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36589

Rules and Regulations

Federal Register
Vol. 72, No. 128
Thursday, July 5, 2007

This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER
contains regulatory documents having general
applicability and legal effect, most of which
are keyed to and codified in the Code of
Federal Regulations, which is published under
50 titles pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 1510.
The Code of Federal Regulations is sold by
the Superintendent of Documents. Prices of
new books are listed in the first FEDERAL
REGISTER issue of each week.

FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Part 205
[Regulation E; Docket No. R–1270]

Electronic Fund Transfers
Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System.
ACTION: Final rule; official staff
interpretation.
AGENCY:

SUMMARY: The Board is amending
Regulation E, which implements the
Electronic Fund Transfer Act, and the
official staff commentary to the
regulation. Regulation E requires that
financial institutions make a receipt
available at the time a consumer
initiates an electronic fund transfer
(EFT) at an electronic terminal. The
final rule creates an exception from this
requirement for EFTs of $15 or less.
DATES: The final rule is effective August
6, 2007.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Vivian W. Wong, Attorney, or Ky TranTrong, Counsel, Division of Consumer
and Community Affairs, Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, Washington, DC 20551, at (202)
452–2412 or (202) 452–3667. For users
of Telecommunications Device for the
Deaf (TDD) only, contact (202) 263–
4869.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

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I. Statutory Background
The Electronic Fund Transfer Act
(EFTA or Act) (15 U.S.C. 1693 et seq.),
enacted in 1978, provides a basic
framework establishing the rights,
liabilities, and responsibilities of
participants in electronic fund transfer
(EFT) systems. The EFTA is
implemented by the Board’s Regulation
E (12 CFR part 205). Examples of the
types of transfers covered by the Act
and regulation include transfers
initiated through an automated teller

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machine (ATM), point-of-sale (POS)
terminal, automated clearinghouse
(ACH), telephone bill-payment plan, or
remote banking service. The Act and
regulation provide for disclosure of the
terms and conditions of an EFT service;
documentation of EFTs by means of
terminal receipts and periodic account
activity statements; limitations on
consumer liability for unauthorized
transfers; procedures for error
resolution; and certain rights related to
preauthorized EFTs. The Act and
regulation also prescribe restrictions on
the unsolicited issuance of ATM and
debit cards and other access devices.
The official staff commentary (12 CFR
part 205 (Supp. I)) interprets the
requirements of Regulation E to
facilitate compliance and provides
protection from liability under sections
915 and 916 of the EFTA for financial
institutions and persons subject to the
Act. 15 U.S.C. 1693m(d)(1). The
commentary is updated periodically to
address significant questions that arise.
II. Background and Overview of
Comments Received
Under the EFTA and Regulation E,
financial institutions must make a
receipt available at the time a consumer
initiates an EFT at an electronic
terminal.1 For this purpose, electronic
terminals include ATMs and POS
terminals. The receipt requirement
applies whenever an EFT is made at an
electronic terminal, regardless of the
transaction amount.2
According to industry representatives,
the receipt requirement has been an
obstacle to their ability to respond to
recent shifts in consumer payment
preferences from cash to debit cards,
particularly in environments that
exclusively handle small-dollar
transactions. For vending machines, for
example, the costs associated with
installing and servicing additional
printing equipment capable of providing
terminal receipts have been an
impediment to offering cashless
payment options. For public mass
1 See Section 906 of the EFTA (15 U.S.C. 1693d)
and 12 CFR 205.9(a).
2 The terminal receipt requirement does not apply
to transactions initiated through a telephone
operated by a consumer, or to transactions initiated
by a consumer ‘‘by a means analogous in function
to a telephone.’’ Thus, the receipt requirement does
not apply to Internet transactions, where a
consumer uses a computer to visit a merchant’s web
site to purchase goods or services. See § 205.2(h);
comment 2(h)–1(ii).

