Popular on s4story
- Ice Melts. Infrastructure Fails. What Happens to Clean Water? - 163
- François Arnaud, star of Heated Rivalry, is the real-life inspiration behind Christopher Stoddard's novel At Night Only
- Kaltra Introduces New Downward-Spraying Distribution Technology to Boost Microchannel Evaporator Performance
- Amicly Launches as a Safety-First Social App Designed to Help People Build Real, Meaningful Friendships
- The Legal AI Showdown: Westlaw, Lexis, ChatGPT… or EvenSteven?
- New Children's Book "Tug of Words" Addresses Emotional Communication in Families
- P-Wave Classics to publish Robert Bage's Hermsprong in three volumes, beginning 12 May
- Diversified Roofing Solutions Strengthens Industry Leadership With Expanded Roofing Services Across South Florida
- New Book Warring From the Standpoint of the Throne Room Calls Believers to Pray From Victory
- Distributed Social Media - Own Your Content
Similar on s4story
- Hollywood's Elite Gather at the Annual WOW Creations Oscars Gifting Suite at the Universal Hilton
- JGCMGS Details Architecture to Safeguard Assets From Unauthorized Phishing Scams
- 21 Days: The Malta Deadline That Could Redraw the Finnish Online Casino Map
- JEGS Launches Modern, Secure Payments Powered by PhaseZero.ai
- U.S. Government Contracts in Excess of 38 Million Secured Through Partner, Establishing Multi-Year Defense Revenue Platform Through 2032: $BLIS
- Jackets for Jobs Hosts Smart & Sexy® Day Detroit for Women's History Month
- $IBG accelerates toward transformative merger with BlockFuel as $6 million raise fuels dual-industry growth strategy: N A S D A Q: IBG
- High-Growth Power Infrastructure Play Targets AI Boom: 1606 Corp. Executes Aggressive Texas Expansion Strategy: 1606 Corp. (Stock Symbol: CBDW) $CBDW
- Accelerating the Transformation into a U.S. Nuclear Fuel Cycle Leader: Frontier Nuclear and Minerals Inc. (N A S D A Q: FNUC)
- Ozz Metals Ltd Secures 1-Tonne Gold Offtake Agreement
NAC Welcomes New OCC Proposed Rule To Help Provide Access to Banking Services for ATM Operators
S For Story/10451014
Proposed OCC Rule states banks should provide fair and reasonable access to banking services for all lawful businesses.
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. - s4story -- The National ATM Council, Inc. (NAC) today welcomed the release by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency of a proposed rule that, according to the agency, "would codify more than a decade of OCC guidance stating that banks should provide access to services . . . based on the risk assessment of individual customers, rather than broad-based decisions affecting whole categories or classes of customers."
Bruce W. Renard, Executive Director of NAC, the U.S. trade association representing the independent owners, operators and suppliers of the nation's approximately 278,000 entrepreneur-owned ATMs, said, "Since 2013, independent ATM providers have encountered repeated roadblocks in maintaining reasonable access to the banking system, as growing numbers of our nation's banks have closed the accounts of thousands of ATM businesses and refused to open new accounts, without providing any valid or rational basis for such actions. It has become all too clear that the largest national banks and a growing number of mid-sized and smaller banks have shunned our entire industry sector."
According to Renard, numerous NAC members have been told by their bankers that these account closures and denials are in response to pressure and criticism from bank examiners, often with suggestions that "cash-intensive" businesses, such as ATM providers, could be involved in money-laundering or other illegal activities, possibly putting their banks at risk.
Renard also said that NAC and its members have corresponded, and met on numerous occasions, with senior officials of the OCC, as well as the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network—a part of the Department of the Treasury—and with numerous members and staff of the U.S. Congress, in efforts to find ways to overcome the crisis that the independent ATM industry is experiencing as a result of widespread denials of bank accounts to ATM deployers.
More on S For Story
The OCC's notice of proposed rulemaking specifically refers to independent ATM providers as among those being injured by the current banking practices sought to be curbed by the proposed rule. According to the OCC notice: "Independent, nonbank automated teller machine operators that provide access to cash settlement and other operational accounts, particularly in low-income communities and thinly-populated rural areas, have been affected" by the unfair and unreasonable denials of banking services to this sector, citing a November 11, 2020, letter addressed to senior officials of the OCC, the Federal Reserve, and the FDIC, and signed by U.S. Representative John Rose (R-TN) and a bipartisan group of senior House members, including Reps. Blaine Luetkemeyer (R-MO), Carolyn Maloney (D-NY), and Donald Payne (D-NJ).
