Standards of Conduct and Referral of Known or Suspected Criminal Violations; Standards of Conduct, 27922-27932 [2018-12874]
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to the United States until APHIS and the
NPPO of Ecuador conduct an
investigation and appropriate remedial
actions have been implemented.
(3) Fallen avocado fruit must be
removed from the production site at
least once every 7 days, starting 2
months before harvest and continuing
through the end of the harvest, and
fallen fruit may not be included in field
containers of fruit to be packed for
export.
(4) At each non-Hass avocado
production site, no other host of A.
fraterculus, A. serpentina, A. striata, or
C. capitata can be grown within 100
meters of the edge of the place of
production.
(5) At each non-Hass avocado
production site, the NPPO of Ecuador
must conduct a fruit fly trapping
program beginning at least 2 months
before the beginning of harvest and
continuing for the duration of the
harvest period for the detection of A.
fraterculus, A. serpentina, A. striata,
and C. capitata in accordance with the
operational workplan.
(6) The NPPO of Ecuador must
maintain records of fruit fly detections
for each trap in a non-Hass avocado
production site and update the records
each time the traps are checked. The
trapping records must be maintained for
at least 1 year and provided for APHIS’
review, if requested.
(7) If the number of flies per trap per
day exceeds levels specified in the
operational workplan for more than 2
consecutive weeks, the place of
production will be prohibited from
exporting avocados to the continental
United States until APHIS and the
NPPO of Ecuador jointly agree that the
risk has been mitigated.
(8) All avocados must be placed in
field cartons or containers that are
marked to identify the production site
from which the consignment of fruit
originated. The fruit must either be
moved to the packinghouse within 3
hours of harvest or protected from fruit
fly infestation until moved.
(d)(1) Packinghouse requirements.
Avocados must be packed for export to
the continental United States in pestexclusionary packinghouses that are
approved by and registered with the
NPPO of Ecuador in accordance with
the requirements of the operational
workplan.
(2) The avocados must be packed
within 24 hours of harvest in a pestexclusionary packinghouse in
accordance with the requirements of the
operational workplan. The avocados
must be safeguarded by an insect-proof
mesh screen or plastic tarpaulin while
in transit to the packinghouse and while
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awaiting packing. The avocados must be
packed in insect-proof cartons or
containers, or covered with insect-proof
mesh or plastic tarpaulin, for transit into
the continental United States. These
safeguards must remain intact until
arrival at the port of entry into the
continental United States or the
consignment will be denied entry into
the continental United States.
(3) All openings to the outside of the
packinghouse must be covered by
screening with openings of not more
than 1.6 mm or by some other barrier
that prevents pests from entering. The
packinghouse must have double doors
at the entrance to the facility and at the
interior entrance to the area where the
avocados are packed.
(4) During the time the packinghouse
is in use for exporting avocados to the
continental United States, the
packinghouse may only accept avocados
from registered approved production
sites and the fruit must be segregated
from fruit intended for other markets.
(5) The identity and origin of the fruit
must be maintained from the
packinghouse through export of
consignments to the United States.
(e) Treatment. If the non-Hass variety
avocados are ineligible for export under
the systems approach due to the place
of production exceeding the trapping
threshold for fruit flies as established in
the operational workplan, they may still
be exported, but only after undergoing
an APHIS approved treatment in
accordance with part 305 of this
chapter.
(f) Phytosanitary inspection. (1)
Inspectors from the NPPO of Ecuador
must inspect a biometric sample of the
fruit from each avocado consignment
jointly agreed upon by APHIS and the
NPPO of Ecuador, following postharvest processing. The inspectors must
visually inspect for quarantine pests
listed in the operational workplan
required by paragraph (a) of this section
and must cut fruit if signs of quarantine
pests that are internal feeders are
observed. If quarantine pests are
detected in this inspection, the
consignment will be prohibited entry
into the United States unless it is treated
with an APHIS-approved quarantine
treatment in accordance with part 305 of
this chapter.
(2) Fruit presented for inspection at a
U.S. port of entry must be identified in
the shipping documents accompanying
each consignment of fruit that specify
the place of production in which the
fruit was produced and the
packinghouse in which the fruit was
processed. This identification must be
maintained until the fruit is released for
entry into the continental United States.
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(g) Phytosanitary certificate. Each
consignment of avocado fruit must be
accompanied by a phytosanitary
certificate of inspection issued by the
NPPO of Ecuador that states that the
fruit in the consignment was produced
in accordance with the requirements of
§ 319.56–84.
Done in Washington, DC, this 11th day of
June 2018.
Kevin Shea,
Administrator, Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service.
[FR Doc. 2018–12827 Filed 6–14–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–34–P
FARM CREDIT ADMINISTRATION
12 CFR Part 612
RIN 3052–AC44
Standards of Conduct and Referral of
Known or Suspected Criminal
Violations; Standards of Conduct
Farm Credit Administration.
Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Farm Credit
Administration (FCA, we, or our)
proposes to amend our regulations
governing standards of conduct of
directors and employees of Farm Credit
System (FCS or System) institutions,
excluding the Federal Agricultural
Mortgage Corporation. The proposed
rule would replace the original
proposed rule, and would require every
System institution to have or develop a
Standards of Conduct Program based on
core principles to put into effect ethical
values as part of corporate culture.
DATES: You may send comments on or
before September 13, 2018.
ADDRESSES: We offer a variety of
methods for you to submit your
comments. For accuracy and efficiency
reasons, commenters are encouraged to
submit comments by email or through
FCA’s website. As facsimiles (fax) are
difficult for us to process and achieve
compliance with section 508 of the
Rehabilitation Act, we are no longer
accepting comments submitted by fax.
Regardless of the method you use,
please do not submit your comment
multiple times via different methods.
You may submit comments by any of
the following methods:
• Email: Send us an email at regcomm@fca.gov.
• FCA Website: https://www.fca.gov.
Select ‘‘Public Commenters,’’ then
‘‘Public Comments’’ and follow the
directions for ‘‘Submitting a Comment.’’
SUMMARY:
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• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Mail: Barry F. Mardock, Deputy
Director, Office of Regulatory Policy,
Farm Credit Administration, 1501 Farm
Credit Drive, McLean, Virginia 22102–
5090.
You may review copies of comments we
receive at our office in McLean,
Virginia, or from our website at https://
www.fca.gov. Once you are in the
website, select ‘‘Public Commenters,’’
then ‘‘Public Comments’’ and follow the
directions for ‘‘Reading Submitted
Public Comments.’’ We will show your
comments as submitted but, for
technical reasons, we may omit items
such as logos and special characters.
Identifying information that you
provide, such as phone numbers and
addresses, will be publicly available.
However, we will attempt to remove
email addresses to help reduce internet
spam.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Jacqueline R. Melvin, Senior Policy
Analyst, Office of Regulatory Policy,
(703) 883–4498, TDD (703) 883–4056,
Melvinj@fca.gov, or Mary Alice Donner,
Senior Counsel, Office of General
Counsel, (703) 883–4020, TDD (703)
883–4056, Donnerm@fca.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Objectives
The objectives of this proposed rule
are to:
• Establish principles for ethical conduct
and recognize each System institution’s
responsibility for promoting an ethical
culture;
• Provide each System institution
flexibility to develop specific guidelines on
acceptable practices suitable for its business;
• Encourage each System institution to
foster core ethical values and conduct as part
of its corporate culture;
• Require each System institution to
develop strategies and a system of internal
controls to promote institution and
individual accountability in ethical conduct,
including by establishing a Standards of
Conduct Program and adopting a Code of
Ethics; and
• Remove prescriptive requirements that
do not promote these objectives.
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS
II. Background
Our standards of conduct regulations
have not been significantly changed
since their 1994 publication.1 Over the
1 The original proposed regulation was published
in the Federal Register on February 20, 2014, (79
FR 9649). The objective was to build on the existing
standards of conduct rules by adding a few new
provisions, clarifying or augmenting some current
provisions, and providing additional flexibility for
others. After receiving comments, FCA determined
to use a different approach.
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past few years, there have been
increasing concerns with governance,
oversight, management practices and
standards of conduct in the financial
services industry. The proposed rule
would update FCA’s regulations in view
of these concerns, and would address
the ethical culture under which System
institutions should operate.2
III. The Importance of Ethical Culture
Public confidence in the integrity and
ethical business practices of any
financial institution is fundamental to
its ongoing viability. Unethical or
preferential business practices can
damage a financial institution’s
reputation and lead to earnings and
credit risk. Congress granted the Farm
Credit System certain attributes that
result in Government-sponsored
enterprise (GSE) status. This status
confers on System institutions
additional responsibility to strive for
high ethical standards and business
practices.
IV. The Proposed Rule
This rule would establish core
principles for ethical conduct. It would
set forth basic tenets of ethical business
practices to compel each System
institution to foster a culture of loyalty,
honesty, integrity and accountability.
The proposed rule would set forth
principles by which a System
institution must do business. The
System institution would be responsible
for establishing and enforcing policies
that expand on these principles, and for
clearly communicating expectations for
acceptable behavior to directors and
employees. FCA believes that the
proposed rule would promote ethical
conduct. At the same time, because it is
less prescriptive than the current rule, it
could reduce regulatory burden.
A. Organization
The proposed rule would change the
organization of the current rule. It
would consolidate, rename and assign
new numbers to some sections and
remove other sections altogether. The
following bullets summarize the
changes:
• Proposed § 612.2136 would set forth the
principles that serve as the foundation for the
rule. It would substantively revise and
rename current § 612.2135 ‘‘Director and
employee responsibilities and conduct—
generally’’.
• Proposed § 612.2137 ‘‘Elements of a
Standards of Conduct Program,’’ would
consolidate current § 612.2160 ‘‘Institution
2 ‘‘The Directors Role’’ booklet states that sound
ethics and adherence to standards of conduct,
among other things, are essential to effective
oversight.
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responsibilities’’ and current § 612.2165
‘‘Policies and procedures’’.
• Proposed § 612.2138 ‘‘Conflicts of
interest, reporting of financial interests’’
would consolidate current ‘‘Director
reporting’’ and current § 612.2155 ‘‘Employee
reporting’’.
• Proposed § 612.2139 ‘‘Prohibited
conduct’’ would consolidate current
§ 612.2140 ‘‘Directors—prohibited conduct’’
and § 612.2150 ‘‘Employees—prohibited
conduct’’. It would also include the
prohibitions in current § 612.2157 ‘‘Joint
employees’’ and current § 612.2270
‘‘Purchase of System obligations’’.
• Proposed § 612.2137 would require that
institutions develop policies and procedures
with respect to agents to avoid conflicts of
interests and would replace current
§ 612.2260 ‘‘Standards of conduct for
agents’’.
B. Definitions [Proposed § 612.2130]
The proposed rule would define
‘‘Code of Ethics,’’ ‘‘resolved’’ and
‘‘Standards of Conduct Program’’. We
would change the term ‘‘controlled
entity and entity controlled by’’ to
‘‘reportable business entity’’ and modify
the definition of ‘‘employee’’. We would
omit the definitions of ‘‘officer’’ and
‘‘service corporation’’ as redundant with
the definitions of ‘‘employee’’ and
‘‘System institution’’, respectively. We
would omit the definition of ‘‘relative’’
as redundant with the definition of
‘‘family’’ in the current rule and
‘‘immediate family’’ in § 620.1(e). We
would make the definition of System
institutions more concise. These and
other changes and clarifications are
discussed below.
Agent. We would modify the
definition of ‘‘agent’’ to clarify that an
agent includes someone who currently
represents a System institution as a
fiduciary in contacts with third parties.
The proposed rule adds the language
‘‘as a fiduciary’’ to the definition of
agent to explain that not all outside
parties performing services for the
System institution require the conflict of
interest disclosure required of agents.
For example, the contractor responsible
for maintaining grounds would not be
an agent. However, those with fiduciary
responsibilities, such as lawyers,
accountants, and those representing the
System institution in contacts with third
parties would be an agent. Each System
institution should review the risks
associated with its use of third parties
and should expand or elaborate on the
definition of agent, depending on the
System institution’s need for conflict
disclosures in those relationships.
Special consideration should be given to
cyber security issues in third party
relationships and information
technology specialists should be subject
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to especially heightened ethical controls
and confidentiality requirements.
Code of Ethics. The proposed rule
would define ‘‘Code of Ethics’’ as a
written statement of the principles and
values the System institution follows to
establish a culture of ethical conduct.
The Code of Ethics directs
professionalism and discourages
misconduct so that the best interests of
the institution and the System are
advanced.
Conflict of interest. This definition
would explain that a conflict can arise
whenever a secondary or non-workrelated interest might unduly influence
or materially impact a director’s or
employee’s work-related decisionmaking.
Employee. The proposed rule would
define ‘‘employee’’ to mean any
individual, including an officer, who
works for the System institution. Every
individual who works for the System
institution, including temporary
employees and interns, would be part of
the ethical corporate culture, regardless
of length or term of employment.
System institutions should also consider
whether and when third-party
contractors should be included in the
definition of employee or agent.
Entity. The proposed rule would add
‘‘sole proprietorship’’ to the definition
of ‘‘entity’’ in the current rule and make
other non-substantive changes.
Family. The proposed rule would
include ‘‘significant others’’ in the
definition of ‘‘family’’. The System
institution could elaborate on this
definition, and consider whether to
include cousins or civil union partners.
Material. The definition of ‘‘material’’
in the proposed rule is not substantively
different from the definition in the
current rule. Each System institution
must set its own specific parameters for
what would constitute a material
financial interest or transaction. The
dollar amount or value of material, in
the context of a financial interest or
transaction, should be determined by
the System institution board. This
should be based on the institution’s
needs for tracking and supervising the
potentially conflicting business and
financial activities of its directors and
employees.
Ordinary course of business. We
would clarify that an ordinary course of
business transaction is one that is usual
and customary ‘‘in the business in
question’’, on terms that are not
preferential. Each System institution
must determine what activities and
transactions are in the ordinary course
of business. Generally, a person
provides goods or services in the
ordinary course of business if the
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transaction is usual or customary for the
kind of business in which the seller or
service provider is engaged or with the
seller’s or service provider’s own usual
or customary practices. So, for example,
a borrower sells crop inputs (seed,
fertilizer, etc.), and a System institution
director or employee wishes to purchase
the crop inputs. A transaction in the
ordinary course of business would mean
that the borrower sells the crop inputs
at the price and terms common to others
in the industry. It would mean that the
director or employee is typical of an
ordinary purchaser of crop inputs in the
industry. Also, the terms of the
arrangement should be consistent with
the other transactions, if any, between
this borrower/seller and director or
employee/buyer.
Another example involves services in
the ordinary course of business, such as
accounting, legal or medical. A System
institution director may need a lawyer.
The fact that the best lawyer is a
borrower, does not preclude the director
from engaging that lawyer for personal
use, assuming no conflict, if the terms
of the engagement are usual or
customary practices in the legal field.
