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28739

Proposed Rules

Federal Register
Vol. 73, No. 97
Monday, May 19, 2008

This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER
contains notices to the public of the proposed
issuance of rules and regulations. The
purpose of these notices is to give interested
persons an opportunity to participate in the
rule making prior to the adoption of the final
rules.

FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Part 230
[Regulation DD; Docket No. R–1315]

Truth in Savings
Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System.
ACTION: Proposed rule; request for
public comment.
AGENCY:

The Federal Reserve Board
(Board) proposes to amend Regulation
DD, which implements the Truth in
Savings Act, and the staff commentary
to the regulation, to provide additional
disclosures about account terms and
costs associated with overdrafts. The
proposed amendments would set forth
content and timing requirements for a
notice to consumers about any right to
opt out of an institution’s overdraft
service. Requirements for disclosing
overdraft fees on periodic statements
would be expanded to apply to all
institutions and not solely to
institutions that promote the payment of
overdrafts. The proposed amendments
also address balance disclosures
provided in response to balance
inquiries from consumers.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before July 18, 2008.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by Docket No. R–1315, by any
of the following methods:
• Agency Web Site: http://
www.federalreserve.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments at
http://www.federalreserve.gov/
generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm.
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: http://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• E-mail:
regs.comments@federalreserve.gov.
Include the docket number in the
subject line of the message.
• Fax: (202) 452–3819 or (202) 452–
3102.
• Mail: Jennifer J. Johnson, Secretary,
Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, 20th Street and

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SUMMARY:

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Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington,
DC 20551.
All public comments are available
from the Board’s Web site at http://
www.federalreserve.gov/generalinfo/
foia/ProposedRegs.cfm as submitted,
unless modified for technical reasons.
Accordingly, your comments will not be
edited to remove any identifying or
contact information. Public comments
may also be viewed electronically or in
paper form in Room MP–500 of the
Board’s Martin Building (20th and C
Streets, NW.) between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.
on weekdays.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Benjamin K. Olson, Attorney, or Vivian
W. Wong, Senior 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:
I. The Truth in Savings Act
The Truth in Savings Act (TISA), 12
U.S.C. 4301 et seq., is implemented by
the Board’s Regulation DD (12 CFR part
230). The purpose of the act and
regulation is to assist consumers in
comparing deposit accounts offered by
depository institutions, principally
through the disclosure of fees, the
annual percentage yield (APY), the
interest rate, and other account terms.
An official staff commentary interprets
the requirements of Regulation DD (12
CFR part 230 (Supp. I)). Credit unions
are governed by a substantially similar
regulation issued by the National Credit
Union Administration (NCUA).
Under TISA and Regulation DD,
account disclosures must be provided
upon a consumer’s request and before
an account is opened. Institutions are
not required to provide periodic
statements; but if they do, the act
requires that fees, yields, and other
information be provided on the
statements. Notice also must be
provided to accountholders before an
adverse change in account terms occurs
and prior to the renewal of certificates
of deposit (time accounts).
TISA and Regulation DD contain rules
for advertising deposit accounts. Under
TISA, there is a prohibition against
advertisements, announcements, or

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solicitations that are inaccurate or
misleading, or that misrepresent the
deposit contract. Institutions also are
prohibited from describing an account
as free (or using words of similar
meaning) if a regular service or
transaction fee is imposed, if a
minimum balance must be maintained,
or if a fee is imposed when a customer
exceeds a specified number of
transactions. In addition, the act and
regulation impose substantive
restrictions on institutions’ practices
regarding the payment of interest on
accounts and the calculation of account
balances.
II. Background on Overdraft Services
and Regulatory Action to Date
Historically, if a consumer engaged in
a transaction that overdrew his or her
account, the consumer’s depository
institution used its discretion on an ad
hoc basis to determine whether to pay
the overdraft, usually imposing a fee for
paying the overdraft. The Board
recognized this longstanding practice
when it initially adopted Regulation Z
in 1969 to implement the Truth in
Lending Act (TILA). The regulation
provided that these transactions are
generally not covered under Regulation
Z where there is no written agreement
between the consumer and institution to
pay an overdraft and impose a fee. See
12 CFR 226.4(c)(3). The treatment of
overdrafts in Regulation Z was designed
to facilitate depository institutions’
ability to accommodate consumers’
transactions on an ad hoc basis.
Over the years, most institutions have
largely automated the overdraft payment
process, including setting specific
criteria for determining whether to
honor overdrafts and limits on the
amount of the coverage provided. From
the industry’s perspective, the benefits
of overdraft, or bounced check, services
include a reduction in the costs of
manually reviewing individual items, as
well as the consistent treatment for all
customers with respect to overdraft
payment decisions. Moreover, industry
representatives assert that overdraft
services are valued by consumers,
particularly for check transactions, as
they allow consumers to avoid
additional fees that would be charged by
the payee if the item was returned
unpaid, and other adverse
consequences, such as the furnishing of

