Proposed Rule 31 C.F.R. 208 Implementing 31 U.S.C. 3332 Requiring
Federal Agencies to Convert all Federal Payments from Checks to Electronic Funds
These comments, written by the National Consumer Law Center(1)
and the Consumer Federation of America,(3) are
also provided on behalf of the following national, state and local groups representing
consumers:
Arizona Consumers Council(4)
Consumer Action(5)
Mercer County Community Action Agency(6)
National Association of Consumer Agency Administrators(7)
National Consumers League(8)
Organization for New Equality(9) and
Niagara Frontier Consumer Association(10)
Public Voice for Food and Health Policy(11)
Virginia Citizens Consumer Council(12)
We are all vitally interested in the way Treasury resolves the issues raised
by these proposed rules. Significant harm will come to federal benefit recipients
throughout the U.S. as a result of EFT 99 if the new law is implemented as proposed
in Rule 208. There are five points we address in these comments:
I. Treasury's failure to regulate the voluntary accounts established by recipients
to comply with EFT 99 violates the specific statutory mandate and will result
in great harm to millions of unbanked recipients of federal benefits.
II. The hardship waivers established by Treasury are too limited.
A. No waivers are provided for those with mental disabilities, literacy problems
or English fluency issues.
B. No waivers are available to those with bank accounts who become eligible
for federal benefits after July 26, 1996.
C. Financial hardship waivers are not available to recipients who have accounts.
III Issues on the design of the ETA must be addressed.
A. Under these proposed rules, the ETA account would not be available to recipients
who have established other accounts.
B. The law as well as policy considerations dictate that full "Reg E"
protections apply to the ETAs.
C. Answers are provided to Treasury's questions regarding appropriate features
of the ETA.
D. Additional Basic ETA Requirements
IV. Protections against attachment and set-off must apply to all accounts established
to comply with EFT 99.
V. Treasury's proposed waiver for itself from these regulations is overly broad.
I. Treasury's Failure to Regulate the Voluntary Accounts Established by Recipients
to Comply with EFT 99 Violates the Specific Statutory Mandate and Will Result
in Great Harm to Millions of Unbanked Recipients of Federal Benefits.
Treasury envisions a four tiered system for implementing EFT 99 for individuals:
-- some recipients will be eligible for a hardship waiver of the requirement
for electronic payment and will continue to receive paper checks;
-- banked recipients will be encouraged to switch to direct deposit;
-- unbanked recipients will be encouraged to go out and establish their own
accounts voluntarily;
-- those recipients who fail to inform Treasury of the financial institution
for receipt of the federal payment, and who do not qualify for a waiver, will
be provided the default account established by Treasury. Treasury will regulate
this default account for access, reasonable cost and consumer protections.
Treasury has chosen not to regulate the features of the accounts established
voluntarily by recipients to comply with the law.
Clear Mandate. Congress' mandate to Treasury is perfectly clear. First, all
federal recipients are required to designate a financial institution to receive
the electronic deposit of federal payments:
(g) Each recipient of Federal payments required to be made by electronic funds
transfer shall --
(1) designate 1 or more financial institutions . . . to which such payments
shall be made; . . .(13)
Treasury is then required to provide regulations to ensure access at a reasonable
cost, with consumer protections. These regulations must apply to all accounts
designated by recipients to receive federal payments electronically:
Regulations under this subsection shall ensure that individuals required under
subsection (g) to have an account at a financial institution . . .
(A) will have access to such an account at a reasonable cost;
and
(B) are given the same consumer protections with respect to the account
as other account holders at the same financial institution.(14)
There is no mention in the law of default accounts to be provided by Treasury.
Treasury has gone beyond the legal mandate in this law by distinguishing between
the default accounts it provides and the accounts voluntarily selected by the
recipients. Under this law, all accounts are to be designated by recipients.(15)
Further, Treasury's regulations must ensure that all of the accounts
designated by recipients be accessible at reasonable cost with consumer protections.
Treasury's proposed regulations do not comply with this clear regulatory requirement.
Instead, Treasury has chosen to regulate only to a very limited extent the accounts
selected by recipients voluntarily. Treasury only requires that the accounts
be in the name of the recipient and at a financial institution.(16)
The regulations include no requirement for direct access to the federal funds
at the financial institution. The regulations include no requirement that only
reasonable costs be imposed for accessing the federal funds. The regulations
include no requirement that any consumer protections apply.(17)
These omissions in the regulations violate the clear directive of Congress.
As the undersigned representatives of federal benefit recipients have explained
in writing and verbally in numerous instances to Treasury officials regarding
the implementation of EFT 99,(18) serious harm
will come to millions of unbanked recipients of federal benefits if they are
forced to receive their federal entitlements electronically without adequate
consumer protections. Excessive costs, lack of choice, reduced access, as well
as the forced use of the other services provided by non-financial institutions,
are some of the harms that will affect the unbanked if Treasury persists in
refusing to regulate the voluntary accounts established by recipients to comply
with EFT 99.(19)
The legislative history also indicates that Congress specifically directed Treasury
to protect the interests of the unbanked:
Since this section will require participating beneficiaries to obtain a bank
account, Congress expects the Secretary of the Treasury to work vigorously
to accommodate the needs of the unbanked recipients through such means
as: (1) the planned implementation of a national electronic benefits transfer
system for Federal payments through the designation of depositaries and
financial agents under the Secretary's existing authority. Under this
program, recipients will receive all benefit payments under a single access
card; (2) implement through the private sector consumer owned bank accounts
where recipients access their funds by debit card or other means, rather
than through traditional account features, such as checking. (Emphasis added.)(20)
There are several clear messages from this expression of Congressional intent:
1) "Congress expects Treasury to work vigorously to accommodate
the needs of the unbanked." Administrative burden is not a reasonable excuse
for refusing to carry out Congress' clear mandate to regulate the accounts established
by unbanked recipients.
2) Congress stated that the accounts established to comply with this law would
be bank accounts. Obviously, Congress intended that recipients should
be able to access the account through the bank, not that Treasury would
create a second class customer relegated to a fringe banker to reach the funds,
as Treasury contemplates is permissible.(21)
3) The default account structure in which accounts are to be provided by Treasury
may be appropriate because Treasury already had the authority to do it. However,
this new law -- amendments to 31 U.S.C. § 3332 -- does not provide the statutory
basis for it. As a result, the statutory language in § 3332(i), requiring the
regulation of accounts, can only refer to the regulation of all accounts
established to comply with the mandates of EFT 99, including the "voluntary"
accounts.
We will address each of these messages separately:
Congress Expected Treasury To Work Vigorously To Meet the Needs of the Unbanked.(22)
Judges in numerous cases have held that fear of administrative burden cannot
be the rationale for an agency's failure to regulate as Congress intended.(23)
Nevertheless, Treasury has chosen not to regulate the features of the
accounts established voluntarily by recipients to comply with the law. It argues
that this would be burdensome on Treasury:
Such a broad interpretation potentially would place Treasury in the position
of determining the reasonableness of prices charged by thousands of financial
institutions, for a wide variety of account services, to individuals who have
account relationships at institutions they have chosen voluntarily.(24)
Representatives of federal recipients have never sought to impose this extensive
an administrative burden on Treasury. As Treasury notes in the preamble to the
regulations:
Another approach involves the development of a model deposit account with an
invitation to financial institutions to offer this account, at a specified price
or at a price below some ceiling determined by Treasury, to individuals without
accounts.(25)
Treasury then rejects this idea because of the extensive regulatory burden that
Treasury believes would be entailed here. It is hard to believe that the burden
complained of would actually be greater than that involved with establishing
the parameters of the ETA account, going through the regulatory process, soliciting
bids, choosing the providers, and maintaining the contractual relationship with
the single or multiple financial institutions appointed as Treasury's financial
agent or agents.
Instead, Treasury only need set the broad parameters -- based on access, reasonable
costs and consumer protections -- of accounts acceptable under this scheme,
and the supervision and enforcement of the baseline regulations established
by Treasury could be enforced by the agencies which regulate the financial institutions.
Indeed, this idea seems to be exactly what Congress contemplated when passing
this law: "Congress expects the Secretary of the Treasury to work vigorously
to accommodate the needs of the unbanked recipients . . . "(26)
Congress envisioned that the accounts established to comply would be bank
accounts with only reasonable fees allowed and required consumer protections
. Treasury contemplates that it would be permissible for federal benefit recipients
to establish accounts through fringe bankers -- check cashers, finance companies
and the like -- which are only accessible through those fringe bankers. No boundaries
on costs or required consumer protections would be required. Given the clear
language in the statute and the Congressional Record regarding the need to protect
the unbanked, Congress did not permit Treasury to create a second class of bank
customers with access to only fringe bankers for their federal funds, as Treasury
contemplates.(27)
If Treasury refuses to limit the conduits of federal payments to regulated financial
institutions, and refuses to regulate access with reasonable fees and consumer
protections, unbanked federal benefit recipients will be harmed. Appendix D
provides detailed documentation of the effect on low income people resulting
from the failure to regulate the financial services offered by fringe bankers.
Those types of results were exactly what Congress sought to avoid when it required
Treasury to regulate the accounts established to obtain federal benefits electronically
in § 3332(i).
