Request for Comment Regarding National Credit Union Administration Operating Fee Schedule Methodology, 43149-43152 [2023-14201]
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 128 / Thursday, July 6, 2023 / Notices
to validate identity and enable
intermittent access to activities.
Currently, visitor registration is
accomplished via several electronic and
paper processes. The NASA Office of
Protective Services is transitioning to a
one-NASA process to manage access for
visitors with an affiliation less than 30days.
NASA may collect event registration
information to include but not limited
to a visitor’s name, address, citizenship,
biometric data, purpose of visit, the
location to be visited, escort/sponsor
name with contact data, and preferred
meeting/event sessions when options
are available. When parking is provided
on Federal owned/leased space, driver’s
license information as well as vehicle
make/model/tag information will be
collected.
When visitors/vendors are permitted
to bring equipment and/or event set-up
materials such as booths and displays,
information will be collected to issue
property passes and coordinate
equipment/property delivery.
Information will also be collected, when
applicable, to include other associated
requirements such as electrical power
needs, internet access, etc.
NASA collects, stores, and secures
information from individuals requiring
routine and intermittent access in a
manner consistent with the Constitution
and applicable laws, including the
Privacy Act (5 U.S.C. 552a) and the
Paperwork Reduction Act.
II. Methods of Collection
Electronic.
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with NOTICES1
III. Data
Title: The NASA Visitor Management
System for Intermittent Access to NASA
Hosted/Sponsored Events and
Activities.
OMB Number: 2700–0165.
Type of Review: Reinstatement
without change of a currently approved
information collection.
Affected Public: Individuals.
Estimated Annual Number of
Activities: 400,000.
Estimated Number of Respondents
per Activity: 1.
Annual Responses: 400,000.
Estimated Time per Response: 8
minutes.
Estimated Total Annual Burden
Hours: 53,333 hours.
Estimated Total Annual Cost:
$2,000,000.
IV. Request for Comments
Comments are invited on: (1) Whether
the proposed collection of information
is necessary for the proper performance
of the functions of NASA, including
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whether the information collected has
practical utility; (2) the accuracy of
NASA’s estimate of the burden
(including hours and cost) of the
proposed collection of information; (3)
ways to enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be
collected; and (4) ways to minimize the
burden of the collection of information
on respondents, including automated
collection techniques or the use of other
forms of information technology.
Comments submitted in response to
this notice will be summarized and
included in the request for OMB
approval of this information collection.
They will also become a matter of
public record.
William Edwards-Bodmer,
NASA PRA Clearance Officer.
[FR Doc. 2023–14200 Filed 7–5–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7510–13–P
NATIONAL CREDIT UNION
ADMINISTRATION
[NCUA–2023–0072]
Request for Comment Regarding
National Credit Union Administration
Operating Fee Schedule Methodology
National Credit Union
Administration (NCUA).
ACTION: Notice and request for comment.
AGENCY:
The NCUA Board (Board) is
requesting comment on changes to the
methodology it uses to determine how
it apportions operating fees charged to
Federal credit unions (FCUs). The Board
uses operating fees to fund part of the
NCUA’s annual budget. In this notice,
the Board proposes to change the
exemption threshold below which
Federal Credit Unions would not be
required to pay the operating fee and
proposes to establish a process to
update the exemption threshold in
future years based on the credit union
system’s annual asset growth.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before August 7, 2023.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
by any of the following methods (Please
send comments by one method only):
• Federal eRulemaking Portal:
https://www.regulations.gov/. Follow
the instructions for submitting
comments for Docket Number NCUA–
2023–0072.
• NCUA website: https://
www.ncua.gov/regulation-supervision/
rulemakings-proposals-comment.
Follow the instructions for submitting
comments.
• USPS/Hand Delivery/Courier:
Address to Melane Conyers-Ausbrooks,
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
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43149
Secretary of the Board, National Credit
Union Administration, 1775 Duke
Street, Alexandria, Virginia 22314–
3428.
• Public Inspection: You may view all
public comments on the Federal
eRulemaking Portal at https://
www.regulations.gov, as submitted,
except for those we cannot post for
technical reasons. The NCUA will not
edit or remove any identifying or
contact information from the public
comments submitted. If you are unable
to access public comments on the
internet, you may contact the NCUA for
alternative access by calling (703) 518–
6540 or emailing OGCMail@ncua.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
James Holm, Supervisory Budget
Analyst, Office of the Chief Financial
Officer, at (703) 518–6570.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Legal Background
The NCUA charters, regulates, and
insures deposits in FCUs and insures
deposits in federally insured Statechartered credit unions (FISCUs). To
cover expenses related to its tasks, the
Board adopts a biennial budget in the
fall of each year. The Federal Credit
Union Act (FCU Act) provides two
primary sources to fund the budget: (1)
requisitions from the National Credit
Union Share Insurance Fund, referred to
as the overhead transfer rate (OTR); 1
and (2) operating fees charged to FCUs.2
With regard to the operating fee, the
FCU Act requires each FCU to, ‘‘in
accordance with rules prescribed by the
Board, . . . pay to the [NCUA] an
annual operating fee which may be
composed of one or more charges
identified as to the function or functions
for which assessed.’’ 3 The fee must ‘‘be
determined according to a schedule, or
schedules, or other method determined
by the Board to be appropriate, which
gives due consideration to the expenses
of the [NCUA] in carrying out its
responsibilities under the [FCU Act] and
to the ability of [FCUs] to pay the fee.’’ 4
The statute requires the Board to, among
other things, ‘‘determine the periods for
1 See, e.g., 12 U.S.C. 1783(a) (making the Share
Insurance Fund available ‘‘for such administrative
and other expenses incurred in carrying out the
purpose of [Title II of the FCU Act] as [the Board]
may determine to be proper.’’).
