Requirements for Contacts with Federal Credit Unions, 77608-77611 [2013-30560]
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77608
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 247 / Tuesday, December 24, 2013 / Proposed Rules
public comment period is appropriate
and in the public interest based on the
foregoing reasoning. Accordingly, DOE
is hereby extending the comment period
and will consider any comments
received by January 23, 2014.
Issued in Washington, DC, on December
18, 2013.
Kathleen B. Hogan,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Energy
Efficiency, Energy Efficiency and Renewable
Energy.
[FR Doc. 2013–30726 Filed 12–23–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
NATIONAL CREDIT UNION
ADMINISTRATION
12 CFR Part 701
RIN 3133–AE34
Requirements for Contacts with
Federal Credit Unions
National Credit Union
Administration (NCUA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
sroberts on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
The NCUA Board (Board)
proposes to amend part 701 of its
regulations to require examinations and
other contacts between NCUA staff and
staff or officials of a federal credit union
(FCU) occur in an FCU’s business
offices or other public location. This
does not include a private residence.
The proposal also would require
affected FCUs to bring to the meeting
site any records or materials NCUA staff
requests, and to maintain at least one
method for members and NCUA staff to
contact the credit union. These
requirements would apply upon the
effective date of a final rule.
Additionally, the proposal would
require all FCUs to obtain and maintain
a business office, not located on the
premises of a private residence address,
no later than two years following the
effective date of a final rule.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before January 23, 2014.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
by any of the following methods (Please
send comments by one method only):
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• NCUA Web site: https://
www.ncua.gov/Legal/Regs/Pages/
PropRegs.aspx. Follow the instructions
for submitting comments.
• Email: Address to
regcomments@ncua.gov. Include ‘‘[Your
name]—Comments on Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking for Part 701’’ in
the email subject line.
SUMMARY:
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• Fax: (703) 518–6319. Use the
subject line described above for email.
• Mail: Address to Gerard Poliquin,
Secretary of the Board, National Credit
Union Administration, 1775 Duke
Street, Alexandria, Virginia 22314–
3428.
• Hand Delivery/Courier: Same as
mail address.
Public Inspection: You may view all
public comments, as submitted, on
NCUA’s Web site at https://
www.ncua.gov/Legal/Regs/Pages/
PropRegs.aspx, except those we cannot
post for technical reasons. NCUA will
not edit or remove identifying or contact
information from the public comments
submitted. You may inspect paper
copies of comments in NCUA’s law
library at 1775 Duke Street, Alexandria,
Virginia 22314, by appointment
weekdays between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. To
make an appointment, call (703) 518–
6546 or send an email to
OGCMail@ncua.gov.
Elizabeth Wirick, Staff Attorney, Office
of General Counsel, at the above address
or by telephone: (703) 518–6540.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
II. Summary of the Proposed Rule
III. Regulatory Procedures
1. NCUA Authority to Regulate Settings
of FCU Examinations and Other On-Site
Contacts, Require Production of
Records, and Regulate Operating
Conditions of FCUs
The Federal Credit Union Act (Act)
requires FCUs to ‘‘make financial
reports to it [the NCUA Board] as and
when it may require’’ and requires FCUs
to make ‘‘books and records accessible
to’’ NCUA for examination purposes.1
Likewise, federally insured, statechartered credit unions must make
‘‘reports of condition . . . in such form
. . . as the Board may require.2 Under
this authority, the Board requires all
insured credit unions to file quarterly
call reports.3
The Act also requires and authorizes
the Board to appoint examiners to
examine any insured credit union to
determine the credit union’s condition.4
NCUA examiners often review and
verify the information credit unions
submit in their call reports through onsite examinations. Specialized NCUA
staff, such as problem case officers, also
U.S.C. 1756.
1782(a)(1).
3 12 CFR 741.6.
4 12 U.S.C. 1784.
2 Id.
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2. NCUA Authority To Direct Conditions
of Work for NCUA Employees
The Act grants the Board authority to
‘‘direct employees of the Board’’ 5 and
‘‘define their duties.’’ 6 Most of NCUA’s
1,260 employees are credit union
examiners who work on-site at credit
union locations, performing
examinations and other types of
reviews. By requiring that all
examinations and other on-site contacts
between NCUA staff and FCU officials
occur in business offices or other public
locations, the proposal ensures that
examinations and other FCU contacts
occur in a professional and safe setting.
3. Home-Based Credit Unions
I. Background
1 12
visit credit unions to address issues
identified in the examination process.
In addition to the Board’s statutory
responsibilities to obtain financial
reports and conduct examinations of
insured credit unions, the Act gives the
Board general authority to adopt
regulations related to the oversight of
FCUs. Taken together, these powers give
the Board the authority to specify the
location and other conditions of
examinations and other on-site contacts
with FCUs, as well as to require FCUs
to conduct business in a commercial
setting rather than in a home.
In the early days of credit union
organizing, it was common for a credit
union to operate out of the home of one
of its officials. As credit unions grew,
however, most added offices either at a
sponsor’s location or in another
commercial setting. NCUA has
identified approximately 95 remaining
home-based, federally insured credit
unions. These are credit unions
operated out of a home or on the
premises of a home address, such as in
a garage, sunroom, or basement
apartment. Eighty-one of these are
FCUs, with assets ranging from $34,000
to $12,000,000. Most of these FCUs are
very small; 34 have assets below
$1,000,000 and 38 have assets between
$1,000,000 and $5,000,000.7
More recently, NCUA has encouraged
examiners and other staff to arrange
meetings with officials of home-based
FCUs in public places, such as libraries
or hotel conference rooms. NCUA did
not, however, prohibit staff from
meeting with an FCU official at a private
5 Id.
1766(j)(1).