EFT 99 does not establish the basis for the default account. Treasury justifies
its failure to regulate the voluntary accounts by relying on its extensive regulation
of the default accounts which it will provide.(28)
However, if there is no statutory authority in 31 U.S.C. § 3332 for the default
accounts to be provided by Treasury, then the only accounts which § 3332(i)
could refer to are those established voluntarily by recipients to comply with
the law. In fact, there is nothing in the 1996 amendments to § 3332 which mentions
default accounts, or accounts to be provided by Treasury. The default account
structure contemplated by Treasury in the Proposed Regulations may be entirely
legal and appropriate, but its legal genesis is based on authority Treasury
had prior to passage of EFT 99.(29) As a result,
the statutory language in subsection (i), requiring the regulation of accounts,
can only refer to the regulation of all accounts established to comply
with the mandates of EFT 99, including the "voluntary" accounts. The
regulation of all accounts pursuant to subsection (i), would require regulation
for access, reasonable costs, and consumer protections.
Unreasonable Fees and Lack of Consumer Protections Will Result from
the Failure to Abide by the Law. Fringe bankers, such as check cashers, finance
companies, and others, do business in the low income community because of the
large profits that they can make. Expensive services, extraordinarily high fees,
and abusive transaction terms are standard business practices for these alternative
providers. These fringe bankers make no reinvestment of their substantial profits
back into the communities. They charge as much for financial services as the
regulatory structure - or lack of regulation - allows. And the low income residents
of the community are unable to save and gain little benefit other than the specific
service provided from their presence. If this non-regulated industry is allowed
to be the conduit of federal payments, the financial problems in the low income
communities will be exacerbated.
Check cashers(30) are NOT the appropriate alternative
to banks to provide access to federal payments for the "unbanked."
In only fourteen states are there even limits on the amounts that check cashers
can charge to cash government checks.(31)
Low income advocates fear the use of alternative financial providers as conduits
largely because of the other services that will be sold to the recipients. If
recipients must go through the doors of the fringe bankers at least one time
each month, it is very likely that they will fall prey to the expensive -- and
unregulated -- other financial products of these fringe bankers, such as check
cashing,(32) payday loans,(33)
high cost home equity loans, and rent-to-own transactions. While recipients
may always be able to opt for these services if they care to, they should not
be required to go through the doors of these alternative providers every single
month in order to obtain their federal entitlement.
For once, let us learn from experience. The experiences in the low-income communities
around the nation is that fringe bankers have developed sophisticated and ingenious
techniques for taking money from the poor. Fringe bankers--check cashers, finance
companies, and others--should not be provided a government boost to their business
by serving as contractors with financial institutions for the delivery of federal
payments, unless there is an absolutely clear regulation that requires access
through the financial institution to the federal funds, at a reasonable cost,
with consumer protections.
"Fringe banking" is an entire industry devoted to doing business in
the low-income community, which has proliferated largely as a result of the
deregulation of interest rates and loan terms in many states since the 1980's.
Appendix D documents the high cost of deregulation to the poor. Many of these
providers constantly push the envelope in terms of the legality of their practices--they
keep charging the exorbitant fees until made to stop. All too often, the abusive
practices are not technically illegal, but exceed the bounds of common decency.(34)
Establishing any one of the purveyors of this high cost credit as the conduit
of federal payments sanctions and stimulates these types of transactions. The
federal government should be in the business of discouraging high cost lending,
not providing means to facilitate it.
We know that check cashers and other fringe bankers are already seeking to expand
their business opportunities as a result of EFT 99. (See Appendix C.) If they
are successful, federal recipients will be required every month, month after
month to go back to the check casher to receive their federal benefits. The
costs will be excessive. In one example from Minneapolis -- a state which limits
the amounts that check cashers can charge to 2% for government checks -- the
monthly cost to receive cash for a federal payment of $500 will be
$13.95!(35) For this cost no new services are
provided.
If Treasury's proposed regulation is implemented, when the recipient signs up
with a fringe banker to receive the federal payment through it, the recipient
gains no advantages, only additional costs, and ends up with a lack of choice
each month as to where to cash the check. This benefit recipient also becomes
a likely prospect for the other loan products of the check casher, such as payday
loans. The result is that the federal payment simply ensures that the recipient
becomes a captive customer of that fringe banker, without even the present opportunities
to go elsewhere if treated unfairly. Treasury's failure to impose any regulations
on access to the accounts into which the federal payments will be delivered
is tantamount to federal encouragement and support of fringe bankers. Moreover,
the lack of regulation will cause substantial harm to the unbanked. The attached
Appendix D provides extensive examples of the abusive charges and practices
of fringe bankers when there is a lack of effective regulation.
There are several reasons that some low income people choose to use check cashers
rather than banks. Very often, low income people cannot afford to use banks:
they cannot afford the fees or minimum balances required for accounts. Presumably
the proper design of Direct Deposit Too accounts will remedy the financial aspect
of this issue. However, many low income people do not use banks even when affordable
accounts are offered because of privacy concerns, fears of having their funds
attached by creditors, or just because banks are not as comfortable to them
as the local check casher or retailer. Reassurances of privacy and of the anti-attachment
prohibitions for Social Security funds should address the first two aspects
of this concern. (See Section IV of these comments.) The last aspect -- the
level of comfort -- can be addressed by simply allowing check cashers to continue
providing their services in the community as they do currently.
We do not propose that fringe bankers be prohibited from providing any access
to federal money, just not that they be the sole access for any federal recipient.
Nothing prohibits check cashers from establishing ATM or POS devices on their
premises and selling recipients all of the products and services that are now
currently offered. The key distinctions between this and allowing alternative
financial providers to be contractors with financial institutions for the delivery
of federal electronic payments are:
1) If recipients can receive their federal payments through "financial
institutions" as currently defined by Treasury, they will be pulled into
the mainstream banking system, and thus provided savings' opportunities as well
as alternative (and less expensive) sources for credit.
2) Recipients who must have a bank account, but who nevertheless choose to access
their money through a check casher or a money transmitter, will still have the
choice every month of where to obtain their funds-- they would not be forced
to go to the check cashers to receive their federal payments.
3) The banks receiving the federal payments will have a greater source of funds
as a basis for community reinvestment into the low income community, whereas
the check casher has no such obligation.
As advocates of low income people, and of consumers generally, we basically
agree that electronic transfers are a more efficient and safer method of receiving
payments than the paper check based system. However, the additional advantages
of the electronic system quickly evaporate if recipients have higher costs,
unanticipated risks, and greater potential losses, as will clearly occur
under the Proposed Regulations, because Treasury has failed to provide even
a minimal level of regulations for the accounts established by recipients.
II. The Hardship Waivers Established by Treasury Are Too Limited.
The scheme proposed by Treasury of allowing recipients to self-certify their
eligibility for a hardship exemption so as to continue to receive payment by
check rather than EFT is good, in so far as it goes.(36)
Treasury anticipates that "a waiver from payment by EFT will be automatic
and based solely on the individual's certification."(37)
Serious hardships will be caused, however, to many federal recipients because
the criteria for hardship waivers are far too narrow. There will be one of two
adverse results: either 1) federal recipients will be forced to surrender a
level of independence, and be subjected to unacceptable charges and abusive
practices they would not have encountered in the check based environment; or
2) they will have to lie on their self-certification waiver to avoid expensive
or inaccessible electronic deposits -- a result which should not be encouraged
by a federal regulation.
A. No Waivers Are Provided for Those with Mental Disabilities, Literacy Problems
or English Fluency Issues.
Treasury ignores the legislative history on the hardship exemption in the Act
by excluding from the enumeration of qualifying criteria:
-- mental handicap,
-- educational hindrances,
-- language problems,
-- financial hardship if the recipient has a bank account, and
-- any criteria whatsoever, if the recipient has a bank account and
becomes eligible for the federal payment after July 26, 1996.
Treasury seems to have ignored the explicit intent of Congress, as evidenced
in the Legislative History, to use hardship waivers to ease the transition to
an electronic payment system:
The Secretary of the Treasury is given broad discretion to waive the requirements
of this section to avoid imposing a hardship on a beneficiary. Congress
expects the Department of the Treasury to promulgate regulations addressing
such hardship waivers and to consider various factors in defining hardship.
Congress recognizes that adherence to these provisions may be difficult for
a variety of beneficiaries. We are concerned that individuals who have geographical,
physical, mental, educational, or language barriers or as a result
of natural or environmental disasters will not be able to receive benefits.
Recipients in this category includes small businesses as well as individuals.
Waivers should be provided in order to minimize disruptions to any beneficiary.(38)
Under the proposed regulations, none of these conditions would be just cause
for the granting of a waiver from the EFT requirement. Only physical handicap,
geographic barrier, or financial hardship for the unbanked, would qualify as
a hardship criteria. The rationale offered by Treasury for this decision in
the preamble to the proposed regulations evidences a lack of true understanding
or compassion for the populations that would be affected.