2 12 U.S.C. 1755(a) (‘‘In accordance with rules
prescribed by the Board, each [FCU] shall pay to the
[NCUA] an annual operating fee which may be
composed of one or more charges identified as to
the function or functions for which assessed.’’) and
12 U.S.C. 1766(j)(3). Other sources of income for the
operating budget include interest income, funds
from publication sales, parking fee income, and
rental income.
3 12 U.S.C. 1755(a).
4 12 U.S.C. 1755(b).
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 128 / Thursday, July 6, 2023 / Notices
which the fee shall be assessed and the
date or dates for the payment of the fee
or increments thereof.’’ 5
Accordingly, the FCU Act imposes
three requirements on the Board related
to assessing an operating fee on FCUs:
(1) the fee must be assessed according
to a schedule or schedules, or other
method that the Board determines to be
appropriate, which gives due
consideration to NCUA’s
responsibilities in carrying out the FCU
Act and the ability of FCUs to pay the
fee; (2) the Board must determine the
period for which the fee will be assessed
and the due date for payment; and (3)
the Board must deposit collected fees
into the Treasury to defray the Board’s
expenses in carrying out the FCU Act.
Once collected, operating fees, ‘‘may be
expended by the Board to defray the
expenses incurred in carrying out the
provisions of [the FCU Act,] including
the examination and supervision of
[FCUs].’’ 6
The NCUA’s regulations govern
certain of the operating fee processes.7
The regulation establishes: (i) the basis
for charging operating fees; (ii) a notice
process; (iii) rules for new charters,
conversions, mergers, and liquidations;
and (iv) administrative fees and interest
for late payment, among other
principles and processes.8 Certain
aspects of and adjustments to the
operating fee process, such as changes
to which FCUs are exempt from
operating fees or the multipliers used to
determine fees applicable to FCUs that
fall within designated asset tiers, are
usually not published in the Federal
Register. Instead, in November 2015, the
Board delegated authority to the
NCUA’s Chief Financial Officer to
administer the Board-approved
operating fee methodology and to set the
operating fees as calculated per the
approved methodology during each
annual budget cycle beginning with
2016. Although it is not required to do
so under the Administrative Procedure
Act,9 in January 2016, the Board
published its methodology in the
Federal Register and requested public
comment on the same.10 The Board
provided notice of several revisions to
the operating fee in July 2020 and
adopted a final operating fee rule in
December 2020.
The Board first proposed its operating
fee methodology in 1979, after Congress
passed the Financial Institutions
Regulatory and Interest Rate Control Act
of 1978.11 This legislation permitted the
Board to consolidate previously separate
chartering, supervision, and
examination fees into a single operating
fee, charged ‘‘in accordance with
schedules, and for time periods, as
determined by the Board, in an amount
necessary to offset the expenses of the
Administration at a rate consistent with
a credit union’s ability to pay.’’ 12 In
combination with a proposed change to
section 701.6 of the NCUA’s regulations
in 1979, the Board proposed an initial
fee schedule in the Federal Register,
including rates for 12 asset tiers.13 It
later published a final rule in the
Federal Register, which included a
finalized fee schedule for 1979.14
On four additional occasions prior to
the July 2020 notice, the Board had
requested comments on potential
changes to the operating fee schedule
through a Federal Register notice,
independent of any changes to 12 CFR
701.6. First, in 1990, the Board provided
notice to the public that it was
considering consolidating the operating
fee schedule from 14 asset tiers to two
asset tiers, retaining an exemption for
FCUs with total assets of less than
$50,000, and implementing a $100
minimum fee.15 Second, in 1992, the
Board requested comments on a plan to
limit operating fees to the first $1 billion
of each FCU’s assets.16 Third, in 1995,
the Board requested comments on a
plan to restructure the operating fee
schedule for natural person FCUs and to
exempt FCUs with assets of $500,000 or
less based on concern about small FCUs’
ability to pay the fees.17 The Board also
requested comments on imposing a
minimum fee of $100 on all natural
person FCUs with assets over $500,000
but less than or equal to $750,000.18
In 2016, the Board published an
updated methodology in detail in the
Federal Register and solicited comment.
The Board made no changes in response
to comments on the methodology
published in 2016 and delegated
authority to the NCUA Chief Financial
Officer to apply the published
methodology. In 2020, the Board
adopted three revisions to the
methodology: (1) including the budget
for capital projects within the total
annual budget subject to the OTR; (2)
including projected miscellaneous
11 44
FR 11785 (Mar. 2, 1979).
at 11786.
13 Id. at 11787.
14 44 FR 27379 (May 10, 1979).
15 55 FR 29857 (July 23, 1990).
16 57 FR 34152 (Aug. 3, 1992).
17 60 FR 32925 (June 26, 1995).
18 Id.
12 Id.
5 Id.
6 12
7 12
U.S.C. 1755(d).
CFR 701.6.
8 Id.
95
U.S.C. 551 et seq.
FR 4674 (Jan. 27, 2016).
10 81
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revenues within the total annual budget
subject to the OTR; and (3) for purposes
of determining the annual adjustment to
the rate tier thresholds, comparing the
average of total system assets reported
in Call Reports for the four quarters
available at the time the Board approves
the budget to the average of total system
assets in Call Reports for the four
quarters of the respective previous
years. Since that time, the Chief
Financial Officer has applied the
published operating fee methodology
and explained its application in the
NCUA’s annual budget documents.