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transit systems, the time required to
provide each consumer with a receipt
for debit card transactions at the gate or
on a vehicle would cause delays that
render the use of debit cards impractical
in such circumstances.
On December 1, 2006, the Board
published a notice of proposed
rulemaking to eliminate the requirement
to provide a receipt to consumers at
POS and other electronic terminals for
transactions of $15 or less. 71 FR 69500.
In support of the proposal, the Board
cited the implementation costs and the
growing consumer preference for using
debit cards in all types of transactions,
regardless of the dollar amount of the
transaction.3 In addition, the Board
noted that while receipts may be
important to consumers for moderate- to
high-value transactions, receipts may be
less significant for small-dollar
transactions because consumers are less
likely to retain them for proof of
payment or for account management
purposes given the limited risk of loss
to the consumer. Moreover, consumers
would continue to receive a record of
each transaction on their periodic
statements and retain the right to assert
an error arising from that transaction
with their account-holding financial
institution, provided notice was given
within the required time frames.4
The Board received 56 comment
letters in response to the proposal.
Commenters included banks, credit
unions, card associations, financial and
other industry trade associations,
consumer groups, and individual
consumers. A majority of the comment
letters were submitted by industry while
nearly 20 letters were submitted by
individual consumers or consumer
groups. In general, financial institutions
and other industry commenters
supported the Board’s proposal to
eliminate the receipt requirement for
small-dollar transactions although many
of these commenters urged the Board to
increase the dollar threshold for the
3 See Elizabeth Olson, Who Needs Pocket Change
When You’ve Got Plastic?, N.Y. Times, Jun. 17,
2007, at BU5. See also Geoffrey Gerdes and Jack
Walton II, ‘‘Trends in the Use of Payment
Instruments in the United States,’’ Federal Reserve
Bulletin 180, 181 (Spring 2005), and Ron
Borzekowski, Elizabeth Kiser, and Shaista Ahmed,
Consumers’ Use of Debit Cards: Patterns,
Preferences, and Price Response (Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Financial
and Economic Discussion Series 2006–16, April
2006).
4 See 12 CFR 205.9(b) and 205.11.

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exception. Specifically, these
commenters advocated an increase in
the dollar threshold from $15 to $25,
stating that a higher threshold would
provide greater flexibility in the future
to accommodate consumer preferences
for electronic forms of payment in more
market segments in the future. Industry
commenters also favored a $25
threshold for consistency with current
payment card association rules that
waive the personal identification
number (PIN) and signature
authorization requirements for certain
merchants for transactions under $25.
Consumer group commenters believed
that the $15 threshold was too high and
stated that a $5 threshold would be
sufficient to accommodate the retail
environments that currently do not
accept debit cards. Consumer groups
also suggested some additional
consumer protections be implemented
along with the exception, including
limiting the exception only to retail
environments that do not conduct any
transactions over the dollar threshold.
The Board received comments from
18 individual consumers. While six
individual consumers supported the
Board’s proposal, the rest of the
comments from individual consumers
opposed the proposal, citing a need for
receipts for various reasons, including
account management, fraud detection,
and reimbursement and income tax
substantiation purposes.
III. Summary of the Final Rule

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The Board is amending Regulation E
to eliminate the requirement for
providing terminal receipts for EFTs of
$15 or less. The revisions are being
adopted largely as proposed without
substantive change. Pursuant to its
authority under section 904(c) of the
EFTA, the Board is adopting this limited
exception to effectuate the purpose of
the Act and facilitate the use and
acceptance of debit cards in transactions
where that option does not currently
exist due to the compliance burdens
associated with the receipt
requirement.5 In addition, a revision to
the commentary clarifies that the fact
that a financial institution does not
make a terminal receipt available for an
EFT of $15 or less is not an error for
5 Section 904(c) of the EFTA (15 U.S.C. 1693b(c))
provides that the rules issued by the Board ‘‘may
contain such classifications, differentiations, or
other provisions, and may provide for any
adjustments and exceptions for any class of
electronic fund transfers’’ that in the judgment of
the Board are ‘‘necessary or proper to effectuate the
purposes of [the Act], to prevent circumvention or
evasion thereof, or to facilitate compliance
therewith.’’