Mental Disability. Treasury simply states that waivers would not be required
for persons with a mental disability. The rationale offered is that those who
have a mental disability that makes them incapable of managing their own funds
would have a representative payee appointed for them by the applicable program
agency and such payee would presumably be able to handle an EFT payment arrangement
unless he/she individually met one of the other exemption criteria.(39)
There are several very important considerations that Treasury leaves out of
its overly simplistic justification. First, there are a very large number of
recipients with mental impairments who are quite capable of managing their own
funds in a check based system and who, absent a transition to an electronic
delivery system, could function independently without the need of turning their
finances over to a representative payee. Some of these recipients may simply
be unable to remember a PIN; others may have a limited ability to think conceptually
and, while they can count out money to make purchases or even write checks to
pay bills, cannot deal with abstract benefits they cannot see and feel. It is
simply unconscionable to say that, because the government wants to save some
money, such individuals should now have to put someone else in charge of their
funds and give up that level of control over their own lives.
The second consideration that Treasury ignores is that there is already a great
difficulty in finding persons or entities willing to serve as representative
payees for those government benefit recipients who are truly incapable of managing
their own funds. SSA officials over the years have acknowledged this problem
and there has been a concerted effort to identify entities willing to serve
in this capacity. In some parts of the country there is a thriving business
of individuals and agencies that sell their services to be a representative
payee to persons who can not otherwise find someone. By forcing even more people
into a situation where they will have to have a representative payee in order
to receive their government benefits, Treasury will in effect be supporting
the growth of this industry that takes money out of the pockets of some of our
neediest citizens without any tangible benefit to the program recipients.
A final consideration ignored by Treasury's justification for its position is
the possible risk of loss of benefits to recipients if they are forced into
a representative payee situation, especially in those cases where the representative
is someone with whom the recipient does not otherwise have a relationship, such
as the pay for service arrangements discussed above. While Congress has made
clear that recipients of direct federal payments in an EFT environment are fully
covered under the Reg E protections,(40) the
Reg E(41) limitations on consumer liability
for losses that are associated with the use of a valid card and PIN do not apply
if those benefits are accessed by a representative payee who misappropriates
the funds for his/her own use. Thus, there would be no protection for recipients
who felt compelled to pay some stranger to serve as their representative payee
so that they could get their government benefits only to find that such person
wiped out their accounts and moved on.
Limited Literacy Skills and English Fluency. Treasury's proposed rule also does
not envision permitting a hardship waiver on the basis of educational level,
limited literacy skills, or lack of fluency in English. Here Treasury argues
first that these factors do not pose any barriers unique to an EFT delivery
mechanism as opposed to a check system.(42)
Such an assertion is again simply untrue. Many persons who fall within one of
these categories can in fact operate in a paper based environment, sometimes
alone and sometimes with the help of friends and family, even if they cannot
read or write or are not fluent in English. It does not take an ability to read
or write to sign a check with an "X" or an ability to read English
to sign your name on the back of a check. It does on the other hand require
an ability to read English or one of the other limited languages that may be
available on a POS or ATM screen to negotiate an electronic debit of funds.
It is those who are not literate and/or fluent in English that are most likely
to end up with an electronic debit only account. It is these populations who
will not otherwise have a relationship with a bank and therefore will not even
be able to avail themselves of teller assistance when they cannot negotiate
the ATM.
Treasury's next argument is that whatever problems EFT may pose for these segments
of the population are merely a "short-lived" "transitional hurdle"
that it asserts will be overcome by targeted educational programs.(43)
Since, to the best of our knowledge, Treasury has no plans to offer any in-person
training on how to use debit card technology or on how to shop around for low
cost bank accounts that will permit direct deposit , it is unclear how they
plan to "educate" this population to get them through the transition.
The printed materials they appear to be relying on most heavily for their educational
campaign will be of little use to those who cannot read the materials, nor is
there any indication that they will be made available in anything other than
a very limited number of languages. Public service announcements, the other
major vehicle Treasury plans to employ, are unlikely to provide much in the
way of substantive information. It is certainly unrealistic for Treasury to
count on already over-extended and under-funded community based organizations
to take on the role of educating and training those among the 10 million unbanked
recipients of direct federal benefits who are out there who will need such assistance
because of their educational or language problems.
It is not enough to note, as Treasury does in the preamble to the proposed regulations,
that in some areas ATMs and POS terminals offer language options other than
English(44) as this does nothing to answer the
question of whether on-screen messages in the appropriate language are in fact
available to those who need them where and when they need them. The obvious
answer to this question is no if your primary language is something other than
Spanish or English.
Moreover, Congress specifically instructed Treasury to address the problems
that recipients with these handicaps have in transitioning to an electronic
system. Simply saying that the problems are not problems, is not addressing
them, it is ignoring them. There will be, as Congress recognized, significant
difficulties faced by recipients with mental problems, and literacy and English
fluency barriers in this changed environment. There is simply no justification
for excluding these populations from the ability to seek a hardship waiver.
B. No Waivers Are Available to Those with Bank Accounts Who Become Eligible
for Federal Benefits after July 26, 1996.
No waivers are available whatsoever for recipients who become eligible for federal
payments after July 26, 1996 who have bank accounts. Treasury's justification
for this is slim:
Treasury's proposal to tie the availability of a waiver for an individual who
has a bank account to the date an individual became eligible for the federal
payment is based on a review of its experience, and the experience of the agencies
responsible for the vast majority of Federal payments, during phase one ....
The SSA . . . reports that approximately 76% of the recipients who became eligible
to receive Social Security and Supplemental Security Income payments since July
26, 1996, are receiving payment by EFT.(45)
There are several problems with this justification. One: We have heard reports
from recipients, that they are being told when they go into SSA offices and
apply for benefits that they must have a bank account.(46)
So recipients are going out and obtaining new bank accounts -- whether or not
they can afford them -- solely because they are led to believe that obtaining
one is a prerequisite to qualifying for federal benefits. Recipients should
not be misled in this way. Congress never intended that unbanked new recipients
be pressured into obtaining bank accounts for the sole purpose of qualifying
for federal payments, especially when there is no federal oversight of the costs
for the accounts established just for receipt of federal benefits. The fact
that as a result of this misinformation, many new recipients are signing up
for EFT, and are obtaining bank accounts in the process, cannot be a reasonable
basis for disallowing hardship waivers to this population.
The second problem is if only 76% of the recipients who become eligible are
receiving payment by EFT, what about the rest? This means that 24% of new recipients
are NOT signing up for EFT. How does Treasury propose to handle them? In its
discussion of the hardship waiver, Congress made no distinction between individuals
based on when they become eligible for federal benefits:
(2)(A) The Secretary of the Treasury may waive application of this subsection
to payments--
(i) for individuals or classes of individuals for whom compliance imposes a
hardship;(47)
New recipients need waivers based on physical, geographic, mental, English
fluency, and literacy reasons as much as other recipients. There should not
be any distinctions based on when eligibility for federal benefits occurred.
Moreover, this proposed system of waivers makes no allowance for future changes
in the circumstances of a recipient. For example, if a recipient moves from
one area in which banks are accessible to another in which they are not, the
recipient should be able to claim a geographic hardship. Or if a recipient becomes
non-ambulatory and can no longer walk to the bank, the physical hardship waiver
should always be available. Further, if banks merge, close branches, or fees
and charges increase to an unaffordable amount, recipients need to be able to
claim hardship waivers.
Finally, having different waiver criteria based on the date of eligibility for
federal payments confuses and unnecessarily complicates the already difficult
educational process. Also, as the years go by, this distinction becomes more
arbitrary and unreasonable.
C. Financial Hardship Waivers Are Not Available to Recipients Who Have Accounts.
Treasury proposes to disallow any waiver based on financial hardship to those
with bank accounts. This might not be so disastrous if Treasury were ensuring
that the bank accounts which recipients are securing are: a) accessible through
the financial institution, b) at a reasonable cost, and c) have consumer protections,
as the law requires. Yet, Treasury is engaging in a massive public education
effort designed to promote direct deposit for federal recipients, and many recipients
are under the impression that obtaining a bank account is a prerequisite to
qualifying for federal benefits. (48) Additionally,
the fringe bankers themselves are launching an ambitious campaign to maintain
and increase their business, by telling federal recipients that they must have
electronic deposit.(49) Also, some recipients
who seek accounts at banks are being denied them because of their credit history.(50)
The result of all this is tremendous confusion by unbanked recipients about
whether they need to go out and obtain their own accounts, and what will happen
to their federal benefits if they do not.
The combination of these three factors -- the failure to tell recipients that
may qualify for a waiver of the EFT requirement only if they do not
have a bank account, and the complete failure to regulate the bank accounts
that recipients obtain in order to receive benefits, combined with the heavy
advertising campaign by the fringe bankers to establish electronic accounts
through them -- is clearly in derogation of Congress' intent to protect low
income recipients from expensive consequences of the EFT mandate. Congress explicitly
said:
The Secretary of the Treasury is given broad discretion to waive the requirements
of this section to avoid imposing a hardship on a beneficiary. (Emphasis
added.).(51)
Also, what about all the recipients who may have an affordable bank account
now, for which the institution raises prices, or if the financial circumstances
of the recipient changes, such that an account is no longer affordable? Surely
recipients who find themselves unable to afford bank accounts should be able
to qualify for this waiver based on financial hardship as well.
The absolute prohibition against waiver based on financial hardship for anyone
who has a bank account is far too broad, and clearly outside the parameters
of Congress' intention for Treasury to design a waiver system "to avoid
imposing a hardship on a beneficiary." Waivers should be available to everyone
based on financial hardship, regardless of whether they have an account at the
time they became eligible for the federal payment, or when EFT went into effect.