In general, the Board has not used
Federal Register notices in connection
with annual adjustments to the asset
tiers and rates of the operating fee
schedule. Instead, the Board has opted
to adopt such changes at its open
meetings. As recently as 2012, for
example, the Board increased the asset
threshold used to exempt FCUs from
operating fees from $500,000 to $1
million at an open meeting, without
requesting advance comment in the
Federal Register.19 While the Board has
varied its practice with respect to
operating fee schedule changes, it has
done so within the FCU Act’s broad
directive that the operating fee schedule
should be as ‘‘determined by the Board
to be appropriate,’’ subject to its
consideration of its expenses and the
ability of FCUs to pay.20 In addition, the
NCUA’s regulation on operating fee
processes includes a standing invitation
for written comments from FCUs on
existing operating fee schedules.21 Each
year the Board also invites comments on
the draft NCUA budget, which includes
a detailed explanation of how the
operating fee is calculated and how
changes to the operating fee rates are
determined based on application of the
published methodology.
II. Methodology for Determining the
Aggregate Operating Fee Amount
The Board adopts an annual budget in
the fall of each year, which includes an
operating budget for the costs of day-today operations such as employee
compensation, travel and training
expenses, support purchased through
contracts, and other miscellaneous
administrative expenses. The annual
budget also includes a capital budget for
the estimated spending on critical
projects, such as for computer hardware
and software, and for investments in
agency-owned real property and
equipment. The annual budget provides
19 Board Action Memorandum on 2013 Operating
Fee (Nov. 15, 2012).
20 12 U.S.C. 1755(b).
21 12 CFR 701.6(c).
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the resources required to execute the
goals and objectives as outlined in the
NCUA’s strategic plan.22
Adjustments to the Budget. When
calculating the aggregate annual
operating fee requirements, the Board
adds together the operating budget and
capital budget to determine the total
annual budget required for the agency’s
operations and investments.23 The
Board then subtracts from the total
annual budget its estimate for
miscellaneous revenues that the agency
will collect during the year, such as rent
collected from other Federal agencies
that share NCUA facilities and parking
fee revenues. The NCUA owns a share
of the parking garage underneath the
complex of buildings that includes the
agency’s Central Office, and the NCUA
receives its share of the revenue
collected from fees charged to those
who park in the garage.
Overhead Transfer Rate: As discussed
previously, the FCU Act authorizes the
NCUA to expend funds from the
National Credit Union Share Insurance
Fund for administrative and other
expenses related to Federal share
insurance.24 The transfer from the
National Credit Union Share Insurance
Fund covers the expenses associated
with insurance-related functions of the
NCUA’s operations. The OTR is one of
the funding sources for the budget, but
the OTR does not affect the amount of
the annual budget. The Board approves
the annual budget separately and
without regard to the OTR. The OTR is
applied to actual expenses incurred
each month, and the OTR share of
monthly expenses is transferred from
the National Credit Union Share
Insurance Fund to the NCUA’s
Operating Fund. The estimated annual
OTR is subtracted from the total annual
budget, net of miscellaneous revenues,
to determine the portion of the annual
budget financed by the operating fee.
Interest Income and Other
Adjustments: The Board reduces the
portion of the annual budget financed
by the operating fee by its estimate of
interest income and by other
adjustments in order to compute the net
22 Additional information on the NCUA budget
may be found at: https://www.ncua.gov/About/
Pages/budget-strategic-planning/supplementarymaterials.aspx.
23 The NCUA Board considers a separate budget
for administrative activities related solely to the
NCUA’s insurance program, which are financed
directly from the National Credit Union Share
Insurance Fund. In addition, the operations of the
Central Liquidity Facility are considered by the
Central Liquidity Facility Board, which is an
instrumentality of the United States within the
NCUA and managed by the Board, and has a
separate budget funded from its own resources.
24 12 U.S.C. 1783(a).
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level of collections required to finance
the agency’s programs. Interest income
reduces the required operating fees by
providing an additional source of funds
to cover regulatory (i.e., non-insurance)
related aspects of operating the NCUA.
The NCUA collects interest income by
investing balances of operating fee
collections in short-term Treasury
securities because the collected funds
are not immediately required to pay
expenses. Other adjustments made by
the Board include an estimate of prioryears’ operating fee collections that are
unlikely to be spent and that therefore
reduce the need for new operating fee
collections.
Operating Fee Requirements. The
result of adjusting the total annual
budget by the OTR share, interest
income, and other adjustments is the net
budget subject to the operating fee and
payable by both natural person and
corporate FCUs. The natural person
FCU operating fees are determined by
deducting the corporate FCU operating
fees from the total budget operating fee
requirements.
The corporate credit union fee
schedule was established in 1979 and
has changed little over the years.
Corporate FCUs hold assets of natural
person credit unions, which are already
assessed under the natural person
operating fees for those members that
are FCUs. Assessing corporate FCUs at
the same rate would, effectively, assess
the same assets twice for natural person
FCU members of corporate FCUs.
Raising operating fee assessments for
corporate FCUs would result in higher
expenses for corporate FCUs. Corporate
FCUs would need to pass the higher
expenses to natural person credit unions
in the form of higher fees and lower
investment yields. The corporate FCU
operating fee schedule is a method of
charging corporate FCUs a supervisory
fee to defray costs and is now published
annually in the budget.
III. Methodology for Determining the
Operating Fee Schedule
The Board delegated authority to the
Chief Financial Officer to administer the
methodology approved by the Board for
calculating the operating fees charged to
natural person FCUs and to set the
operating fee schedule as calculated per
the approved methodology, beginning in
2016. After determining the operating
fee requirements for natural person
FCUs, the Chief Financial Officer
creates the natural person FCU
operating fee schedule for the upcoming
year. The FCU operating fee schedule is
published annually in the budget.