The director must pay the lawyer at the
going rate, the legal services must be of
the kind the lawyer typically provides
in the business, and the relationship
cannot have any preferential terms or
discounts.
Preferential. The proposed rule would
not change the definition of
‘‘preferential’’ but would list it
separately from the definition of
‘‘ordinary course of business’’.
Reportable business entity. The
proposed rule would change the term
‘‘controlled entity and entity controlled
by’’ and replace it with ‘‘reportable
business entity’’. The proposed rule
would provide that a reportable
business entity is an entity in which the
reporting individual, directly or
indirectly or acting through or in
concert with one or more persons, owns
a material percentage of the equity;
owns, controls, or has the power to vote
a material percentage of any class of
voting securities; or has the power to
exercise a material influence over
management of policies of such entity.
We would make this change to avoid
confusion with the term ‘‘control’’ in the
corporate context, and to allow the
System institution discretion to
determine how much interest represents
a conflict. This determination may vary
depending on whether the entity is
private, public, profit, or not for profit.
The intent of this provision is to require
directors and employees to identify and
report any business interest that is
significant enough to create a conflict of
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interest or the appearance of a conflict
of interest when considered from the
perspective of an ordinarily prudent and
reasonable person.
Resolved. We would define
‘‘resolved’’ to mean an actual or
apparent conflict of interest that has
been addressed with an action such as
recusal, divestiture, approval or
exception, job reassignment, employee
supervision, employment separation or
other action, with the result that a
reasonable person with knowledge of
the relevant facts would conclude that
the conflicting interest is unlikely to
adversely affect the person’s
performance of official duties in an
objective and fair manner and in
furtherance of the interests and statutory
purposes of the Farm Credit System.
Standards of Conduct Official. The
proposed rule would modify the
definition of Standards of Conduct
Official (or Official). Because of the
variety of institution sizes and
resources, we do not require the
Standards of Conduct Official to be a
senior officer. However, the focus of this
proposal is on accountability in ethical
conduct; therefore, the Official must be
an employee who is an officer
appointed under § 612.2137(b), and
must have the authority to report
directly to the System institution board
or designated board committee on
standards of conduct matters. The
Official should be an employee who is
able to exert a positive influence in
ethical matters on System institution
directors and employees. The Official
would be independent in his duties
related to standards of conduct. It may
be practical for some larger System
institutions to appoint more than one
Standards of Conduct Official.
Standards of Conduct Program. The
proposed rule would define ‘‘Standards
of Conduct Program’’ to mean the
policies and procedures, internal
controls, and other actions a System
institution must implement to put into
practice the requirements of this rule.
The Standards of Conduct Program is
the totality of the policies and
procedures, internal controls, audit,
training, and other activities that
promote ethical behavior.
C. Standards of Conduct—Core
Principles [Proposed § 612.2136]
As mentioned in Section A, we would
substantively revise and rename current
§ 612.2135 ‘‘Director and employees
responsibilities and conduct—
generally’’ as proposed § 612.2136
‘‘Standards of conduct—core
principles.’’ Proposed § 612.2136 would
establish principles that directors and
employees must follow in performing
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official duties. We specifically request
comment on the effectiveness of the
proposed principles in reaching the
objective of fostering a culture of ethical
conduct.
Paragraph (a) would establish core
principles. Paragraph (b) would set forth
certain basic minimum requirements to
comply with the principles.
Proposed § 612.2136(a)(1) would set
forth the first principle: To maintain the
highest ethical standards of the financial
banking industry, including standards
of care, honesty, integrity and fairness.
This principle establishes that these
standards, important in the financial
banking industry, are critical to the
conduct expected of a GSE. System
institution directors and employees
should consider ethical conduct beyond
reproach a component of their job
responsibilities.
System institution directors and
employees must avoid self-serving
practices and hold performance of their
duties to the institution above personal
concerns. They must not use their
position for personal advantage.
Proposed § 612.2136(a)(2) would set
forth the principle that institution
directors and employees must act in the
best interest of the institution. Proposed
§ 612.2136(a)(3) would set forth the
principle to preserve the reputation of
the institution and the public’s
confidence in the Farm Credit System.
Proposed § 612.2136(a)(4) would set
forth the principle to exercise diligence
and good business judgment in carrying
out duties and responsibilities.
Proposed § 612.2136(a)(5) would state
as a principle the responsibility to
report, vet and make all reasonable
efforts to resolve conflicts and the
appearance of conflicts in business
relationships and activities. As a
corollary, proposed § 612.2136(a)(6)
would set forth the principle that
directors and employees must avoid
self-dealing and acceptance of gifts or
favors that may influence or have the
appearance of influencing official
actions or decisions. Proposed rules
concerning acceptance of gifts are set
forth in proposed § 612.2137(d)(6).
Proposed § 612.2136(a)(7) would require
directors and employees, if applicable,
to fulfill fiduciary duties.
Proposed § 612.2136(b)(1) would
require institution directors and
employees to comply with their System
institution’s Standards of Conduct
Program and Code of Ethics. Proposed
§ 612.2136(b)(2) would require
institution directors and employees to
comply with all applicable laws and
regulations when carrying out official
duties. Applicable laws and regulations
would include all FCA regulations and
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Federal laws. Proposed § 612.2136(b)(3)
would require institution directors and
employees to participate in annual
standards of conduct training, and to
acknowledge participation with a
written certification. Section
612.2136(b)(4) would require directors
and employees to report, under
§ 612.2137(e), known or suspected
illegal or unethical activities, and
known or suspected violations of the
institution’s rules on standards of
conduct and Code of Ethics. Reporting
would be made to the Standards of
Conduct Official or through the
institution’s hotline or other method
consistent with the institution’s
procedures for anonymous reporting.
D. Elements of a Standards of Conduct
Program [Proposed § 612.2137]
The proposed rule would consolidate
current § 612.2160 ‘‘Institution
responsibilities’’ with current
§ 612.2165 ‘‘Policies and procedures,’’
in proposed § 612.2137 ‘‘Elements of a
Standards of Conduct Program.’’ This
section would require each System
institution to establish a Standards of
Conduct Program that incorporates the
principles established in proposed
§ 612.2136 and provide resources for its
implementation. A System institution
may continue to use its existing
Standards of Conduct Program if it
incorporates the core principles and
satisfies the requirements of this
proposed rule.
The Standards of Conduct Program
would set forth specific guidelines on
acceptable and unacceptable business
practices. Policies and procedures
should include requirements and
prohibitions as necessary to promote
public confidence in the institution and
the System, and further the objectives of
the principles and this proposed rule.
Each System institution should enhance
these requirements with comprehensive
rules as necessary to meet System
institution goals. Each System
institution would be required to allocate
resources to administer the Standards of
Conduct Program. This could include
hiring personnel in addition to the
Standards of Conduct Official, if
necessary, to assist in responsibilities
such as reviewing reports, providing
training, and conducting investigations.
It could include use of outside counsel,
especially if the Standards of Conduct
Official is not an attorney, and whatever
additional resources are necessary to
implement the Standards of Conduct
Program and promote the ethical culture
of the System institution.
The System institution board is
ultimately responsible for implementing
the principles and for compliance and
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oversight of the Standards of Conduct
Program. Proposed § 612.2137(a) would
require each institution to establish a
Standards of Conduct Program that sets
forth the core principles in § 612.2136.
Proposed § 612.2137(b) would require
the board of directors to appoint a
Standards of Conduct Official, defined
as an employee, who would be
responsible for carrying out the duties
set forth in proposed § 612.2170. To
carry out these responsibilities and
promote the ethical culture required by
the proposed rule, the Standards of
Conduct Official should have a close
relationship with the employees of the
System institution and be in a position
of authority and trust. Because the board
of directors is ultimately responsible for
compliance, the Standards of Conduct
Official must have direct access to the
board or designated board committee on
standards of conduct matters. The
Standards of Conduct Official would be
required to meet periodically with the
board or designated board committee as
proposed in § 612.2170(g).
Proposed § 612.2137(c) would require
each System institution to adopt a
written Code of Ethics that states the
institution’s principles and values and
guides directors and employees in
ethical conduct. These principles and
values must include standards for
appropriate professional conduct at the
workplace and in matters related to
employment. The Code of Ethics would
be a component of the Standards of
Conduct Program. To demonstrate
commitment to its values and to provide
transparency and accountability in
ethical conduct, the proposed rule
requires each System institution to post
its Code of Ethics on the System
institution’s external (public) website.
Proposed § 612.2137(d) would require
each System institution to establish
policies and procedures to put into
operation the Standards of Conduct
Program and to comply with the
provisions of this proposed rule.
Proposed § 612.2137(d)(1) would
require each System institution to
establish policies and procedures for
reporting. At a minimum, these would
include reporting requirements
sufficient to identify any conflicts of
interest, actual or apparent; any
business transactions with directors,
employees, borrowers and agents that
are not in the ordinary course of
business; any gifts; names of family
members; and reportable business
entities (or other related party as
determined by the System institution).
As defined in proposed § 612.2130,
ordinary course of business means a
transaction that is usual and customary
in the business in question, on terms
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that are not preferential. We believe the
System institution is in the best position
to determine that which is an ordinary
course of business transaction and that
which is favorable or preferential in its
region. Therefore, each System
institution should develop policies and
procedures to identify transactions that
are preferential and not in the ordinary
course of business and report the
transactions pursuant to
§ 612.2137(d)(1)(ii).
Generally, ordinary course of business
means business procedures and
practices consistent with usual customs
and practices in that line of business. Is
the transaction of a type that other
similar businesses and their customers
would engage in as ordinary business?
Is the transaction, and its terms,
common in the specific industry? From
an industry-wide perspective, is the
transaction of the sort commonly
undertaken? The practices of others in
the industry would be helpful in making
the determination.
Another consideration is the parties’
own past relationship and past practice.
Is the transaction ordinary in the
context of the relationship already
existing between the parties? A review
of the parties’ prior conduct and
practices would be helpful in making
this determination.
Certain special situations bear
discussion. Transactions between a
director/employee and that director’s/
employee’s loan officer should be
specifically addressed, and the general
nature of these transactions should
always be reported because of the high
potential for conflict, even if the
transactions are in the ordinary course
of business. System institution policies
and procedures should require reporting
for other ordinary course of business
transactions that may have a high
potential for conflict.
Compliance with proposed
§ 612.2137(d)(1) would require the
System institution to develop a method
to monitor related-party transactions
and make sure that directors and
employees do not transact business on
preferential or favorable terms and do
not take advantage of their employment
or position with the Farm Credit System
in their business affairs. The policies
and procedures should include specific
dollar amounts as appropriate, and
other criteria for pre-event versus postevent reporting. Reporting should
include, at a minimum, financial
transactions (recurring or one-time), and
other relationships or arrangements
(monetary or non-monetary) between
directors, employees, agents or
borrower/stockholders.
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Proposed § 612.2137(d)(2) would
require each System institution to
establish policies and procedures to
address how conflicts of interest would
be resolved through an action such as
recusal, divestiture, approval or
exception, job reassignment, employee
supervision, employment separation or
other action. To resolve conflicts of
interest, the director or employee
should cooperate with the Standards of
Conduct Official. Policies and
procedures would include action taken
in the event a conflict cannot be
resolved. Compliance with proposed
§ 612.2137 requires that the System
institution establish a process to report,
vet, and resolve conflicts of interest
effectively. It would be read in tandem
with proposed § 612.2138, which speaks
directly to directors and employees and
sets forth their reporting requirements.
Agents, consultants and other third
parties who represent the institution to
the public, or upon whom the
institution relies for professional
services, must be bound by the same
ethical responsibilities to the System
institution and its borrower/
shareholders as directors and
employees. Proposed § 612.2137(d)(3)
would require each System institution
to establish policies and procedures to
make sure that agents file conflict of
interest disclosures, and that agents,
consultants and other third-party
contractors avoid misconduct and
conflicts of interests. These third parties
must be notified that their engagement
is conditioned upon their agreement to
avoid misconduct and conflicts of
interest. These policies and procedures
should include a mechanism to report,
vet and resolve any conflicts of interest
between third parties representing the
institution and the System institution
itself or its directors and employees.
The System institution should also
consider having the agent or consultant
acknowledge its Code of Ethics,
depending on the relative importance of
the agent or consultant services to the
institution. Consideration should be
given to the sensitivity of the services,
for example third-party performers of
internet technology or cyber security
services should be subject to a high
degree of scrutiny. Consideration also
should be given to whether the third
party is covered by a professional code
or standard that prescribes ethical
conduct.
The rule provides specific authority to
each System institution to monitor and
enforce its standards of conduct rules
and Code of Ethics. Violators should be
subject to specific and appropriate
action, as determined by the System
institution. Proposed § 612.2137(d)(4)
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would require each System institution
to establish policies and procedures for
the enforcement of its Standards of
Conduct Program. This would provide
the mechanism by which the institution
takes action against any person who
violates the standards of conduct rules,
Code of Ethics, or these regulations.
This section places accountability for
enforcing the ethical conduct outlined
in this proposed rule and fundamental
to the health and viability of the System
institution directly with the System
institution itself.
Proposed § 612.2137(d)(5) would
require each System institution to
establish policies and procedures to
apply and enforce the prohibitions set
forth in proposed § 612.2139 and any
other provision in this subpart A.
Proposed § 612.2137(d)(6) would
require policies and procedures to
prohibit gifts. These should include a
definition of gifts, and explanation of
prohibited sources. Directors and
employees are prohibited from
accepting gifts or favors that could be
viewed as offered to influence or give
the appearance to influence decisionmaking or official action or to obtain
information. A System institution may
determine that certain gifts, for example
those valued at $25.00 or less, are so
low in value (de minimis) that they
could not be perceived as influencing
decision-making or official action. The
System institution may allow its
directors and employees to accept gifts
of little or no value. However, it may do
so only if it has policies and procedures
in place that set forth controls that are
consistent with the core principles
established in this proposed rule and
with the requirements of Federal laws
including FCA regulations and the
Federal Bank Bribery Act.3 These
policies and procedures would set forth
the maximum value of any individual
gift that a director or employee may
accept, and the maximum value of gifts
in the aggregate per year that a director
or employee may accept. The policies
and procedures would include reporting
requirements for gifts and rules for
disposing of impermissible gifts.
Proposed § 612.2137(e) would set
forth minimum requirements for
internal controls for all aspects of the
System institution’s Standards of
Conduct Program.
Proposed § 612.2137(e)(1) would
require the System institution to
maintain all reports generated under
subpart A of the Standards of Conduct
regulations including those required by
§ 612.2137(d)(1) and records on any
ethics investigations and
3 See
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determinations, for a minimum of 6
years. Proposed § 612.2137(e)(2) would
require internal controls to preserve the
confidentiality of reports and other
information maintained under the
Standards of Conduct Program.
Proposed § 612.2137(e)(3) would
require each System institution to
establish a process for anonymous
reporting of suspected standards of
conduct or Code of Ethics violations. A
reporting hotline is most effective when
both internal parties (directors and
employees) and external parties (agents,
borrowers, shareholders, applicants, and
others) can report a complaint,
misconduct, or tip for corrective action
without fear of retribution such as
termination of employment, suspension,
or other similar action.