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purposes of the error resolution
provisions in § 205.11.
IV. Section-by-Section Analysis
Section 205.9 Receipts at Electronic
Terminals; Periodic Statements
Consumer Need for a Receipt
Most commenters agreed that an
exception from the receipt requirement
would be appropriate to facilitate
consumers’ use of debit cards in
locations that do not currently offer that
option. Many individual consumer
commenters, however, opposed the
Board’s proposal, offering various
reasons for needing receipts. A majority
of these commenters stated that they use
terminal receipts to accurately enter the
transaction amounts in their financial
records to track their finances or to
independently verify transactions listed
on their periodic statement. A few
consumer commenters stated that the
receipts can be used as proof of
purchase to obtain reimbursements by
employers or to substantiate tax
deductions. Several of these individual
consumer commenters also raised
concerns that eliminating the receipt
requirement for transactions of $15 or
less might make it more difficult for
consumers to dispute these transactions.
These commenters asserted that without
the receipt to serve as evidence to
support a consumer’s claim of error,
consumers may be less likely to prevail
in a dispute with the financial
institution.
As noted in the proposal, the
intended purpose of making a terminal
receipt available to a consumer at the
time the consumer initiates an EFT was
to provide a record of the transaction
equivalent to a cancelled check.6
Receipts may also serve to assist
consumers in tracking their purchases
for account management purposes.
However, in certain retail environments,
the burden in costs or delays in
transaction time of making receipts
available to consumers may discourage
merchants and others from offering
consumers the option to use a debit
card, thus potentially limiting consumer
payment options. The Board has
previously recognized this potential
obstacle in the context of vending
machines in particular. In its March
1997 Report to the Congress on the
Application of the Electronic Fund
6 See National Commission on Electronic Fund
Transfers, EFT in the United States: Policy
Recommendations in the Public Interest, 47–48
(1977). See also S. Rep. No. 915, 95th Cong., 2d
Sess. 5 (1978) (noting that ‘‘receipts * * * would
give the consumer written verification of the
amount, date, and type of transfer and the person
paid.’’).

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Transfer Act to Electronic Stored-Value
Products (1997 Report), the Board noted
that the delay in transaction time from
printing a receipt might discourage the
use of machines accepting products that
require receipts.7 The Board also noted
in the 1997 Report the additional
compliance costs of the receipt
requirement. Moreover, in other retail
environments, the requirement to
provide receipts may be impractical,
such as in the case of mass transit
systems where the time required to print
a receipt for each consumer purchasing
single fares with a debit card would
cause delays that would significantly
conflict with a transit system’s need to
handle a heavy volume of transactions
within short time periods. In these
circumstances, a consumer using cash
would not be provided a receipt for
transactions conducted in these
environments nor would the consumer
expect one.
The Board believes that receipts are of
minimal benefit to consumers in smalldollar transactions for several reasons.
First, consumers are less likely to obtain
a receipt or retain it for such
transactions due to the limited risk of
loss. Furthermore, even without a
receipt for small-dollar transactions,
consumers have other means to track
their finances. For example, in addition
to receiving a record of each transaction
on periodic statements, consumers can
in most cases access information on
specific transactions before receiving
their periodic statements from their
financial institutions through the
telephone and often through the Internet
as well. For expense reimbursement and
tax substantiation purposes, consumers
can use their periodic statements for
small-dollar transactions if documentary
evidence is needed. Also, while a
receipt may be helpful for a consumer
in disputing a transaction with their
account-holding financial institution for
certain types of errors, the absence of a
receipt does not affect the consumer’s
right to assert any error with their
financial institution.
In light of the foregoing, the Board is
exercising its authority under section
904(c) of the EFTA (15 U.S.C. 1693b) to
create an exception to the receipt
requirement that applies to EFTs of $15
or less. See § 205.9(a) and (e). The Board
believes that the limited exception to
the receipt requirement has significant
potential benefits for consumers because
the exception will facilitate compliance
with the regulation and allow financial
institutions to offer consumers the
7 See Report to the Congress on the Application
of the Electronic Fund Transfer Act to Electronic
Stored-Value Products 50–51 (March 1997).

