Availability of Funds and Collection of Checks

Download PDF
Federal RegisterSep 28, 2004
69 Fed. Reg. 57837 (Sep. 28, 2004)

AGENCY:

Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.

ACTION:

Final rule; technical amendment.

SUMMARY:

The Board of Governors is amending appendix A of Regulation CC to delete the reference to the Indianapolis check processing office of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago and reassign the Federal Reserve routing symbols currently listed under that office to the Cincinnati branch of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland. This amendment is the last in a series of amendments to the appendix associated with the restructuring of check processing operations that the Reserve Banks announced in February 2003. The Board also is providing advance notice about a series of future amendments to appendix A in connection with the next phase of the Reserve Banks' restructuring of the check processing operations within the Federal Reserve System. This future restructuring and the associated amendments to appendix A will take effect on a staggered basis beginning in 2005 and ending in early 2006.

DATES:

The final rule will become effective on October 30, 2004.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:

Jack K. Walton II, Assistant Director (202/452-2660), or Joseph P. Baressi, Senior Financial Services Analyst (202/452-3959), Division of Reserve Bank Operations and Payment Systems; or Adrianne G. Threatt, Counsel (202/452-3554), Legal Division. For users of Telecommunications Devices for the Deaf (TDD) only, contact 202/263-4869.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

Background

Regulation CC establishes the maximum period a depositary bank may wait between receiving a deposit and making the deposited funds available for withdrawal. A depositary bank generally must provide faster availability for funds deposited by a “local check” than by a “nonlocal check.” A check drawn on a bank is considered local if it is payable by or at a bank located in the same Federal Reserve check processing region as the depositary bank. A check drawn on a nonbank is considered local if it is payable through a bank located in the same Federal Reserve check processing region as the depositary bank. Checks that do not meet the requirements for “local” checks are considered “nonlocal.”

For purposes of Regulation CC, the term “bank” refers to any depository institution, including commercial banks, savings institutions, and credit unions.

Appendix A to Regulation CC contains a routing number guide that assists banks in identifying local and nonlocal banks and thereby determining the maximum permissible hold periods for most deposited checks. The appendix includes a list of each Federal Reserve check processing office and the first four digits of the routing number, known as the Federal Reserve routing symbol, of each bank that is served by that office for check processing purposes. Banks whose Federal Reserve routing symbols are grouped under the same office are in the same check processing region and thus are local to one another.

Final Amendment to Appendix A

As explained in detail in the Board's final rule published in the Federal Register on May 28, 2003, the Federal Reserve Banks decided in early 2003 to reduce the number of locations at which they process checks. As part of this restructuring process, effective October 30, 2004, the Indianapolis office of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago will cease processing checks and banks with routing symbols currently assigned to that office for check processing purposes will be reassigned to the Cincinnati branch of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland. This is the last stage of the restructuring process announced in 2003. Some checks that are drawn on and deposited at banks located in the affected check processing regions and that currently are nonlocal checks will become local checks subject to faster availability schedules. Because the Cincinnati check processing region serves banks located in multiple Federal Reserve districts, banks located in the expanded Cincinnati check processing region cannot determine that a check is nonlocal solely because the paying bank for that check is located in another Federal Reserve district.

See 68 FR 31592, May 28, 2003. In addition to the general advance notice of future amendments previously provided by the Board, as well as the Board's notices of each of the final amendments, the Reserve Banks generally inform affected depository institutions of the exact date of each office transition at least 120 days in advance. The Reserve Banks' communications to affected depository institutions are available at www.frbservices.org.

To assist banks in identifying local and nonlocal checks and making funds availability decisions, the Board is amending the lists of routing symbols associated with the Federal Reserve Banks of Cleveland and Chicago to reflect the transfer of operations from the Chicago Reserve Bank's Indianapolis office to the Cleveland Reserve Bank's Cincinnati branch. To coincide with the effective date of the underlying check processing changes, the amendments are effective October 30, 2004. The Board is providing advance notice of these amendments to give affected banks ample time to make any needed processing changes. The advance notice will also enable affected banks to amend their availability schedules and related disclosures, if necessary, and provide their customers with notice of these changes. The Federal Reserve routing symbols assigned to all other Federal Reserve branches and offices will remain the same at this time.

Section 229.18(e) of Regulation CC requires that banks notify account holders who are consumers within 30 days after implementing a change that improves the availability of funds.

Information About Future Changes to Appendix A

As the Federal Reserve Banks announced on August 2, 2004, in response to the continued nationwide decline in check usage and to position themselves more effectively to meet the cost recovery requirements of the Monetary Control Act of 1980, the Reserve Banks have decided to reduce further the number of locations at which they process checks. The Reserve Banks plan to stop processing checks at nine offices, and the checks currently processed at those offices will be processed at other nearby offices, as follows:

The Reserve Banks' press release concerning the upcoming restructuring process is available at http://www.frbservices.org/Retail/pdf/CheckAnnouncePressRelease8-2-04.pdf.

Branches and offices that no longer will process checks: Branches and offices to which check processing will be transferred:
Boston, MA Windsor Locks, CT.
Columbus, OH Cleveland, OH.
Birmingham, AL Atlanta, GA.
Nashville, TN Atlanta, GA.
Detroit, MI Cleveland, OH.
Oklahoma City, OK Dallas, TX.
Houston, TX Dallas, TX.
Portland, OR Seattle, WA.
Salt Lake City, UT Denver, CO.