Proposed § 612.2137(e)(4) requires
periodic review of the Standards of
Conduct Program for consistency with
current practices at the System
institution, financial banking industry
best practices, and FCA regulations.
Internal controls to prevent selfdealing and conflict situations should
be monitored and evaluated with an
effective audit program. Proposed
§ 612.2137(e)(5) would require each
System institution to arrange for
periodic internal audits of the Standards
of Conduct Program. The audit would
identify weaknesses, review and
measure the effectiveness of the
Standards of Conduct Program, and
prescribe necessary corrective actions.
The audit would cover the entire
System institution and include all
activities conducted by the System
institution including through an
unincorporated business entity (UBE),
such as those organized for the express
purpose of investing in a Rural Business
Investment Company pursuant to
§ 611.1150(b). The audit would test for
compliance and recommend corrective
action as necessary, and the results
should be reported directly to the
institution’s board or designated board
committee. The scope and depth of the
audit would be determined by the needs
of the institution. The System
institution would document the audit
process and results.
Proposed § 612.2137(f) would require
each System institution to establish and
provide standards of conduct training at
least annually. This section should be
read in tandem with § 612.2170. The
institution’s Standards of Conduct
Program and ongoing training would
encourage directors and employees to
obtain counsel from the Standards of
Conduct Official prior to engaging in
transactions that could be perceived as
preferential or not in the ordinary
course of business. The Standards of
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Conduct Official could then provide
advice to the director or employee on
the permissibility of the transaction
under the institution’s Standards of
Conduct Program and these proposed
rules, or prescribe actions that would be
necessary before or following the
transaction to resolve a conflict of
interest or the appearance of a conflict
of interest. Training must include
updates, if any, to the Standards of
Conduct Program and Code of Ethics,
and discussion of the System
institution’s procedures for the
anonymous reporting of violations. It
must include education on prohibited
conduct, conflicts of interest and
reporting requirements. Training on
fiduciary responsibilities would be
required, although the System
institution may elect to have that service
performed by outside counsel.
E. Conflicts of Interest, Reporting of
Financial Interests [New § 612.2138]
It is incumbent upon each System
institution to adopt the standards of
conduct core principles, to make them
part of the culture and lexicon of every
director and employee. In addition,
certain prescriptive rules directed to
employees and directors are necessary
to realize a baseline ethical standard.
The baseline prescriptive requirements
are set forth in proposed §§ 612.2138
and 612.2139, and each System
institution should expand upon these
prescriptive requirements as
appropriate.
Section 612.2138 of the proposed rule
would specifically address conflicts of
interest and reporting of financial
interests. This section would require
directors and employees to take
affirmative action to identify, report and
resolve conflicts or potential conflicts of
interest of which they are aware. It is
intended to compel each director and
employee to take ownership of and
invest in ethical responsibilities.
Proposed § 612.2138(a) would require
each director and employee to identify,
report and resolve conflicts and
potential conflicts. Proposed
§ 612.2138(b) would require that if a
director or employee has a conflict of
interest in a matter, transaction or
activity that is subject to official action,
or that is being considered by the board
of directors, then that director or
employee must disclose relevant nonprivileged information including the
existence, nature, and extent of his or
her interests; refrain from participating
in the official action or board discussion
on the matter, activity or transaction
(§ 612.2138(b)(2)); and not vote on or
influence the decision-making on the
matter, transaction or activity
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(§ 612.2138(b)(3)). Working together
with other provisions of the proposed
rule, this section is intended to bolster
loyalty to the System institution and to
reinforce personal responsibility and
accountability in avoiding conflicts and
acting ethically.
Proposed § 612.2138(c) would require
a director or employee to report
conflicts of interest to the Standards of
Conduct Official at year-end and at such
other times as may be required by the
institution. At a minimum, this section
would require reporting of information
sufficient for a reasonable person to
make a conflict of interest determination
on any business matter to be considered
by the System institution. Reporting
consistent with part 620 is also
required.
Proposed § 612.2138(c)(1) would
require directors and employees to
report any interest that they may have
in any business matter before the
System institution. This would include
any interest in a loan, or in an entity
making a loan application, or any other
direct or indirect interest in a matter
that pertains to the business of the
System institution.
Proposed § 612.2138(c)(2) would
require directors and employees to
report the names of any family member
who has transacted or is currently
transacting business with the System
institution. The System institution
should determine how best to capture
reporting of current transactions, and
should consider whether to require a
director or employee to report the name
of a family member who has engaged in
a transaction in the past.
Proposed § 612.2138(c)(3) would
require directors and employees to
report all material financial interests
with any director, employee, agent,
borrower or business affiliate of the
System institution, supervised
institution or supervising institution.
Proposed § 612.2138(c)(4) would
require directors and employees to
report any matter required to be
disclosed by § 620.6 of this chapter, in
accordance with System institution
policies and procedures.
Proposed § 612.2138(c)(5) would
require directors and employees to
report the names of reportable business
entities.
Proposed § 612.2138(c)(6) would
require directors and employees to
report the names of any person residing
in the home if such person transacts
business with the System institution, or
any institution supervised by the
System institution.
All the reporting in this section would
be based on information the reporting
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individual knows or has reason to
know.
F. Prohibited Conduct [Proposed
§ 612.2139]
As stated in Section A, we would
consolidate current § 612.2140
‘‘Directors—prohibited conduct’’ with
current § 612.2150 ‘‘Employees—
prohibited conduct,’’ in proposed
§ 612.2139 ‘‘Prohibited conduct.’’ We
would also incorporate current
§ 612.2157 ‘‘Joint employees’’ and
current § 612.2270 ‘‘Purchase of System
obligations’’ requirements in this
section. Most of our revisions to the
prohibited conduct rules are
straightforward and provide
clarification of an intended prohibition.
For example, we would clarify that
lending transactions with a party related
to the System institution such as a
director, employee or a borrower is
permitted, but only if on terms that are
not favorable or preferential. We would
also add a new provision that would
prohibit directors and employees from
acting inconsistently with the core
principles.
Proposed § 612.2139(a) would set
forth the general prohibitions and their
related exceptions for directors and
employees, and proposed § 612.2139(b)
would set forth additional prohibitions
specifically for employees with their
related exceptions.
Proposed § 612.2139(a)(1) would
prohibit acting inconsistently with the
core principles in proposed § 612.2136.
Proposed § 612.2139(a)(2) restates the
director and employee prohibitions on
participation in matters affecting
financial interests in current
§§ 612.2140(a) and 612.4150(a),
respectively.
Proposed § 612.2139(a)(3) restates the
director and employee prohibitions on
use of information in current
§§ 612.2140(b) and 612.4150(b),
respectively.
Proposed § 612.2139(a)(4) would
prohibit directors and employees from
soliciting, obtaining or accepting,
directly or indirectly, any gift, fee or
other compensation that could be
viewed as offered to influence decisionmaking, or official action or to obtain
information. The System institution
may determine that a gift that has an
insignificant value would not trigger
this prohibition, and may develop rules
under which directors and employees
may accept de minimis gifts. However,
these System institution rules must be
consistent with Federal rules and
regulations including FCA rules and the
Federal Bank Bribery Act. De minimis
gifts may be accepted only as set forth
under the institution’s properly
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established policies and procedures (see
§ 612.2137(d)(6)).
Proposed § 612.2139(a)(5) would
provide that, among other things, a
director or employee may not
knowingly purchase or otherwise
acquire, directly or indirectly, unless
through inheritance, any interest
(including mineral interests) in any real
or personal property that is currently
owned, or within the 12 past months
was owned, by the System institution,
supervising institution or any
supervised institution as a result of
foreclosure, deed in lieu, or similar
action. Like the current rule, the
proposed rule would allow a director to
purchase such property only through
public auction or similar open,
competitive bidding. By open
competitive bidding, we mean bidding
that is both competitive, allowing
involvement of all interested parties,
and open and unsealed. Open
competitive bidding affords all
interested parties an opportunity to
counter-bid. The advantage to open
bidding is that it discourages unethical
behavior or favoritism. A public auction
can be accomplished on-line only if
there is an opportunity for all who may
be interested in the auction to
participate in the bidding process. A
director may purchase acquired
property through open competitive
bidding only if the director did not
participate in the decision to foreclose
or dispose of the property, including
setting the sale terms, and did not
receive information that could provide
an advantage over other potential
bidders or purchasers of the property.
The proposed acquired property
prohibitions do not reflect a substantive
change from the current rule. We made
revisions because the scope of
misunderstanding and misapplication of
the original provision warranted further
clarification of the current rule’s intent.
The prohibition would apply to
collateral acquired by a System
institution, including collateral acquired
directly or through use of an acquired
property UBE. This provision of the rule
does not change or alter any rights a
borrower may have under title IV, part
C of the Farm Credit Act of 1971, as
amended, 12 U.S.C. 2199–2202, or FCA
regulations promulgated thereunder.
Proposed § 612.2139(a)(6) would
provide that a director or employee
must not directly or indirectly borrow
from, lend to, or become financially
obligated with or on behalf of a director,
employee, or agent of the System
institution, supervising institution, or
supervised institution or a borrower or
loan applicant of the System institution.
This section prohibits a director or
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employee from entering into a lending
or borrowing transaction with those
who may have a financial relationship
with the System institution. Lending
and borrowing relationships include
providing loan guarantees or stand-by
letters of credit and similar forms of
financial obligation.
FCA recognizes that there are many
situations in which a director or
employee may enter into lending
transactions or business relationships
that involve other directors, employees,
agents, borrowers, or loan applicants in
the ordinary course of business.
Financing in the ordinary course of
business, as discussed earlier, is not a
prohibited lending transaction. Each
System institution should develop
policies and procedures governing
ordinary course of business transactions
that include rules for reporting.
The proposed rule requires every
System institution to develop policies
and procedures for directors and
employees to identify, vet, and resolve
any lending transactions with
prohibited sources that are on
preferential terms. Evidence of a
director or employee engaging in a
preferential business arrangement with
a borrower or other party related to the
System institution would be a safety
and soundness concern and might be
evidence of non-compliance.
Proposed § 612.2139(a)(7) restates the
prohibitions in current § 612.2270 on
purchasing System obligations; and
§ 612.2165(b)(14) on purchasing or
retiring preferred stock in advance of
the release of material non-public
information.
Proposed § 612.2139(b)(1) restates the
prohibition in current § 612.2150(d) on
serving as an officer or director of an
entity other than a System institution,
except that the proposed revisions
would not include the exception in
current § 612.2150(d) that allows an
employee of a Farm Credit Bank or
association to serve as a director of a
cooperative that borrows from a bank for
cooperatives. This exception has been
dropped because of the conflicts that
would arise as a result of merger
activity. Proposed § 612.2139(b)(2) and
(b)(3) restate the prohibitions in current
§ 612.2150(j) on acting as a real estate
agent or broker; and current
§ 612.2150(k) on acting as an agent or
broker; respectively. Proposed
§ 612.2139(b)(4) restates the prohibition
in current § 612.2157 on joint
employees, but allows an employee of a
bank to serve as an officer of a
supervised association in its district in
an extraordinary situation if: Both
boards authorize the service, the duties
and compensation at each institution
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are set forth in writing, and reasonable
notice prior to the assumption of duties
is provided to FCA.
G. Standards of Conduct Official
[Proposed § 612.2170]
The proposed rule would enhance the
role of the Standards of Conduct
Official. The System institution board of
directors is responsible for creating and
fostering the institution culture, and for
development of the Standards of
Conduct Program. The institution board
is also responsible for compliance with
the Standards of Conduct Program.
Proposed § 612.2170(a) would require
that the Standards of Conduct Official
must implement the Standards of
Conduct Program. The Standards of
Conduct Official is the authority to
whom directors, employees, agents and
consultants turn for advice on conflict
of interest situations. Proposed
§ 612.2170(b) would require the
Standards Conduct Official to provide
guidance and information to directors
and employees on conflicts of interest.
Proposed § 612.2170(c) should be read
in tandem with proposed § 612.2137(f)
and would require the Standards of
Conduct Official to provide annual and
new director and employee training.
The training would review the
institution’s standards of conduct rules
and the Code of Ethics and discuss any
updates; review and discuss the
anonymous reporting hotline or other
reporting procedure; prohibited
conduct; directors’ and employees’
fiduciary duties (this training could be
separate from the training of employees
who do not have fiduciary duties); the
importance of identifying conflicts of
interests and reporting of financial
interests; and annual and ongoing
reporting requirements.
The proposed rule would require the
Standards of Conduct Official to report
periodically to the board of directors or
designated board committee on the
Standards of Conduct Program and Code
of Ethics matters. Proposed
§ 612.2170(d) would require the
Standards of Conduct Official to help
directors and employees identify
conflicts of interest and report financial
interests, in accordance with proposed
§ 612.2138. The Official would make
written determinations on conflicts of
interest and determine how to resolve
them including by recusal, divestiture,
approval or exception, job reassignment,
employee supervision, employment
separation, or other action consistent
with the institution’s Standards of
Conduct Program as provided in
proposed § 612.2170(e). Proposed
§ 612.2170(f) would require the
Standards of Conduct Official to
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document all resolved and unresolved
material or significant conflicts of
interest. The Standards of Conduct
Official would be required to maintain
documentation that explains how
conflicts are handled.
Proposed § 612.2170(g) would require
the Standards of Conduct Official to
report to the institution’s board of
directors or designated board committee
any instance of non-compliance with
the System institution’s standards of
conduct rules or Code of Ethics. It
would also require periodic reporting on
the administration of the Standards of
Conduct Program. These reports would
include a review of the Standards of
Conduct Program required under
proposed § 612.2137.
V. Regulatory Flexibility Act
Pursuant to section 605(b) of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601
et seq.), FCA hereby certifies that the
proposed rule would not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
Each of the banks in the System,
considered together with its affiliated
associations, has assets and annual
income in excess of the amounts that
would qualify them as small entities.
Therefore, System institutions are not
‘‘small entities’’ as defined in the
Regulatory Flexibility Act.
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 612
Agriculture, Banks, banking, Conflict
of interests, Crime, Investigations, Rural
areas.
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, part 612 of chapter VI, title 12
of the Code of Federal Regulations is
proposed to be amended as follows:
PART 612—STANDARDS OF
CONDUCT AND REFERRAL OF
KNOWN OR SUSPECTED CRIMINAL
VIOLATIONS
1. The authority citation for part 612
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: Secs. 5.9, 5.17, 5.19 of the Farm
Credit Act (12 U.S.C. 2243, 2252, 2254).
2. Subpart A, consisting of
§§ 661.2130 through 612.2270, is
revised to read as follows:
■
Subpart A—Standards of Conduct
Sec.
612.2130 Definitions.
612.2135 [Reserved]
612.2136 Standards of conduct—core
principles.
612.2137 Elements of a Standards of
Conduct Program.
612.2138 Conflicts of interest, reporting of
financial interests.