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negative information to a consumer
reporting agency.1
In contrast, consumer advocates
believe overdraft transactions are a highcost form of lending that traps low- and
moderate-income consumers
(particularly students and the elderly)
into paying high fees. Moreover,
consumer advocates note that
consumers are enrolled in overdraft
services automatically, often with no
chance to opt out. In addition, consumer
advocates believe that by honoring
check and other types of overdrafts,
institutions encourage consumers to rely
on this service and thereby consumers
incur greater costs in the long run than
they would if the transactions were not
honored. Consumer advocates also
express concerns about debit card
overdrafts where the dollar amount of
the fee may far exceed the dollar
amount of the overdraft, and multiple
fees may be assessed in a single day for
a series of small-dollar transactions.2
According to a recent report from the
Government Accountability Office
(GAO), the average cost of overdraft and
insufficient funds fees has increased
roughly 11 percent between 2000 and
2007 to just over $26 per item,
according to one estimate.3 The GAO
also reported that large institutions on
average charged between $4 and $5
more for overdraft and insufficient fund
fees compared to smaller institutions.4
In addition, the GAO Bank Fees Report
noted that a small number of
institutions (primarily large banks)
apply tiered fees to overdrafts, charging
higher fees as the number of overdrafts
in the account increases.5
1 See, e.g., Overdraft Protection: Fair Practices for
Consumers: Hearing before the House Subcomm. on
Financial Institutions and Consumer Credit, House
Comm. on Financial Services, 110th Cong. (2007)
Overdraft Protection Hearing), (available at http://
www.house.gov/apps/list/hearing/
financialsvcs_dem/hr0705072.shtml).
2 See, e.g., Overdraft Protection Hearing n.1;
Jacqueline Duby, Eric Halperin & Lisa James, High
Cost and Hidden From View: The $10 Billion
Overdraft Loan Market, Ctr. Responsible Lending
(May 26, 2005) (noting that the bulk of overdraft
fees are incurred by repeat users) (available at
http://www.responsiblelending.org/pdfs/ip009High_Cost_Overdraft-0505.pdf).
3 See Bank Fees: Federal Banking Regulators
Could Better Insure That Consumers Have Required
Disclosure Documents Prior to Opening Checking or
Savings Accounts, GAO Report 08–281 (January
2008) (hereinafter, GAO Bank Fees Report). See also
Bankrate 2007 Checking Account Study, posted
September 26, 2007 (available at: http://
www.bankrate.com/brm/news/chk/chkstudy/
20070924_bounced_check_fee_al.asp?caret=2e)
(reporting an average overdraft fee of over $28.00
per item).
4 See GAO Bank Fees Report at 16.
5 According to the GAO, of the financial
institutions that applied up to 3 tiers of fees in
2006, the average overdraft fees were $26.74, $32.53
and $34.74, respectively. See GAO Bank Fees
Report at 14.