1789(a)(4).
7 The 14 federally insured, state-chartered, homebased credit unions have assets ranging from
$115,000 to nearly $11,000,000. The state-chartered,
home-based credit unions are located in nine states
as follows: Kansas has five, Utah has two, and
Alabama, Illinois, Minnesota, Nebraska, Ohio,
Pennsylvania, and Vermont each have one.
6 Id.
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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 247 / Tuesday, December 24, 2013 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
home if the official was reluctant to
come to another location.
When an on-site contact occurs at the
home of an FCU official, NCUA has no
way of ensuring the environment is safe
for its employees or conducive to
working efficiently and securely. NCUA
staff who have conducted on-site
contacts in homes have recently raised
concerns about the conditions they
sometimes face. These concerns
include: aggressive animals; lack of
proper seating, lighting, and rest room
access; interruptions from other
residents of the home; exposure to
allergens; poorly maintained driveways
that pose hazards to examiners’
vehicles; and low clearances or
dilapidated stairways to access
basement home offices. These types of
concerns are much less likely to arise in
a public, non-residential setting. For
those home-based credit unions located
in rural areas, NCUA is also concerned
about the potential for examiners being
isolated in a remote location.
Recently, NCUA began extensive
efforts to encourage home-based credit
unions to obtain commercial office
space. NCUA’s Office of Small Credit
Union Initiatives (OSCUI) has worked
with NCUA’s Regional Offices to
identify home-based credit unions.
OSCUI then contacted each of these
credit unions to offer assistance in
planning for the credit union’s longterm viability, including obtaining office
space. OSCUI also offered grants to
support relocation of home-based credit
unions holding the NCUA Low Income
Designation. To date, no home-based
credit union has taken advantage of
these services.
4. Why is NCUA proposing this rule?
The Board proposes to amend its
regulations to require that any
examinations or other on-site contacts
between NCUA staff and FCU officials
occur at an FCU’s business offices or at
a mutually agreeable public location.
This does not include a private
residence. No later than two years
following the effective date of a final
rule, the proposal would also require all
FCUs to obtain and maintain a business
office, not located in a private residence.
The Board is proposing this rule
because, as discussed above, it is
concerned that continuing to allow
NCUA staff to meet with FCU officials
at private residences poses safety risks
and is not favorable to conducting
business in an appropriate fashion. In
addition, the lack of a business office
impedes the ability of FCUs to thrive
and grow by obtaining new members or
providing additional services to existing
members.
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The proposed rule would also require
FCUs to maintain and monitor
telephone numbers or electronic mail
addresses, or both. The Board believes
another impediment to an FCU’s longterm viability is the inability of
members to contact the FCU. In the
recent outreach to home-based credit
unions, OSCUI staff discovered that
many of these credit unions lacked a
dedicated telephone number with an
answering system, a monitored
electronic mail address, or both. Lacking
both telephone and electronic mail
access is not acceptable for a presentday financial institution. NCUA staff,
FCU members, and potential FCU
members need a reliable way to reach
the FCU by electronic mail or telephone,
leave messages, and receive prompt
replies.
Operating an FCU out of a private
residence also creates significant
operational risks. The preservation and
security of records is a critical concern,
and NCUA is concerned many homebased FCUs are storing records in areas
where they are at risk for accidental
destruction, such as in basements near
water heater tanks. Member privacy is
also at risk if records are stored where
other residents of the household could
access them. Finally, as occurred in a
recent situation, if an FCU official
operating a home-based credit union
dies or becomes disabled, NCUA can
face barriers to accessing the FCU’s
records.
Further, a home-based FCU that pays
rent for its space to the residing official
creates disincentives for FCU
management to procure appropriate
space. These rental arrangements, by
their nature, pose a potential conflict of
interest for FCU officials.
The Board also notes that requiring
examinations and other contacts with
NCUA staff to occur in an alternative
public location for credit unions that
lack offices is not an ideal long-term
solution. While addressing NCUA’s
concerns about staff safety and working
conditions, meeting in public locations
raises other risks. The main concern is
the potential for inadvertent violations
of privacy laws, or disclosure of
confidential supervisory information
related to the FCU’s condition. For
example, credit union examinations
frequently involve discussion of the
details of particular member loan files,
which contain personally identifiable
information (PII) that can be used to
distinguish or trace an individual’s
identity. Likewise, examination contacts
focus on the FCU’s operations and often
involve discussions of corrective actions
the FCU must take. If these discussions
occur in the alternative public locations,
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77609
as permitted for the first two years
under the proposal, NCUA staff and
FCU officials must exercise caution that
no other parties can overhear any PII or
confidential supervisory information.
Having credit union officials move
paper files to and from meeting
locations, as would be required by the
proposal if the credit union is unable to
send records electronically, also entails
privacy risks. When examiners take
possession of an FCU’s books and
records outside of a credit union’s
office, the potential for inadvertent
disclosure of PII increases further. As
required by the Office of Management
and Budget, NCUA has adopted
guidance for staff regarding privacy
responsibilities. These instructions
require staff to take a variety of steps to
safeguard PII.8 One requirement is that
staff taking possession of an FCU’s
records must conduct the contact in a
non-public place.9 Combining this
requirement with the proposal’s
prohibition on meetings in residences
limits the number of acceptable
locations for off-site contacts.