612.2139 Prohibited conduct.
612.2140–612.2165 [Reserved]
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612.2170 Standards of Conduct Official.
612.2260–612.2270 [Reserved]
Subpart A—Standards of Conduct
§ 612.2130
Definitions.
For purposes of this section, the
following terms are defined:
Agent means any person, other than a
director or employee, who currently
represents a System institution as a
fiduciary in contacts with third parties
or who currently provides professional
services to a System institution, such as
legal, accounting, appraisal, cybersecurity, internet technology and other
similar services.
Code of Ethics means a written
statement of the principles and values
the System institution follows to
establish a culture of ethical conduct for
directors and employees.
Conflicts of interest means a set of
circumstances that creates a risk that
actions or judgments regarding a
primary interest will be unduly
influenced by a secondary interest. A
conflict of interest (or the appearance of
a conflict of interest) may exist when a
person has a financial interest in a
transaction, relationship, or activity that
could materially impact that person’s
ability to perform official duties and
responsibilities in a totally impartial
manner and in the best interest of the
institution, when viewed from the
perspective of a reasonable person with
knowledge of the relevant facts.
Employee means any individual,
including an officer, working part-time,
full-time, or on a temporary basis for the
System institution.
Entity means a corporation, company,
association, firm, joint venture,
partnership, sole proprietorship, trust or
other organization whether or not
incorporated.
Family means spouse or significant
other and anyone having the following
relationship to either: Parent, spouse,
son, daughter, sibling, stepparent,
stepson, stepdaughter, stepbrother,
stepsister, half-brother, half-sister,
uncle, aunt, nephew, niece,
grandparent, grandson, granddaughter,
and the spouses of the foregoing.
Financial interest means an interest in
an activity, transaction, property, or
relationship with a person that involves
receiving or providing something of
monetary value or other present or
deferred compensation.
Financially obligated with means
having a legally enforceable joint
obligation with, being financially
obligated on behalf of (contingently or
otherwise), having an enforceable legal
obligation secured by property owned
by another person, or owning property
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that secures an enforceable legal
obligation of another.
Material, when applied to a financial
interest or transaction (including a
series of transactions viewed in the
aggregate), means that the interest or
transaction is of sufficient magnitude
that a reasonable person with
knowledge of the relevant facts would
question the ability of the person who
has the interest or is party to such
transaction(s) to perform the person’s
official duties objectively and
impartially and in the best interest of
the institution and its statutory purpose.
Mineral interest means any interest in
minerals, oil or gas, including but not
limited to, any right derived directly or
indirectly from a mineral, oil, or gas
lease, deed or royalty conveyance.
Ordinary course of business, when
applied to a transaction, means:
(1) A transaction that is usual and
customary in the business in question
on terms that are not preferential; or
(2) A transaction with a person who
is in the business of offering the goods
or services that are the subject of the
transaction on terms that are not
preferential.
Person means individual or entity.
Preferential means that the
transaction is not on the same terms as
those prevailing at the same time for
comparable transactions for other
persons who are not directors,
employees or agents of a System
institution.
Reportable business entity means an
entity in which the reporting individual,
directly or indirectly, or acting through
or in concert with one or more persons:
(1) Owns a material percentage of the
equity;
(2) Owns, controls, or has the power
to vote a material percentage of any
class of voting securities; or
(3) Has the power to exercise a
material influence over the management
of policies of such entity.
Resolved means an actual or apparent
conflict of interest that has been
addressed with an action such as
recusal, divestiture, approval or
exception, job reassignment, employee
supervision, employment separation or
other action, with the result that a
reasonable person with knowledge of
the relevant facts would conclude that
the conflicting interest is unlikely to
adversely affect the person’s
performance of official duties in an
objective and impartial manner and in
furtherance of the interests and statutory
purposes of the Farm Credit System.
Standards of Conduct Official means
a System institution employee who is
appointed as an officer under
§ 612.2137(b), and who reports directly
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to the board of directors or designated
board committee on Standards of
Conduct and Code of Ethics matters.
Standards of Conduct Program means
the policies and procedures, internal
controls and other actions a System
institution must implement to put into
practice the requirements of this rule
and the System institution’s Code of
Ethics.
Supervised institution is a term that
only applies within the context of a
System bank or employee of a System
bank and refers to each association
supervised by that System bank.
Supervising institution is a term that
only applies within the context of an
association or employee of an
association and refers to the System
bank that supervises that association.
System institution and institution
means any Farm Credit System bank,
association, or service corporation
chartered under section 4.25 of the Act,
and the Federal Farm Credit Banks
Funding Corporation. It does not
include the Federal Agricultural
Mortgage Corporation.
§ 612.2135
[Reserved]
§ 612.2136 Standards of conduct—core
principles.
(a) If you are a System institution
director or employee, you must:
(1) Maintain the highest ethical
standards of the financial banking
industry, including standards of care,
honesty, integrity, and fairness.
(2) Act in the best interest of the
institution.
(3) Preserve the reputation of the
institution and the public’s confidence
in the Farm Credit System.
(4) Exercise diligence and good
business judgment in carrying out
official duties and responsibilities.
(5) Report, vet, and work with the
Standards of Conduct Official to resolve
conflicts of interest and the appearance
of conflicts of interest in System
business relationships and activities.
(6) Avoid self-dealing and acceptance
of gifts or favors that may be deemed as
offered, or have the appearance of being
offered, to influence official actions or
decisions.
(7) Fulfill your fiduciary duties, as
applicable.
(b) To comply with core principles,
all System institution directors and
employees must:
(1) Comply with the institution’s
standards of conduct and Code of
Ethics.
(2) Comply with all applicable laws
and regulations.
(3) Certify, in writing, participation in
the institution’s annual standards of
conduct training.
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(4) Timely report to the Standards of
Conduct Official or through the
institution’s reporting procedures under
§ 612.2137(e)(3) known or suspected:
(i) Illegal or unethical activities; and
(ii) Violations of the institution’s
standards of conduct and Code of
Ethics.
§ 612.2137 Elements of a Standards of
Conduct Program.
The System institution board is
ultimately responsible for the
implementation and oversight of, and
compliance with, the Standards of
Conduct Program. Each System
institution board of directors must:
(a) Establish a Standards of Conduct
Program that sets forth the core
principles in § 612.2136 and provide
adequate resources for its
implementation.
(b) Appoint a Standards of Conduct
Official. Provide the Standards of
Conduct Official:
(1) Authority to carry out
responsibilities set forth in this subpart
A; and
(2) Direct access to the System
institution board of directors or
designated board committee on
standards of conduct matters.
(c) Adopt a written Code of Ethics that
establishes the System institution’s
values and expectations for the ethical
conduct of directors and employees.
Include standards for appropriate
professional conduct at the workplace
and in matters related to employment.
Post the Code of Ethics on the
institution’s external website with
access for the public.
(d) Establish policies and procedures
to:
(1) Institute requirements for directors
and employees to comply with the
Standards of Conduct Program,
including at a minimum, annual and
interim reporting of:
(i) Actual or apparent conflicts of
interest;
(ii) Transactions not in the ordinary
course of business;
(iii) Names of family members;
(iv) Reportable business entities; and
(v) Gifts under paragraph (d)(6) of this
section.
(2) Address how conflicts will be
resolved, and provide action(s) to be
taken when a conflict cannot be
resolved to the satisfaction of the
System institution;
(3) Address third-party relationships.
Include policies and procedures to:
(i) Require agents to disclose conflicts
of interest and act in a manner
consistent with the ethical standards of
the System institution; and
(ii) Notify agents, consultants and
other third parties who represent the
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institution, or who provide expert or
professional services to the System
institution that their engagement is
conditioned upon their agreement to
avoid misconduct and conflicts of
interest;
(4) Enforce and monitor the System
institution’s Standards of Conduct
Program. Take appropriate action
against any director or employee who
violates the standards of conduct rules,
Code of Ethics or the regulations under
this subpart A;
(5) Apply and enforce the prohibited
conduct rules set forth in § 612.2139
and any other Farm Credit
Administration rules in this subpart A;
and
(6) Set forth rules prohibiting gifts. If
the System institution allows directors
and employees to accept de minimis
gifts, establish a de minimis threshold
dollar amount per gift and an aggregate
amount per year consistent with
applicable laws. Establish rules for
disposing of impermissible gifts.
(e) Provide for Standards of Conduct
Program internal controls to include at
a minimum, a process to:
(1) Maintain conflicts of interest and
other reports required under this
subpart A, including paragraph (d)(1) of
this section, along with any
investigations, determinations and
supporting documentation, for a
minimum of 6 years.
(2) Protect against unauthorized
disclosure of confidential information
maintained by the institution, pursuant
to this subpart A.
(3) Report anonymously known or
suspected violations of the institution’s
Standards of Conduct Program and Code
of Ethics, through a hotline or other
reporting procedure.
(4) Periodically review the Standards
of Conduct Program to ensure continued
adequacy and consistency with changes
in institution practices, financial
banking industry best practices and
Farm Credit Administration regulations.
(5) Perform internal audits of the
Standards of Conduct Program to:
(i) Review the effectiveness of
advancing the core principles,
(ii) Identify weaknesses;
(iii) Recommend and report necessary
corrective actions directly to the
institution’s board or designated board
committee; and
(iv) Cover the entire Standards of
Conduct Program across the System
institution and include all activities
conducted through a System institution
unincorporated business entity (UBE),
including UBEs organized for the
express purpose of investing in a Rural
Business Investment Company pursuant
to § 611.1150(b) of this chapter. The
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27931
System institution must determine and
document the scope and depth of the
audit.
(f) Establish periodic standards of
conduct training required under
§ 612.2170(c) at least annually.
(6) The name of any person residing
in your home if, you know or have
reason to know, such person transacts
business with your System institution,
or any institution supervised by the
System institution.
§ 612.2138 Conflicts of interest, reporting
of financial interests.
§ 612.2139
(a) If you are a director or employee
of a System institution you must, to the
best of your knowledge and belief:
(1) Identify conflicts of interest and
potential conflicts of interest;
(2) Report conflicts of interest and
potential conflicts of interest in any
matters, transactions or activities
pending at the System institution to the
Standards of Conduct Official; and
(3) Cooperate with and provide
information requested by the Standards
of Conduct Official to resolve conflicts
of interest and potential conflicts of
interest.
(b) If you are a director or employee
of a System institution and you have a
conflict of interest in a matter,
transaction or activity subject to official
action, or before the board of directors
then you must, to the best of your
knowledge:
(1) Disclose relevant information
including:
(i) The existence, nature, and extent of
your interest; and
(ii) The facts known to you as to the
matter, transaction or activity under
consideration;
(2) Refrain from participating in the
official action or board discussion of the
matter, transaction or activity; and
(3) Not vote on, or influence the vote
on, the matter, transaction or activity.
(c) If you are a director or employee,
at least annually and at such other times
as may be required by your institution
policies and procedures, you must
report to the Standards of Conduct
Official, in sufficient detail for a
reasonable person to make a conflict of
interest determination, the following
information to the best of your
knowledge or belief:
(1) Any interest you have in any
business matter to be considered by the
System institution;
(2) The names of your family
members who have transacted or are
currently transacting, business with the
System institution;
(3) All material financial interests
with any director, employee, agent,
borrower or business affiliate of your
System institution, or supervised or
supervising institution;
(4) Any matter you are required to
disclose under § 620.6(f) of this chapter;
(5) The names of entities that are
reportable business entities to you; and
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Fmt 4702
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Prohibited conduct.
(a) If you are a System institution
director or employee you must not:
(1) Act inconsistently with the core
principles. You must follow the core
principles set forth in § 612.2136.
(2) Use your position for personal gain
or advantage. Do not participate in
deliberations on, or the determination
of, any matter affecting your financial
interest. Matters affecting your financial
interest include financial interests of a
family member, a person residing in
your home, or a reportable business
entity. You may participate in matters of
general applicability affecting
shareholders/borrowers of a particular
class in a nondiscriminatory way.
(3) Divulge confidential information.
Do not make use of any fact, information
or document not generally available to
the public that you acquired by virtue
of your position. You may use
confidential information in the
performance of your official duties.
(4) Accept gifts. Do not solicit, obtain,
or accept, directly or indirectly, any gift,
fee or other compensation that could be
viewed as offered to influence your
decision-making, or official action, or to
obtain information.
(5) Purchase property owned by the
institution. Do not knowingly purchase
or otherwise acquire, directly or
indirectly except through inheritance,
any interest (including mineral
interests) in any real or personal
property that currently is owned, or
within the past 12 months was owned,
by your employing or supervising
institution, or any supervised institution
as a result of foreclosure, deed in lieu,
or similar action. Exceptions: As a
director, in addition to the inheritance
exception, you may purchase such
property if you:
(i) Purchase the property through
public auction or similar open,
competitive bidding process;
(ii) Did not participate in the decision
to foreclose or dispose of the property,
including setting the sale terms; and
(iii) Have not received information as
a result of your position that could give
you an advantage over other potential
bidders or purchasers of the property.
(6) Enter into loan transactions with
prohibited sources. Do not directly or
indirectly borrow from, lend to, or
become financially obligated with or on
behalf of a director, employee, or agent
of your employing or supervising
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institution, supervised institution, or a
borrower or loan applicant of the
employing institution. Exceptions: You
may enter into transactions with family
members and transactions in the
ordinary course of business as
determined and documented by the
written policies and procedures of your
institution.
(7) Purchase System obligations.
(i) Do not purchase any obligation of
a System institution, including any
joint, consolidated or System-wide
obligation, unless such obligation is part
of an offering available to the public;
and purchased through a dealer or
dealer bank affiliated with a member of
the selling group designated by the
Federal Farm Credit Banks Funding
Corporation or purchased in the
secondary market.
(ii) Do not purchase or retire any stock
in advance of the release of material
non-public information concerning the
institution to other stockholders;
(iii) If you are a director or employee
of the Federal Farm Credit Banks
Funding Corporation, do not purchase
or otherwise acquire, directly or
indirectly, except by inheritance, any
obligation or equity of a System
institution, including any joint,
consolidated or System-wide
obligations, unless it is a common
cooperative equity as defined in § 628.2
of this chapter.
(b) In addition to the prohibitions
under paragraph (a) of this section, if
you are a System institution employee
you must not:
(1) Serve as a director or employee of
certain entities. Do not serve as a
director or employee of an entity that
transacts business with your institution,
another System institution in the
district, or of any commercial bank,
savings and loan or other non-System
financial institution. For the purpose of
this paragraph, ‘‘transacts business’’
does not include System institution
loans to a reportable business entity;
service on the board of directors of the
Federal Agricultural Mortgage
Corporation; or transactions with nonprofit entities; or entities in which the
System institution has an ownership
interest. Exceptions: You may serve as a
director or employee of an employee
credit union, and you may serve as an
employee of another System institution
as permitted under paragraph (b)(4) of
this section.
(2) Act as a real estate agent or broker.