The current fee schedule for natural
person FCUs uses three asset tiers. A
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43151
different assessment rate is applied to
each tier, and the threshold for each tier
is adjusted annually to reflect growth of
the credit union system. Currently,
FCUs with $1 million or less in assets
pay no operating fee.
There are two steps used to determine
adjustments to the operating fee
schedule for the upcoming year: (1)
updating the prior-year asset tier
thresholds using the computed rate of
natural person FCU asset growth; and
(2) updating the prior-year assessment
rates for each asset tier by determining
the average assessment rate adjustment.
Updating prior year asset levels. The
first step in determining the new
operating fee schedule is to adjust the
threshold for each asset tier from the
prior year by comparing the average of
total system assets reported in Call
Reports for the four quarters available at
the time the Board approves the budget
to the average of total system assets in
Call Reports for the four quarters of the
respective previous years. The tier
thresholds are adjusted annually in this
manner to preserve the same relative
relationship of the scale to the
applicable asset base.
Updating the prior year’s assessment
rates. After updating the prior-year asset
tier thresholds, the next step is to
project operating fees using the updated
asset tier thresholds and the prior-year
assessment rates charged for each tier.
The percentage difference between the
projected operating fee collections using
the prior-year assessment rates and the
total operating fee collections required
to support the budget is the average rate
adjustment.
The average rate adjustment is used to
amend the prior-year’s assessment rates
for each asset tier either upwards or
downwards. If the projected amount of
operating fees is less than the required
budgeted amount, then the assessment
rates for each asset tier are adjusted
upwards. If the projected amount is
more than the required budgeted
amount, the assessment rates for each
asset tier are adjusted downwards.
The resulting new operating fee
schedule and due date are
communicated through a Letter to
Federal Credit Unions and posted
online to NCUA.gov within 30 days of
Board approval of the annual budget.
The Board also makes available on the
NCUA website an online operating fee
calculator for FCUs to estimate their
individual operating fees for the
upcoming year. No later than March of
each year, natural person FCUs with
assets greater than $1 million will
receive an invoice for their operating
fee. Operating fees are based on the
average of the assets reported for the
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previous four quarters available when
the Board approves the budget. The
NCUA combines operating fee and
capitalization deposit adjustments into a
single invoice normally due in April. As
required by the FCU Act, the NCUA will
deposit the collected fees in the United
States Treasury.25
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IV. Change to Operating Fee
Methodology and Request for Comment
The Board seeks comment on a
change to the exemption level below
which FCUs are not charged an
operating fee and invites comment on
other aspects of the operating fee
methodology, as described below.
1. Threshold for Exemption From
Paying an Operating Fee
Currently, FCUs reporting average
assets of $1,000,000 or less during the
preceding four calendar quarters are
exempt from paying an operating fee,
because the Board considered and
determined that such credit unions do
not have the ability to pay the fee. The
$1,000,000 average asset exemption
level has been in place since 2012 and
has not been adjusted since that time. In
the intervening 11 years, average assets
across FCUs have approximately
doubled. To account for this growth in
the size of the credit union system, the
Board is proposing to raise the average
asset exemption level for FCUs to
$2,000,000 and to adjust the exemption
threshold annually in future years by
the computed rate of asset growth in the
credit union system. This inflationary
adjustment would be included in the
operating fee calculation presented in
the annual draft NCUA budget
published by the Chief Financial Officer
pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 1789(b). The
NCUA would adjust the exemption
threshold by the percentage by which
average quarterly assets reported for the
credit union system for the most-current
four quarters have increased compared
to the previous four quarters, using the
Call report data available at the time the
NCUA budget is published. For
example, when the Board approved the
2023–2024 operating budget in
December 2022, the average credit
union system assets for the four mostcurrent quarters (i.e., the third and
fourth quarters of 2021 and the first two
quarters of 2022) were 8.5 percent
higher than the previous four quarters
(i.e., the third and fourth quarter of 2020
and the first two quarters of 2021). This
increase in assets can be expressed as an
inflation multiplier (1.085 in the
25 12 U.S.C. 1755(d); https://www.ncua.gov/files/
agenda-items/AG20191212Item1b.pdf, pages 57 to
64.
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example given) and applied to the
exemption threshold to determine the
adjusted level.
The Board believes that this change
would appropriately maintain its
current policy of exempting the smallest
natural person credit unions from
paying the operating fee based on those
institutions’ inability to pay such a fee.
2. Other Aspects of the Operating Fee
Methodology
The Board has not substantially
modified the current three-tier operating
fee schedule since 1993. The current
operating fee schedule is regressive; that
is, credit unions with a larger amount of
total assets pay a lower marginal rate on
those assets above the threshold levels
for the lower tiers. Given growth and
consolidation in the credit union
system, the Board is interested in
whether such an approach is an
equitable method for allocating the
operating fee. There is a potentially
wide range of approaches for assessing
the operating fee. For example, the
Board could adopt a single, flat-rate
operating fee for all credit unions with
total assets that exceed a standard
exemption threshold. Overall, a flat-rate
operating fee would shift fees away from
relatively smaller credit unions to
relatively larger ones, making the
operating fee schedule less regressive.
The Board could also make the
operating fee schedule less regressive by
increasing the rates for the second and
third tiers on the schedule.
Alternatively, adjusting the rates
upward for the first and second tiers of
the current operating fee would create a
more regressive schedule. The Board is
interested in receiving public comments
on whether or how it should consider
modifying the operating fee schedule
and what specific aspects and
conditions of the credit union system it
should evaluate when making such
decisions.