In summary, while conducting
contacts in alternative public locations,
NCUA staff and credit union officials
must exercise extreme care to avoid
violations of privacy laws or revealing
confidential supervisory information
about the credit union. In the longer
term, the Board has determined to
eliminate this risk by requiring all FCUs
to have an office that will facilitate
discussions involving members’ PII and
confidential supervisory information
without the risk of unauthorized
disclosure of this sensitive information.
The Board emphasizes that it is
sensitive to the challenges the smallest
FCUs face, and wants to ensure the
long-term viability of all FCUs. Lacking
appropriate commercial office space,
however, is a significant barrier to both
long-term viability and effective
supervision. As noted above, over the
past year, NCUA has undertaken
extensive efforts to assist home-based
credit unions, and these efforts will
continue. OSCUI will offer another
round of grants to support relocation of
home-based credit unions that hold the
NCUA Low Income Designation in 2014.
OSCUI will also produce a Home
Relocation Guide best practice
document and work with all affected
FCUs to provide guidance on relocation.
8 NCUA Instruction 01200.15, Rules and
Consequences for Safeguarding Personally
Identifiable Information (Oct. 5, 2007).
9 NCUA Instruction 13500.09, Security of
External Party’s Documentation (Mar. 25, 2008).
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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 247 / Tuesday, December 24, 2013 / Proposed Rules
sroberts on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
II. Summary of the Proposed Rule
The proposed rule adds new section
701.40 to part 701 of NCUA’s
regulations. Paragraph (a) requires that
any meetings between an FCU and
NCUA staff occur at an FCU’s offices or
another alternative public location. This
paragraph excludes from the definition
of ‘‘office,’’ private homes, as well as
separate areas of residential premises.
Defining ‘‘office’’ in this manner will
address the many varieties of homebased offices, including rooms in
homes, separate apartments attached to
homes, separate buildings on residential
premises such as garages, and separate
apartments within a residential
apartment building not zoned for retail
use. All of these types of locations raise
similar concerns in terms of working
conditions and safety for NCUA staff, as
well as member accessibility.
Paragraph (b) specifies that any homebased FCU official that meets with
NCUA staff at an alternative public
location must deliver all necessary
records to that location. The proposal
lists examples of acceptable alternative
public locations, such as restaurants,
hotel lobbies or meeting rooms,
libraries, and community centers. For
FCUs that operate from churches or
other communal sites such as lodges,
the church or lodge office would also be
an acceptable alternative public location
under the proposed rule. FCU officials
and NCUA staff must, however, find a
meeting space that complies with
NCUA’s privacy regulations related to
the security of records provided to
NCUA. Where an FCU’s records with PII
are present and in the possession of
NCUA staff, the meeting space must be
in a separate area, such as a conference
room in a hotel, library, or community
center.
Subparagraph (c) requires FCUs to
maintain and monitor, at a minimum,
either an electronic mail address or a
telephone number.
The proposed rule applies only to
FCUs, not all federally insured credit
unions. State supervisory authorities
may continue to conduct their
examinations of home-based, state
credit unions at any location they
choose.
Two years after the final rule’s
effective date, the proposal would revise
§ 701.40 to prohibit FCUs from
operating out of homes. The proposal
would also prohibit storage of FCU
records at residential locations and
continue to require FCUs to maintain at
least one method of contact. As
permitted in conjunction with the
requirement that NCUA staff meet with
FCU officials at an office or other public
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location, an FCU that operates out of a
church office or similar location will be
deemed in compliance with the
requirement to obtain office space.
OSCUI will consult with affected FCUs
to determine if specific situations meet
the office requirement.
The proposed rule does not
immediately require FCUs to operate
out of an office location, so that all
affected FCUs have time to adapt to this
change. The delayed effective date for
obtaining office space, combined with
the immediate requirement to meet in
public places, improves working
conditions for NCUA staff in the short
term without immediately imposing a
new requirement on small FCUs. As
noted above, OSCUI staff will continue
to be available to assist affected FCUs as
they transition to obtaining business
office locations, with appropriate and
secure records storage areas, over the
next two years.
The proposed rule intends to ensure
that all FCUs operate in a manner
consistent with modern-day
expectations for insured financial
institutions. In conjunction with its
recent rule requiring all federally
insured credit unions to file quarterly
call reports electronically, NCUA
provided grants so that all credit unions
with NCUA’s Low Income Designation
that lacked computers could obtain
them. NCUA will make similar efforts to
assist home-based FCUs to comply with
these proposed requirements.
III. Request for Comments
NCUA requests comments on all
aspects of the proposed rule. In light of
NCUA’s concerns about staff safety and
working conditions, NCUA particularly
requests comments about whether the
portion of the rule requiring home-based
credit unions to meet NCUA staff at an
alternative public location should also
apply to state-chartered, federally
insured credit unions.
IV. Regulatory Procedures
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act
requires NCUA to prepare an analysis to
describe any significant economic
impact a proposed rule may have on a
substantial number of small credit
unions (primarily those under $50
million in assets). Although this rule
would affect relatively few FCUs, NCUA
recognizes that all of the affected FCUs
are small credit unions. As discussed
above, NCUA is offering assistance to
locate suitable meeting space at low or
no cost as well as assistance with initial
relocation expenses. Over the longer
term, NCUA will work with officials of
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affected FCUs to provide consulting,
training, and education and resource
support as home-based FCUs transition
to commercial locations. Accordingly,
NCUA certifies this rule will not have
a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small credit
unions.