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Overdraft services vary among
institutions but typically share certain
characteristics. Coverage is ‘‘automatic’’
for consumers who meet the
institution’s criteria (e.g., the account
has been open a certain number of days,
the account is in ‘‘good standing’’,
deposits are made regularly). While
institutions generally do not underwrite
on an individual account basis in
determining whether to enroll the
consumer in the service initially, most
institutions will review individual
accounts periodically to determine
whether the consumer continues to
qualify for the service, and the amounts
that may be covered.
Most overdraft program disclosures
state that payment of an overdraft is
discretionary on the part of the
institution, and disclaim any legal
obligation of the institution to pay any
overdraft. Typically, the service is
extended to also cover non-check
transactions, including withdrawals at
automated teller machines (ATMs),
automated clearinghouse (ACH)
transactions, debit card transactions at
point-of-sale, pre-authorized automatic
debits from a consumer’s account,
telephone-initiated funds transfers, and
on-line banking transactions. A flat fee
is charged each time an overdraft is
paid, and commonly, institutions charge
the same amount for paying the
overdraft as they would if they returned
the item unpaid. A daily fee also may
apply for each day the account remains
overdrawn.
Where institutions vary most in their
provision of overdraft services is the
extent to which institutions inform
consumers about the existence of the
service or otherwise promote the use of
the service. For those institutions that
choose to promote the existence and
availability of the service, they may also
disclose to consumers, typically in a
brochure or welcome letter, the
aggregate dollar limit of overdrafts that
may be paid under the service.
As the availability and customer use
of these overdraft services has
increased, the federal banking agencies
(Board, Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation (FDIC), NCUA, Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) and
Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS)) have
become concerned about aspects of the
marketing, disclosure, and
implementation of some of these
services. In response to some of these
concerns, the agencies published
guidance on overdraft protection
programs in February 2005.6 The Joint
6 See Interagency Guidance on Overdraft
Protection Programs (Joint Guidance), 70 FR 9127
(Feb. 24, 2005) and OTS Guidance on Overdraft

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Guidance addresses three primary
areas—safety and soundness
considerations, legal risks, and best
practices, while the OTS Guidance
focuses on safety and soundness
considerations and best practices. The
best practices focus on the marketing
and communications that accompany
the offering of overdraft services, as well
as the disclosure and operation of
program features, including the
provision of a consumer election or optout of the overdraft service. The
agencies have also published a
consumer brochure on overdraft
services.7
In May 2005, the Board separately
issued revisions to Regulation DD and
the staff commentary pursuant to its
authority under the Truth in Savings
Act (TISA) to address concerns about
the uniformity and adequacy of
institutions’ disclosure of overdraft fees
generally, and to address concerns about
advertised overdraft services in
particular. 70 FR 29582 (May 24, 2005).8
The goal of the final rule was to improve
the uniformity and adequacy of
disclosures provided to consumers
about overdraft and returned-item fees
to assist consumers in better
understanding the costs associated with
the payment of overdrafts. In addition,
the final rule addressed some of the
Board’s concerns about institutions’
marketing practices with respect to
overdraft services.
Under the May 2005 final rule, which
became effective July 1, 2006, all
depository institutions are required to
specify in their account disclosures the
categories of transactions for which an
overdraft fee may be imposed, and to
include in their advertisements about
overdraft services, certain information
about the costs associated with the
service and the circumstances under
which the institution would not pay an
overdraft. The Board’s final rule also
requires institutions that promote the
payment of overdrafts in an
advertisement to disclose separately on
their periodic statements the total
amount of fees or charges imposed on
the account for paying overdrafts and
the total amount of fees charged for
returning items unpaid. These
disclosures must be provided for the
statement period and for the calendar
Protection Programs (OTS Guidance), 70 FR 8428
(Feb. 18, 2005).
7 The brochure entitled ‘‘Protecting Yourself from
Overdraft and Bounced-Check Fees,’’ can be found
at: http://www.federalreserve.gov/pubs/bounce/
default.htm.
8 A substantively similar rule applying to credit
unions was issued separately by the NCUA. 71 FR
24568 (Apr. 26, 2006). The NCUA previously issued
an interim final rule in 2005. 70 FR 72895 (Dec. 8,
2005).