Do not act as a real estate agent or
broker, unless you are buying or selling
real estate for your own use or for a
family member or a person living in
your home.
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(3) Act as an insurance agent or
broker. Do not act as an insurance agent
or broker for the sale and placement of
insurance, unless authorized by section
4.29 of the Act.
(4) Serve as a joint employee.
(i) If you are currently employed as an
officer with a System bank, you cannot
serve as an employee of a supervised
association.
(ii) If you are currently employed with
a bank, but not as an officer, you may
be an officer of a supervised association
only if:
(A) Both boards authorize such
service in an extraordinary situation;
(B) The duties and compensation at
each institution is delineated in the
board’s approval; and
(C) Reasonable prior notice is
provided to the Farm Credit
Administration.
(iii) You may be both a non-officer
employee at a System bank and a
supervised association, if employee
expenses are appropriately reflected in
each institution’s financial statements.
§§ 612.2140–612.2165
§ 612.2170
[Reserved]
Standards of Conduct Official.
The Standards of Conduct Official
must:
(a) Implement and enforce the
institution’s Standards of Conduct
Program.
(b) Provide guidance and information
to directors and employees on conflicts
of interest.
(c) Administer periodic, but at a
minimum, annual standards of conduct
training to directors and employees that
includes:
(1) Procedures for the review of and
recommendation for any revisions to the
institution’s standards of conduct rules
and Code of Ethics;
(2) Procedures for reporting
anonymously known or suspected
violations of standards of conduct, Code
of Ethics and unethical conduct;
(3) Rules for prohibited conduct;
(4) Fiduciary duties;
(5) Conflicts of interest and apparent
conflicts of interest;
(6) Reporting requirements; and
(7) New director training within 60
calendar days before the beginning of
the director’s election or term; and new
employee training within 5 business
days of the beginning of employment.
(d) Help all directors and employees
identify conflicts of interest and report
financial interests in accordance with
§ 612.2138.
(e) Make written determinations on
how conflicts of interest will be
resolved consistent with your
institution’s Standards of Conduct
Program.
PO 00000
Frm 00015
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
(f) Document resolved and unresolved
conflicts of interest that are material or
significant. Maintain documentation
that explains how conflicts are being
handled.
(g) Report to your institution’s board
of directors or designated board
committee:
(1) Instances of standards of conduct
or Code of Ethics non-compliance,
promptly upon completion of any
investigation or determination; and
(2) Administration of the Standards of
Conduct Program, periodically as
determined by the written policies and
procedures of your institution.
§§ 612.2260–612.2270
[Reserved]
Dated: June 12, 2018.
Dale L. Aultman,
Secretary, Farm Credit Administration Board.
[FR Doc. 2018–12874 Filed 6–14–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6705–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Coast Guard
33 CFR Part 110
[Docket Number USCG–2018–0388]
Anchorage Ground; Sabine Pass, TX
Coast Guard, DHS.
Notice of inquiry; request for
comments.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
We are requesting your
comments on a request we received
from Sabine Pass LNG, L.P. for the
disestablishment of the Sabine Pass
Channel Anchorage Ground in Sabine,
TX. The request indicates that deep
draft ships do not use the anchorage and
that disestablishment of the anchorage
would not pose a concern for ship
traffic. We seek your comments on
whether we should consider a proposed
rulemaking disestablishing the Sabine
Pass Anchorage Ground based on this
request or if other actions, such as
reducing the size of the anchorage,
should be considered.
DATES: Your comments and related
material must reach the Coast Guard on
or before July 16, 2018.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
identified by docket number USCG–
2018–0388 using the Federal portal at
https://www.regulations.gov. See the
‘‘Public Participation and Request for
Comments’’ portion of the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section for
further instructions on submitting
comments.
SUMMARY:
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 116 (Friday, June 15, 2018)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 27922-27932]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-12874]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
FARM CREDIT ADMINISTRATION
12 CFR Part 612
RIN 3052-AC44
Standards of Conduct and Referral of Known or Suspected Criminal
Violations; Standards of Conduct
AGENCY: Farm Credit Administration.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Farm Credit Administration (FCA, we, or our) proposes to
amend our regulations governing standards of conduct of directors and
employees of Farm Credit System (FCS or System) institutions, excluding
the Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corporation. The proposed rule would
replace the original proposed rule, and would require every System
institution to have or develop a Standards of Conduct Program based on
core principles to put into effect ethical values as part of corporate
culture.
DATES: You may send comments on or before September 13, 2018.
ADDRESSES: We offer a variety of methods for you to submit your
comments. For accuracy and efficiency reasons, commenters are
encouraged to submit comments by email or through FCA's website. As
facsimiles (fax) are difficult for us to process and achieve compliance
with section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act, we are no longer accepting
comments submitted by fax. Regardless of the method you use, please do
not submit your comment multiple times via different methods. You may
submit comments by any of the following methods:
Email: Send us an email at [email protected].
FCA Website: https://www.fca.gov. Select ``Public
Commenters,'' then ``Public Comments'' and follow the directions for
``Submitting a Comment.''
[[Page 27923]]
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
Mail: Barry F. Mardock, Deputy Director, Office of
Regulatory Policy, Farm Credit Administration, 1501 Farm Credit Drive,
McLean, Virginia 22102-5090.
You may review copies of comments we receive at our office in McLean,
Virginia, or from our website at https://www.fca.gov. Once you are in
the website, select ``Public Commenters,'' then ``Public Comments'' and
follow the directions for ``Reading Submitted Public Comments.'' We
will show your comments as submitted but, for technical reasons, we may
omit items such as logos and special characters. Identifying
information that you provide, such as phone numbers and addresses, will
be publicly available. However, we will attempt to remove email
addresses to help reduce internet spam.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jacqueline R. Melvin, Senior Policy
Analyst, Office of Regulatory Policy, (703) 883-4498, TDD (703) 883-
4056, [email protected], or Mary Alice Donner, Senior Counsel, Office of
General Counsel, (703) 883-4020, TDD (703) 883-4056, [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Objectives
The objectives of this proposed rule are to:
Establish principles for ethical conduct and recognize
each System institution's responsibility for promoting an ethical
culture;
Provide each System institution flexibility to develop
specific guidelines on acceptable practices suitable for its
business;
Encourage each System institution to foster core
ethical values and conduct as part of its corporate culture;
Require each System institution to develop strategies
and a system of internal controls to promote institution and
individual accountability in ethical conduct, including by
establishing a Standards of Conduct Program and adopting a Code of
Ethics; and
Remove prescriptive requirements that do not promote
these objectives.
II. Background
Our standards of conduct regulations have not been significantly
changed since their 1994 publication.\1\ Over the past few years, there
have been increasing concerns with governance, oversight, management
practices and standards of conduct in the financial services industry.
The proposed rule would update FCA's regulations in view of these
concerns, and would address the ethical culture under which System
institutions should operate.\2\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The original proposed regulation was published in the
Federal Register on February 20, 2014, (79 FR 9649). The objective
was to build on the existing standards of conduct rules by adding a
few new provisions, clarifying or augmenting some current
provisions, and providing additional flexibility for others. After
receiving comments, FCA determined to use a different approach.
\2\ ``The Directors Role'' booklet states that sound ethics and
adherence to standards of conduct, among other things, are essential
to effective oversight.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
III. The Importance of Ethical Culture
Public confidence in the integrity and ethical business practices
of any financial institution is fundamental to its ongoing viability.
Unethical or preferential business practices can damage a financial
institution's reputation and lead to earnings and credit risk. Congress
granted the Farm Credit System certain attributes that result in
Government-sponsored enterprise (GSE) status. This status confers on
System institutions additional responsibility to strive for high
ethical standards and business practices.
IV. The Proposed Rule
This rule would establish core principles for ethical conduct. It
would set forth basic tenets of ethical business practices to compel
each System institution to foster a culture of loyalty, honesty,
integrity and accountability. The proposed rule would set forth
principles by which a System institution must do business. The System
institution would be responsible for establishing and enforcing
policies that expand on these principles, and for clearly communicating
expectations for acceptable behavior to directors and employees. FCA
believes that the proposed rule would promote ethical conduct. At the
same time, because it is less prescriptive than the current rule, it
could reduce regulatory burden.
A. Organization
The proposed rule would change the organization of the current
rule. It would consolidate, rename and assign new numbers to some
sections and remove other sections altogether. The following bullets
summarize the changes:
Proposed Sec. 612.2136 would set forth the principles
that serve as the foundation for the rule. It would substantively
revise and rename current Sec. 612.2135 ``Director and employee
responsibilities and conduct--generally''.
Proposed Sec. 612.2137 ``Elements of a Standards of
Conduct Program,'' would consolidate current Sec. 612.2160
``Institution responsibilities'' and current Sec. 612.2165
``Policies and procedures''.
Proposed Sec. 612.2138 ``Conflicts of interest,
reporting of financial interests'' would consolidate current
``Director reporting'' and current Sec. 612.2155 ``Employee
reporting''.
Proposed Sec. 612.2139 ``Prohibited conduct'' would
consolidate current Sec. 612.2140 ``Directors--prohibited conduct''
and Sec. 612.2150 ``Employees--prohibited conduct''. It would also
include the prohibitions in current Sec. 612.2157 ``Joint
employees'' and current Sec. 612.2270 ``Purchase of System
obligations''.
Proposed Sec. 612.2137 would require that institutions
develop policies and procedures with respect to agents to avoid
conflicts of interests and would replace current Sec. 612.2260
``Standards of conduct for agents''.
B. Definitions [Proposed Sec. 612.2130]
The proposed rule would define ``Code of Ethics,'' ``resolved'' and
``Standards of Conduct Program''. We would change the term ``controlled
entity and entity controlled by'' to ``reportable business entity'' and
modify the definition of ``employee''. We would omit the definitions of
``officer'' and ``service corporation'' as redundant with the
definitions of ``employee'' and ``System institution'', respectively.
We would omit the definition of ``relative'' as redundant with the
definition of ``family'' in the current rule and ``immediate family''
in Sec. 620.1(e). We would make the definition of System institutions
more concise. These and other changes and clarifications are discussed
below.
Agent. We would modify the definition of ``agent'' to clarify that
an agent includes someone who currently represents a System institution
as a fiduciary in contacts with third parties. The proposed rule adds
the language ``as a fiduciary'' to the definition of agent to explain
that not all outside parties performing services for the System
institution require the conflict of interest disclosure required of
agents. For example, the contractor responsible for maintaining grounds
would not be an agent. However, those with fiduciary responsibilities,
such as lawyers, accountants, and those representing the System
institution in contacts with third parties would be an agent. Each
System institution should review the risks associated with its use of
third parties and should expand or elaborate on the definition of
agent, depending on the System institution's need for conflict
disclosures in those relationships. Special consideration should be
given to cyber security issues in third party relationships and
information technology specialists should be subject
[[Page 27924]]
to especially heightened ethical controls and confidentiality
requirements.
Code of Ethics. The proposed rule would define ``Code of Ethics''
as a written statement of the principles and values the System
institution follows to establish a culture of ethical conduct. The Code
of Ethics directs professionalism and discourages misconduct so that
the best interests of the institution and the System are advanced.
Conflict of interest. This definition would explain that a conflict
can arise whenever a secondary or non-work-related interest might
unduly influence or materially impact a director's or employee's work-
related decision-making.
Employee. The proposed rule would define ``employee'' to mean any
individual, including an officer, who works for the System institution.
Every individual who works for the System institution, including
temporary employees and interns, would be part of the ethical corporate
culture, regardless of length or term of employment. System
institutions should also consider whether and when third-party
contractors should be included in the definition of employee or agent.
Entity. The proposed rule would add ``sole proprietorship'' to the
definition of ``entity'' in the current rule and make other non-
substantive changes.
Family. The proposed rule would include ``significant others'' in
the definition of ``family''. The System institution could elaborate on
this definition, and consider whether to include cousins or civil union
partners.
Material. The definition of ``material'' in the proposed rule is
not substantively different from the definition in the current rule.
Each System institution must set its own specific parameters for what
would constitute a material financial interest or transaction. The
dollar amount or value of material, in the context of a financial
interest or transaction, should be determined by the System institution
board. This should be based on the institution's needs for tracking and
supervising the potentially conflicting business and financial
activities of its directors and employees.
Ordinary course of business. We would clarify that an ordinary
course of business transaction is one that is usual and customary ``in
the business in question'', on terms that are not preferential. Each
System institution must determine what activities and transactions are
in the ordinary course of business. Generally, a person provides goods
or services in the ordinary course of business if the transaction is
usual or customary for the kind of business in which the seller or
service provider is engaged or with the seller's or service provider's
own usual or customary practices. So, for example, a borrower sells
crop inputs (seed, fertilizer, etc.), and a System institution director
or employee wishes to purchase the crop inputs. A transaction in the
ordinary course of business would mean that the borrower sells the crop
inputs at the price and terms common to others in the industry. It
would mean that the director or employee is typical of an ordinary
purchaser of crop inputs in the industry. Also, the terms of the
arrangement should be consistent with the other transactions, if any,
between this borrower/seller and director or employee/buyer.
Another example involves services in the ordinary course of
business, such as accounting, legal or medical. A System institution
director may need a lawyer. The fact that the best lawyer is a
borrower, does not preclude the director from engaging that lawyer for
personal use, assuming no conflict, if the terms of the engagement are
usual or customary practices in the legal field. The director must pay
the lawyer at the going rate, the legal services must be of the kind
the lawyer typically provides in the business, and the relationship
cannot have any preferential terms or discounts.
Preferential. The proposed rule would not change the definition of
``preferential'' but would list it separately from the definition of
``ordinary course of business''.
Reportable business entity. The proposed rule would change the term
``controlled entity and entity controlled by'' and replace it with
``reportable business entity''. The proposed rule would provide that a
reportable business entity is an entity in which the reporting
individual, directly or indirectly or acting through or in concert with
one or more persons, owns a material percentage of the equity; owns,
controls, or has the power to vote a material percentage of any class
of voting securities; or has the power to exercise a material influence
over management of policies of such entity. We would make this change
to avoid confusion with the term ``control'' in the corporate context,
and to allow the System institution discretion to determine how much
interest represents a conflict. This determination may vary depending
on whether the entity is private, public, profit, or not for profit.
The intent of this provision is to require directors and employees to
identify and report any business interest that is significant enough to
create a conflict of interest or the appearance of a conflict of
interest when considered from the perspective of an ordinarily prudent
and reasonable person.
Resolved. We would define ``resolved'' to mean an actual or
apparent conflict of interest that has been addressed with an action
such as recusal, divestiture, approval or exception, job reassignment,
employee supervision, employment separation or other action, with the
result that a reasonable person with knowledge of the relevant facts
would conclude that the conflicting interest is unlikely to adversely
affect the person's performance of official duties in an objective and
fair manner and in furtherance of the interests and statutory purposes
of the Farm Credit System.