The restructuring of Reserve Bank check processing operations will take place in several stages over the course of 2005 and early 2006 and collectively will reduce the number of check processing regions from 32 to 23. The Board will amend appendix A in connection with each stage of the restructuring to delete the name of the office(s) that will no longer process checks and transfer the affected Federal Reserve routing symbols to another check processing office. The Board intends to announce each stage of the restructuring and the associated amendments to appendix A at least 60 days prior to the effective date of the amendment in order to give affected banks ample time to make processing changes and, if necessary, amend their availability schedules and related disclosures and provide their customers with notice of any changes to their availability schedules.

Some affected banks might prefer to make or to plan for some or all of their processing and availability changes prior to the effective dates of the relevant amendments. For the information and planning needs of affected banks, the Board today is describing below the Federal Reserve routing symbol changes to appendix A that will be made between January 1, 2005, and early 2006.

1. Windsor Locks

The operations of the Boston head office will be transferred such that banks with the following Federal Reserve routing symbols will be local to the Windsor Locks office:

0110   2110

0111   2111

0112   2112

0113   2113

0114   2114

0115   2115

0116   2116

0117   2117

0118   2118

0119   2119

0211   2211

2. Cleveland

The operations of the Columbus office and the Detroit branch will be transferred such that banks with the following Federal Reserve routing symbols will be local to the Cleveland head office:

0410   2410

0412   2412

0430   2430

0432   2432

0433   2433

0434   2434

0440   2440

0441   2441

0442   2442

0720   2720

0724   2724

3. Atlanta

The operations of the Birmingham and Nashville branches will be transferred such that banks with the following Federal Reserve routing symbols will be local to the Atlanta head office:

0610   2610

0611   2611

0612   2612

0613   2613

0620   2620

0621   2621

0622   2622

0640   2640

0641   2641

0642   2642

4. Denver

The operations of the Salt Lake City branch will be transferred such that banks with the following Federal Reserve routing symbols will be local to the Denver branch:

1020   3020

1021   3021

1022   3022

1023   3023

1070   3070

1240   3240

1241   3241

1242   3242

1243   3243

5. Dallas

The operations of the Oklahoma City and Houston branches will be transferred such that banks with the following Federal Reserve routing symbols will be local to the Dallas head office:

1030   3030

1031   3031

1039   3039

1110   3110

1111   3111

1113   3113

1119   3119

1120   3120

1122   3122

1123   3123

1130   3130

1131   3131

1140   3140

1149   3149

1163   3163

6. Seattle

The operations of the Portland branch will be transferred such that banks with the following Federal Reserve routing symbols will be local to the Seattle branch:

1230   3230

1231   3231

1232   3232

1233   3233

1250   3250

1251   3251

1252   3252

The Federal Reserve routing symbols assigned to all other Federal Reserve branches and offices will remain the same.

Administrative Procedure Act

The Board has not followed the provisions of 5 U.S.C. 553(b) relating to notice and public participation in connection with the adoption of the final rule. The revisions to the appendix are technical in nature and are required by the statutory and regulatory definitions of “check-processing region.” Thus, the Board has determined that the section 553(b) notice and comment procedures are unnecessary.

Regulatory Flexibility Act Certification

Pursuant to section 605(b) of the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 605(b)), the Board certifies that the final rule will not have a significantly adverse economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. These amendments are technical, and the routing number changes are required by law. Moreover, these amendments apply to all banks regardless of their size. Many small banks generally provide next-day availability for all checks and will not be affected by this amendment. For the subset of small banks that does distinguish between checks subject to next-day availability and those subject to longer holds, the final rule should necessitate only minimal programming changes. Some of these affected banks might also have to modify their funds availability disclosures and notify both new and existing customers of the modified funds availability schedules.

Paperwork Reduction Act

In accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3506; 5 CFR 1320 Appendix A.1), the Board has reviewed the final rule under authority delegated to the Board by the Office of Management and Budget. This technical amendment to appendix A of Regulation CC will delete the reference to the Indianapolis office of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago and reassign the routing symbols listed under that office to the Cincinnati office of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland. The depository institutions that are located in the affected check processing regions and that include the routing numbers in their disclosure statements would be required to notify customers of the resulting change in availability under § 229.18(e). However, all paperwork collection procedures associated with Regulation CC already are in place, and the Board accordingly anticipates that no additional burden will be imposed as a result of this rulemaking.

12 CFR Chapter II

List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 229

  • Banks
  • Banking
  • Reporting and recordkeeping requirements

Authority and Issuance

For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Board is amending 12 CFR part 229 to read as follows:

PART 229 AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS AND COLLECTION OF CHECKS (REGULATION CC)

1. The authority citation for part 229 continues to read as follows:

Authority: 12 U.S.C. 4001-4010, 12 U.S.C. 5001-5018.

2. The Fourth and Seventh Federal Reserve District routing symbol lists in appendix A are revised to read as follows:

Appendix A to Part 229—Routing Number Guide to Next-Day Availability Checks and Local Checks

Fourth Federal Reserve District

[Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland]

Head Office

0410   2410

0412   2412

0430   2430

0432   2432

0433   2433

0434   2434

Cincinnati Branch

0420   2420

0421   2421

0422   2422

0423   2423

0515   2515

0519   2519

0740   2740

0749   2749

0813   2813

0830   2830

0839   2837

0863   2863

Columbus Office

0440   2440

0441   2441

0442   2442

Seventh Federal Reserve District

[Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago]

Head Office

0710   2710

0711   2711

0712   2712

0719   2719

0750   2750

0759   2759

Detroit Branch

0720   2720

0724   2724

Des Moines Office

0730   2730

0739   2739

1040   3040

1041   3041

1049   3049

By order of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, acting through the Secretary of the Board under delegated authority, September 22, 2004.

Jennifer J. Johnson,

Secretary of the Board.

[FR Doc. 04-21632 Filed 9-27-04; 8:45 am]

BILLING CODE 6210-01-P