"Nearly 60 percent of America's approximately 470,000 ATMs are independently owned," Renard added. "The one thing every ATM owner must have to stay in business is regular and reliable access to a bank account. If you are an ATM provider and cannot obtain or keep a bank account, you're out of business. Yet, numerous companies and individuals in our industry across the country are continuing to have their bank accounts closed and new accounts denied, without any reason whatsoever, or simply because the business is an independent ATM company."
"NAC applauds the present OCC action, which has been a long time in coming," Renard said. "The proposed rule is an extremely important and very necessary first step toward the relief urgently needed by our industry, and by the hundreds of thousands of businesses and millions of consumers, throughout America, whose needs for convenient cash are served daily by independent ATMs. This year, these ATMs have provided a vital service to the nation in helping efficiently and cost-effectively distribute COVID recovery and unemployment funds to many millions of Americans, and the industry stands ready to continue in this essential role in the days ahead." In this regard, Renard noted that ATM services have been designated as 'essential services' by the Cybersecurity & Infrastructure Security Agency of the Department of Homeland Security, further emphasizing the importance of ensuring those who provide such services have full and fair access to the US banking system for their businesses.
More on S For Story
As part of its efforts to obtain reliable banking access for independent ATM providers, NAC has also urged the bank regulatory agencies to take prompt action to update and correct the current Examination Manual published by the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council, an interagency group having representatives from all the federal financial regulators. NAC maintains that the Examination Manual, as it relates to independent ATM businesses, is outdated and inaccurate, and likely has contributed to much of the misunderstanding and misperception of risk wrongly attributed to the accounts of independent ATM businesses.
"NAC has provided to the regulatory agencies, and has met and discussed with them, suggested revisions that we believe are essential to be made to the Examination Manual as it relates to our industry," Renard stated. "We hope adoption of these revisions will occur promptly and, along with the proposed OCC rulemaking proceeding, will help achieve the objective of ensuring that the nation's banks provide fair and reasonable access to banking services for all lawful businesses, including those independent ATM companies providing essential access to cash and financial services nationwide."
Bruce W. Renard, Executive Director of NAC, the U.S. trade association representing the independent owners, operators and suppliers of the nation's approximately 278,000 entrepreneur-owned ATMs, said, "Since 2013, independent ATM providers have encountered repeated roadblocks in maintaining reasonable access to the banking system, as growing numbers of our nation's banks have closed the accounts of thousands of ATM businesses and refused to open new accounts, without providing any valid or rational basis for such actions. It has become all too clear that the largest national banks and a growing number of mid-sized and smaller banks have shunned our entire industry sector."
According to Renard, numerous NAC members have been told by their bankers that these account closures and denials are in response to pressure and criticism from bank examiners, often with suggestions that "cash-intensive" businesses, such as ATM providers, could be involved in money-laundering or other illegal activities, possibly putting their banks at risk.
Renard also said that NAC and its members have corresponded, and met on numerous occasions, with senior officials of the OCC, as well as the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network—a part of the Department of the Treasury—and with numerous members and staff of the U.S. Congress, in efforts to find ways to overcome the crisis that the independent ATM industry is experiencing as a result of widespread denials of bank accounts to ATM deployers.
More on S For Story
- 21 Days: The Malta Deadline That Could Redraw the Finnish Online Casino Map
- JEGS Launches Modern, Secure Payments Powered by PhaseZero.ai
- U.S. Government Contracts in Excess of 38 Million Secured Through Partner, Establishing Multi-Year Defense Revenue Platform Through 2032: $BLIS
- New Report Reveals Surprising Trends in Ohio Airport Accidents
- Why Your Berberine Failed: RevGenetics Unveils the Absorption Gap Solution
The OCC's notice of proposed rulemaking specifically refers to independent ATM providers as among those being injured by the current banking practices sought to be curbed by the proposed rule. According to the OCC notice: "Independent, nonbank automated teller machine operators that provide access to cash settlement and other operational accounts, particularly in low-income communities and thinly-populated rural areas, have been affected" by the unfair and unreasonable denials of banking services to this sector, citing a November 11, 2020, letter addressed to senior officials of the OCC, the Federal Reserve, and the FDIC, and signed by U.S. Representative John Rose (R-TN) and a bipartisan group of senior House members, including Reps. Blaine Luetkemeyer (R-MO), Carolyn Maloney (D-NY), and Donald Payne (D-NJ).
"Nearly 60 percent of America's approximately 470,000 ATMs are independently owned," Renard added. "The one thing every ATM owner must have to stay in business is regular and reliable access to a bank account. If you are an ATM provider and cannot obtain or keep a bank account, you're out of business. Yet, numerous companies and individuals in our industry across the country are continuing to have their bank accounts closed and new accounts denied, without any reason whatsoever, or simply because the business is an independent ATM company."