Standards of Conduct Official. The proposed rule would modify the
definition of Standards of Conduct Official (or Official). Because of
the variety of institution sizes and resources, we do not require the
Standards of Conduct Official to be a senior officer. However, the
focus of this proposal is on accountability in ethical conduct;
therefore, the Official must be an employee who is an officer appointed
under Sec. 612.2137(b), and must have the authority to report directly
to the System institution board or designated board committee on
standards of conduct matters. The Official should be an employee who is
able to exert a positive influence in ethical matters on System
institution directors and employees. The Official would be independent
in his duties related to standards of conduct. It may be practical for
some larger System institutions to appoint more than one Standards of
Conduct Official.
Standards of Conduct Program. The proposed rule would define
``Standards of Conduct Program'' to mean the policies and procedures,
internal controls, and other actions a System institution must
implement to put into practice the requirements of this rule. The
Standards of Conduct Program is the totality of the policies and
procedures, internal controls, audit, training, and other activities
that promote ethical behavior.
C. Standards of Conduct--Core Principles [Proposed Sec. 612.2136]
As mentioned in Section A, we would substantively revise and rename
current Sec. 612.2135 ``Director and employees responsibilities and
conduct--generally'' as proposed Sec. 612.2136 ``Standards of
conduct--core principles.'' Proposed Sec. 612.2136 would establish
principles that directors and employees must follow in performing
[[Page 27925]]
official duties. We specifically request comment on the effectiveness
of the proposed principles in reaching the objective of fostering a
culture of ethical conduct.
Paragraph (a) would establish core principles. Paragraph (b) would
set forth certain basic minimum requirements to comply with the
principles.
Proposed Sec. 612.2136(a)(1) would set forth the first principle:
To maintain the highest ethical standards of the financial banking
industry, including standards of care, honesty, integrity and fairness.
This principle establishes that these standards, important in the
financial banking industry, are critical to the conduct expected of a
GSE. System institution directors and employees should consider ethical
conduct beyond reproach a component of their job responsibilities.
System institution directors and employees must avoid self-serving
practices and hold performance of their duties to the institution above
personal concerns. They must not use their position for personal
advantage. Proposed Sec. 612.2136(a)(2) would set forth the principle
that institution directors and employees must act in the best interest
of the institution. Proposed Sec. 612.2136(a)(3) would set forth the
principle to preserve the reputation of the institution and the
public's confidence in the Farm Credit System. Proposed Sec.
612.2136(a)(4) would set forth the principle to exercise diligence and
good business judgment in carrying out duties and responsibilities.
Proposed Sec. 612.2136(a)(5) would state as a principle the
responsibility to report, vet and make all reasonable efforts to
resolve conflicts and the appearance of conflicts in business
relationships and activities. As a corollary, proposed Sec.
612.2136(a)(6) would set forth the principle that directors and
employees must avoid self-dealing and acceptance of gifts or favors
that may influence or have the appearance of influencing official
actions or decisions. Proposed rules concerning acceptance of gifts are
set forth in proposed Sec. 612.2137(d)(6). Proposed Sec.
612.2136(a)(7) would require directors and employees, if applicable, to
fulfill fiduciary duties.
Proposed Sec. 612.2136(b)(1) would require institution directors
and employees to comply with their System institution's Standards of
Conduct Program and Code of Ethics. Proposed Sec. 612.2136(b)(2) would
require institution directors and employees to comply with all
applicable laws and regulations when carrying out official duties.
Applicable laws and regulations would include all FCA regulations and
Federal laws. Proposed Sec. 612.2136(b)(3) would require institution
directors and employees to participate in annual standards of conduct
training, and to acknowledge participation with a written
certification. Section 612.2136(b)(4) would require directors and
employees to report, under Sec. 612.2137(e), known or suspected
illegal or unethical activities, and known or suspected violations of
the institution's rules on standards of conduct and Code of Ethics.
Reporting would be made to the Standards of Conduct Official or through
the institution's hotline or other method consistent with the
institution's procedures for anonymous reporting.
D. Elements of a Standards of Conduct Program [Proposed Sec. 612.2137]
The proposed rule would consolidate current Sec. 612.2160
``Institution responsibilities'' with current Sec. 612.2165 ``Policies
and procedures,'' in proposed Sec. 612.2137 ``Elements of a Standards
of Conduct Program.'' This section would require each System
institution to establish a Standards of Conduct Program that
incorporates the principles established in proposed Sec. 612.2136 and
provide resources for its implementation. A System institution may
continue to use its existing Standards of Conduct Program if it
incorporates the core principles and satisfies the requirements of this
proposed rule.
The Standards of Conduct Program would set forth specific
guidelines on acceptable and unacceptable business practices. Policies
and procedures should include requirements and prohibitions as
necessary to promote public confidence in the institution and the
System, and further the objectives of the principles and this proposed
rule. Each System institution should enhance these requirements with
comprehensive rules as necessary to meet System institution goals. Each
System institution would be required to allocate resources to
administer the Standards of Conduct Program. This could include hiring
personnel in addition to the Standards of Conduct Official, if
necessary, to assist in responsibilities such as reviewing reports,
providing training, and conducting investigations. It could include use
of outside counsel, especially if the Standards of Conduct Official is
not an attorney, and whatever additional resources are necessary to
implement the Standards of Conduct Program and promote the ethical
culture of the System institution.
The System institution board is ultimately responsible for
implementing the principles and for compliance and oversight of the
Standards of Conduct Program. Proposed Sec. 612.2137(a) would require
each institution to establish a Standards of Conduct Program that sets
forth the core principles in Sec. 612.2136. Proposed Sec. 612.2137(b)
would require the board of directors to appoint a Standards of Conduct
Official, defined as an employee, who would be responsible for carrying
out the duties set forth in proposed Sec. 612.2170. To carry out these
responsibilities and promote the ethical culture required by the
proposed rule, the Standards of Conduct Official should have a close
relationship with the employees of the System institution and be in a
position of authority and trust. Because the board of directors is
ultimately responsible for compliance, the Standards of Conduct
Official must have direct access to the board or designated board
committee on standards of conduct matters. The Standards of Conduct
Official would be required to meet periodically with the board or
designated board committee as proposed in Sec. 612.2170(g).
Proposed Sec. 612.2137(c) would require each System institution to
adopt a written Code of Ethics that states the institution's principles
and values and guides directors and employees in ethical conduct. These
principles and values must include standards for appropriate
professional conduct at the workplace and in matters related to
employment. The Code of Ethics would be a component of the Standards of
Conduct Program. To demonstrate commitment to its values and to provide
transparency and accountability in ethical conduct, the proposed rule
requires each System institution to post its Code of Ethics on the
System institution's external (public) website.
Proposed Sec. 612.2137(d) would require each System institution to
establish policies and procedures to put into operation the Standards
of Conduct Program and to comply with the provisions of this proposed
rule.
Proposed Sec. 612.2137(d)(1) would require each System institution
to establish policies and procedures for reporting. At a minimum, these
would include reporting requirements sufficient to identify any
conflicts of interest, actual or apparent; any business transactions
with directors, employees, borrowers and agents that are not in the
ordinary course of business; any gifts; names of family members; and
reportable business entities (or other related party as determined by
the System institution).
As defined in proposed Sec. 612.2130, ordinary course of business
means a transaction that is usual and customary in the business in
question, on terms
[[Page 27926]]
that are not preferential. We believe the System institution is in the
best position to determine that which is an ordinary course of business
transaction and that which is favorable or preferential in its region.
Therefore, each System institution should develop policies and
procedures to identify transactions that are preferential and not in
the ordinary course of business and report the transactions pursuant to
Sec. 612.2137(d)(1)(ii).
Generally, ordinary course of business means business procedures
and practices consistent with usual customs and practices in that line
of business. Is the transaction of a type that other similar businesses
and their customers would engage in as ordinary business? Is the
transaction, and its terms, common in the specific industry? From an
industry-wide perspective, is the transaction of the sort commonly
undertaken? The practices of others in the industry would be helpful in
making the determination.
Another consideration is the parties' own past relationship and
past practice. Is the transaction ordinary in the context of the
relationship already existing between the parties? A review of the
parties' prior conduct and practices would be helpful in making this
determination.
Certain special situations bear discussion. Transactions between a
director/employee and that director's/employee's loan officer should be
specifically addressed, and the general nature of these transactions
should always be reported because of the high potential for conflict,
even if the transactions are in the ordinary course of business. System
institution policies and procedures should require reporting for other
ordinary course of business transactions that may have a high potential
for conflict.
Compliance with proposed Sec. 612.2137(d)(1) would require the
System institution to develop a method to monitor related-party
transactions and make sure that directors and employees do not transact
business on preferential or favorable terms and do not take advantage
of their employment or position with the Farm Credit System in their
business affairs. The policies and procedures should include specific
dollar amounts as appropriate, and other criteria for pre-event versus
post-event reporting. Reporting should include, at a minimum, financial
transactions (recurring or one-time), and other relationships or
arrangements (monetary or non-monetary) between directors, employees,
agents or borrower/stockholders.
Proposed Sec. 612.2137(d)(2) would require each System institution
to establish policies and procedures to address how conflicts of
interest would be resolved through an action such as recusal,
divestiture, approval or exception, job reassignment, employee
supervision, employment separation or other action. To resolve
conflicts of interest, the director or employee should cooperate with
the Standards of Conduct Official. Policies and procedures would
include action taken in the event a conflict cannot be resolved.
Compliance with proposed Sec. 612.2137 requires that the System
institution establish a process to report, vet, and resolve conflicts
of interest effectively. It would be read in tandem with proposed Sec.
612.2138, which speaks directly to directors and employees and sets
forth their reporting requirements.
Agents, consultants and other third parties who represent the
institution to the public, or upon whom the institution relies for
professional services, must be bound by the same ethical
responsibilities to the System institution and its borrower/
shareholders as directors and employees. Proposed Sec. 612.2137(d)(3)
would require each System institution to establish policies and
procedures to make sure that agents file conflict of interest
disclosures, and that agents, consultants and other third-party
contractors avoid misconduct and conflicts of interests. These third
parties must be notified that their engagement is conditioned upon
their agreement to avoid misconduct and conflicts of interest. These
policies and procedures should include a mechanism to report, vet and
resolve any conflicts of interest between third parties representing
the institution and the System institution itself or its directors and
employees. The System institution should also consider having the agent
or consultant acknowledge its Code of Ethics, depending on the relative
importance of the agent or consultant services to the institution.
Consideration should be given to the sensitivity of the services, for
example third-party performers of internet technology or cyber security
services should be subject to a high degree of scrutiny. Consideration
also should be given to whether the third party is covered by a
professional code or standard that prescribes ethical conduct.
The rule provides specific authority to each System institution to
monitor and enforce its standards of conduct rules and Code of Ethics.
Violators should be subject to specific and appropriate action, as
determined by the System institution. Proposed Sec. 612.2137(d)(4)
would require each System institution to establish policies and
procedures for the enforcement of its Standards of Conduct Program.
This would provide the mechanism by which the institution takes action
against any person who violates the standards of conduct rules, Code of
Ethics, or these regulations. This section places accountability for
enforcing the ethical conduct outlined in this proposed rule and
fundamental to the health and viability of the System institution
directly with the System institution itself.
Proposed Sec. 612.2137(d)(5) would require each System institution
to establish policies and procedures to apply and enforce the
prohibitions set forth in proposed Sec. 612.2139 and any other
provision in this subpart A.
Proposed Sec. 612.2137(d)(6) would require policies and procedures
to prohibit gifts. These should include a definition of gifts, and
explanation of prohibited sources. Directors and employees are
prohibited from accepting gifts or favors that could be viewed as
offered to influence or give the appearance to influence decision-
making or official action or to obtain information. A System
institution may determine that certain gifts, for example those valued
at $25.00 or less, are so low in value (de minimis) that they could not
be perceived as influencing decision-making or official action. The
System institution may allow its directors and employees to accept
gifts of little or no value. However, it may do so only if it has
policies and procedures in place that set forth controls that are
consistent with the core principles established in this proposed rule
and with the requirements of Federal laws including FCA regulations and
the Federal Bank Bribery Act.\3\ These policies and procedures would
set forth the maximum value of any individual gift that a director or
employee may accept, and the maximum value of gifts in the aggregate
per year that a director or employee may accept. The policies and
procedures would include reporting requirements for gifts and rules for
disposing of impermissible gifts.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ See 18 U.S.C. 215 and 18 U.S.C. 20.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed Sec. 612.2137(e) would set forth minimum requirements for
internal controls for all aspects of the System institution's Standards
of Conduct Program.
Proposed Sec. 612.2137(e)(1) would require the System institution
to maintain all reports generated under subpart A of the Standards of
Conduct regulations including those required by Sec. 612.2137(d)(1)
and records on any ethics investigations and
[[Page 27927]]
determinations, for a minimum of 6 years. Proposed Sec. 612.2137(e)(2)
would require internal controls to preserve the confidentiality of
reports and other information maintained under the Standards of Conduct
Program.
Proposed Sec. 612.2137(e)(3) would require each System institution
to establish a process for anonymous reporting of suspected standards
of conduct or Code of Ethics violations. A reporting hotline is most
effective when both internal parties (directors and employees) and
external parties (agents, borrowers, shareholders, applicants, and
others) can report a complaint, misconduct, or tip for corrective
action without fear of retribution such as termination of employment,
suspension, or other similar action.
Proposed Sec. 612.2137(e)(4) requires periodic review of the
Standards of Conduct Program for consistency with current practices at
the System institution, financial banking industry best practices, and
FCA regulations.
Internal controls to prevent self-dealing and conflict situations
should be monitored and evaluated with an effective audit program.
Proposed Sec. 612.2137(e)(5) would require each System institution to
arrange for periodic internal audits of the Standards of Conduct
Program. The audit would identify weaknesses, review and measure the
effectiveness of the Standards of Conduct Program, and prescribe
necessary corrective actions. The audit would cover the entire System
institution and include all activities conducted by the System
institution including through an unincorporated business entity (UBE),
such as those organized for the express purpose of investing in a Rural
Business Investment Company pursuant to Sec. 611.1150(b). The audit
would test for compliance and recommend corrective action as necessary,
and the results should be reported directly to the institution's board
or designated board committee. The scope and depth of the audit would
be determined by the needs of the institution. The System institution
would document the audit process and results.
Proposed Sec. 612.2137(f) would require each System institution to
establish and provide standards of conduct training at least annually.
This section should be read in tandem with Sec. 612.2170. The
institution's Standards of Conduct Program and ongoing training would
encourage directors and employees to obtain counsel from the Standards
of Conduct Official prior to engaging in transactions that could be
perceived as preferential or not in the ordinary course of business.
The Standards of Conduct Official could then provide advice to the
director or employee on the permissibility of the transaction under the
institution's Standards of Conduct Program and these proposed rules, or
prescribe actions that would be necessary before or following the
transaction to resolve a conflict of interest or the appearance of a
conflict of interest. Training must include updates, if any, to the
Standards of Conduct Program and Code of Ethics, and discussion of the
System institution's procedures for the anonymous reporting of
violations. It must include education on prohibited conduct, conflicts
of interest and reporting requirements. Training on fiduciary
responsibilities would be required, although the System institution may
elect to have that service performed by outside counsel.