The Board is also interested in
specific suggestions that would increase
the equitable distribution of the
operating fee across FCUs. Because the
operating fee methodology allocates the
non-OTR portion of the NCUA budget to
all FCUs subject to it, changes to the
methodology do not lower total
operating fee collections but instead
shift the fees to those FCUs required to
pay it. The Board is interested in
understanding how any proposals to
change the methodology can be justified
as fair and equitable not only for those
FCUs whose operating fee would
decrease, but also for those FCUs whose
operating fees would increase and
therefore bear a greater fee burden
compared to the current methodology.
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Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1755.
By the National Credit Union
Administration Board on June 29, 2023.
Melane Conyers-Ausbrooks,
Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. 2023–14201 Filed 7–5–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7535–01–P
NATIONAL CREDIT UNION
ADMINISTRATION
Privacy Act of 1974: Systems of
Records
National Credit Union
Administration (NCUA).
ACTION: Notice of a modified system of
records.
AGENCY:
Pursuant to the Privacy Act of
1974, the National Credit Union
Administration (NCUA) gives notice of
a proposed modified Privacy Act system
of records titled NCUA–11, ‘‘Office of
Inspector General (OIG) Investigative
Records.’’ The OIG Investigative
Records system of records documents
the investigative work of the OIG,
including complaints received through
the OIG Hotline, OIG mail, and
otherwise, enabling the OIG to secure
and maintain necessary investigative
information and to coordinate with
other law enforcement agencies as
appropriate.
SUMMARY:
Submit comments on or before
August 7, 2023. This modification will
be effective immediately, and new
routine uses will be effective on August
7, 2023.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
by any of the following methods, but
please send comments by one method
only:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• NCUA website: https://
www.ncua.gov/
RegulationsOpinionsLaws/proposed_
regs/proposed_regs.html. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Fax: (703) 518–6319. Use the
subject line described above for email.
• Mail: Address to Melane ConyersAusbrooks, Secretary of the Board,
National Credit Union Administration,
1775 Duke Street, Alexandria, Virginia
22314–3428.
• Hand Delivery/Courier: Same as
mail address.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Marta Erceg, Counsel to the Inspector
General/Assistant Inspector General,
Office of the Inspector General, (703)
518–6350, or Jennifer Harrison,
Attorney-Advisor, Office of General
DATES:
E:\FR\FM\06JYN1.SGM
06JYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 128 (Thursday, July 6, 2023)]
[Notices]
[Pages 43149-43152]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-14201]
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NATIONAL CREDIT UNION ADMINISTRATION
[NCUA-2023-0072]
Request for Comment Regarding National Credit Union
Administration Operating Fee Schedule Methodology
AGENCY: National Credit Union Administration (NCUA).
ACTION: Notice and request for comment.
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SUMMARY: The NCUA Board (Board) is requesting comment on changes to the
methodology it uses to determine how it apportions operating fees
charged to Federal credit unions (FCUs). The Board uses operating fees
to fund part of the NCUA's annual budget. In this notice, the Board
proposes to change the exemption threshold below which Federal Credit
Unions would not be required to pay the operating fee and proposes to
establish a process to update the exemption threshold in future years
based on the credit union system's annual asset growth.
DATES: Comments must be received on or before August 7, 2023.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments by any of the following methods
(Please send comments by one method only):
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov/.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments for Docket Number NCUA-
2023-0072.
NCUA website: https://www.ncua.gov/regulation-supervision/rulemakings-proposals-comment. Follow the instructions for submitting
comments.
USPS/Hand Delivery/Courier: Address to Melane Conyers-
Ausbrooks, Secretary of the Board, National Credit Union
Administration, 1775 Duke Street, Alexandria, Virginia 22314-3428.
Public Inspection: You may view all public comments on the
Federal eRulemaking Portal at https://www.regulations.gov, as
submitted, except for those we cannot post for technical reasons. The
NCUA will not edit or remove any identifying or contact information
from the public comments submitted. If you are unable to access public
comments on the internet, you may contact the NCUA for alternative
access by calling (703) 518-6540 or emailing [email protected].
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: James Holm, Supervisory Budget
Analyst, Office of the Chief Financial Officer, at (703) 518-6570.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Legal Background
The NCUA charters, regulates, and insures deposits in FCUs and
insures deposits in federally insured State-chartered credit unions
(FISCUs). To cover expenses related to its tasks, the Board adopts a
biennial budget in the fall of each year. The Federal Credit Union Act
(FCU Act) provides two primary sources to fund the budget: (1)
requisitions from the National Credit Union Share Insurance Fund,
referred to as the overhead transfer rate (OTR); \1\ and (2) operating
fees charged to FCUs.\2\
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\1\ See, e.g., 12 U.S.C. 1783(a) (making the Share Insurance
Fund available ``for such administrative and other expenses incurred
in carrying out the purpose of [Title II of the FCU Act] as [the
Board] may determine to be proper.'').
\2\ 12 U.S.C. 1755(a) (``In accordance with rules prescribed by
the Board, each [FCU] shall pay to the [NCUA] an annual operating
fee which may be composed of one or more charges identified as to
the function or functions for which assessed.'') and 12 U.S.C.
1766(j)(3). Other sources of income for the operating budget include
interest income, funds from publication sales, parking fee income,
and rental income.
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With regard to the operating fee, the FCU Act requires each FCU to,
``in accordance with rules prescribed by the Board, . . . pay to the
[NCUA] an annual operating fee which may be composed of one or more
charges identified as to the function or functions for which
assessed.'' \3\ The fee must ``be determined according to a schedule,
or schedules, or other method determined by the Board to be
appropriate, which gives due consideration to the expenses of the
[NCUA] in carrying out its responsibilities under the [FCU Act] and to
the ability of [FCUs] to pay the fee.'' \4\ The statute requires the
Board to, among other things, ``determine the periods for
[[Page 43150]]
which the fee shall be assessed and the date or dates for the payment
of the fee or increments thereof.'' \5\
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\3\ 12 U.S.C. 1755(a).