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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 128 / Thursday, July 5, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
additional option of using a debit card
in retail environments where the costs
and time delays of making receipts
available now effectively preclude
merchants from offering that option.
Proposed § 205.9(e) is revised in the
final rule, for consistency with
§ 205.9(a), to state that the exception
applies to the general requirement to
‘‘make available’’ a terminal receipt at
the time of the EFT. No substantive
change is intended.
The Board also notes that the types of
retail environments making use of the
exception will likely be limited to
circumstances where providing a receipt
is impractical. In retail environments
that process both large- and small-dollar
transactions, merchants still will be
required to make receipts available for
those higher-dollar transactions, and the
Board believes they will be unlikely to
change their practices based on the
dollar amount of the transaction.
Similarly, merchants that provide
receipts for purposes other than to
comply with Regulation E, for example
to facilitate merchandise returns, likely
still would make receipts available for
all transactions.
A few commenters requested
clarification regarding the applicability
of the proposed exception to ATM
transactions. In the proposal, the Board
stated that the proposed exception
would apply to deposits at ATMs of $15
or less.8 These commenters interpreted
the statement as limiting the exception
to ATM deposits and suggested that the
exception should apply to all
transactions conducted at an ATM. The
Board did not intend to so limit the
exception but instead to note that the
exception could potentially apply to all
transactions at an ATM, including
deposits. Nevertheless, the Board
anticipates that for operational reasons,
financial institutions would continue to
make receipts available for ATM
transactions, regardless of the amount of
transfer.
A small number of commenters
suggested that instead of excepting
small-dollar transactions altogether from
the requirement to provide receipts,
receipts should be provided to
consumers upon request. Currently,
comment 9(a)–1 already states that
receipts may be provided only upon a
consumer’s request. As discussed above,
however, in some retail environments,
such as vending machines, the burdens
associated with installing and
maintaining printing equipment would
be an obstacle to merchant acceptance
of debit cards, even if the receipts are
only provided upon request.
8 See

71 FR at 69502.

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Dollar Threshold
The Board specifically requested
comment on whether $15 is the
appropriate threshold for the proposed
exception. Several industry commenters
suggested that the threshold should be
set at $25 to be consistent with current
card association rules that waive
requirements for signature or PIN
authorization for transactions under that
amount for certain retailers. These
commenters stated that having different
dollar amount thresholds for receipts
and authorization requirements would
be confusing to consumers and would
be difficult to implement in terms of
training staff and reprogramming
terminals. Industry commenters also
asserted that a $25 threshold would
better accommodate rising costs than
the $15 threshold and provide greater
flexibility for expansion of the use of
debit cards in additional retail
environments.
Consumer group commenters and
some individual consumers, however,
thought the proposed threshold was too
high, and they suggested that the
threshold be the minimum amount
necessary to address the limited
circumstances cited by the industry.
Thus, consumer groups recommended a
threshold of no more than $5, which
they stated would be sufficient to
accommodate the types of retail
environments discussed in the proposal.
One consumer commenter suggested
that the amount be lowered to $10,
which the commenter believed would
still take into account future price
increases.
The final rule provides an exception
for transactions of $15 or less, as
proposed. As discussed in the proposal,
the Board believes that the $15
threshold strikes an appropriate balance
between industry’s need for flexibility
to offer cashless payment options in a
variety of retail environments and
consumers’ need for receipts in higherdollar transactions. Commenters did not
provide any data that suggests that a
higher or lower threshold than the one
proposed by the Board better or more
appropriately balances the costs and
benefits of the exception. The $5
threshold suggested by consumer groups
may be sufficient today to enable
consumers to use debit cards in a
majority of retail environments where
the option to use a debit card is
currently unavailable.9 The Board
9 Vending industry data indicates that the average
cost in 2005 for food and beverages sold in vending
machines was about 75 cents for candy, $1 for
bottled beverages, and $2 for frozen and refrigerated
food products. ‘‘State of the Vending Industry
Report: Operators Slow to Invest; Sales Rise 3