E. Conflicts of Interest, Reporting of Financial Interests [New Sec.
612.2138]
It is incumbent upon each System institution to adopt the standards
of conduct core principles, to make them part of the culture and
lexicon of every director and employee. In addition, certain
prescriptive rules directed to employees and directors are necessary to
realize a baseline ethical standard. The baseline prescriptive
requirements are set forth in proposed Sec. Sec. 612.2138 and
612.2139, and each System institution should expand upon these
prescriptive requirements as appropriate.
Section 612.2138 of the proposed rule would specifically address
conflicts of interest and reporting of financial interests. This
section would require directors and employees to take affirmative
action to identify, report and resolve conflicts or potential conflicts
of interest of which they are aware. It is intended to compel each
director and employee to take ownership of and invest in ethical
responsibilities.
Proposed Sec. 612.2138(a) would require each director and employee
to identify, report and resolve conflicts and potential conflicts.
Proposed Sec. 612.2138(b) would require that if a director or employee
has a conflict of interest in a matter, transaction or activity that is
subject to official action, or that is being considered by the board of
directors, then that director or employee must disclose relevant non-
privileged information including the existence, nature, and extent of
his or her interests; refrain from participating in the official action
or board discussion on the matter, activity or transaction (Sec.
612.2138(b)(2)); and not vote on or influence the decision-making on
the matter, transaction or activity (Sec. 612.2138(b)(3)). Working
together with other provisions of the proposed rule, this section is
intended to bolster loyalty to the System institution and to reinforce
personal responsibility and accountability in avoiding conflicts and
acting ethically.
Proposed Sec. 612.2138(c) would require a director or employee to
report conflicts of interest to the Standards of Conduct Official at
year-end and at such other times as may be required by the institution.
At a minimum, this section would require reporting of information
sufficient for a reasonable person to make a conflict of interest
determination on any business matter to be considered by the System
institution. Reporting consistent with part 620 is also required.
Proposed Sec. 612.2138(c)(1) would require directors and employees
to report any interest that they may have in any business matter before
the System institution. This would include any interest in a loan, or
in an entity making a loan application, or any other direct or indirect
interest in a matter that pertains to the business of the System
institution.
Proposed Sec. 612.2138(c)(2) would require directors and employees
to report the names of any family member who has transacted or is
currently transacting business with the System institution. The System
institution should determine how best to capture reporting of current
transactions, and should consider whether to require a director or
employee to report the name of a family member who has engaged in a
transaction in the past.
Proposed Sec. 612.2138(c)(3) would require directors and employees
to report all material financial interests with any director, employee,
agent, borrower or business affiliate of the System institution,
supervised institution or supervising institution.
Proposed Sec. 612.2138(c)(4) would require directors and employees
to report any matter required to be disclosed by Sec. 620.6 of this
chapter, in accordance with System institution policies and procedures.
Proposed Sec. 612.2138(c)(5) would require directors and employees
to report the names of reportable business entities.
Proposed Sec. 612.2138(c)(6) would require directors and employees
to report the names of any person residing in the home if such person
transacts business with the System institution, or any institution
supervised by the System institution.
All the reporting in this section would be based on information the
reporting
[[Page 27928]]
individual knows or has reason to know.
F. Prohibited Conduct [Proposed Sec. 612.2139]
As stated in Section A, we would consolidate current Sec. 612.2140
``Directors--prohibited conduct'' with current Sec. 612.2150
``Employees--prohibited conduct,'' in proposed Sec. 612.2139
``Prohibited conduct.'' We would also incorporate current Sec.
612.2157 ``Joint employees'' and current Sec. 612.2270 ``Purchase of
System obligations'' requirements in this section. Most of our
revisions to the prohibited conduct rules are straightforward and
provide clarification of an intended prohibition. For example, we would
clarify that lending transactions with a party related to the System
institution such as a director, employee or a borrower is permitted,
but only if on terms that are not favorable or preferential. We would
also add a new provision that would prohibit directors and employees
from acting inconsistently with the core principles.
Proposed Sec. 612.2139(a) would set forth the general prohibitions
and their related exceptions for directors and employees, and proposed
Sec. 612.2139(b) would set forth additional prohibitions specifically
for employees with their related exceptions.
Proposed Sec. 612.2139(a)(1) would prohibit acting inconsistently
with the core principles in proposed Sec. 612.2136.
Proposed Sec. 612.2139(a)(2) restates the director and employee
prohibitions on participation in matters affecting financial interests
in current Sec. Sec. 612.2140(a) and 612.4150(a), respectively.
Proposed Sec. 612.2139(a)(3) restates the director and employee
prohibitions on use of information in current Sec. Sec. 612.2140(b)
and 612.4150(b), respectively.
Proposed Sec. 612.2139(a)(4) would prohibit directors and
employees from soliciting, obtaining or accepting, directly or
indirectly, any gift, fee or other compensation that could be viewed as
offered to influence decision-making, or official action or to obtain
information. The System institution may determine that a gift that has
an insignificant value would not trigger this prohibition, and may
develop rules under which directors and employees may accept de minimis
gifts. However, these System institution rules must be consistent with
Federal rules and regulations including FCA rules and the Federal Bank
Bribery Act. De minimis gifts may be accepted only as set forth under
the institution's properly established policies and procedures (see
Sec. 612.2137(d)(6)).
Proposed Sec. 612.2139(a)(5) would provide that, among other
things, a director or employee may not knowingly purchase or otherwise
acquire, directly or indirectly, unless through inheritance, any
interest (including mineral interests) in any real or personal property
that is currently owned, or within the 12 past months was owned, by the
System institution, supervising institution or any supervised
institution as a result of foreclosure, deed in lieu, or similar
action. Like the current rule, the proposed rule would allow a director
to purchase such property only through public auction or similar open,
competitive bidding. By open competitive bidding, we mean bidding that
is both competitive, allowing involvement of all interested parties,
and open and unsealed. Open competitive bidding affords all interested
parties an opportunity to counter-bid. The advantage to open bidding is
that it discourages unethical behavior or favoritism. A public auction
can be accomplished on-line only if there is an opportunity for all who
may be interested in the auction to participate in the bidding process.
A director may purchase acquired property through open competitive
bidding only if the director did not participate in the decision to
foreclose or dispose of the property, including setting the sale terms,
and did not receive information that could provide an advantage over
other potential bidders or purchasers of the property.
The proposed acquired property prohibitions do not reflect a
substantive change from the current rule. We made revisions because the
scope of misunderstanding and misapplication of the original provision
warranted further clarification of the current rule's intent. The
prohibition would apply to collateral acquired by a System institution,
including collateral acquired directly or through use of an acquired
property UBE. This provision of the rule does not change or alter any
rights a borrower may have under title IV, part C of the Farm Credit
Act of 1971, as amended, 12 U.S.C. 2199-2202, or FCA regulations
promulgated thereunder.
Proposed Sec. 612.2139(a)(6) would provide that a director or
employee must not directly or indirectly borrow from, lend to, or
become financially obligated with or on behalf of a director, employee,
or agent of the System institution, supervising institution, or
supervised institution or a borrower or loan applicant of the System
institution. This section prohibits a director or employee from
entering into a lending or borrowing transaction with those who may
have a financial relationship with the System institution. Lending and
borrowing relationships include providing loan guarantees or stand-by
letters of credit and similar forms of financial obligation.
FCA recognizes that there are many situations in which a director
or employee may enter into lending transactions or business
relationships that involve other directors, employees, agents,
borrowers, or loan applicants in the ordinary course of business.
Financing in the ordinary course of business, as discussed earlier, is
not a prohibited lending transaction. Each System institution should
develop policies and procedures governing ordinary course of business
transactions that include rules for reporting.
The proposed rule requires every System institution to develop
policies and procedures for directors and employees to identify, vet,
and resolve any lending transactions with prohibited sources that are
on preferential terms. Evidence of a director or employee engaging in a
preferential business arrangement with a borrower or other party
related to the System institution would be a safety and soundness
concern and might be evidence of non-compliance.
Proposed Sec. 612.2139(a)(7) restates the prohibitions in current
Sec. 612.2270 on purchasing System obligations; and Sec.
612.2165(b)(14) on purchasing or retiring preferred stock in advance of
the release of material non-public information.
Proposed Sec. 612.2139(b)(1) restates the prohibition in current
Sec. 612.2150(d) on serving as an officer or director of an entity
other than a System institution, except that the proposed revisions
would not include the exception in current Sec. 612.2150(d) that
allows an employee of a Farm Credit Bank or association to serve as a
director of a cooperative that borrows from a bank for cooperatives.
This exception has been dropped because of the conflicts that would
arise as a result of merger activity. Proposed Sec. 612.2139(b)(2) and
(b)(3) restate the prohibitions in current Sec. 612.2150(j) on acting
as a real estate agent or broker; and current Sec. 612.2150(k) on
acting as an agent or broker; respectively. Proposed Sec.
612.2139(b)(4) restates the prohibition in current Sec. 612.2157 on
joint employees, but allows an employee of a bank to serve as an
officer of a supervised association in its district in an extraordinary
situation if: Both boards authorize the service, the duties and
compensation at each institution
[[Page 27929]]
are set forth in writing, and reasonable notice prior to the assumption
of duties is provided to FCA.
G. Standards of Conduct Official [Proposed Sec. 612.2170]
The proposed rule would enhance the role of the Standards of
Conduct Official. The System institution board of directors is
responsible for creating and fostering the institution culture, and for
development of the Standards of Conduct Program. The institution board
is also responsible for compliance with the Standards of Conduct
Program. Proposed Sec. 612.2170(a) would require that the Standards of
Conduct Official must implement the Standards of Conduct Program. The
Standards of Conduct Official is the authority to whom directors,
employees, agents and consultants turn for advice on conflict of
interest situations. Proposed Sec. 612.2170(b) would require the
Standards Conduct Official to provide guidance and information to
directors and employees on conflicts of interest.
Proposed Sec. 612.2170(c) should be read in tandem with proposed
Sec. 612.2137(f) and would require the Standards of Conduct Official
to provide annual and new director and employee training. The training
would review the institution's standards of conduct rules and the Code
of Ethics and discuss any updates; review and discuss the anonymous
reporting hotline or other reporting procedure; prohibited conduct;
directors' and employees' fiduciary duties (this training could be
separate from the training of employees who do not have fiduciary
duties); the importance of identifying conflicts of interests and
reporting of financial interests; and annual and ongoing reporting
requirements.
The proposed rule would require the Standards of Conduct Official
to report periodically to the board of directors or designated board
committee on the Standards of Conduct Program and Code of Ethics
matters. Proposed Sec. 612.2170(d) would require the Standards of
Conduct Official to help directors and employees identify conflicts of
interest and report financial interests, in accordance with proposed
Sec. 612.2138. The Official would make written determinations on
conflicts of interest and determine how to resolve them including by
recusal, divestiture, approval or exception, job reassignment, employee
supervision, employment separation, or other action consistent with the
institution's Standards of Conduct Program as provided in proposed
Sec. 612.2170(e). Proposed Sec. 612.2170(f) would require the
Standards of Conduct Official to document all resolved and unresolved
material or significant conflicts of interest. The Standards of Conduct
Official would be required to maintain documentation that explains how
conflicts are handled.
Proposed Sec. 612.2170(g) would require the Standards of Conduct
Official to report to the institution's board of directors or
designated board committee any instance of non-compliance with the
System institution's standards of conduct rules or Code of Ethics. It
would also require periodic reporting on the administration of the
Standards of Conduct Program. These reports would include a review of
the Standards of Conduct Program required under proposed Sec.
612.2137.
V. Regulatory Flexibility Act
Pursuant to section 605(b) of the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.), FCA hereby certifies that the proposed rule would
not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities. Each of the banks in the System, considered together with its
affiliated associations, has assets and annual income in excess of the
amounts that would qualify them as small entities. Therefore, System
institutions are not ``small entities'' as defined in the Regulatory
Flexibility Act.
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 612
Agriculture, Banks, banking, Conflict of interests, Crime,
Investigations, Rural areas.
For the reasons stated in the preamble, part 612 of chapter VI,
title 12 of the Code of Federal Regulations is proposed to be amended
as follows:
PART 612--STANDARDS OF CONDUCT AND REFERRAL OF KNOWN OR SUSPECTED
CRIMINAL VIOLATIONS
0
1. The authority citation for part 612 continues to read as follows:
Authority: Secs. 5.9, 5.17, 5.19 of the Farm Credit Act (12
U.S.C. 2243, 2252, 2254).
0
2. Subpart A, consisting of Sec. Sec. 661.2130 through 612.2270, is
revised to read as follows:
Subpart A--Standards of Conduct
Sec.
612.2130 Definitions.
612.2135 [Reserved]
612.2136 Standards of conduct--core principles.
612.2137 Elements of a Standards of Conduct Program.
612.2138 Conflicts of interest, reporting of financial interests.
612.2139 Prohibited conduct.
612.2140-612.2165 [Reserved]
612.2170 Standards of Conduct Official.
612.2260-612.2270 [Reserved]
Subpart A--Standards of Conduct
Sec. 612.2130 Definitions.
For purposes of this section, the following terms are defined:
Agent means any person, other than a director or employee, who
currently represents a System institution as a fiduciary in contacts
with third parties or who currently provides professional services to a
System institution, such as legal, accounting, appraisal, cyber-
security, internet technology and other similar services.
Code of Ethics means a written statement of the principles and
values the System institution follows to establish a culture of ethical
conduct for directors and employees.
Conflicts of interest means a set of circumstances that creates a
risk that actions or judgments regarding a primary interest will be
unduly influenced by a secondary interest. A conflict of interest (or
the appearance of a conflict of interest) may exist when a person has a
financial interest in a transaction, relationship, or activity that
could materially impact that person's ability to perform official
duties and responsibilities in a totally impartial manner and in the
best interest of the institution, when viewed from the perspective of a
reasonable person with knowledge of the relevant facts.
Employee means any individual, including an officer, working part-
time, full-time, or on a temporary basis for the System institution.
Entity means a corporation, company, association, firm, joint
venture, partnership, sole proprietorship, trust or other organization
whether or not incorporated.
Family means spouse or significant other and anyone having the
following relationship to either: Parent, spouse, son, daughter,
sibling, stepparent, stepson, stepdaughter, stepbrother, stepsister,
half-brother, half-sister, uncle, aunt, nephew, niece, grandparent,
grandson, granddaughter, and the spouses of the foregoing.
Financial interest means an interest in an activity, transaction,
property, or relationship with a person that involves receiving or
providing something of monetary value or other present or deferred
compensation.
Financially obligated with means having a legally enforceable joint
obligation with, being financially obligated on behalf of (contingently
or otherwise), having an enforceable legal obligation secured by
property owned by another person, or owning property
[[Page 27930]]
that secures an enforceable legal obligation of another.