\4\ 12 U.S.C. 1755(b).
\5\ Id.
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Accordingly, the FCU Act imposes three requirements on the Board
related to assessing an operating fee on FCUs: (1) the fee must be
assessed according to a schedule or schedules, or other method that the
Board determines to be appropriate, which gives due consideration to
NCUA's responsibilities in carrying out the FCU Act and the ability of
FCUs to pay the fee; (2) the Board must determine the period for which
the fee will be assessed and the due date for payment; and (3) the
Board must deposit collected fees into the Treasury to defray the
Board's expenses in carrying out the FCU Act. Once collected, operating
fees, ``may be expended by the Board to defray the expenses incurred in
carrying out the provisions of [the FCU Act,] including the examination
and supervision of [FCUs].'' \6\
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\6\ 12 U.S.C. 1755(d).
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The NCUA's regulations govern certain of the operating fee
processes.\7\ The regulation establishes: (i) the basis for charging
operating fees; (ii) a notice process; (iii) rules for new charters,
conversions, mergers, and liquidations; and (iv) administrative fees
and interest for late payment, among other principles and processes.\8\
Certain aspects of and adjustments to the operating fee process, such
as changes to which FCUs are exempt from operating fees or the
multipliers used to determine fees applicable to FCUs that fall within
designated asset tiers, are usually not published in the Federal
Register. Instead, in November 2015, the Board delegated authority to
the NCUA's Chief Financial Officer to administer the Board-approved
operating fee methodology and to set the operating fees as calculated
per the approved methodology during each annual budget cycle beginning
with 2016. Although it is not required to do so under the
Administrative Procedure Act,\9\ in January 2016, the Board published
its methodology in the Federal Register and requested public comment on
the same.\10\ The Board provided notice of several revisions to the
operating fee in July 2020 and adopted a final operating fee rule in
December 2020.
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\7\ 12 CFR 701.6.
\8\ Id.
\9\ 5 U.S.C. 551 et seq.
\10\ 81 FR 4674 (Jan. 27, 2016).
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The Board first proposed its operating fee methodology in 1979,
after Congress passed the Financial Institutions Regulatory and
Interest Rate Control Act of 1978.\11\ This legislation permitted the
Board to consolidate previously separate chartering, supervision, and
examination fees into a single operating fee, charged ``in accordance
with schedules, and for time periods, as determined by the Board, in an
amount necessary to offset the expenses of the Administration at a rate
consistent with a credit union's ability to pay.'' \12\ In combination
with a proposed change to section 701.6 of the NCUA's regulations in
1979, the Board proposed an initial fee schedule in the Federal
Register, including rates for 12 asset tiers.\13\ It later published a
final rule in the Federal Register, which included a finalized fee
schedule for 1979.\14\
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\11\ 44 FR 11785 (Mar. 2, 1979).
\12\ Id. at 11786.
\13\ Id. at 11787.
\14\ 44 FR 27379 (May 10, 1979).
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On four additional occasions prior to the July 2020 notice, the
Board had requested comments on potential changes to the operating fee
schedule through a Federal Register notice, independent of any changes
to 12 CFR 701.6. First, in 1990, the Board provided notice to the
public that it was considering consolidating the operating fee schedule
from 14 asset tiers to two asset tiers, retaining an exemption for FCUs
with total assets of less than $50,000, and implementing a $100 minimum
fee.\15\ Second, in 1992, the Board requested comments on a plan to
limit operating fees to the first $1 billion of each FCU's assets.\16\
Third, in 1995, the Board requested comments on a plan to restructure
the operating fee schedule for natural person FCUs and to exempt FCUs
with assets of $500,000 or less based on concern about small FCUs'
ability to pay the fees.\17\ The Board also requested comments on
imposing a minimum fee of $100 on all natural person FCUs with assets
over $500,000 but less than or equal to $750,000.\18\
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\15\ 55 FR 29857 (July 23, 1990).
\16\ 57 FR 34152 (Aug. 3, 1992).
\17\ 60 FR 32925 (June 26, 1995).
\18\ Id.
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In 2016, the Board published an updated methodology in detail in
the Federal Register and solicited comment. The Board made no changes
in response to comments on the methodology published in 2016 and
delegated authority to the NCUA Chief Financial Officer to apply the
published methodology. In 2020, the Board adopted three revisions to
the methodology: (1) including the budget for capital projects within
the total annual budget subject to the OTR; (2) including projected
miscellaneous revenues within the total annual budget subject to the
OTR; and (3) for purposes of determining the annual adjustment to the
rate tier thresholds, comparing the average of total system assets
reported in Call Reports for the four quarters available at the time
the Board approves the budget to the average of total system assets in
Call Reports for the four quarters of the respective previous years.
Since that time, the Chief Financial Officer has applied the published
operating fee methodology and explained its application in the NCUA's
annual budget documents.