"NAC applauds the present OCC action, which has been a long time in coming," Renard said. "The proposed rule is an extremely important and very necessary first step toward the relief urgently needed by our industry, and by the hundreds of thousands of businesses and millions of consumers, throughout America, whose needs for convenient cash are served daily by independent ATMs. This year, these ATMs have provided a vital service to the nation in helping efficiently and cost-effectively distribute COVID recovery and unemployment funds to many millions of Americans, and the industry stands ready to continue in this essential role in the days ahead." In this regard, Renard noted that ATM services have been designated as 'essential services' by the Cybersecurity & Infrastructure Security Agency of the Department of Homeland Security, further emphasizing the importance of ensuring those who provide such services have full and fair access to the US banking system for their businesses.
More on S For Story
- "Power Beyond Power" by Michael Davenport outlines a leadership framework built on 75 street strategies for influence
- WCC Kitchens and Cabinets Featured on Selling Houses Australia
- Cat Hunt Simulator : Burrow & Pounce Lands on the App Store
- Shincheonji Marks 42nd Anniversary: From a Basement to a Denomination Growing by Tens of Thousands Annually
- Jackets for Jobs Hosts Smart & Sexy® Day Detroit for Women's History Month
As part of its efforts to obtain reliable banking access for independent ATM providers, NAC has also urged the bank regulatory agencies to take prompt action to update and correct the current Examination Manual published by the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council, an interagency group having representatives from all the federal financial regulators. NAC maintains that the Examination Manual, as it relates to independent ATM businesses, is outdated and inaccurate, and likely has contributed to much of the misunderstanding and misperception of risk wrongly attributed to the accounts of independent ATM businesses.
"NAC has provided to the regulatory agencies, and has met and discussed with them, suggested revisions that we believe are essential to be made to the Examination Manual as it relates to our industry," Renard stated. "We hope adoption of these revisions will occur promptly and, along with the proposed OCC rulemaking proceeding, will help achieve the objective of ensuring that the nation's banks provide fair and reasonable access to banking services for all lawful businesses, including those independent ATM companies providing essential access to cash and financial services nationwide."
Source: The National ATM Council, Inc.
0 Comments
Latest on S For Story
- Scoop Social Co. Launches a New Era of Mobile Hospitality — One Truck, Two Experiences
- Record Sales Growth After Strategic Acquisitions; New Distribution Agreements for Established Premium Cigar Supplier: Green Leaf Innovations $GRLF
- R2 Copilot Addresses Critical Privacy Issues as Enterprise AI Spending and Security Incidents Rise
- Silence and Resistance: Memoir of a Girlhood in Haiti, is Longlisted for the BOCAS Literary Award in Nonfiction
- New Epstein Book Details Explosive New Factoids about Epstein-Trump
- Innovative Environmental Technologies Unveils New Website Featuring Free AI Tools for the Environmental Industry
- CCHR Warns: Psychiatric Diagnoses Without Biological Proof Now Used to Justify Euthanasia
- Michelle Carey Unveils High-Stakes Thriller "Haze" Set for Global Release March 25
- Impact Filtration Appoints Alejandro Sturniolo as Head of Sustainability to Engineer High-Performance, Water-Positive Infrastructure
- ilubra Guides Launches "Mocktails for Bartenders: 26 Modern & Classic Essentials" Amidst Growing Sober-Curious Trend
- ilubra guides Unveils Bible Study Guides for a New Generation This Easter
- Attn: Book Critics, Poetry Lovers & Rock Stars: Help Rescue All these Great Poems from Obscurity
- 106 Years Strong: The Liberty Group Celebrates a Century-Plus of Service and Unveils a Unified Family of Companies
- Airport Transportation Reaches All Five Continents Through Global Transportation Partner Network
- BookBuzz.net Interviews Poet and Storyteller Kabal - Author of MOUTHY
- Acquisition of Israeli Defense Manufacturing Platform to Accelerate AI-Driven Autonomous Systems: VisionWave Holdings, Inc.: (N A S D A Q: VWAV)
- HRC Fertility to Celebrate Grand Opening of New Beverly Hills Location During National Infertility Awareness Week
- It's Okay, Mattie Encourages Emotional Resilience and Empathy for Children with Autism
- ilubra guides Launches 'Power of 78 Gemstones & Crystals' for Stress Awareness Month
- AktieGo Publishes Editorial Feature Examining Decentralized Power Infrastructure and Hydrogen Energy Deployment