Material, when applied to a financial interest or transaction
(including a series of transactions viewed in the aggregate), means
that the interest or transaction is of sufficient magnitude that a
reasonable person with knowledge of the relevant facts would question
the ability of the person who has the interest or is party to such
transaction(s) to perform the person's official duties objectively and
impartially and in the best interest of the institution and its
statutory purpose.
Mineral interest means any interest in minerals, oil or gas,
including but not limited to, any right derived directly or indirectly
from a mineral, oil, or gas lease, deed or royalty conveyance.
Ordinary course of business, when applied to a transaction, means:
(1) A transaction that is usual and customary in the business in
question on terms that are not preferential; or
(2) A transaction with a person who is in the business of offering
the goods or services that are the subject of the transaction on terms
that are not preferential.
Person means individual or entity.
Preferential means that the transaction is not on the same terms as
those prevailing at the same time for comparable transactions for other
persons who are not directors, employees or agents of a System
institution.
Reportable business entity means an entity in which the reporting
individual, directly or indirectly, or acting through or in concert
with one or more persons:
(1) Owns a material percentage of the equity;
(2) Owns, controls, or has the power to vote a material percentage
of any class of voting securities; or
(3) Has the power to exercise a material influence over the
management of policies of such entity.
Resolved means an actual or apparent conflict of interest that has
been addressed with an action such as recusal, divestiture, approval or
exception, job reassignment, employee supervision, employment
separation or other action, with the result that a reasonable person
with knowledge of the relevant facts would conclude that the
conflicting interest is unlikely to adversely affect the person's
performance of official duties in an objective and impartial manner and
in furtherance of the interests and statutory purposes of the Farm
Credit System.
Standards of Conduct Official means a System institution employee
who is appointed as an officer under Sec. 612.2137(b), and who reports
directly to the board of directors or designated board committee on
Standards of Conduct and Code of Ethics matters.
Standards of Conduct Program means the policies and procedures,
internal controls and other actions a System institution must implement
to put into practice the requirements of this rule and the System
institution's Code of Ethics.
Supervised institution is a term that only applies within the
context of a System bank or employee of a System bank and refers to
each association supervised by that System bank.
Supervising institution is a term that only applies within the
context of an association or employee of an association and refers to
the System bank that supervises that association.
System institution and institution means any Farm Credit System
bank, association, or service corporation chartered under section 4.25
of the Act, and the Federal Farm Credit Banks Funding Corporation. It
does not include the Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corporation.
Sec. 612.2135 [Reserved]
Sec. 612.2136 Standards of conduct--core principles.
(a) If you are a System institution director or employee, you must:
(1) Maintain the highest ethical standards of the financial banking
industry, including standards of care, honesty, integrity, and
fairness.
(2) Act in the best interest of the institution.
(3) Preserve the reputation of the institution and the public's
confidence in the Farm Credit System.
(4) Exercise diligence and good business judgment in carrying out
official duties and responsibilities.
(5) Report, vet, and work with the Standards of Conduct Official to
resolve conflicts of interest and the appearance of conflicts of
interest in System business relationships and activities.
(6) Avoid self-dealing and acceptance of gifts or favors that may
be deemed as offered, or have the appearance of being offered, to
influence official actions or decisions.
(7) Fulfill your fiduciary duties, as applicable.
(b) To comply with core principles, all System institution
directors and employees must:
(1) Comply with the institution's standards of conduct and Code of
Ethics.
(2) Comply with all applicable laws and regulations.
(3) Certify, in writing, participation in the institution's annual
standards of conduct training.
(4) Timely report to the Standards of Conduct Official or through
the institution's reporting procedures under Sec. 612.2137(e)(3) known
or suspected:
(i) Illegal or unethical activities; and
(ii) Violations of the institution's standards of conduct and Code
of Ethics.
Sec. 612.2137 Elements of a Standards of Conduct Program.
The System institution board is ultimately responsible for the
implementation and oversight of, and compliance with, the Standards of
Conduct Program. Each System institution board of directors must:
(a) Establish a Standards of Conduct Program that sets forth the
core principles in Sec. 612.2136 and provide adequate resources for
its implementation.
(b) Appoint a Standards of Conduct Official. Provide the Standards
of Conduct Official:
(1) Authority to carry out responsibilities set forth in this
subpart A; and
(2) Direct access to the System institution board of directors or
designated board committee on standards of conduct matters.
(c) Adopt a written Code of Ethics that establishes the System
institution's values and expectations for the ethical conduct of
directors and employees. Include standards for appropriate professional
conduct at the workplace and in matters related to employment. Post the
Code of Ethics on the institution's external website with access for
the public.
(d) Establish policies and procedures to:
(1) Institute requirements for directors and employees to comply
with the Standards of Conduct Program, including at a minimum, annual
and interim reporting of:
(i) Actual or apparent conflicts of interest;
(ii) Transactions not in the ordinary course of business;
(iii) Names of family members;
(iv) Reportable business entities; and
(v) Gifts under paragraph (d)(6) of this section.
(2) Address how conflicts will be resolved, and provide action(s)
to be taken when a conflict cannot be resolved to the satisfaction of
the System institution;
(3) Address third-party relationships. Include policies and
procedures to:
(i) Require agents to disclose conflicts of interest and act in a
manner consistent with the ethical standards of the System institution;
and
(ii) Notify agents, consultants and other third parties who
represent the
[[Page 27931]]
institution, or who provide expert or professional services to the
System institution that their engagement is conditioned upon their
agreement to avoid misconduct and conflicts of interest;
(4) Enforce and monitor the System institution's Standards of
Conduct Program. Take appropriate action against any director or
employee who violates the standards of conduct rules, Code of Ethics or
the regulations under this subpart A;
(5) Apply and enforce the prohibited conduct rules set forth in
Sec. 612.2139 and any other Farm Credit Administration rules in this
subpart A; and
(6) Set forth rules prohibiting gifts. If the System institution
allows directors and employees to accept de minimis gifts, establish a
de minimis threshold dollar amount per gift and an aggregate amount per
year consistent with applicable laws. Establish rules for disposing of
impermissible gifts.
(e) Provide for Standards of Conduct Program internal controls to
include at a minimum, a process to:
(1) Maintain conflicts of interest and other reports required under
this subpart A, including paragraph (d)(1) of this section, along with
any investigations, determinations and supporting documentation, for a
minimum of 6 years.
(2) Protect against unauthorized disclosure of confidential
information maintained by the institution, pursuant to this subpart A.
(3) Report anonymously known or suspected violations of the
institution's Standards of Conduct Program and Code of Ethics, through
a hotline or other reporting procedure.
(4) Periodically review the Standards of Conduct Program to ensure
continued adequacy and consistency with changes in institution
practices, financial banking industry best practices and Farm Credit
Administration regulations.
(5) Perform internal audits of the Standards of Conduct Program to:
(i) Review the effectiveness of advancing the core principles,
(ii) Identify weaknesses;
(iii) Recommend and report necessary corrective actions directly to
the institution's board or designated board committee; and
(iv) Cover the entire Standards of Conduct Program across the
System institution and include all activities conducted through a
System institution unincorporated business entity (UBE), including UBEs
organized for the express purpose of investing in a Rural Business
Investment Company pursuant to Sec. 611.1150(b) of this chapter. The
System institution must determine and document the scope and depth of
the audit.
(f) Establish periodic standards of conduct training required under
Sec. 612.2170(c) at least annually.
Sec. 612.2138 Conflicts of interest, reporting of financial
interests.
(a) If you are a director or employee of a System institution you
must, to the best of your knowledge and belief:
(1) Identify conflicts of interest and potential conflicts of
interest;
(2) Report conflicts of interest and potential conflicts of
interest in any matters, transactions or activities pending at the
System institution to the Standards of Conduct Official; and
(3) Cooperate with and provide information requested by the
Standards of Conduct Official to resolve conflicts of interest and
potential conflicts of interest.
(b) If you are a director or employee of a System institution and
you have a conflict of interest in a matter, transaction or activity
subject to official action, or before the board of directors then you
must, to the best of your knowledge:
(1) Disclose relevant information including:
(i) The existence, nature, and extent of your interest; and
(ii) The facts known to you as to the matter, transaction or
activity under consideration;
(2) Refrain from participating in the official action or board
discussion of the matter, transaction or activity; and
(3) Not vote on, or influence the vote on, the matter, transaction
or activity.
(c) If you are a director or employee, at least annually and at
such other times as may be required by your institution policies and
procedures, you must report to the Standards of Conduct Official, in
sufficient detail for a reasonable person to make a conflict of
interest determination, the following information to the best of your
knowledge or belief:
(1) Any interest you have in any business matter to be considered
by the System institution;
(2) The names of your family members who have transacted or are
currently transacting, business with the System institution;
(3) All material financial interests with any director, employee,
agent, borrower or business affiliate of your System institution, or
supervised or supervising institution;
(4) Any matter you are required to disclose under Sec. 620.6(f) of
this chapter;
(5) The names of entities that are reportable business entities to
you; and
(6) The name of any person residing in your home if, you know or
have reason to know, such person transacts business with your System
institution, or any institution supervised by the System institution.
Sec. 612.2139 Prohibited conduct.
(a) If you are a System institution director or employee you must
not:
(1) Act inconsistently with the core principles. You must follow
the core principles set forth in Sec. 612.2136.
(2) Use your position for personal gain or advantage. Do not
participate in deliberations on, or the determination of, any matter
affecting your financial interest. Matters affecting your financial
interest include financial interests of a family member, a person
residing in your home, or a reportable business entity. You may
participate in matters of general applicability affecting shareholders/
borrowers of a particular class in a nondiscriminatory way.
(3) Divulge confidential information. Do not make use of any fact,
information or document not generally available to the public that you
acquired by virtue of your position. You may use confidential
information in the performance of your official duties.
(4) Accept gifts. Do not solicit, obtain, or accept, directly or
indirectly, any gift, fee or other compensation that could be viewed as
offered to influence your decision-making, or official action, or to
obtain information.
(5) Purchase property owned by the institution. Do not knowingly
purchase or otherwise acquire, directly or indirectly except through
inheritance, any interest (including mineral interests) in any real or
personal property that currently is owned, or within the past 12 months
was owned, by your employing or supervising institution, or any
supervised institution as a result of foreclosure, deed in lieu, or
similar action. Exceptions: As a director, in addition to the
inheritance exception, you may purchase such property if you:
(i) Purchase the property through public auction or similar open,
competitive bidding process;
(ii) Did not participate in the decision to foreclose or dispose of
the property, including setting the sale terms; and
(iii) Have not received information as a result of your position
that could give you an advantage over other potential bidders or
purchasers of the property.
(6) Enter into loan transactions with prohibited sources. Do not
directly or indirectly borrow from, lend to, or become financially
obligated with or on behalf of a director, employee, or agent of your
employing or supervising
[[Page 27932]]
institution, supervised institution, or a borrower or loan applicant of
the employing institution. Exceptions: You may enter into transactions
with family members and transactions in the ordinary course of business
as determined and documented by the written policies and procedures of
your institution.
(7) Purchase System obligations.
(i) Do not purchase any obligation of a System institution,
including any joint, consolidated or System-wide obligation, unless
such obligation is part of an offering available to the public; and
purchased through a dealer or dealer bank affiliated with a member of
the selling group designated by the Federal Farm Credit Banks Funding
Corporation or purchased in the secondary market.
(ii) Do not purchase or retire any stock in advance of the release
of material non-public information concerning the institution to other
stockholders;
(iii) If you are a director or employee of the Federal Farm Credit
Banks Funding Corporation, do not purchase or otherwise acquire,
directly or indirectly, except by inheritance, any obligation or equity
of a System institution, including any joint, consolidated or System-
wide obligations, unless it is a common cooperative equity as defined
in Sec. 628.2 of this chapter.
(b) In addition to the prohibitions under paragraph (a) of this
section, if you are a System institution employee you must not:
(1) Serve as a director or employee of certain entities. Do not
serve as a director or employee of an entity that transacts business
with your institution, another System institution in the district, or
of any commercial bank, savings and loan or other non-System financial
institution. For the purpose of this paragraph, ``transacts business''
does not include System institution loans to a reportable business
entity; service on the board of directors of the Federal Agricultural
Mortgage Corporation; or transactions with non-profit entities; or
entities in which the System institution has an ownership interest.
Exceptions: You may serve as a director or employee of an employee
credit union, and you may serve as an employee of another System
institution as permitted under paragraph (b)(4) of this section.
(2) Act as a real estate agent or broker. Do not act as a real
estate agent or broker, unless you are buying or selling real estate
for your own use or for a family member or a person living in your
home.
(3) Act as an insurance agent or broker. Do not act as an insurance
agent or broker for the sale and placement of insurance, unless
authorized by section 4.29 of the Act.
(4) Serve as a joint employee.
(i) If you are currently employed as an officer with a System bank,
you cannot serve as an employee of a supervised association.
(ii) If you are currently employed with a bank, but not as an
officer, you may be an officer of a supervised association only if:
(A) Both boards authorize such service in an extraordinary
situation;
(B) The duties and compensation at each institution is delineated
in the board's approval; and
(C) Reasonable prior notice is provided to the Farm Credit
Administration.
(iii) You may be both a non-officer employee at a System bank and a
supervised association, if employee expenses are appropriately
reflected in each institution's financial statements.
Sec. Sec. 612.2140-612.2165 [Reserved]
Sec. 612.2170 Standards of Conduct Official.
The Standards of Conduct Official must:
(a) Implement and enforce the institution's Standards of Conduct
Program.
(b) Provide guidance and information to directors and employees on
conflicts of interest.
(c) Administer periodic, but at a minimum, annual standards of
conduct training to directors and employees that includes:
(1) Procedures for the review of and recommendation for any
revisions to the institution's standards of conduct rules and Code of
Ethics;
(2) Procedures for reporting anonymously known or suspected
violations of standards of conduct, Code of Ethics and unethical
conduct;
(3) Rules for prohibited conduct;
(4) Fiduciary duties;
(5) Conflicts of interest and apparent conflicts of interest;
(6) Reporting requirements; and
(7) New director training within 60 calendar days before the
beginning of the director's election or term; and new employee training
within 5 business days of the beginning of employment.
(d) Help all directors and employees identify conflicts of interest
and report financial interests in accordance with Sec. 612.2138.
(e) Make written determinations on how conflicts of interest will
be resolved consistent with your institution's Standards of Conduct
Program.
(f) Document resolved and unresolved conflicts of interest that are
material or significant. Maintain documentation that explains how
conflicts are being handled.
(g) Report to your institution's board of directors or designated
board committee:
(1) Instances of standards of conduct or Code of Ethics non-
compliance, promptly upon completion of any investigation or
determination; and
(2) Administration of the Standards of Conduct Program,
periodically as determined by the written policies and procedures of
your institution.
Sec. Sec. 612.2260-612.2270 [Reserved]
Dated: June 12, 2018.
Dale L. Aultman,
Secretary, Farm Credit Administration Board.
[FR Doc. 2018-12874 Filed 6-14-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6705-01-P