Paperwork Reduction Act
The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(PRA) applies to rulemakings in which
an agency creates a new paperwork
burden on regulated entities or modifies
an existing burden. For purposes of the
PRA, a paperwork burden may take the
form of either a reporting or a
recordkeeping requirement, both
referred to as information collections.
The proposed change to part 701 simply
requires examinations and other
meetings with NCUA staff to occur in
certain authorized locations, and that
FCUs maintain a functioning telephone
number or electronic mail address, or
both. This proposed rule will not create
new paperwork burdens or modify any
existing paperwork burdens.
Executive Order 13132
Executive Order 13132 encourages
independent regulatory agencies to
consider the impact of their actions on
state and local interests. NCUA, an
independent regulatory agency as
defined in 44 U.S.C. 3502(5), voluntarily
complies with the executive order to
adhere to fundamental federalism
principles. Given the minor
requirements the rule imposes on FCUs
only, it will not have substantial direct
effects on the states, on the relationship
between the national government and
the states, or on the distribution of
power and responsibilities among the
various levels of government. NCUA has
determined that this proposed rule does
not constitute a policy that has
federalism implications for purposes of
the Executive Order.
Treasury and General Government
Appropriations Act, 1999
NCUA has determined that this
proposed rule will not affect family
well-being within the meaning of
section 654 of the Treasury and General
Government Appropriations Act,
1999.10
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 701
Credit unions, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
10 Public
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Law 105–277, 112 Stat. 2681 (1998).
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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 247 / Tuesday, December 24, 2013 / Proposed Rules
By the National Credit Union
Administration Board on December 12, 2013.
Gerard Poliquin,
Secretary of the Board.
sroberts on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
For the reasons set forth above, NCUA
proposes to amend 12 CFR part 701 as
follows:
FINAL RULE IN THE Federal Register],
revise § 701.40 to read as follows:
§ 701.40 FCU office location and
requirements.
(a) Office location. Federal credit
unions must maintain at least one office
in a building that is accessible to credit
union members during the federal credit
PART 701—ORGANIZATION AND
OPERATION OF FEDERAL CREDIT
union’s normal business hours. Office
UNIONS
space maintained in a home or on the
premises of a residential address does
■ 1. The authority citation for part 701
not meet this requirement.
continues to read as follows:
(b) Records. An FCU’s records must
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1752(5), 1755, 1756,
be stored either at the FCU’s office
1757, 1758, 1759, 1761a, 1761b, 1766, 1767,
location or another commercial location
1782, 1784, 1786, 1787, 1789. Section 701.6
designed for secure records storage.
is also authorized by 15 U.S.C. 3717. Section
(c) Required communication services.
701.31 is also authorized by 15 U.S.C. 1601
All federal credit unions must maintain
et seq.; 42 U.S.C. 1981 and 3601–3610.
either an electronic mail address or
Section 701.35 is also authorized by 42
telephone service, or both. The
U.S.C. 4311–4312.
electronic mail address or telephone
■ 2. Add § 701.40 to part 701 to read as
number must be dedicated exclusively
follows:
for the credit union’s business purposes,
§ 701.40 Examinations and communication and authorized credit union officials
requirements.
must monitor them regularly.
(a) Office location. All examinations,
[FR Doc. 2013–30560 Filed 12–23–13; 8:45 am]
on-site contacts, and other meetings
BILLING CODE 7535–01–P
between a federal credit union and
NCUA, where NCUA staff are physically
present, must be held in a federal credit
union’s offices or at an alternative
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
public location. For purposes of this
Federal Aviation Administration
section, a federal credit union’s offices
do not include an office maintained in
14 CFR Part 25
a home or on the premises of a
residential address.
(b) Alternative public location. For
[Docket No. FAA–2013–1001; Notice No. 25–
purposes of this section, an alternative
13–35–SC]
public location means a place
designated by NCUA staff that is open
Special Conditions: Airbus, A350–900
and available to the general public and
Series Airplane; High Speed Protection
that is generally accessible during
System
normal business hours. Alternative
AGENCY: Federal Aviation
public locations may include, but are
not limited to, restaurants, hotel lobbies Administration (FAA), DOT.
ACTION: Notice of proposed special
or meeting rooms, libraries, and
conditions.
community centers. Federal credit
union officials meeting with NCUA staff
SUMMARY: This action proposes special
at an alternative public location must
conditions for Airbus A350–900 series
deliver to that location all credit union
airplanes. These airplanes will have a
records required by NCUA staff. For
novel or unusual design feature when
contacts where member information
compared to the state of technology
protected under federal privacy law or
envisioned in the airworthiness
regulation is present or discussed, the
standards for transport category
meeting location must allow for
airplanes. These design features include
necessary safeguards of this
a high-speed protection system. The
information.
(c) Required communication services. applicable airworthiness regulations do
All federal credit unions must maintain not contain adequate or appropriate
safety standards for this design feature.
either an electronic mail address or
These proposed special conditions
telephone service, or both. The
contain the additional safety standards
electronic mail address or telephone
that the Administrator considers
number must be dedicated exclusively
for the credit union’s business purposes, necessary to establish a level of safety
equivalent to that established by the
and authorized credit union officials
existing airworthiness standards.
must monitor them regularly.
DATES: We must receive your comments
■ 3. Effective [DATE 24 MONTHS
by February 7, 2014.
