to hold as of the record date.
Notwithstanding the preceding sentence, the number of votes that any
member may cast for any one directorship shall not exceed the average
number of shares of Bank stock required to be held as of the record
date by all members located in the same state as of the record date. If
a Bank has issued more than one class of stock, it shall calculate the
average number of shares separately for each class of stock, using the
total number of members in a state as the denominator, and shall apply
those limits separately in determining the maximum number of votes that
any member owning that class of stock may cast in the election. If a
Bank's capital plan was not in effect as of the record date, the number
of shares of Bank stock that a member was required to hold as of the
record date shall be determined in accordance with 12 CFR 925.20 and
925.22. If a Bank's capital plan was in effect as of the record date,
the number of shares of Bank stock that a member was required to hold
as of the record date shall be determined in accordance with the
minimum investment requirement established by the Bank's capital plan;
however, for any member whose Bank stock is less than the minimum
investment during a transition period, the amount of Bank stock to be
used shall be the number of shares of Bank stock actually owned by the
member as of the record date.
(c) Voting preferences. If the board of directors of a Bank
includes any voting preferences as part of its approved capital plan,
those preferences shall supersede the provisions of paragraph (b) of
this section that otherwise would allow a member to cast one vote for
each share of Bank stock it was required to hold as of the record date.
If a Bank establishes a voting preference for a class of stock, the
members with voting rights shall remain subject to the provisions of
section 7(b) of the Act (12 U.S.C. 1427(b)) that prohibit any member
from casting any vote in excess of the average number of shares of
stock
[[Page 55718]]
required to be held by all members in its state.
Sec. 1261.6 Nominations for member and independent directorships.
(a) Election announcement. Within a reasonable time in advance of
an election, a Bank shall notify each member in its district of the
commencement of the election process. Such notice shall include:
(1) The number of member directorships designated for each voting
state in the Bank district and the number of independent directorships
for the Bank;
(2) The name of each incumbent Bank director, the name and location
of the member at which each member director serves, and the name and
location of the organization with which each independent director is
affiliated, if any, and the expiration date of each Bank director's
term of office;
(3) A brief statement describing the skills and experience the Bank
believes are most likely to add strength to the board of directors,
provided that the Bank previously has conducted the annual assessment
permitted by Sec. 1261.9 and the Bank has elected to provide the
results of the assessment to the members;
(4) An attachment indicating the name, location, and FHFA ID number
of every member in the member's voting state, and the number of votes
each such member may cast for each directorship to be filled by such
members, as determined in accordance with Sec. 1261.5; and
(5) A nominating certificate.
(b) Member directorship nominations. (1) Any member that is
entitled to vote in the election may nominate an eligible individual to
fill each available member directorship for its voting state by
delivering to its Bank, prior to a deadline to be established by the
Bank and set forth in the notice required in paragraph (a) of this
section, a nominating certificate duly adopted by the member's
governing body or by an individual authorized by the member's governing
body to act on its behalf.
(2) The nominating certificate shall include the name of the
nominee and the name, location, and FHFA ID number of the member the
nominee serves as an officer or director.
(3) The Bank shall establish a deadline for delivery of nominating
certificates, which shall be no earlier than 30 calendar days after the
date on which the Bank delivers the notice required by paragraph (a) of
this section, and the Bank shall not accept certificates received after
that deadline. The Bank shall retain all accepted nominating
certificates for at least two years after the date of the election.
(c) Accepting member directorship nominations. A Bank shall notify
in writing any person nominated for a member directorship promptly upon
receipt of the nominating certificate. A person may accept the
nomination only by delivering to the Bank, prior to a deadline
established by the Bank and set forth in its notice, an executed
director eligibility certification form prescribed by the FHFA. A Bank
shall allow each nominee at least 30 calendar days after the date the
Bank delivered the notice of nomination within which to deliver the
executed form. A nominee may decline the nomination by so advising the
Bank in writing, or by failing to deliver a properly executed director
eligibility certification form prior to the deadline. Each Bank shall
retain all information received under this paragraph for at least two
years after the date of the election.
(d) Independent directorship nominations. (1) Any individual who
seeks to be an independent director of the board of directors of a Bank
may deliver to the Bank, on or before the deadline set by the Bank for
delivery of nominating certificates, an executed independent director
application form prescribed by the FHFA that demonstrates that the
individual both is eligible and has either of the following
qualifications:
(i) More than four years experience representing consumer or
community interests in banking services, credit needs, housing, or
consumer financial protections; or
(ii) Knowledge of or experience in one or more of the areas set
forth in paragraph (e) of this section.
(2) Any other interested party may recommend to the Bank that it
consider a particular individual as a nominee for an independent
directorship, but the Bank shall not nominate any individual unless the
individual has delivered to the Bank, on or before the date the Bank
has set for delivery of nominating certificates, an executed
independent director application form prescribed by the FHFA. The
application form prescribed by the FHFA will provide a means by which
an individual can indicate an intent to be considered for a public
interest directorship. Only individuals who indicate on the form that
they wish to be considered for a public interest directorship may be
nominated for such directorships. The board of directors of the Bank
may consider any individual for any independent directorship
nomination, provided it has determined that the individual is eligible
and qualified. The board of directors of the Bank shall consult with
the Bank's Advisory Council before nominating any individual for any
independent directorship. Each Bank shall include in its bylaws the
procedures it intends to use for the nomination and election of the
independent directors, and shall retain all information received under
this paragraph for at least two years after the date of the election.
(3) Each Bank shall determine the number of public interest
directorships to be included among its authorized independent
directorships, provided that each Bank shall at all times have at least
two such directorships, and shall announce that number to its members
in the notice required by paragraph (a) of this section. In submitting
nominations to its members, each Bank shall nominate at least as many
individuals as there are independent directorships to be filled in that
year's election.
(e) Independent director qualifications. Any independent director
or nominee for an independent directorship, other than a public
interest director, shall submit to the Bank an independent director
application form that includes information demonstrating how that
person satisfies the requirement that he or she have experience in, or
knowledge of, one or more of the follow