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year to date. The final rule for the
aggregate fee disclosures was narrower
than the proposal, which would have
applied the periodic statement
requirements to all institutions,
regardless of whether they market the
payment of overdrafts.
Notwithstanding the issuance of the
February 2005 Joint Guidance and the
Board’s May 2005 final rule under
Regulation DD, the Board remains
concerned that consumers may not
adequately understand the costs of
overdraft services nor how overdraft
services operate generally. The Board is
thus proposing additional disclosure
requirements pursuant to its authority
under Sections 263, 264, 268 and 269(a)
of TISA to facilitate consumers’ ability
to make informed judgments about the
use of their accounts. 12 U.S.C. 4302(e),
4303(b) & (d), 4307, 4308(a). The
proposed requirements address
disclosures to consumers about the costs
associated with overdraft services on
periodic statements and disclosures to
consumers about account balances in
response to consumer inquiries.
In addition, as discussed elsewhere in
this Federal Register, the Board, along
with the OTS and the NCUA, are
proposing to adopt substantive
protections using their authority under
the Federal Trade Commission Act (FTC
Act) to address certain unfair or abusive
protections associated with overdraft
services.9 The Board’s proposal would
add a new Subpart D on overdraft
services to the Board’s Regulation AA,
Unfair or Deceptive Acts or Practices
(2008 Regulation AA Proposal) (12 CFR
part 227). Among other things, the
proposal would require institutions to
provide consumers the ability to opt out
of their institutions’ payment of
overdrafts. The Board is proposing to
amend Regulation DD to ensure that
consumers receive effective disclosures
about their right to opt out of overdraft
services, by setting forth certain content,
format and timing requirements for the
notice.10
During this rulemaking process, Board
staff has held discussions with
representatives from banks, core
systems providers, consumer groups,
vendors of overdraft services, payment
card associations, and industry trade
associations. Board staff has also
reviewed current account disclosures,
9 For simplicity, this notice will refer only to the
Board’s proposal.
10 While NCUA is not proposing amendments to
its 12 CFR part 707 in today’s Federal Register,
TISA requires NCUA to promulgate regulations
substantially similar to Regulation DD. Accordingly,
NCUA will issue amendments to part 707 following
the Board’s adoption of final rules under Regulation
DD.

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and solicited input from members of the
Board’s Consumer Advisory Council
regarding overdraft services.
III. Summary of Proposal
Disclosure of Consumer Opt-Out of
Overdraft Services
The Board is proposing amendments
under Regulation DD to set forth content
and format requirements for the notices
that would be given to consumers
informing them about their right to
decline, or opt out of, their institution’s
overdraft service. The substantive optout requirement is proposed separately
in today’s Federal Register under the
Board’s authority under the FTC Act.
Under the proposal, the notice must be
provided to the consumer before the
institution assesses any fees in
connection with paying an overdraft,
and subsequently during or for each
statement period in which a fee is
imposed (for example, on a notice sent
promptly after an overdraft informing
the consumer of that fact, or on each
periodic statement reflecting an
overdraft fee or charge). The notice
following assessment of an overdraft fee
would help to ensure that consumers
are apprised of their opt-out rights at a
time when the information may be most
relevant, that is, after the consumer has
overdrawn his or her account and
received information about the costs of
using the service. The content of the
notice is discussed in more detail in the
Section-by-Section Analysis below. The
Board intends to conduct consumer
testing on the proposed notice following
the issuance of this proposal and review
of comments received.
Disclosure of the Aggregate Costs of
Overdraft Services on Periodic
Statements
As discussed above, the Board’s May
2005 final rule under Regulation DD
requires, among other things,
institutions that promote the payment of
overdrafts to provide consumers
information about the aggregate costs of
the overdraft service for the statement
period and the calendar year to date.
The Board is proposing to expand this
provision to require all institutions,
regardless of whether they promote the
payment of overdrafts, to disclose
aggregate cost information. The
amendment is intended to provide all
consumers that use overdraft services
with additional information about fees
to help them better understand the costs
associated with their accounts. Under
the current rule, institutions that do not
promote their overdraft service may be
reluctant to provide information about
their service, including other

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alternatives to overdraft services, out of
concern that such disclosures might
trigger the aggregate fee disclosure
requirements. Thus, the proposal would
promote greater transparency about the
costs and terms of overdraft services for
all institutions. The proposed rule
would also add format requirements to
help make the aggregate fee disclosures
are more effective and noticeable to
consumers.
Balance Inquiries
To ensure that consumers are not
confused or misled about the amount of
funds in their account when they
request their balance, the Board
proposes to require that institutions
generally disclose only the amount of
funds available for the consumer’s
immediate use or withdrawal, without
incurring an overdraft. This rule would
apply to balance inquiries made through
any automated system, including, but
not limited to, an ATM, Internet web
site, and telephone response system.
Institutions would be permitted to
provide a second balance that includes
any additional funds that an institution
may advance to cover an overdraft if
this fact is also prominently disclosed to
the consumer, along with that balance
information.
IV. Section-by-Section Analysis
Section 230.10 Opt-Out Disclosure
Requirements for Overdraft Services
The February 2005 Joint Guidance
recommended as a best practice that
where overdraft protection is provided
automatically, institutions should offer
consumers the option of ‘‘opting out’’ of
the overdraft service with a clear
consumer disclosure of this option. See
70 FR at 9132. As discussed separately
in this Federal Register, the Board is
proposing to exercise its authority under
the FTC Act to require institutions to
provide consumers with a right to opt
out of an institution’s overdraft service
before assessing a fee or charge for the
service. Proposed § 230.10 sets forth
content and timing requirements for the
notice to ensure that the opt-out right is
disclosed effectively to consumers. The
Board anticipates that any final actions
taken under the FTC Act and TISA will
be issued simultaneously after the Board
has reviewed comments received on the
proposals.
To facilitate compliance, Sample
Form B–10 provides a model form
institutions may use to satisfy their
disclosure obligations under the
proposed rule. Following issuance of
the proposal, the Board intends to
conduct consumer testing to determine