In general, the Board has not used Federal Register notices in
connection with annual adjustments to the asset tiers and rates of the
operating fee schedule. Instead, the Board has opted to adopt such
changes at its open meetings. As recently as 2012, for example, the
Board increased the asset threshold used to exempt FCUs from operating
fees from $500,000 to $1 million at an open meeting, without requesting
advance comment in the Federal Register.\19\ While the Board has varied
its practice with respect to operating fee schedule changes, it has
done so within the FCU Act's broad directive that the operating fee
schedule should be as ``determined by the Board to be appropriate,''
subject to its consideration of its expenses and the ability of FCUs to
pay.\20\ In addition, the NCUA's regulation on operating fee processes
includes a standing invitation for written comments from FCUs on
existing operating fee schedules.\21\ Each year the Board also invites
comments on the draft NCUA budget, which includes a detailed
explanation of how the operating fee is calculated and how changes to
the operating fee rates are determined based on application of the
published methodology.
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\19\ Board Action Memorandum on 2013 Operating Fee (Nov. 15,
2012).
\20\ 12 U.S.C. 1755(b).
\21\ 12 CFR 701.6(c).
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II. Methodology for Determining the Aggregate Operating Fee Amount
The Board adopts an annual budget in the fall of each year, which
includes an operating budget for the costs of day-to-day operations
such as employee compensation, travel and training expenses, support
purchased through contracts, and other miscellaneous administrative
expenses. The annual budget also includes a capital budget for the
estimated spending on critical projects, such as for computer hardware
and software, and for investments in agency-owned real property and
equipment. The annual budget provides
[[Page 43151]]
the resources required to execute the goals and objectives as outlined
in the NCUA's strategic plan.\22\
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\22\ Additional information on the NCUA budget may be found at:
https://www.ncua.gov/About/Pages/budget-strategic-planning/supplementary-materials.aspx.
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Adjustments to the Budget. When calculating the aggregate annual
operating fee requirements, the Board adds together the operating
budget and capital budget to determine the total annual budget required
for the agency's operations and investments.\23\ The Board then
subtracts from the total annual budget its estimate for miscellaneous
revenues that the agency will collect during the year, such as rent
collected from other Federal agencies that share NCUA facilities and
parking fee revenues. The NCUA owns a share of the parking garage
underneath the complex of buildings that includes the agency's Central
Office, and the NCUA receives its share of the revenue collected from
fees charged to those who park in the garage.
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\23\ The NCUA Board considers a separate budget for
administrative activities related solely to the NCUA's insurance
program, which are financed directly from the National Credit Union
Share Insurance Fund. In addition, the operations of the Central
Liquidity Facility are considered by the Central Liquidity Facility
Board, which is an instrumentality of the United States within the
NCUA and managed by the Board, and has a separate budget funded from
its own resources.
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Overhead Transfer Rate: As discussed previously, the FCU Act
authorizes the NCUA to expend funds from the National Credit Union
Share Insurance Fund for administrative and other expenses related to
Federal share insurance.\24\ The transfer from the National Credit
Union Share Insurance Fund covers the expenses associated with
insurance-related functions of the NCUA's operations. The OTR is one of
the funding sources for the budget, but the OTR does not affect the
amount of the annual budget. The Board approves the annual budget
separately and without regard to the OTR. The OTR is applied to actual
expenses incurred each month, and the OTR share of monthly expenses is
transferred from the National Credit Union Share Insurance Fund to the
NCUA's Operating Fund. The estimated annual OTR is subtracted from the
total annual budget, net of miscellaneous revenues, to determine the
portion of the annual budget financed by the operating fee.
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\24\ 12 U.S.C. 1783(a).
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Interest Income and Other Adjustments: The Board reduces the
portion of the annual budget financed by the operating fee by its
estimate of interest income and by other adjustments in order to
compute the net level of collections required to finance the agency's
programs. Interest income reduces the required operating fees by
providing an additional source of funds to cover regulatory (i.e., non-
insurance) related aspects of operating the NCUA. The NCUA collects
interest income by investing balances of operating fee collections in
short-term Treasury securities because the collected funds are not
immediately required to pay expenses. Other adjustments made by the
Board include an estimate of prior-years' operating fee collections
that are unlikely to be spent and that therefore reduce the need for
new operating fee collections.
Operating Fee Requirements. The result of adjusting the total
annual budget by the OTR share, interest income, and other adjustments
is the net budget subject to the operating fee and payable by both
natural person and corporate FCUs. The natural person FCU operating
fees are determined by deducting the corporate FCU operating fees from
the total budget operating fee requirements.
The corporate credit union fee schedule was established in 1979 and
has changed little over the years. Corporate FCUs hold assets of
natural person credit unions, which are already assessed under the
natural person operating fees for those members that are FCUs.
Assessing corporate FCUs at the same rate would, effectively, assess
the same assets twice for natural person FCU members of corporate FCUs.
Raising operating fee assessments for corporate FCUs would result in
higher expenses for corporate FCUs. Corporate FCUs would need to pass
the higher expenses to natural person credit unions in the form of
higher fees and lower investment yields. The corporate FCU operating
fee schedule is a method of charging corporate FCUs a supervisory fee
to defray costs and is now published annually in the budget.
III. Methodology for Determining the Operating Fee Schedule
The Board delegated authority to the Chief Financial Officer to
administer the methodology approved by the Board for calculating the
operating fees charged to natural person FCUs and to set the operating
fee schedule as calculated per the approved methodology, beginning in
2016. After determining the operating fee requirements for natural
person FCUs, the Chief Financial Officer creates the natural person FCU
operating fee schedule for the upcoming year. The FCU operating fee
schedule is published annually in the budget.
The current fee schedule for natural person FCUs uses three asset
tiers. A different assessment rate is applied to each tier, and the
threshold for each tier is adjusted annually to reflect growth of the
credit union system. Currently, FCUs with $1 million or less in assets
pay no operating fee.
There are two steps used to determine adjustments to the operating
fee schedule for the upcoming year: (1) updating the prior-year asset
tier thresholds using the computed rate of natural person FCU asset
growth; and (2) updating the prior-year assessment rates for each asset
tier by determining the average assessment rate adjustment.
