Newsroom

May 21, 2015

Shelby reg relief bill clears panel, 12-10

The "Financial Regulatory Improvement Act," a NAFCU-backed regulatory relief bill authored by Senate Banking Committee Chairman Richard Shelby, R-Ala., was approved by the committee in a party-line vote of 12-10 after mark-up this morning.

"We applaud committee members for moving the bill forward, and we look forward to more progress being made on behalf of credit union regulatory relief," said NAFCU President and CEO Dan Berger. "This is a positive development and a solid step forward in overcoming the regulatory overburden the credit union industry now faces. However, more needs to be done – and we are working on the development of a bipartisan approach to get the job done."

The package, which Shelby first released last week, includes several NAFCU-backed provisions for credit union relief and transparency at NCUA. The bill would require public NCUA budget hearings and require the agency to study the impact of its risk-based capital proposal on mortgage servicing assets.

The committee-approved bill also includes an amendment from Sen. Pat Toomey, R-Pa., to raise the asset threshold for institutions subject to CFPB examinations from $10 billion to $50 billion. NAFCU supports this amendment, although the association has always advocated the exemption of all credit unions from CFPB regulation. The bill also includes a NAFCU-backed amendment from Sen. Mike Crapo, R-Idaho, that would bar federal financial institution regulators from participating in the Justice Department's Operation Choke Point initiative.

The bill will proceed to the full Senate, where it will require some Democratic lawmakers' support to pass with a supermajority of 60 votes.

Berger wrote Shelby and Ranking Member Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, in advance of the mark-up to express NAFCU's support. He also emphasized NAFCU's support for the parts of the package that would provide credit unions parity with community banks in the Federal Housing Finance Act, index arbitrary asset thresholds in Dodd-Frank, provide statutory relief from annual privacy notice requirements and create safe harbor qualified-mortgage (QM) status for eligible loans held in portfolio, among other things.

NAFCU staff will continue to monitor the debate and push for credit unions' concerns.