AFTER DATE OF PUBLICATION OF
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77611
Send comments identified
by docket number FAA–2013–1001
using any of the following methods:
• Federal eRegulations Portal: Go to
https://www.regulations.gov/ and follow
the online instructions for sending your
comments electronically.
• Mail: Send comments to Docket
Operations, M–30, U.S. Department of
Transportation (DOT), 1200 New Jersey
Avenue SE., Room W12–140, West
Building Ground Floor, Washington, DC
20590–0001.
• Hand Delivery or Courier: Take
comments to Docket Operations in
Room W12–140 of the West Building
Ground Floor at 1200 New Jersey
Avenue SE., Washington, DC, between 8
a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through
Friday, except federal holidays.
• Fax: Fax comments to Docket
Operations at 202–493–2251.
Privacy: The FAA will post all
comments it receives, without change,
to https://www.regulations.gov/,
including any personal information the
commenter provides. Using the search
function of the docket Web site, anyone
can find and read the electronic form of
all comments received into any FAA
docket, including the name of the
individual sending the comment (or
signing the comment for an association,
business, labor union, etc.). DOT’s
complete Privacy Act Statement can be
found in the Federal Register published
on April 11, 2000 (65 FR 19477–19478),
as well as at https://DocketsInfo.dot.gov/
.
Docket: Background documents or
comments received may be read at
https://www.regulations.gov/ at any time.
Follow the online instructions for
accessing the docket or go to the Docket
Operations in Room W12–140 of the
West Building Ground Floor at 1200
New Jersey Avenue SE., Washington,
DC, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday
through Friday, except federal holidays.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Todd Martin, FAA, Airframe/Cabin
Safety, ANM–115, Transport Airplane
Directorate, Aircraft Certification
Service, 1601 Lind Avenue SW.,
Renton, Washington 98057–3356;
telephone (425) 227–1178; facsimile
(425) 227–1322.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
ADDRESSES:
Comments Invited
We invite interested people to take
part in this rulemaking by sending
written comments, data, or views. The
most helpful comments reference a
specific portion of the special
conditions, explain the reason for any
recommended change, and include
supporting data. We ask that you send
us two copies of written comments.
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 78, Number 247 (Tuesday, December 24, 2013)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 77608-77611]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2013-30560]
=======================================================================
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NATIONAL CREDIT UNION ADMINISTRATION
12 CFR Part 701
RIN 3133-AE34
Requirements for Contacts with Federal Credit Unions
AGENCY: National Credit Union Administration (NCUA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The NCUA Board (Board) proposes to amend part 701 of its
regulations to require examinations and other contacts between NCUA
staff and staff or officials of a federal credit union (FCU) occur in
an FCU's business offices or other public location. This does not
include a private residence. The proposal also would require affected
FCUs to bring to the meeting site any records or materials NCUA staff
requests, and to maintain at least one method for members and NCUA
staff to contact the credit union. These requirements would apply upon
the effective date of a final rule. Additionally, the proposal would
require all FCUs to obtain and maintain a business office, not located
on the premises of a private residence address, no later than two years
following the effective date of a final rule.
DATES: Comments must be received on or before January 23, 2014.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments by any of the following methods
(Please send comments by one method only):
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
NCUA Web site: https://www.ncua.gov/Legal/Regs/Pages/PropRegs.aspx. Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
Email: Address to regcomments@ncua.gov. Include ``[Your
name]--Comments on Notice of Proposed Rulemaking for Part 701'' in the
email subject line.
Fax: (703) 518-6319. Use the subject line described above
for email.
Mail: Address to Gerard Poliquin, Secretary of the Board,
National Credit Union Administration, 1775 Duke Street, Alexandria,
Virginia 22314-3428.
Hand Delivery/Courier: Same as mail address.
Public Inspection: You may view all public comments, as submitted,
on NCUA's Web site at https://www.ncua.gov/Legal/Regs/Pages/PropRegs.aspx, except those we cannot post for technical reasons. NCUA
will not edit or remove identifying or contact information from the
public comments submitted. You may inspect paper copies of comments in
NCUA's law library at 1775 Duke Street, Alexandria, Virginia 22314, by
appointment weekdays between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. To make an appointment,
call (703) 518-6546 or send an email to OGCMail@ncua.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Elizabeth Wirick, Staff Attorney,
Office of General Counsel, at the above address or by telephone: (703)
518-6540.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
II. Summary of the Proposed Rule
III. Regulatory Procedures
I. Background
1. NCUA Authority to Regulate Settings of FCU Examinations and Other
On-Site Contacts, Require Production of Records, and Regulate Operating
Conditions of FCUs
The Federal Credit Union Act (Act) requires FCUs to ``make
financial reports to it [the NCUA Board] as and when it may require''
and requires FCUs to make ``books and records accessible to'' NCUA for
examination purposes.\1\ Likewise, federally insured, state-chartered
credit unions must make ``reports of condition . . . in such form . . .
as the Board may require.\2\ Under this authority, the Board requires
all insured credit unions to file quarterly call reports.\3\
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\1\ 12 U.S.C. 1756.
\2\ Id. 1782(a)(1).
\3\ 12 CFR 741.6.
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The Act also requires and authorizes the Board to appoint examiners
to examine any insured credit union to determine the credit union's
condition.\4\ NCUA examiners often review and verify the information
credit unions submit in their call reports through on-site
examinations. Specialized NCUA staff, such as problem case officers,
also visit credit unions to address issues identified in the
examination process.