Updating prior year asset levels. The first step in determining the
new operating fee schedule is to adjust the threshold for each asset
tier from the prior year by comparing the average of total system
assets reported in Call Reports for the four quarters available at the
time the Board approves the budget to the average of total system
assets in Call Reports for the four quarters of the respective previous
years. The tier thresholds are adjusted annually in this manner to
preserve the same relative relationship of the scale to the applicable
asset base.
Updating the prior year's assessment rates. After updating the
prior-year asset tier thresholds, the next step is to project operating
fees using the updated asset tier thresholds and the prior-year
assessment rates charged for each tier. The percentage difference
between the projected operating fee collections using the prior-year
assessment rates and the total operating fee collections required to
support the budget is the average rate adjustment.
The average rate adjustment is used to amend the prior-year's
assessment rates for each asset tier either upwards or downwards. If
the projected amount of operating fees is less than the required
budgeted amount, then the assessment rates for each asset tier are
adjusted upwards. If the projected amount is more than the required
budgeted amount, the assessment rates for each asset tier are adjusted
downwards.
The resulting new operating fee schedule and due date are
communicated through a Letter to Federal Credit Unions and posted
online to NCUA.gov within 30 days of Board approval of the annual
budget. The Board also makes available on the NCUA website an online
operating fee calculator for FCUs to estimate their individual
operating fees for the upcoming year. No later than March of each year,
natural person FCUs with assets greater than $1 million will receive an
invoice for their operating fee. Operating fees are based on the
average of the assets reported for the
[[Page 43152]]
previous four quarters available when the Board approves the budget.
The NCUA combines operating fee and capitalization deposit adjustments
into a single invoice normally due in April. As required by the FCU
Act, the NCUA will deposit the collected fees in the United States
Treasury.\25\
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\25\ 12 U.S.C. 1755(d); https://www.ncua.gov/files/agenda-items/AG20191212Item1b.pdf, pages 57 to 64.
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IV. Change to Operating Fee Methodology and Request for Comment
The Board seeks comment on a change to the exemption level below
which FCUs are not charged an operating fee and invites comment on
other aspects of the operating fee methodology, as described below.
1. Threshold for Exemption From Paying an Operating Fee
Currently, FCUs reporting average assets of $1,000,000 or less
during the preceding four calendar quarters are exempt from paying an
operating fee, because the Board considered and determined that such
credit unions do not have the ability to pay the fee. The $1,000,000
average asset exemption level has been in place since 2012 and has not
been adjusted since that time. In the intervening 11 years, average
assets across FCUs have approximately doubled. To account for this
growth in the size of the credit union system, the Board is proposing
to raise the average asset exemption level for FCUs to $2,000,000 and
to adjust the exemption threshold annually in future years by the
computed rate of asset growth in the credit union system. This
inflationary adjustment would be included in the operating fee
calculation presented in the annual draft NCUA budget published by the
Chief Financial Officer pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 1789(b). The NCUA would
adjust the exemption threshold by the percentage by which average
quarterly assets reported for the credit union system for the most-
current four quarters have increased compared to the previous four
quarters, using the Call report data available at the time the NCUA
budget is published. For example, when the Board approved the 2023-2024
operating budget in December 2022, the average credit union system
assets for the four most-current quarters (i.e., the third and fourth
quarters of 2021 and the first two quarters of 2022) were 8.5 percent
higher than the previous four quarters (i.e., the third and fourth
quarter of 2020 and the first two quarters of 2021). This increase in
assets can be expressed as an inflation multiplier (1.085 in the
example given) and applied to the exemption threshold to determine the
adjusted level.
The Board believes that this change would appropriately maintain
its current policy of exempting the smallest natural person credit
unions from paying the operating fee based on those institutions'
inability to pay such a fee.
2. Other Aspects of the Operating Fee Methodology
The Board has not substantially modified the current three-tier
operating fee schedule since 1993. The current operating fee schedule
is regressive; that is, credit unions with a larger amount of total
assets pay a lower marginal rate on those assets above the threshold
levels for the lower tiers. Given growth and consolidation in the
credit union system, the Board is interested in whether such an
approach is an equitable method for allocating the operating fee. There
is a potentially wide range of approaches for assessing the operating
fee. For example, the Board could adopt a single, flat-rate operating
fee for all credit unions with total assets that exceed a standard
exemption threshold. Overall, a flat-rate operating fee would shift
fees away from relatively smaller credit unions to relatively larger
ones, making the operating fee schedule less regressive. The Board
could also make the operating fee schedule less regressive by
increasing the rates for the second and third tiers on the schedule.
Alternatively, adjusting the rates upward for the first and second
tiers of the current operating fee would create a more regressive
schedule. The Board is interested in receiving public comments on
whether or how it should consider modifying the operating fee schedule
and what specific aspects and conditions of the credit union system it
should evaluate when making such decisions.
The Board is also interested in specific suggestions that would
increase the equitable distribution of the operating fee across FCUs.
Because the operating fee methodology allocates the non-OTR portion of
the NCUA budget to all FCUs subject to it, changes to the methodology
do not lower total operating fee collections but instead shift the fees
to those FCUs required to pay it. The Board is interested in
understanding how any proposals to change the methodology can be
justified as fair and equitable not only for those FCUs whose operating
fee would decrease, but also for those FCUs whose operating fees would
increase and therefore bear a greater fee burden compared to the
current methodology.
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1755.
By the National Credit Union Administration Board on June 29,
2023.
Melane Conyers-Ausbrooks,
Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. 2023-14201 Filed 7-5-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7535-01-P