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36591

believes, however, that such a low
threshold might not sufficiently
accommodate price increases that may
occur in these retail environments over
time. A lower threshold might also
foreclose the possibility of additional
retail environments accepting cashless
payments in the future.
Commenters also did not provide
strong arguments for increasing the
threshold. While a $25 threshold would
make the rule consistent with the card
association rules that waive signature
and PIN authorization for certain
transactions under that amount, the
Board does not believe consumers
would be confused by a different dollar
threshold for receiving receipts because
these two rules fulfill different goals and
purposes. The Board will continue to
monitor the market need for the
exception and revisit this dollar
threshold as necessary.
Additional Consumer Protections
The Board solicited comment in the
proposal on whether the Board should
adopt any additional consumer
protections in connection with the
proposed exception. Most industry
commenters thought that current
consumer protections were sufficient
and that additional protections were not
necessary. A couple of industry
commenters, however, suggested that a
notice be posted at the terminal
informing consumers that a receipt will
not be provided for transactions of $15
or less. The Board believes that, on
balance, the consumer benefit from
receiving this notice is outweighed by
the costs of imposing the burden on
financial institutions of providing this
notice. Many of the retail environments
that would take advantage of the
exception, such as vending machines,
do not currently provide receipts for
cash transactions. The Board believes
that consumers will not expect a receipt
when using a debit card in those
environments. Thus, a notice informing
them of the lack of a receipt is
unnecessary.
Consumer group commenters
proposed some additional consumer
protections. First, consumer groups
advocated that receipts should be
required in transactions where
additional fees are imposed because
Points in 2005,’’ Automatic Merchandiser, 40–62
(August 2006). A survey of major transit systems in
Boston, Chicago, New York, and Washington, DC,
indicates the maximum one-way fares range
between $2 and $5 for subway systems. In addition,
according to one creator of smart-card based
payment solutions for municipal parking, the
average purchase in parking meters using its smartcard system is $1.39. See Ryan Kline, ‘‘No Change,
No Problem With Smart Card Enabled Meters,’’
SecureID News (Mar. 28, 2007).

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they believe receipts are helpful to alert
consumers to these fees. Although a
merchant or ATM operator would be
aware of any fees it may impose in
connection with a debit card
transaction, it is the Board’s
understanding that information about
transaction fees charged by the
consumer’s account-holding financial
institution in connection with an EFT
typically would not be transmitted to
merchants or to ATM operators unless
the terminal is owned and operated by
the financial institution. Thus, a receipt
that is made available in such
circumstances is unlikely to alert the
consumer to all fees that may be charged
in the transaction. Accordingly, the
Board declines to adopt the suggestion.
Nonetheless, the Board agrees that
consumers should be made aware in
some manner of all of the fees that may
be imposed before entering into a
transaction.
Consumer group commenters also
suggested that the exception should not
be available in retail environments
where transactions of both small- and
large-dollar amounts are processed. As
previously noted, however, the Board
expects that for operational reasons,
many businesses that process
transactions of varying amounts will
still make receipts available for all
transactions, regardless of amount.
Moreover, limiting the exception in the
manner suggested would add additional
complexity to the rule, and therefore,
the Board believes the rule should be
applied consistently for ease of
compliance.
Section 205.11 Procedures for
Resolving Errors
11(a) Definition of Error
Comment 11(a)–6, as proposed,
clarified that the fact that a financial
institution does not make a terminal
receipt available for a transaction of $15
or less is not a billing error for purposes
of §§ 205.11(a)(1)(vi) or (vii).10 No
comments were received regarding this
provision, and the comment is adopted
as proposed.

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V. Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.) (RFA) generally
requires an agency to perform an
assessment of the rule’s expected impact
on small entities. Under section 605(b)
10 Section 205.11(a)(1)(vi) defines an ‘‘error’’ to
include an EFT not identified in accordance with
§ 205.9 or § 205.10(a). Section 205.11(a)(1)(vii)
states that a consumer’s request for documentation
required by § 205.9 or § 205.10(a) or for additional
information or clarification concerning an EFT is
also considered an ‘‘error’’ for error resolution
purposes.