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how well consumers understand and
can use the proposed opt-out notice.

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10(a) General Rule
Proposed § 230.10(a) states the general
rule that if a depository institution
provides a consumer the right to opt out
of the institution’s payment of
overdrafts pursuant to the institution’s
payment of overdrafts on the
consumer’s account pursuant to the
institution’s overdraft service, the
institution must provide notice of that
right in writing. As noted above, the
Board is separately proposing, pursuant
to its authority under the FTC Act, to
require institutions to provide
consumers with a right to opt out of the
institution’s overdraft service before
assessing a fee or charge for the service.
Section 230.10 generally sets forth
requirements regarding the content and
timing requirements for providing this
opt-out. See proposed comment 10–1.
10(b) Format and Content
Under proposed § 230.10(b),
institutions are required to include in
their opt-out notice specified
information about the institution’s
overdraft service. The new disclosures
are proposed pursuant to the Board’s
authority under TISA Sections 264, 268,
and 269. 12 U.S.C. 4303(b) & (d), 4308.
Consistent with TISA’s purpose, the
proposal would require institutions to
provide disclosures about the terms of
deposit accounts to assist consumers in
comparing accounts. Specifically, the
proposed disclosures relate to the fees
that are assessed against consumer
accounts for the payment of overdrafts,
the conditions under which the fees are
imposed, how consumers can avoid
such fees by opting out, and the
availability of potentially less costly
alternatives.
Under proposed § 230.10(b)(1), the
notice must state the categories of
transactions for which an overdraft fee
may be imposed. For example, if the
institution pays overdrafts created by
check, ATM withdrawals and point-ofsale debit card transactions, it must
indicate this fact. See comment 4(b)(4)–
5.
Under the proposal, the notice must
also include information about the costs
of the institution’s overdraft service. See
proposed § 230.10(b)(2). In addition to
stating the dollar amount of any fees or
charges imposed on the account for
paying overdraft items, including daily
fees, institutions would also be required
to inform consumers in the notice that
overdraft fees could be charged in
connection with an overdraft as low as
$1, or the lowest dollar amount for
which the institution could charge a fee.

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This latter disclosure is intended to
make consumers aware, in some cases,
that the per item overdraft fee may far
exceed the amount of the overdraft. See
proposed § 230.10(b)(3).
In the February 2005 Joint Guidance,
the federal banking agencies
recommended that institutions consider
imposing a cap on consumers’ potential
daily costs from the overdraft program,
such as a limit on the number of
overdraft transactions subject to a fee
per day, or a dollar limit on the total
fees that will be imposed per day. See
70 FR at 9132. The Board is proposing
to require additional disclosures about
the maximum costs that could be
incurred in connection with an
institution’s overdraft service. Under the
proposal, institutions must disclose any
daily dollar limits on the amount of
overdraft fees or charges that may be
assessed in addition to any limits for the
statement period. If the institution does
not limit the amount of fees that can be
imposed either for a single day or for a
statement period, it must disclose that
fact. See proposed § 230.10(b)(4). The
Board intends that both this disclosure
about fee limits as well as the notice
that overdraft fees in some cases will
exceed the amount of the overdraft
would alert consumers to the potentially
high costs of overdraft services, so that
they may more effectively determine
whether the service’s terms and features
are suited to their needs, or whether
other alternatives would be more
appropriate.
Proposed § 230.10(b)(5) requires
institutions to inform a consumer of the
right to opt out of the institution’s
payment of overdrafts, including the
method(s) that the consumer may use to
exercise the opt-out right.11 Such
methods may include providing a tollfree telephone number that the
consumer may call to opt out or
allowing the consumer to mail in the
opt-out request. See proposed comment
10(b)–2. Comment is requested as to
whether institutions should be required
to provide a form with a check-off box
that consumers may mail in to opt out.
Comment is also requested regarding
whether consumers should also be
allowed to opt out electronically,
provided that the consumer has agreed
to the electronic delivery of information.
11 Under the Board’s Regulation AA proposal in
today’s Federal Register, an institution would be
required to allow consumers to opt out of the
institution’s overdraft service for all transaction
types. In addition, the proposal would require the
institution to allow consumers to opt out of the
payment of overdrafts resulting only from ATM
withdrawals and point-of-sale debit card
transactions.