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\4\ 12 U.S.C. 1784.
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In addition to the Board's statutory responsibilities to obtain
financial reports and conduct examinations of insured credit unions,
the Act gives the Board general authority to adopt regulations related
to the oversight of FCUs. Taken together, these powers give the Board
the authority to specify the location and other conditions of
examinations and other on-site contacts with FCUs, as well as to
require FCUs to conduct business in a commercial setting rather than in
a home.
2. NCUA Authority To Direct Conditions of Work for NCUA Employees
The Act grants the Board authority to ``direct employees of the
Board'' \5\ and ``define their duties.'' \6\ Most of NCUA's 1,260
employees are credit union examiners who work on-site at credit union
locations, performing examinations and other types of reviews. By
requiring that all examinations and other on-site contacts between NCUA
staff and FCU officials occur in business offices or other public
locations, the proposal ensures that examinations and other FCU
contacts occur in a professional and safe setting.
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\5\ Id. 1766(j)(1).
\6\ Id. 1789(a)(4).
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3. Home-Based Credit Unions
In the early days of credit union organizing, it was common for a
credit union to operate out of the home of one of its officials. As
credit unions grew, however, most added offices either at a sponsor's
location or in another commercial setting. NCUA has identified
approximately 95 remaining home-based, federally insured credit unions.
These are credit unions operated out of a home or on the premises of a
home address, such as in a garage, sunroom, or basement apartment.
Eighty-one of these are FCUs, with assets ranging from $34,000 to
$12,000,000. Most of these FCUs are very small; 34 have assets below
$1,000,000 and 38 have assets between $1,000,000 and $5,000,000.\7\
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\7\ The 14 federally insured, state-chartered, home-based credit
unions have assets ranging from $115,000 to nearly $11,000,000. The
state-chartered, home-based credit unions are located in nine states
as follows: Kansas has five, Utah has two, and Alabama, Illinois,
Minnesota, Nebraska, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Vermont each have one.
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More recently, NCUA has encouraged examiners and other staff to
arrange meetings with officials of home-based FCUs in public places,
such as libraries or hotel conference rooms. NCUA did not, however,
prohibit staff from meeting with an FCU official at a private
[[Page 77609]]
home if the official was reluctant to come to another location.
When an on-site contact occurs at the home of an FCU official, NCUA
has no way of ensuring the environment is safe for its employees or
conducive to working efficiently and securely. NCUA staff who have
conducted on-site contacts in homes have recently raised concerns about
the conditions they sometimes face. These concerns include: aggressive
animals; lack of proper seating, lighting, and rest room access;
interruptions from other residents of the home; exposure to allergens;
poorly maintained driveways that pose hazards to examiners' vehicles;
and low clearances or dilapidated stairways to access basement home
offices. These types of concerns are much less likely to arise in a
public, non-residential setting. For those home-based credit unions
located in rural areas, NCUA is also concerned about the potential for
examiners being isolated in a remote location.
Recently, NCUA began extensive efforts to encourage home-based
credit unions to obtain commercial office space. NCUA's Office of Small
Credit Union Initiatives (OSCUI) has worked with NCUA's Regional
Offices to identify home-based credit unions. OSCUI then contacted each
of these credit unions to offer assistance in planning for the credit
union's long-term viability, including obtaining office space. OSCUI
also offered grants to support relocation of home-based credit unions
holding the NCUA Low Income Designation. To date, no home-based credit
union has taken advantage of these services.
4. Why is NCUA proposing this rule?
The Board proposes to amend its regulations to require that any
examinations or other on-site contacts between NCUA staff and FCU
officials occur at an FCU's business offices or at a mutually agreeable
public location. This does not include a private residence. No later
than two years following the effective date of a final rule, the
proposal would also require all FCUs to obtain and maintain a business
office, not located in a private residence. The Board is proposing this
rule because, as discussed above, it is concerned that continuing to
allow NCUA staff to meet with FCU officials at private residences poses
safety risks and is not favorable to conducting business in an
appropriate fashion. In addition, the lack of a business office impedes
the ability of FCUs to thrive and grow by obtaining new members or
providing additional services to existing members.
The proposed rule would also require FCUs to maintain and monitor
telephone numbers or electronic mail addresses, or both. The Board
believes another impediment to an FCU's long-term viability is the
inability of members to contact the FCU. In the recent outreach to
home-based credit unions, OSCUI staff discovered that many of these
credit unions lacked a dedicated telephone number with an answering
system, a monitored electronic mail address, or both. Lacking both
telephone and electronic mail access is not acceptable for a present-
day financial institution. NCUA staff, FCU members, and potential FCU
members need a reliable way to reach the FCU by electronic mail or
telephone, leave messages, and receive prompt replies.
Operating an FCU out of a private residence also creates
significant operational risks. The preservation and security of records
is a critical concern, and NCUA is concerned many home-based FCUs are
storing records in areas where they are at risk for accidental
destruction, such as in basements near water heater tanks. Member
privacy is also at risk if records are stored where other residents of
the household could access them. Finally, as occurred in a recent
situation, if an FCU official operating a home-based credit union dies
or becomes disabled, NCUA can face barriers to accessing the FCU's
records.
Further, a home-based FCU that pays rent for its space to the
residing official creates disincentives for FCU management to procure
appropriate space. These rental arrangements, by their nature, pose a
potential conflict of interest for FCU officials.