IV. Issues on the Design of the ETA Must Be Addressed.
A. Under These Proposed Rules, the ETA Would Not Be Available to Recipients
Who Have Established Other Accounts.
Treasury proposes that the ETA will only be provided to
"an individual [who] either certifies that he or she does not have an account
with a financial institution, or [who] fails to provide information pursuant
to Sec. 208.8 . . . .(52)
Inexplicably, Treasury proposes to not provide the only accounts regulated
for reasonable costs and consumer protections to individuals who already have
accounts. Thus, all of the following recipients are prohibited from participating
in these regulated, limited fee, and protected accounts:
1) Those who were misled into believing that they had to have an account to
qualify for or maintain their federal benefits; (53)
2) those who were good citizens and responded to the insistent advertisements
from the Social Security Administration that they had to obtain an account and
signed up for a bad one through a check casher or even an account with a bank
that does not work for them for some reason or another; or
3) those who may already have an account with a financial institution but find
that it is too expensive or inconvenient.
We are led to believe that the reason that Treasury will not provide the ETAs
to those already with accounts is because Treasury does not want to compete
with the private sector. Treasury cannot have it both ways. Treasury should
not be in the business of providing accounts if it does not want to compete
for those accounts. Congress expressly required Treasury to ensure that recipients
do not suffer as a result of the EFT 99. Treasury seems most concerned that
the private sector not suffer as the result of EFT 99. If Treasury is concerned
about competing with financial institutions for business then the simple solution
is for Treasury not to offer an ETA. Rather, Treasury should establish
a baseline of minimum consumer protections that would apply to all accounts
established to access federal money, as Congress mandated.
Further, it is entirely unreasonable to assume, as Treasury does, that recipients
of federal benefits, who rely on their monthly checks for subsistence will close
existing bank accounts to become eligible for the ETA. To qualify for an ETA,
a recipient would be required to close an existing account, obtain and send
in the Treasury waiver form, then be assigned an ETA, all within one month.
This would be necessary to ensure the federal benefit payments arrive in a timely
manner. The process is complicated and unwieldy. How many sophisticated
consumers would trust the combined bureaucracies of the federal government
and two financial institutions to make a transfer of an essential payment from
one institution to another on timely basis? Imagine the consternation of a fairly
unsophisticated recipient who is facing this prospect as the only way to obtain
the ETA.
B. The Law as Well as Policy Considerations Dictate That Full "Reg E"
Protections Apply to the ETAs.
Presumably Treasury will establish that ETAs will be considered government benefit
accounts under 12 C.F.R. § 205.15. As such, they will be exempt from certain
requirements of Reg E. If they are exempt, the cost to financial institutions
for establishing the ETAs will be lower. However, this is not what Congress
envisioned.
Treasury is setting up the ETA structure pursuant to the Congressional mandate
to provide regulations which ensure access at reasonable cost with "the
same consumer protections with respect to the account as other account holders
at the same financial institution" as is required by 31 U.S.C. § 3332(i)(2).
All Reg E protections apply to all other account holders, and by virtue of §
3332(i)(2), should apply to the ETA accounts as well. This means that the various
exemptions for accounts "established by a government agency for distributing
benefits to a consumer electronically" -- as permitted by 12 C.F.R. 205.15
(Reg E) -- should not be applicable to the ETAs. If these exemptions
were to be applicable, such that ETA recipients were not entitled to the same
initial disclosures, and the same periodic statements as all other accounts
holders, what would be the meaning of the language in 31 U.S.C. § 3332(i)(2)?
On the other hand, if ETAs are provided by Treasury pursuant to authority that
it had prior to the passage of 31 U.S.C. § 3332(i)(2), then the exemptions allowed
government benefit accounts in Reg E would be permissible. It is clear that
Congress was under the impression that Treasury already had the authority to
establish a federal Electronic Benefit Transfer system:
Congress expects the Secretary of the Treasury to work vigorously to accommodate
the needs of the unbanked recipients through such means as (1) the planned implementation
of a national electronic benefits transfer system for federal payments . . .under
Treasury's existing authority. (emphasis added.)(54)
Congress contemplated that the new accounts, to be established by recipients
to comply with EFT 99 requirements, are to be owned by the recipients. As the
statement in the Congressional Record goes on:
(2) implement through the private sector consumer owned bank accounts where
recipients access their funds by debit card or other means, rather than through
traditional account features, such as checking.(55)
Any accounts which are owned by the recipients do not qualify for the exemption
in Reg E, as the exemption only applies to accounts which are"established
by a government agency."(56)
The solution to this confusion is simple: ETAs can be provided by Treasury as
a default account, if it chooses to go that route, but it does so pursuant to
the authority it has exclusive of the mandates of EFT 99. As such, the ETAs
would qualify for the exemption in Reg E. In that case, the mandates of 31 U.S.C.
§ 3332(i) -- requiring that Treasury regulate accounts established by recipients
to comply with the requirements of EFT 99, for access at reasonable cost, with
all consumer protections applicable to other account holders -- would apply
to all the voluntary accounts established by recipients.
C. Answers to Treasury's questions regarding appropriate features of the ETA.
Question: Should Treasury make available a debit card-based account to
individuals who are required to receive Federal payments by EFT and who do not
have an account of their own with a financial institution?
Response: Yes, but this should not be the only type of account option offered
to recipients. Treasury's own commissioned study, Mandatory EFT Demographic
Study, showed that this type of account is particularly unappealing to
those who are unbanked (57) Moreover, in many
rural areas the local community banks completely lack ATMs. Debit card only
accounts would be useless to recipients in such areas, as they would be unable
to readily access their funds. Accordingly, the ETA should encompass a menu
of account options from which recipients can select the account type that best
meets their needs, including the option to opt out of any of the alternatives
based on one of the hardship waivers (which should be expanded to include criteria
as discussed above).
Question: Should the cost of the account to the recipient be the most important
factor for selecting the account structure and/or the account providers, or
should the account structure be designed to meet other objectives even if the
cost to recipients is increased as a result? If the latter, which objectives?
What is an appropriate standard by which to weigh tradeoffs between increased
cost and additional account features?
Response: Yes, the cost of the account to the recipient should be the most important
factor. Cost would be less critical if Treasury were willing to permit the majority
of the currently unbanked to claim a waiver from ETA on the basis of financial
hardship, as most of these individuals are now able to have checks cashed at
little or no cost.(58)
One of the major reason some recipients have avoided establishing bank accounts
is because they cannot afford the fees and have found alternative means for
cashing their benefit checks.(59) For low income
recipients living on fixed incomes any new expense is in fact a financial hardship.
Accordingly, we would urge that Treasury waive all fees for a basic ETA for
all unbanked recipients of needs based federal benefits and that some sort of
sliding fee scale be established for all other recipients based on their actual
monthly income.
By offering a menu of services, decisions about cost can be made by the individual
recipients. Encouraging saving should be included among the goals to be met
by the ETA.
Question: Should the account be structured to provide only a basic withdrawal
service at the lowest possible cost, with additional service charges for additional
features, or should the account offer a range of services at a fixed monthly
cost, even if greater than the cost of a basic account?
Response: For the very reasons noted above, we believe the former approach is
preferable. Many recipients will want nothing more than basic withdrawal services
and should not be required to pay routine monthly fees for services they never
or rarely use. Those who want additional services can shop around for them and
then decide whether to obtain them on their own or elect to have them provided
as part of their ETA at an additional cost.
Question: How many withdrawals should be included in the base price of the
account? Should the account terms address the charges imposed by automated teller
machine owners other than the account provider?
Response: No fewer than four ATM withdrawals should be included in the base
price of the account plus a reasonable number of ATM balance inquiries, as well
as an unlimited number of POS transactions including withdrawals. In the absence
of ATM availability, the same general rules should apply to teller withdrawals.
Recipients who use the ATMs of the financial agent with whom the account has
been established or any of its subcontractors, on a more frequent basis than
for four withdrawals a month, should be charged no more than the actual cost
of the transaction to the financial agent.
Evaluators of the Maryland EBT Project found that cash assistance recipients
averaged 1.7 transactions per $100 in cash benefits. Given that the basic SSI
grant for a single individual will be in excess of $500 per month by January
1999, it would appear that providing only four free ATM transactions is, if
anything, already on the low side.
Surcharging should be prohibited for all ETA transactions at either ATMs or
POS devices, whether they are owned by the account provider or not. There is
already precedent for such a position as several states expressly prohibit surcharging
for EBT transactions or have otherwise worked out arrangements with the business
sector to waive surcharges for such transactions.
Question: Should the account structure provide for additional electronic
or nonelectronic deposits within the basic monthly service charge? If so, what
number of deposits?
Response: Yes, an unlimited number of other deposits to the account should be
permitted at no additional cost to the recipient as such deposits are to the
financial institution's own benefit as the financial institution will benefit
from the float on these non-interest bearing ETAs. If, however, it is clear
that additional costs are actually incurred as a result of the additional deposits,
then rather than adding costs to the baseline ETA, appropriate fees for the
additional deposits may be allowed.
Question: Should the account provide for some number of third-party payments,
such as payments for rent or utility bills? If so, how many third party payments
should be provided for and should they be priced in the basic monthly service
charge?