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Proposed § 230.10(b)(6) incorporates
the February 2005 Joint Guidance
recommendation that when describing
an overdraft protection program,
institutions should inform consumers
generally of other overdraft services and
credit products, if any, that are
available. These alternatives may
include transfers from other accounts
held at the institution, overdraft lines of
credit, or transfers from a credit card
issued by the institution. In some cases,
these alternatives may be less costly
than the overdraft service offered by the
institution. Under the proposed rule,
institutions must state whether it offers
any alternatives for the payment of
overdrafts. If one of the alternatives that
the institution offers is an overdraft line
of credit, it must state this fact.
Institutions may also, but are not
required to, list any additional
alternatives they may offer to overdraft
services.
In some cases, institutions may wish
to explain to consumers the
consequences of opting out of overdraft
services. For example, the institution
may explain that if a consumer opts out
and writes a check that overdraws an
account, the institution may still charge
a fee if the check is returned, and that
the merchant may also assess a fee.
Proposed comment 10(b)–3 permits
institutions to briefly describe the
consequences of opting out. Of course,
institutions should not represent that
the payment of overdrafts is guaranteed
or assured if they are not. See comment
8(a)–10.ii.
Comment is requested regarding
whether the proposed content
requirements provide sufficient
information for consumers to evaluate
effectively whether an institution’s
overdraft service meets their needs. In
addition, the Board’s proposal would
require that all opt-out notices contain
the same content, regardless of when the
notice is provided. As further discussed
below, the Board is requesting comment
whether the content requirements
should differ when the opt-out notice is
provided after an overdraft fee has been
charged to the consumer’s account.
Proposed § 230.10(b) also requires
institutions to provide the opt-out
notice in a format substantially similar
to Sample Form B–10 to ensure that the
opt-out content is segregated from other
disclosures provided by the institution
and noticeable by the consumer. The
Board recognizes, however, that
institutions may need flexibility in
formatting disclosures, depending on
where and when the disclosure is
provided. For example, if the opt-out
notice is included in disclosures
provided at account opening,

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segregating the required content from
other disclosures may overemphasize
the importance of the disclosure to the
consumer in comparison to other
information about the account that the
consumer is given at that time. In
contrast, consumers may benefit from a
more conspicuous opt-out notice when
the notice is provided on the periodic
statement once the consumer has
incurred fees. As noted above, the Board
expects to conduct consumer testing of
the proposed sample form following
issuance of this proposal, which may
include exploring how the opt-out
notice may be presented in a manner
that complies with the regulation’s
general clear and conspicuous
requirements under § 230.3, including
formatting methods.
10(c) Timing
Proposed § 230.10(c) sets forth timing
requirements for providing an opt-out
notice. The opt-out notice must initially
be provided before the overdraft service
is provided and overdraft fees are
imposed on the consumer’s account. For
example, notice may be given at the
time of account opening, either as part
of the deposit account agreement or in
a stand-alone document. Some
institutions, however, do not enroll
consumers in their overdraft service
until some time after account opening,
after the consumer has maintained his
or her account in good standing for a
certain period of time. Thus, institutions
may provide the opt-out notice closer to
the time in which overdraft services
would be added to the consumer’s
account. The proposed rule would allow
this later notice so long as it is provided,
and the consumer has a reasonable
opportunity to exercise the opt-out
right, before the institution imposes any
fees in connection with paying an
overdraft.
The Board believes that providing an
opt-out notice only at account opening
may have limited effectiveness. For
example, consumers may not focus on
the significance of the information at
account opening because they may
assume they will not overdraw the
account.12 Thus, under both the Board’s