The Board also notes that requiring examinations and other contacts
with NCUA staff to occur in an alternative public location for credit
unions that lack offices is not an ideal long-term solution. While
addressing NCUA's concerns about staff safety and working conditions,
meeting in public locations raises other risks. The main concern is the
potential for inadvertent violations of privacy laws, or disclosure of
confidential supervisory information related to the FCU's condition.
For example, credit union examinations frequently involve discussion of
the details of particular member loan files, which contain personally
identifiable information (PII) that can be used to distinguish or trace
an individual's identity. Likewise, examination contacts focus on the
FCU's operations and often involve discussions of corrective actions
the FCU must take. If these discussions occur in the alternative public
locations, as permitted for the first two years under the proposal,
NCUA staff and FCU officials must exercise caution that no other
parties can overhear any PII or confidential supervisory information.
Having credit union officials move paper files to and from meeting
locations, as would be required by the proposal if the credit union is
unable to send records electronically, also entails privacy risks. When
examiners take possession of an FCU's books and records outside of a
credit union's office, the potential for inadvertent disclosure of PII
increases further. As required by the Office of Management and Budget,
NCUA has adopted guidance for staff regarding privacy responsibilities.
These instructions require staff to take a variety of steps to
safeguard PII.\8\ One requirement is that staff taking possession of an
FCU's records must conduct the contact in a non-public place.\9\
Combining this requirement with the proposal's prohibition on meetings
in residences limits the number of acceptable locations for off-site
contacts.
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\8\ NCUA Instruction 01200.15, Rules and Consequences for
Safeguarding Personally Identifiable Information (Oct. 5, 2007).
\9\ NCUA Instruction 13500.09, Security of External Party's
Documentation (Mar. 25, 2008).
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In summary, while conducting contacts in alternative public
locations, NCUA staff and credit union officials must exercise extreme
care to avoid violations of privacy laws or revealing confidential
supervisory information about the credit union. In the longer term, the
Board has determined to eliminate this risk by requiring all FCUs to
have an office that will facilitate discussions involving members' PII
and confidential supervisory information without the risk of
unauthorized disclosure of this sensitive information.
The Board emphasizes that it is sensitive to the challenges the
smallest FCUs face, and wants to ensure the long-term viability of all
FCUs. Lacking appropriate commercial office space, however, is a
significant barrier to both long-term viability and effective
supervision. As noted above, over the past year, NCUA has undertaken
extensive efforts to assist home-based credit unions, and these efforts
will continue. OSCUI will offer another round of grants to support
relocation of home-based credit unions that hold the NCUA Low Income
Designation in 2014. OSCUI will also produce a Home Relocation Guide
best practice document and work with all affected FCUs to provide
guidance on relocation.
[[Page 77610]]
II. Summary of the Proposed Rule
The proposed rule adds new section 701.40 to part 701 of NCUA's
regulations. Paragraph (a) requires that any meetings between an FCU
and NCUA staff occur at an FCU's offices or another alternative public
location. This paragraph excludes from the definition of ``office,''
private homes, as well as separate areas of residential premises.
Defining ``office'' in this manner will address the many varieties of
home-based offices, including rooms in homes, separate apartments
attached to homes, separate buildings on residential premises such as
garages, and separate apartments within a residential apartment
building not zoned for retail use. All of these types of locations
raise similar concerns in terms of working conditions and safety for
NCUA staff, as well as member accessibility.
Paragraph (b) specifies that any home-based FCU official that meets
with NCUA staff at an alternative public location must deliver all
necessary records to that location. The proposal lists examples of
acceptable alternative public locations, such as restaurants, hotel
lobbies or meeting rooms, libraries, and community centers. For FCUs
that operate from churches or other communal sites such as lodges, the
church or lodge office would also be an acceptable alternative public
location under the proposed rule. FCU officials and NCUA staff must,
however, find a meeting space that complies with NCUA's privacy
regulations related to the security of records provided to NCUA. Where
an FCU's records with PII are present and in the possession of NCUA
staff, the meeting space must be in a separate area, such as a
conference room in a hotel, library, or community center.
Subparagraph (c) requires FCUs to maintain and monitor, at a
minimum, either an electronic mail address or a telephone number.
The proposed rule applies only to FCUs, not all federally insured
credit unions. State supervisory authorities may continue to conduct
their examinations of home-based, state credit unions at any location
they choose.
Two years after the final rule's effective date, the proposal would
revise Sec. 701.40 to prohibit FCUs from operating out of homes. The
proposal would also prohibit storage of FCU records at residential
locations and continue to require FCUs to maintain at least one method
of contact. As permitted in conjunction with the requirement that NCUA
staff meet with FCU officials at an office or other public location, an
FCU that operates out of a church office or similar location will be
deemed in compliance with the requirement to obtain office space. OSCUI
will consult with affected FCUs to determine if specific situations
meet the office requirement.
The proposed rule does not immediately require FCUs to operate out
of an office location, so that all affected FCUs have time to adapt to
this change. The delayed effective date for obtaining office space,
combined with the immediate requirement to meet in public places,
improves working conditions for NCUA staff in the short term without
immediately imposing a new requirement on small FCUs. As noted above,
OSCUI staff will continue to be available to assist affected FCUs as
they transition to obtaining business office locations, with
appropriate and secure records storage areas, over the next two years.