Response: Yes, third party payments should be permitted at recipient option,
with fees permitted only to cover the actual, incremental costs incurred for
providing this service. This is especially important if the basic account structure
limits the number of "free" withdrawals. Otherwise it would take many
recipients multiple withdrawals just to get enough cash at the beginning of
the month to pay their basic bills for housing and utilities. Moreover, the
third parties involved will generally pay the costs of any processing fees involved
in such electronic transactions, just as they do now for the general banking
public, since it is in their own best interest to receive recurring payments
in this manner. Typically, utility companies and other service providers pay
for electronic bill payment services in lieu of maintaining walk-in business
offices to receive cash payments.
Question: Should the account include a savings feature? How would such a
feature operate? Would additional free withdrawals or the capability to accept
deposits other than the Federal payment act to foster savings by the recipient?
Response: Yes, the ETA should include a savings feature. It certainly would
not cost the financial agent to allow the recipient to carryover funds month
to month.(60) The ETA menu could provide for
a similar option to encourage savings and provide no-cost bill payment methods.
Other features that should be considered to encourage savings would be to provide
for additional free ATM transactions or lower monthly service fees to those
recipients who maintain a certain monthly balance in the account. Allowing additional
free withdrawals and the capability to accept deposits other than the Federal
payment would certainly foster Treasury's goal of encouraging savings.
Question: How important is a broad geographic reach to meeting the access
objectives that most recipients will want? How should Treasury best meet access
needs in underserved areas?
Response: Treasury should not designate any financial institution as the financial
agent for providing ETA services in any geographic area where such institution
has not provided evidence that it can guarantee reasonable free access to all
those recipients living within that designated area, including those recipients
who may have special needs. Moreover, Treasury should consider investing some
of the Federal savings resulting from EFT 99 in assuring the placement of convenient
ATMs in underserved areas. Treasury will also need to assure that recipients
are fully informed of their waiver options, especially those related to geographical
hardship, so that if access needs cannot be reasonably met in some underserved
areas, recipients will know of their ability to continue to receive their benefits
via check.
Question: Should access to the account be provided at outlets in addition
to those normally offered by the financial institution providing the account?
For example, should arrangements be permitted under which third parties may
offer other means by which a recipient may, in effect, withdraw funds from the
account. If yes, should there be any restrictions on where additional access
may be provided or under what terms it can be offered?
Response: Yes, additional access points for cash withdrawals should be made
available, so long as the recipient truly has reasonable access to multiple
sources for accessing the funds, including free access through the financial
institution's ATM and POS structure. We do not see a need for imposing any restrictions
on where additional access may be provided at this time as our goal is to maximize
the ease with which recipients can access their benefits by providing as extensive
a range of access points as possible. However, we do feel strongly that any
third parties who offer such services for a fee must clearly post information
about those fees and must also allow for the recipient to cancel the transaction
midstream without the imposition of any fee should the recipient decide he/she
does not want to incur the listed fee that must appear on the ATM or POS screen.
The informational materials provided to the recipient by the financial agent
should also specify that there may be some access points that will impose fees
and identify the types of locations where benefits can be accessed without incurring
any additional fees.
Question: If additional access is offered through arrangements with third
parties, should the cost of this additional access be included in the pricing
proposal in the competitive bid process?
Response: If the additional access points provided by the third parties are
part of the method by which the financial agent will provide the necessary access
to the recipients within their geographic area, then all costs incurred necessary
to obtain the federal money must be included in the competitive bid process.
If the additional access is indeed extra, and not part of the required
outreach of the financial agent, then the fees should be required to be reasonable.
Question: Which account design would provide the appropriate opportunity
for non-financial institutions to participate in the delivery of services to
Federal payment recipients?
Response: We do not support delivery of services exclusively through non-financial
institutions, although we do support maximizing recipient access to their benefits
by permitting a broad range of businesses to offer ATM and POS access for debit
purchases, bill payment, and cash withdrawal. Recipients must truly be afforded
meaningful and reasonable access to their funds at a financial institution but
they should also have the option of accessing their benefits at grocery stores
and other retail outlets and electronic bill payment options at utility companies,
housing authorities, or retail outlets. This is especially true, if this is
a free service to recipients. Even when there is a fee involved, so long as
the fee is reasonable, non-financial institutions may have a place in the delivery
structure of federal payments, because they may provide safer and more secure
options and provide less expensive money orders. However, for non-financial
institutions to have a role, that role must be regulated to ensure that the
fees charged are reasonable, and to prohibit set-offs against federal payments
received through them.
In addition, we strongly encourage aggressive efforts on the part of Treasury
to encourage the U.S. Postal Service to offer electronic access to federal benefits
through its network of local post offices. Such access would go a long way toward
addressing issues of both safety and convenience without raising the specter
of high pressure marketing of other costly services, especially since the Postal
Service already offers low cost money orders and some branches also afford other
options for some bill payments. The Mandatory EFT Demographic Study
found that of all locations other than banks for accessing funds electronically
recipients overwhelming preferred being able to use their local post office
over any other option.(61)
D. Additional Basic ETA Requirements
Basic consumer protections for federal ETAs are absolutely essential. In addition
to the criteria specified above in response to the questions posed by Treasury
in the NPRM, we feel that there are several additional minimum attributes that
must be met by any ETA product:
-- Need for enhanced consumer protections. Given the fact that the majority
of the recipients of federal benefits who will be subject to the ETA default
option will be low income, we contend that an enhanced set of consumer protections
that go beyond those generally required under Regulation E must be guaranteed.
This would include the prohibition against attachment and set-off discussed
elsewhere in this comment, as well as both an extension of the more favorable
credit card liability limits to ETA debit card recipients, and a prohibition
on the assessment of either over-the-limit fees with debit card use or bounced
deposit fees if other checks deposited into the account are returned for insufficient
funds.
To provide ETA services, the financial agent must provide assurances that
an enhanced package of consumer protections beyond those specified by Regulation
E will be guaranteed.
-- Reasonable access to information about the balance left in the account. Providing
monthly statements--as otherwise required to consumers under the EFTA--is a
relatively expensive service which might reasonably be waived for ETA recipients
(Although if the ETAs are established pursuant to the new authority granted
Treasury by virtue of P.L. 104-134, Congress' explicit requirement for "the
same consumer protections with respect to the account as other account holders
at the same financial institution" mandates that the monthly statements
be provided.(62)) However, without monthly statements
there is a necessity that recipients be entitled to find out, on a reasonable
basis, without cost the remaining balance in their accounts, as well
as the reason, the timing, and the amount of any fees imposed. While 12 C.F.R.
§ 205.15 requires account balance information and written history upon request
when the requirement for the monthly statement is waived, a charge is not prohibited.
Also, every ATM transaction should include a receipt which indicates the imposition
of fees, to the extent applicable, and the remaining balance in the account.
POS transactions should also provide for receipts with comparable information,
except that in the case of POS we support a recipient option to suppress the
balance information from appearing on the receipt whenever there are safety
or privacy concerns. To the extent that further information is necessary, or
recipients wish to find out any of this information at other times, they should
be able to call a toll free number, provide appropriate identifying information
and obtain their account information at no cost. This would include an unlimited
number of free balance verification inquiries to the financial institution's
automated phone line. Whether or not this telephone service is available, recipients
should be able to obtain a transaction history upon request at minimal or no
cost.
At a minimum, all receipts from ATM transactions should include information
about the remaining balance and fees; at least two monthly ATM balance inquiries
should be allowed for free, and others should be charged no more than the actual
cost to the bank for providing the information; and a transaction history should
be available free upon request or whenever there is a dispute
-- The ATM card or device must be accepted by a reasonable number of merchants
in the neighborhood and surrounding area. There are currently a number of ATM
networks--Cirrus, Honor, etc.--most of which are reasonably accessible at merchants
in the geographical area in which the banks offering them are located. However,
some networks are more popular in some areas than others, and are thus less
accessible in the "foreign" areas. It is important that there be both
access to cash benefits through ATMs without fees, and reasonable POS access.
This means that there must be a sufficient number of stores which both accept
the type of ATM network device provided in the geographic vicinity in which
the federal payee lives and permit the use of the card for cash back and withdrawals
as well as purchases.
The ATM card or device must be accepted by a reasonable number of merchants
in the neighborhood and surrounding area who permit both free cash back with
purchase transactions and free or reasonably priced cash withdrawal options.
-- ATMs and POS devices must be accessible to handicapped people. Many recipients
of direct federal benefit payments are eligible for such payments on the basis
of a physical or mental handicap. Their handicap may cause them to be unable
to participate in an electronic banking environment unless the equipment is
specially modified to accommodate any handicapping condition they have, such
as braille PIN pads, wheelchair accessible ATMs, etc. For those handicapped
recipients who neither want a waiver or a representative payee, provisions should
be made to insure that they can participate.
Unless Treasury is prepared to monitor compliance, merely requiring system compliance
with the Americans with Disabilities Act is not sufficient. Leaving it up to
the aggrieved individual to somehow find a way to manage while independently
pursuing an ADA claim is an unreasonable expectation for government benefit
recipients who are both poor and disabled.
To provide ETA services, the financial agent must demonstrate an ability
to meet the special needs of handicapped recipients of government payments.