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12 This

behavior is referred to as ‘‘hyperbolic
discounting.’’ See Angela Littwin, Beyond Usury: A
Study of Credit-Card Use and Preference Among
Low-Income Consumers, 80 Tex. L. Rev. 451, 467–
478 (2008) (discussing consumers’ tendency to
underestimate their future credit card usage when
they apply for a card and thereby failing to
adequately anticipate the costs of the product, and
citing Shane Frederick, George Loewenstein & Ted
O’Donoghue, Time Discounting and Time
Preference: A Critical Review, 40 J. Econ. Literature
351, 366–67 (2002); Ted O’Donoghue & Matthew
Rabin, Doing It Now or Later, 89 Am. Econ. Rev.
103, 103, 111 (1999) (explaining people’s preference

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2008 Regulation AA proposal and this
proposed rule, institutions must also
provide consumers notice of the right to
opt-out of their institution’s payment of
overdrafts at a time when the consumer
is more likely to be focused on the cost
impact of the service, specifically after
the consumer has overdrawn the
account and fees have been assessed on
the account. Proposed § 230.10(c)(2)(i)
generally requires institutions to
provide a notice meeting the content
requirements of § 230.10(b) on each
periodic statement reflecting the
assessment of any overdraft fee or
charge. In addition, pursuant to
authority under section 269 of TISA, the
proposed rule requires that if the notice
is included on the periodic statement, it
must be provided in close proximity to
the aggregate fee disclosures required
under § 230.11(a) to ensure that these
related disclosures are presented
together.
Alternatively, many institutions
notify consumers promptly after paying
an overdraft of the fact of the overdraft
and the amount the consumer’s account
is overdrawn. While this separate notice
is not required by Regulation DD (it is
considered a best practice under the
February 2005 Joint Guidance),
institutions providing an opt-out notice
at this time would also be deemed to
comply with the timing requirements of
this proposed rule. See proposed
§ 230.10(c)(2)(ii). Institutions that elect
to provide the opt-out disclosure on a
separate notice sent following the
institution’s payment of an overdraft
need only provide the opt-out notice
once per statement period. For example,
assume a statement cycle is for a
calendar month. If a consumer
overdraws on the account at the
beginning of the month and receives an
opt-out notice shortly after the overdraft
is paid, the institution is not required to
provide another opt-out notice for any
additional overdrafts that occur during
that statement period.
As noted above, the Board’s proposal
would require that institutions provide
the same content in proposed
§ 230.10(b) for all opt-out notices to
ensure uniform notices and because
consumers may not see the initial optout notice. However, the Board is
cognizant of the compliance burden
imposed on institutions from the
proposed content requirements. In
addition, the Board recognizes that
consumers may not require all of the
information in proposed § 230.10(b) in
for delaying unpleasant activities and accepting
immediate rewards despite their knowledge that the
delay may lessen potential future rewards or
increase potential adverse consequences)).

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the notices following an individual
overdraft. For example, the consumer
may not need to be reminded that he or
she may incur an overdraft fee for a
small dollar overdraft if the periodic
statement reflects both the fee and the
amount of the transaction that caused
the consumer to overdraw the account.
Similarly, the amount of the fee may not
need to be included in the opt-out
notice if the transaction history on the
statement reflects fees charged to the
account, including for paying an
overdraft.
Comment is requested on the content
requirements of the opt-out notice, and
the burden to institutions and benefits
to consumers of providing all of the
proposed content in each notice,
including the information about
alternatives to overdraft services.
Comment is also requested regarding
whether consumers should receive the
same content for all opt-out notices,
regardless of when a notice is provided,
or whether the rule should permit
institutions to exclude some of the
required content in subsequent notices.
For example, if the information about
alternatives to overdraft services is
retained generally, should this
information be excluded from periodic
statements. In addition, comment is
requested on the burden to institutions
of requiring that the opt-out disclosures
appear in close proximity to the fees.
The Board also intends to explore these
issues through its consumer testing of
the opt-out notice following the
issuance of this proposal.
The Board anticipates that the
requirement to provide notice before
overdraft fees are assessed would apply
only to accounts opened after the
effective date of the final rule. Thus,
depository institutions would not be
required to provide initial opt-out
notices to existing customers.
Nonetheless, the requirement to provide
subsequent notice of the opt-out after
the consumer has overdrawn the
account and fees have been assessed on
the account would apply to all accounts
after the effective date of the final rule,
including those existing as of the
effective date of the rule.
Section 230.11 Additional Disclosure
Requirements Regarding Overdraft
Services
11(a) Disclosure of Total Fees on
Periodic Statements
Applicability of Aggregate Fee
Disclosures
Although periodic statements are not
required under TISA, institutions that
do provide such statements are required
to disclose fees or charges imposed on