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of the RFA, the regulatory flexibility
analysis otherwise required under the
RFA is not required if an agency
certifies that the rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities,
and provides a statement providing the
factual basis for such certification.
Based on the analysis and reasons stated
below, the Board certifies that the final
rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities.
1. Statement of the need for, and
objectives of, the final rule. The EFTA
was enacted to provide a basic
framework establishing the rights,
liabilities, and responsibilities of
participants in electronic fund transfer
systems. The primary objective of the
EFTA is the provision of individual
consumer rights. 15 U.S.C. 1693. The
EFTA authorizes the Board to prescribe
regulations to carry out the purpose and
provisions of the statute. 15 U.S.C.
1693b(a). The Act expressly states that
the Board’s regulations may contain
‘‘such classifications, differentiations, or
other provisions, * * * as, in the
judgment of the Board, are necessary or
proper to effectuate the purposes of [the
Act], to prevent circumvention or
evasion [of the Act], or to facilitate
compliance [with the Act].’’ 15 U.S.C.
1693b(c).
The Board is revising Regulation E to
provide financial institutions relief from
the requirement to make available
terminal receipts at the time of a
transaction for EFTs of $15 or less. The
Board believes that these revisions to
Regulation E are within Congress’s
broad grant of authority to the Board to
adopt provisions that carry out the
purposes of the statute and to facilitate
compliance with the EFTA. These
revisions facilitate financial institutions’
compliance with the EFTA in smalldollar transactions by eliminating
obstacles to the use of electronic
payment methods in such transactions
where the value to the consumer of
having a record of the transaction in the
form of a terminal receipt is limited.
2. Issues raised by comments in
response to the initial regulatory
flexibility analysis. In accordance with
section 603(a) of the RFA, the Board
conducted an initial regulatory
flexibility analysis in connection with
the proposed amendments. 71 FR
69502–03. The Board did not receive
any comments on its regulatory
flexibility analysis with respect to
providing an exception from the
requirement to make terminal receipts
available for EFTs of $15 or less.
3. Small entities affected by the final
rule. The requirement to make available

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receipts when a consumer initiates an
EFT at an electronic terminal applies to
all financial institutions, regardless of
their size. Accordingly, the proposed
exception would reduce the burden and
compliance costs for small institutions
by providing relief from the requirement
to make terminal receipts available to
consumers at the time of the transaction
where the transaction amount is $15 or
less.
4. Other federal rules. The Board has
not identified any federal rules that
duplicate, overlap, or conflict with the
final revisions to Regulation E.
VI. Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act (PRA) of 1995 (44 U.S.C.
3506; 5 CFR part 1320 Appendix A.1),
the Board reviewed the rule under the
authority delegated to the Board by the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB). The final rule contains
requirements subject to the PRA. The
collection of information that is
required by this final rule is found in 12
CFR part 205. The Board may not
conduct or sponsor, and an organization
is not required to respond to, this
information collection unless the
information collection displays a
currently valid OMB control number.
The OMB control number is 7100–0200.
This collection of information is
required to provide benefits for
consumers and is mandatory (15 U.S.C.
1693 et seq.). The respondents/
recordkeepers are for-profit financial
institutions, including small businesses.
Institutions are required to retain
records for 24 months.
The final rule provides relief to
financial institutions from the
requirement to make available terminal
receipts to consumers for all EFTs of
$15 or less. The burden associated with
use of this exception was previously
estimated in the proposed rule and
reported in documents filed with OMB.
Under the Board’s prior analysis,
respondents that are currently providing
receipts for EFTs of $15 or less would
face a one-time burden of 8 hours (one
business day) to reprogram and update
their systems if they wish to make use
of the exception. The Board did not
receive any comments on the burden
estimate provided in the proposal.
Although the current requirement to
make receipts available for all
transactions initiated at an electronic
terminal applies to financial
institutions, third parties, such as
merchants, typically make receipts
available on behalf of an accountholding financial institution. In retail
environments that do not currently
accept debit cards, the financial

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institution’s burden under Regulation E
due to the receipt requirement will not
be impacted if the merchant should
choose to accept debit cards for
transactions of $15 or less without
printing a receipt. Under the final rule,
however, an account-holding financial
institution may also choose to program
its ATMs to make receipts available
only for transactions above $15. For
purposes of this PRA analysis, the Board
estimates that if approximately 100 of
the 1,289 institutions subject to the
Board’s supervisory authority program
their ATMs in this manner, the resulting
total annual burden for this requirement
would be 800 hours. This would
increase the total annual burden of this
information collection from 83,866
hours to 84,666 hours for the first year
the financial institution elects to take
advantage of the exception. Thereafter,
the Board estimates that the burden of
making receipts available will decrease
as a result of the new exception.
Nevertheless, as stated above, the Board
anticipates that financial institutions
will likely continue to make receipts
available for all transactions regardless
of the amount and therefore incur no
costs in reprogramming their ATMs.
The other federal financial agencies
are responsible for estimating and
reporting to OMB the total paperwork
burden for the institutions for which
they have administrative enforcement
authority. They may, but are not
required to, use the Board’s burden
estimates. The Board estimates that if
1,500 of the approximately 19,300
depository institutions program their
ATMs to take advantage of the
exception, the resulting increase in their
total estimated annual burden for
complying with Regulation E as a whole
would be 12,000 hours.
Because the records would be
maintained by the institutions and the
notices are not provided to the Board,
no issue of confidentiality arises under
the Freedom of Information Act.
Text of Final Revisions
Comments are numbered to comply
with Federal Register publication rules.

jlentini on PROD1PC65 with RULES

List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 205
Consumer protection, Electronic fund
transfers, Federal Reserve System,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.