-- Recipients with limited reading skills or no English literacy at all also
have special needs. ATM and POS on-screen messages must meet the needs of those
with limited English proficiency or who are non-English speaking as must the
written materials provided to recipients.
To provide ETA services, the financial agent must demonstrate an ability
to meet the special needs of those who are non-English speaking or have limited
English proficiency.
-- Training for new electronic transfer recipients. Many of the 10 million unbanked
recipients of federal payments may have never had a relationship with a financial
institution or used a credit or debit card prior to implementation of EFT 99.
In recognition of this, there should be an opportunity for anyone who desires
some personal training on how to use an ATM for a balance inquiry or withdrawal
to receive some minimal level of assistance from the financial institution.
This should be in addition to any written training material that may be provided.
In addition to providing written materials, financial institutions offering
federally established ETAs should be required to provide in-person training
upon recipient request.
-- Opportunity for recipients of federal ETA to choose their own PINs (personal
identification numbers) and to obtain their debit card by means other than regular
mail delivery as necessary. Mandatory electronic delivery systems should use
PIN self-selection as the norm to reduce the likelihood of the individual's
needing to write the number down in order to remember it. Where PIN assignment
is used individuals must be allowed to change their PIN to a self-selected number.
Also, the mailing of cards and PINs to recipients raises all the issues of theft,
loss, and delay within the mail system that already exist in the paper based
benefit delivery system. ETAs must be able to accommodate alternative card issuance
mechanisms for any recipients who express a concern about routine mail issuance.
Federally established ETAs must provide for a simple and quick means for
recipients with an assigned PIN to change to a number of their own choosing
and for alternatives to the mail issuance of the debit device when requested
by the recipient.
-- Reasonable procedures for PIN replacement and card replacement. It is critical
that any electronic system for delivering federal payments have established
procedures for promptly responding to recipient requests for a replacement of
either the ATM card or the PIN. The need to get a replacement card or PIN could
arise for any number of reasons, including the loss of the card, damage to the
card or the magnetic strip on the card, failure to remember the assigned PIN,
or recipient concern that the card and/or PIN has been compromised. Use of the
card and PIN may well be the only way that federal payees can access the benefits
they need to pay their bills and provide for the bare necessities.
Financial agents must demonstrate that they will provide simple procedures
for requesting and promptly obtaining a replacement card and/or PIN and assure
that a clear explanation of the steps an individual must take to initiate this
process will be included in the informational materials that will be provided
about the account.
IV. Protections Against Attachment and Set-off Must Apply to All Accounts Established
to Comply with EFT 99.
Protections from Attachment by Third Parties Must Be Clarified. Most federal
benefit programs afford recipients certain basic due process protections before
their federal benefits can be attached by a third party. The statutes creating
benefit programs, e.g. Veteran's benefits,(63)
and Social Security benefits,(64) exempt those
benefits from attachment by creditors when those benefits are deposited into
a bank account as long as the funds are available on demand or for the support
of the beneficiary and not converted into a permanent investment.(65)
The provision on Social Security is typical of these protections:
(a) The right of any person to any future payment under this subchapter shall
not be transferable or assignable, at law or in equity, and none of the moneys
paid or payable or rights existing under this subchapter shall be subject to
execution, levy, attachment, garnishment, or other legal process, or to the
operation of any bankruptcy or insolvency law.(66)
There are similar provisions in the governing statutes for SSI benefits(67)
and Veteran's benefits.(68) Also, there are
provisions in each of these statutes regarding the government's collection of
overpayments, in cases in which too much money has mistakenly been paid to the
federal recipient.(69)
The law is clear regarding attachment and protection from the execution from
claims of judgment creditors -- the underlying statutes prohibit it(70).
However, while the law is clear, the practice is less so. As evidenced
by the volume of cases in the appellate courts, third party creditors attempt
to attach exempt funds in a bank account quite often.(71)
While the federal recipient always wins, because the law is crystal clear on
this point, the recipient had the burden of finding an attorney, prevailing
in the case, and doing without the federal payment during the duration of the
litigation. However, low income recipients of federal benefits -- such as those
on needs based assistance programs -- generally lack the resources to pursue
court challenges and in any event cannot afford to do without the benefits needed
simply to survive while awaiting a court decision.
At the same time, creditors are becoming more brazen about seeking the funds
they believe they are entitled to, especially against consumers who they know
have fewer resources to defend themselves.(72)Fear of having their meager resources attached by creditors is an important
reason why some federal recipients do not use banks. Fear of attachment
is also a significant reason why many recipients are still resisting direct
deposit.(73)
The solution is simple: Treasury should clarify that the financial institutions
which provide accounts established for the express purpose of complying with
the mandates of EFT 99, to receive Social Security, SSI, VA or similar federal
funds are prohibited from allowing any execution, attachment, garnishment, levy
or other legal process against any funds in those accounts. This rule should
apply to the voluntary accounts as well as to the ETA accounts. Two dividends
will immediately be achieved by such a rule: the federal payments which Congress
intended to be safe from creditors will in fact be much more protected, and
because recipients will be reassured of the safety of their federal payments,
more recipients will sign up for accounts voluntarily with banks.
Protection from Set-off. Garnishment, attachment and execution are all remedies
enforced to address the claims of third parties against the debtor, and while
the practice may be cloudy, the law is clear. The states are split on the issue
of whether a bank that is a creditor of the consumer may use the self-help remedy
of setoff to seize funds in the consumer's bank account which are exempt
from legal process.
The bankers' right of a setoff can be a devastating remedy when employed against
funds needed for a household's essential living expenses. The amount of an entire
social security or other check may be taken from the debtor's bank account without
any warning, leaving the debtor without resources to meet the necessities of
life. While the majority rule is that otherwise exempt income (e.g., social
security, welfare, disability, retirement funds)(74)
is also exempt from setoff,(75) a significant
minority of courts, through a variety of rationales, allow a setoff against
these same types of funds.(76) Some recent minority
rule cases fail even to acknowledge older cases in the same jurisdiction(77)
which follow the majority rule.
The extent to which it is legal for a bank -- or another creditor -- to set-off
Social Security payments, or other exempt funds is critical to the evolution
of the regulations implementing EFT 99. As we have been maintaining for months,
one of our greatest fears resulting from Treasury's failure to regulate the
voluntary accounts, will be the coerced purchase of other financial services
from the non-financial institutions. If a federal recipient must return month
after month to a check casher or a finance company to obtain the federal payment,
it is highly likely that eventually the recipient will fall prey to obtaining
a high cost loan from that provider. If the right of set-off is permitted in
that jurisdiction, what is to prevent the non-financial institution from claiming
a portion or all of otherwise exempt funds if the recipient falls behind in
making the payments on the high cost loan?
The most practical course for consumers to take to protect against the bankers'
right of setoff, at least in the minority states and those without recent precedent,
is not to maintain an account at a bank or other depository institution to which
they owe a debt or where they have cosigned for another debtor. However, because
EFT 99 will force these relationships into existence before the debts are created,
and because of the difficulty entailed in switching EFT providers,
this option will effectively not be available after the recipient enters
into the credit arrangement with the EFT provider.(78)
Again, the solution is easy. Treasury should absolutely prohibit any financial
institution or non-financial institution which is a conduit for the electronic
payment of federal money from setting off any debt against the federal money.
Provisional credits under the Electronic Funds Transfer Act. Another issue is
how provisional credits made to recipients under the requirements of the Electronic
Funds Transfer Act(79) after there has been
an unauthorized transfer, will be recouped from the recipient when the bank
has determined that the transfer was not unauthorized. These problems are most
likely to arise when there is a dispute regarding the appropriate application
of the Electronic Funds Transfer Act.
An example of when a transfer may be considered to have been unauthorized would
be when the recipient has reported a card stolen and money missing from the
account; the bank makes the provisional credit required by 12 C.F.R. § 205.11(c),
then determines that the transfer was made by the recipient's brother who knew
the PIN number because he had used the card with permission on previous occasions.
Under the definition of "unauthorized transfer" in the EFTA, this
would not be considered an unauthorized transfer.(80)
In the recent Direct Payment system pilot project in Texas, it appears that
in this scenario the financial institution is simply going back and withdrawing
the money directly out of the account. No notice or hearing is offered, even
though the provisional credits are exactly analogous to an overpayment. Yet
under the Social Security statute, notice, hearing and an extended time period
for repayment are required. This is wrong and probably illegal.
The correct policy should be that set-offs are never permitted for special accounts
established to receive federal benefit payments. When provisional credits have
been incorrectly made by the financial institution, the institution should be
able to recoup its money from the federal government immediately. The government
then should treat the provisional credit as an accidental overpayment and apply
the overpayment rules, including the right to notice and hearing, accordingly.
V. Treasury's Proposed Waiver for Itself from These Regulations Is Overly Broad.
Without offering any explanation as to the need for or intent of this provision,
the Proposed Regulations includes 208.10, which would enable the Secretary,
at his or her sole discretion, to waive any provision of these rules whenever
the Secretary deems it necessary or appropriate. No formal rulemaking process
or any other formal review process would be required. The inclusion of such
a provision renders the protections otherwise afforded under these regulations
meaningless, since they could be withdrawn at any time and for any reason simply
at the Secretary's discretion. Such broad authority presents an unwarranted
threat to the normal checks and balances inherent in a democracy. Recipient
advocates have vehemently opposed even less far reaching waiver provisions whenever
they have been considered in the public benefits context and for very good reason:
when dealing with the most vulnerable of our citizens, many of whom are totally
dependent on the receipt of these benefits to meet their basic needs, every
assurance must be provided that there is full opportunity for their input in
the rulemaking process before any final decisions are made.