The proposed rule intends to ensure that all FCUs operate in a
manner consistent with modern-day expectations for insured financial
institutions. In conjunction with its recent rule requiring all
federally insured credit unions to file quarterly call reports
electronically, NCUA provided grants so that all credit unions with
NCUA's Low Income Designation that lacked computers could obtain them.
NCUA will make similar efforts to assist home-based FCUs to comply with
these proposed requirements.
III. Request for Comments
NCUA requests comments on all aspects of the proposed rule. In
light of NCUA's concerns about staff safety and working conditions,
NCUA particularly requests comments about whether the portion of the
rule requiring home-based credit unions to meet NCUA staff at an
alternative public location should also apply to state-chartered,
federally insured credit unions.
IV. Regulatory Procedures
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act requires NCUA to prepare an analysis
to describe any significant economic impact a proposed rule may have on
a substantial number of small credit unions (primarily those under $50
million in assets). Although this rule would affect relatively few
FCUs, NCUA recognizes that all of the affected FCUs are small credit
unions. As discussed above, NCUA is offering assistance to locate
suitable meeting space at low or no cost as well as assistance with
initial relocation expenses. Over the longer term, NCUA will work with
officials of affected FCUs to provide consulting, training, and
education and resource support as home-based FCUs transition to
commercial locations. Accordingly, NCUA certifies this rule will not
have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
credit unions.
Paperwork Reduction Act
The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA) applies to rulemakings in
which an agency creates a new paperwork burden on regulated entities or
modifies an existing burden. For purposes of the PRA, a paperwork
burden may take the form of either a reporting or a recordkeeping
requirement, both referred to as information collections. The proposed
change to part 701 simply requires examinations and other meetings with
NCUA staff to occur in certain authorized locations, and that FCUs
maintain a functioning telephone number or electronic mail address, or
both. This proposed rule will not create new paperwork burdens or
modify any existing paperwork burdens.
Executive Order 13132
Executive Order 13132 encourages independent regulatory agencies to
consider the impact of their actions on state and local interests.
NCUA, an independent regulatory agency as defined in 44 U.S.C. 3502(5),
voluntarily complies with the executive order to adhere to fundamental
federalism principles. Given the minor requirements the rule imposes on
FCUs only, it will not have substantial direct effects on the states,
on the relationship between the national government and the states, or
on the distribution of power and responsibilities among the various
levels of government. NCUA has determined that this proposed rule does
not constitute a policy that has federalism implications for purposes
of the Executive Order.
Treasury and General Government Appropriations Act, 1999
NCUA has determined that this proposed rule will not affect family
well-being within the meaning of section 654 of the Treasury and
General Government Appropriations Act, 1999.\10\
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\10\ Public Law 105-277, 112 Stat. 2681 (1998).
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List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 701
Credit unions, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
[[Page 77611]]
By the National Credit Union Administration Board on December
12, 2013.
Gerard Poliquin,
Secretary of the Board.
For the reasons set forth above, NCUA proposes to amend 12 CFR part
701 as follows:
PART 701--ORGANIZATION AND OPERATION OF FEDERAL CREDIT UNIONS
0
1. The authority citation for part 701 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1752(5), 1755, 1756, 1757, 1758, 1759,
1761a, 1761b, 1766, 1767, 1782, 1784, 1786, 1787, 1789. Section
701.6 is also authorized by 15 U.S.C. 3717. Section 701.31 is also
authorized by 15 U.S.C. 1601 et seq.; 42 U.S.C. 1981 and 3601-3610.
Section 701.35 is also authorized by 42 U.S.C. 4311-4312.
0
2. Add Sec. 701.40 to part 701 to read as follows:
Sec. 701.40 Examinations and communication requirements.
(a) Office location. All examinations, on-site contacts, and other
meetings between a federal credit union and NCUA, where NCUA staff are
physically present, must be held in a federal credit union's offices or
at an alternative public location. For purposes of this section, a
federal credit union's offices do not include an office maintained in a
home or on the premises of a residential address.
(b) Alternative public location. For purposes of this section, an
alternative public location means a place designated by NCUA staff that
is open and available to the general public and that is generally
accessible during normal business hours. Alternative public locations
may include, but are not limited to, restaurants, hotel lobbies or
meeting rooms, libraries, and community centers. Federal credit union
officials meeting with NCUA staff at an alternative public location
must deliver to that location all credit union records required by NCUA
staff. For contacts where member information protected under federal
privacy law or regulation is present or discussed, the meeting location
must allow for necessary safeguards of this information.
(c) Required communication services. All federal credit unions must
maintain either an electronic mail address or telephone service, or
both. The electronic mail address or telephone number must be dedicated
exclusively for the credit union's business purposes, and authorized
credit union officials must monitor them regularly.
0
3. Effective [DATE 24 MONTHS AFTER DATE OF PUBLICATION OF FINAL RULE IN
THE Federal Register], revise Sec. 701.40 to read as follows:
Sec. 701.40 FCU office location and requirements.
(a) Office location. Federal credit unions must maintain at least
one office in a building that is accessible to credit union members
during the federal credit union's normal business hours. Office space
maintained in a home or on the premises of a residential address does
not meet this requirement.
(b) Records. An FCU's records must be stored either at the FCU's
office location or another commercial location designed for secure
records storage.
(c) Required communication services. All federal credit unions must
maintain either an electronic mail address or telephone service, or
both. The electronic mail address or telephone number must be dedicated
exclusively for the credit union's business purposes, and authorized
credit union officials must monitor them regularly.
[FR Doc. 2013-30560 Filed 12-23-13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7535-01-P