PART 205—ELECTRONIC FUND
TRANSFERS (REGULATION E)
1. The authority citation for part 205
continues to read as follows:

■

2. Section 205.9 is amended by
revising paragraph (a) introductory text
and adding paragraph (e), to read as
follows:

■

§ 205.9 Receipts at electronic terminals;
periodic statements.

(a) Receipts at electronic terminals—
General. Except as provided in
paragraph (e) of this section, a financial
institution shall make a receipt available
to a consumer at the time the consumer
initiates an electronic fund transfer at an
electronic terminal. The receipt shall set
forth the following information, as
applicable:
*
*
*
*
*
(e) Exception for receipts in smallvalue transfers. A financial institution is
not subject to the requirement to make
available a receipt under paragraph (a)
of this section if the amount of the
transfer is $15 or less.
3. In Supplement I to part 205, under
section 205.11—Procedures for
Resolving Errors, under 11(a) Definition
of Error, paragraph 6 is added, to read
as follows:

■

Supplement I to Part 205—Official Staff
Interpretations

*

*

*

*

Section 205.11—Procedures for Resolving
Errors
11(a)

*

Definition of Error

*

*

*

*

6. Terminal receipts for transfers of
$15 or less. The fact that an institution
does not make a terminal receipt
available for a transfer of $15 or less in
accordance with § 205.9(e) is not an
error for purposes of §§ 205.11(a)(1)(vi)
or (vii).
*
*
*
*
*

■

By order of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, June 27, 2007.
Jennifer J. Johnson,
Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. E7–12810 Filed 7–3–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6210–01–P

For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, 12 CFR part 205 and the
Official Staff is amended as follows:

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VerDate Aug<31>2005

15:50 Jul 03, 2007

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DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Part 71
[Docket No. FAA–2007–27439; Airspace
Docket No. 07–AAL–04]

Authority: 15 U.S.C. 1693b.

*

36593

Revision of Class E Airspace; Red
Dog, AK
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), DOT.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:

SUMMARY: This action revises Class E
airspace at Red Dog, AK to provide
adequate controlled airspace to contain
aircraft executing Instrument Approach
Procedures. Two Area Navigation
(RNAV) Required Navigation
Performance (RNP) Special Instrument
Approach Procedures and an RNAV
RNP Special Departure Procedure (DP)
are being developed for the Red Dog
Airport. This action revises existing
Class E airspace upward from 1,200 feet
(ft.) above the surface at Red Dog
Airport, Red Dog, AK.
DATES: Effective Date: 0901 UTC, August
30, 2007. The Director of the Federal
Register approves this incorporation by
reference action under title 1, Code of
Federal Regulations, part 51, subject to
the annual revision of FAA Order
7400.9 and publication of conforming
amendments.

Gary
Rolf, AAL–538G, Federal Aviation
Administration, 222 West 7th Avenue,
Box 14, Anchorage, AK 99513–7587;
telephone number (907) 271–5898; fax:
(907) 271–2850; e-mail:
gary.ctr.rolf@faa.gov. Internet address:
http://www.alaska.faa.gov/at.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:

History
On Monday, April 9, 2007, the FAA
proposed to amend part 71 of the
Federal Aviation Regulations (14 CFR
part 71) to revise Class E airspace
upward from 1,200 ft. above the surface
at Red Dog, AK (72 FR 17445). The
action was proposed in order to create
Class E airspace sufficient in size to
contain aircraft while executing Special
Instrument Approach Procedures for the
Red Dog Airport. A recent rulemaking
action revealed that a small area of
additional controlled airspace is
required for these procedures.
Additionally, the coordinates listed for
the Red Dog Airport and the Selawik
VOR/DME have been updated to reflect
the most current location surveys. Class
E controlled airspace extending upward
from 1,200 ft. above the surface, in the

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