One Treasury official suggested at the Baltimore hearing on October 30, 1997,
the intent of this provision was to permit the Department to make limited, technical
changes to these regulations to address unanticipated glitches or "exceptional
circumstances" that might come to light after these regulations are finalized.
He said speedy action might be needed to prevent harm to certain classes of
individuals without imposing any new burdens on other populations. If that description
of the need is the sole reason for this broad waiver provision, then the provision
should be more narrowly drafted to address this more limited need. Further,
the provision should specify how such technical amendments or clarifications
would be promulgated and what opportunities would be afforded to solicit and
respond to public comments either before or after the fact on such modifications,
which may themselves have unintended consequences that need to be considered
by Treasury.(81)
While the current administration's intent in providing this waiver authority
to the Secretary may in fact be benign in nature, the broadness of the provision
as drafted opens the door to abuse at some future point when the best interests
of the affected recipient populations may not be of paramount importance. This
is especially true since neither the proposed provision itself nor the Preamble
to the Proposed Regulations establishes any standards governing the exercise
of this authority or otherwise speaks to its limited intent. At a minimum, the
regulation should include a stated prohibition on any waiver of any portion
of the regulations that would prejudice any recipient's rights otherwise guaranteed
under the statute or implementing regulations.
Whether or not the current Administrative Procedures Act or that which may govern
at some future time provides sufficient protections to insure that the Secretary
does not abuse this authority is really besides the point. The concerns we have
raised about the proposed language of Section 208.10 need to be addressed here
and now in these regulations to prevent any possible harms to recipients of
government benefits before they occur. Recipients should not be forced to take
a chance that harms may occur because the rules gave the Secretary unintended
authority that might subsequently be undone if they are lucky enough to find
an attorney who can eventually prevail with an APA claim in court.
___________________________
1. The National Consumer Law Center is a nonprofit organization
specializing in consumer credit issues on behalf of low-income people. We work
with thousands of legal services, government and privates attorneys around the
country, representing low-income and elderly individuals, who request our assistance
with the analysis of credit transactions to determine appropriate claims and
defenses their clients might have.(2)
2. The National Consumer Law Center, Inc. (NCLC) is a nonprofit
Massachusetts corporation founded in 1969 at Boston College School of Law and
dedicated to the interests of low-income consumers. NCLC provides legal and
technical consulting and assistance on consumer law issues to legal services,
government and private attorneys across the country. Cost of Credit
(NCLC 1995), Truth in Lending (NCLC 1996) and Unfair and Deceptive
Acts and Practices (NCLC 1991), three of twelve practice treatises published
and annually supplemented by NCLC, and our newsletter, NCLC Reports Consumer
Credit & Usury Ed., describe the law currently applicable to all types
of consumer loan transactions. - -- --
3. The Consumer Federation of America is a nonprofit association
of some 250 pro-consumer groups, with a combined membership of 50 million people.
CFA was founded in 1968 to advance consumers' interests through advocacy and
education. CFA's address is 1424 16th Street, NW, Suite 604, Washington, DC
20036.
4. Arizona Consumers Council is a statewide grassroots consumer
advocacy organization located in Phoenix, Arizona.
5. Consumer Action is a California based information and
advocacy organization.
6. Mercer County Community Action Agency is a local level
community and consumer agency in Sharon, Pennsylvania.
7. The National Association of Consumer Agency Administrators
(NACAA) is a national association of consumer agency administrators.
8. The National Consumers League, is America's pioneer consumer
organization. NCL is a private, non-profit membership organization dedicated
to representing consumers.
9. The Organization for a New Equality (O.N.E.) is a multi-racial
organization whose top priority is expanding economic opportunity to people
who have historically been excluded from the economic mainstream.
10. Niagara Frontier Consumer Association is a consumer
organization located in Williamsville, New York.
11. Public Voice for Food and Health Policy is national
consumer organization that promotes improved access to food and health for all
consumers.20005.
12. Virginia Citizens Consumer Council is a statewide consumer
advocacy organization, headquartered in Richmond.
18. See Comments in Response to Treasury Request
for Comments on Interim Rule, 61 Fed. Reg. 39253 (July 26, 1996), November 25,
1996; Supplemental Comments, April 30, 1997; Testimony before the Senate Committee
on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs regarding the Impact of P.L. 104-134 ("EFT
99"), May 22, 1997; Testimony before the Committee on Government Reform
and Oversight Subcommittee on Government Management, Information and Technology
regarding the Impact of P.L. 104-134 ("EFT 99") June 18, 1997; Testimony
before the House Committee on Banking and Financial Services regarding the impact
of Treasury's Proposed Regulation under the "EFT 99," September 25,
1997. In addition, there were numerous formal and informal meetings and discussions
with Treasury officials, including October, 1996; March 19, 1997; April 8, 1997;
May 19, 1997; July 11, 1997; July 24, 1997; and July 25, 1997.
19. See the extensive documentation provided in
Appendix D of the abuses -- particularly the high costs and the lack of consumer
protections -- that characterizes financial services provided to low income
consumers where there is no regulation.
21. See 62 Fed. Reg. 48722-3: "The
proposed rule is silent on the role that non-financial institutions may play
in the delivery of Federal payments to recipients with bank accounts and the
relationship between non-financial institutions and such recipients. Treasury
anticipates that non-financial institutions will continue to have the opportunity
to partner with financial institutions and to market products and services to
recipients."
22. See Memorandum of Law from Crowell & Moring to
the National Consumer Law Center regarding Treasury's Statutory Mandate to Regulate
the Voluntary Accounts, December 15, 1997 -- Appendix B.
23. SeeReed v. Reed, 404 U.S. 71, 76-77
(1971) (holding that administrative convenience alone did not justify a preferential
system of administering statutory benefits); Frontiero v. Richardson,
411 U.S. 676, 688-91 (1973) (same); Califano v. Goldfarb, 430 U.S. 199,
205-07 (1977) (same).
27. See 62 Fed. Reg. 48722-3: "The
proposed rule is silent on the role that non-financial institutions may play
in the delivery of Federal payments to recipients with bank accounts and the
relationship between non-financial institutions and such recipients. Treasury
anticipates that non-financial institutions will continue to have the opportunity
to partner with financial institutions and to market products and services to
recipients."
28. "Section 3332(i) also could be read more narrowly
as referring to those individuals who, as of January 2, 1999, have not voluntarily
selected or opened an account a financial institution . . . . Treasury believes
the latter interpretation is the better one . . . ."Id.
29. Hence the reference in the Congressional Record to
"the planned implementation of a national electronic benefits transfer
system for federal payments . . .under Treasury's existing authority."
(Emphasis added). 142 Cong. Rec. H4090.
30. For additional information about the current practices
of check cashers and pay day lenders, see Jean Ann Fox, The High
Cost of "Banking" at the Corner Check Casher: Check Cashing Outlet
Fees and Pay Day Loans, Consumer Federation of America August (1997).
31. Examples of caps on check cashing fees in the few states
that have limits are:
California: 3 to 3.5% for government and payroll checks, depending upon identification.
Connecticut: 1% for state welfare checks, 2% for others.
Delaware: 2% or $4, whichever is larger, for all checks.
Florida: 5% with ID or 6% without, or $5 whichever is greater for personal
checks and money orders; 3% with ID, 4% without or $5 for state benefits or
Social Security checks, whichever is greater.
Georgia: The larger of $5 or 3% for welfare checks, 5% for payroll checks,
and 10% for personal checks.
Illinois: 1.4% to 1.85% plus an additional 90-cent-per-check charge.
Indiana: $5.00 or 10% of the face amount of the check, whichever is greater.
Minnesota: 2.5% of welfare checks over $500 (5% for the first check), 3% on
other government and payroll checks (6% for the first check); no limit on personal
checks (but rates must be filed and "reasonable").
New Jersey: 1% on New Jersey checks, 1.5% on others, or $.50, whichever is
larger.
New York: 1.1% of the face amount or $.60, whichever is larger.
North Carolina: 3% or $5 whichever is greater for government checks; 10% or
$5 whichever is greater for personal checks; 10% or $5 whichever is greater
for all other checks.
Ohio: 3% on government checks.
Rhode Island: The larger of $5 or 3% for welfare checks, 5% for payroll checks.
Tennessee: 3% or $2 whichever is greater for state public assistance or federal
social security checks, 10% or $5 whichever is greater of personal checks or
money orders.
While some of these fee ceilings may themselves seem high, in the rest of the
36 states, there are no limits whatsoever on these fringe bankers.
32. According to a recent study of fringe banking in Milwaukee:
"Customers pay far more for services provided by a check cashing business
than they pay for the same services at a conventional bank. Fees for cashing
payroll checks nationwide generally range between one percent and three percent
of the face value of the check For personal checks the range was generally between
1.7 percent and 20 percent, averaging around 8 percent. In some instances, however,
fees and interest rates have been reported as high as 2000 percent. A study
by the New York Office of the Public Advocate found that a check cashing customer
with an annual income of $17,000 will pay almost $250 a year at a check cashing
business for services that would cost $60 at a bank. The Federal Reserve Bank
of Kansas City reported that a family with a $24,000 annual income using a check
cashing business will spend almost $400 in fees for services that would cost
under $110 at a bank." (Citations omitted). Squires and O'Connor, Fringe
Banking in Milwaukee: The Rise of Check Cashing Businesses and the Emergence
of Two-Tiered Banking System. (1997) at 5,6.
33. Payday loans are generally provided by check cashers
who agree to cash a post-dated personal check with the understanding that it
will not be deposited until the customer's next payday. "Customers can
receive $50 for a check written in the amount of $60 and dated 14 days after
the cash is provided. ... The effective annual interest rate for this loan is
1,092 percent." Ibid, at 11, 12.
34. The legal standard applicable to judge these transactions
thus becomes one of "unconscionability." Unconscionability generally
refers to a transaction "which is so one sided that only one under delusion
would make it and only one unfair and dishonest would accept it." SeeCobb v. Monarch Finance Company, 913 F.Supp 1164, 1179 (N.D.Ill. 1995).
35. There is a $12 annual fee, a $2.95 monthly fee, and
2% of $500 is $10.00.
48. We have heard this from advocates in several states.
49. See Appendix C, ad from a Minneapolis check
casher advertising electronic deposit with the delivery of a paper check. Total
cost each month for a $500 Social Security check - $13.95.
50. We have heard this problem from an advocate in Illinois.
The client was told that in order the client's disabled child to receive SSI
payments, the mother must establish a bank account. Because of the mother's
credit problems, no bank would provide her an account.
57. 52% of the unbanked recipients in the mail survey
said that they would be not at all or not too likely to elect a debit card based
account. In the telephone survey the opposition was even stronger with two-thirds
of the unbanked indicating that they were not at all or not too likely to want
such an account.
58. The Mandatory EFT Demographic Study found
that for respondents to the mail survey two-thirds of the unbanked recipients
use banks, credit unions or grocery stores to cash their federal checks, 12%
get friends or relatives to cash the checks for them, and only 12% pay check
cashing outlets to cash their checks; corresponding figures from the telephone
survey found 81% of respondents using primarily banks and grocery stores and
8% using check cashing outlets (the telephone survey did not include a comparable
question about the use of friends and relatives for check cashing purposes).
Thus, the survey results fully support the fact that most unbanked recipients
of federal benefits are able to find a way to have their federal checks cashed
for free.
59. Findings from the Mandatory EFT Demographic Study
were that 67% of respondents to the mail survey and 47% of respondents
to the telephone survey felt that they did not have enough money to make having
a bank account worthwhile while 24% and 40% respectively cited high fees and
costs as their primary reason for not having an account.
60. For example, Union Bank of California offers a "Cash
& Save" account that provides six free money orders to customers who
maintain a "Nest Egg Club Savings Account" opened with only a $10
deposit.
61. Of mail survey respondents 70% of all respondents and
62% of unbanked respondents stated a preference for accessing their benefits
at the Post Office.
62. 31 U.S.C. § 3332(i)(2)(B), 1996. Also see discussion
in section IIIB regarding the policy arguments requiring full Reg E protections
to apply to the ETAs.
63. See Porter v. Aetna Casualty & Surety
Co., 370 U.S. 159 (1962).
64. See Philpott v. Essex Cty. Welfare Board,
409 U.S. 413 (1973). See also S&S Diversified Services L.L.C.
v. Taylor, 897 F. Supp. 549 (D. Wyo. 1995) (Social Security benefits remained
exempt, even after being commingled with other funds, so long as "readily
traceable." Court warned of possible sanctions against creditors who attempt
to garnish social security benefits).
65. Porter v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co., 370
U.S. 159 (1962). See also Jones v. Goodson, 772 S.W.2d 609 (Ark.
1989) (certificates of deposit purchased with Veterans' benefits remained exempt;
funds were "immediately accessible" even though depositor would forfeit
some interest in case of early withdrawal); Younger v. Mitchell, 777
P.2d 789 (Kan. 1989) (veterans' benefits deposited into an interest bearing
savings account exempt); United Home Foods Dist., Inc. v. Villegas, 724
P.2d 265 (Okla. App. 1986) (veterans benefits direct deposited into a bank account
and used to pay household expenses "clearly" exempt).
68. 38 U.S.C. § 5301. SeePorter v. Aetna Casualty
& Surety Co., 370 U.S. 159 (1962).
69. 42 U.S.C. § 1383 applies to overpayments of SSI benefits,
and is an example of these provisions.
70. SeePhilpott v. Essex Cty. Welfare Board,
409 U.S. 413 (1973). See also S&S Diversified Services L.L.C.
v. Taylor, 897 F. Supp. 549 (D. Wyo. 1995) (Social Security benefits remained
exempt, even after being commingled with other funds, so long as "readily
traceable." Court warned of possible sanctions against creditors who attempt
to garnish social security benefits).
71. See eg. S&S Diversified Services L.L.C.
v. Taylor, 897 F. Supp. 549 (D. Wyo. 1995) (Social Security old age benefits
remained exempt when commingled with other funds in joint account, so long as
they are "reasonably traceable." Court warned creditors it may impose
sanctions for attempt to garnish exempt funds); NCNB Financial Services v.
Shumate, 829 F. Supp. 178 (W.D. Va. 1993) (first in first out accounting
rule applied to exempt old age Social Security benefits); Hatfield v. Christopher,
841 S.W.2d 761 (Mo. App. 1992) (where recipient cashed his Social Security check,
spent part of it and deposited balance in account commingled with other funds,
benefits remained exempt); Collins, Webster & Rouse v. Coleman, 776
S.W.2d 930 (Mo. App. 1989) (Social Security benefits exempt); Dean v. Fred's
Towing, 801 P.2d 579 (Mont. 1990) (Social Security benefits of non-debtor
wife remained exempt when commingled in joint account with debtor husband; first
in first out accounting rule).
73. We have heard from numerous low income clients who
do not want to participate in EFT 99 because of these fears.
74. An extensive listing of state and federal exempt property
statutes is found in National Consumer Law Center, Fair Debt Collection
Practices Act (3rd ed. 1996) Ch. 16, and National Consumer Law
Center, Consumer Bankruptcy Law and Practice Ch. 10 (5th ed. 1996);
Exemptions, 7 Collier on Bankruptcy (1988). See also W. Vukowich, Debtor's
Exempt Property Rights, 62 Georgetown L. Rev. 779 (1974).
75. Atlantic Life Insurance Co. v. Ring, 187 S.E.
449 (Va. 1936) ("The exemption of such payments from setoff finds strong
support in the textbooks and in decided cases."); Anno., Availability
of Debtor's Exemption to Defeat Counterclaim or Setoff, 106 A.L.R. 1070
(1937). See Kruger v. Wells Fargo Bank, 11 Cal. 3d 352, 113
Cal Rptr. 449, 521 P.2d 441 (1974); Finance Acceptance Co. v. Breaux,
160 Colo. 510, 419 P.2d 955 (1966); Bettcher v. Bristol Savings Bank,
Clearinghouse No. 30,961 (Conn. Super. Ct. 1981); Carlough v. City Federal
Sav. & Loan Ass'n, Clearinghouse No. 44,838 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1984).
See also exemption prevails over bankruptcy right of setoff: In
re Klein, 10 B.R. 356 (Bankr. 9th Cir. 1981); In re Hoffman,
12 B.R. 371 (Bankr. M.D. Tenn. 1981).
76. Frazier v. Marine Midland Bank, 702 F. Supp.
1000 (W.D.N.Y. 1988); In re Gillespie, 41 B.R. 810 (Bankr. D.
Colo. 1984); Dougherty v. Central Trust,Consumer Cred. Guide (CCH)
96,014 (Ohio Sup. Ct. 1986) (per curiam); Bernardini v. Central Nat'l Bank,
290 S.E.2d 863 (Va. 1982).
77. Compare In re Gillespie, 41 B.R. 810
(Bankr. D. Colo. 1984); Bernardini v. Central Nat'l Bank, 290 S.E.2d
863 (Va. 1982) withFinance Acceptance Co. v. Breaux, 160 Colo.
510, 419 P.2d 955 (1966); Atlantic Life Insurance Co. v. Ring, 187 S.E.
449 (Va. 1936).
78. The courts in In re Gillespie, 41 B.R.
810 (Bankr. D. Colo. 1984) and Bernardini v. Central Nat'l Bank, 290
S.E.2d 863 (Va. 1982) recommended that consumers simply switch banking providers
because the law provided no other protection against set-off of exempt funds.
However, this option will not be available for EFT recipients.
79. The financial institution is required to provisionally
credit a consumer's account in the amount of the alleged error within 10 business
days after receiving the notice of error. 12 C.F.R. § 205.11(c).
80. The definition of "unauthorized electronic fund
transfer" does not include "any electronic fund transfer (A) initiated
by a person other than the consumer who was furnished with the card, code, or
other means of access to such consumer's account, unless the consumer has notified
the financial institution involved that transfers by such other person are not
longer authorized,..." EFTA § 903(11).
81. After all Treasury does not have much history dealing
with the special needs of the many of the diverse groups which will be particularly
impacted by EFT 99.