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the account during the statement period.
See 12 U.S.C. 4307(3) and 12 CFR
230.6(a)(3). Section 230.11(a) further
requires institutions that promote the
payment of overdrafts in an
advertisement to provide aggregate
dollar amount totals for overdraft fees
and for returned item fees, both for the
statement period as well as for the
calendar year to date. Under the
proposed rule, § 230.11(a) is amended to
require all institutions to provide these
fee disclosures, whether or not they
promote the payment of overdrafts.
As originally proposed in May 2004,
all institutions would have been
required to separately disclose the total
dollar amount of overdraft fees and the
total dollar amount of returned-item fees
for the statement period and for the
calendar year to date. Most industry
commenters opposed the proposal,
stating that it would be costly and
provide little benefit to consumers. The
majority of industry commenters stated
that if the Board adopted such a
requirement, it should apply to all
institutions and not just institutions that
market overdraft services. Some of these
commenters stated that a rule based on
‘‘marketing’’ would be too vague, while
others asserted that if the Board
believed the cost disclosures are useful,
they would be just as beneficial to
consumers regardless of whether the
overdraft service is marketed. See 70 FR
at 29,588.
In limiting the aggregate fee
disclosures to institutions that market
overdraft services in the May 2005 final
rule, the Board stated its intention to
avoid imposing compliance burdens on
institutions that pay overdrafts
infrequently, such as institutions that
only pay overdrafts on an ad hoc basis.
See 70 FR at 29,589. To address
industry concerns that a rule based on
marketing would be too vague to
administer, the final rule also specified
certain types of communications and
practices that would not trigger the
requirement for disclosing aggregate fees
on periodic statements, including
responding to consumer-initiated
inquiries about deposit accounts or
overdrafts or making disclosures that are
required by federal or other applicable
law. See § 230.10(a)(2).
Since issuance of the May 2005 final
rule, Board staff and staff of other
federal banking agencies have received
a number of questions and requests for
more guidance about when an
institution is deemed to be promoting
the payment of overdrafts in an
advertisement to trigger the aggregate
fee disclosure requirements.
Compliance issues have most often been
raised by financial institutions that are

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concerned that implementing the best
practices recommended by the February
2005 Joint Guidance may lead to a
determination that they are promoting
their overdraft service. For example,
Board staff has received a number of
inquiries about how institutions may
provide notices informing consumers
about their ability to opt out of an
institution’s overdraft service without
being considered to be promoting the
service. Similarly, an institution may
want to inform consumers of less costly
alternatives to the institution’s overdraft
service as recommended by the
February 2005 Joint Guidance, but
refrain from doing so because they may
inadvertently trigger the aggregate fee
disclosure requirements under
§ 230.11(a). Based on further analysis,
the Board is concerned that limiting the
scope of the rule to institutions that
market the service may have led to the
unintended consequence of
discouraging transparency by depository
institutions regarding their overdraft
payment practices.
In addition, although the rule’s
application only to institutions that
market overdraft services was intended
to avoid imposing compliance burdens
on institutions that pay overdrafts
infrequently, the Board is concerned
that the vast majority of institutions may
no longer pay overdrafts on an entirely
‘‘ad hoc’’ basis, but rather automate
most of their overdraft payment
decision process, leading to more
frequent payment of overdrafts.
Available data reviewed by Board staff
indicates that the percentage of
accountholders with one or more
overdrafts paid during a calendar year
appears to be consistent across
institutions, whether or not an
institution promotes its overdraft
service. Thus, a significant number of
consumers who use overdraft services
on a regular basis do not receive the
benefit of the aggregate fee disclosures
which might otherwise help them in
evaluating their approach to account
management and determine whether
other types of accounts or services
would be more appropriate for their
needs. Moreover, the Board notes that
the ability of consumers to compare
effectively the terms of accounts is
potentially undercut by a rule that
distinguishes between institutions that
promote overdraft services and those
that do not.
In light of the concerns noted above,
the Board is proposing to require all
institutions to provide aggregate dollar
amount totals of fees for paying
overdrafts and for fees for returning
items unpaid on periodic statements
provided to consumers, pursuant to its

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authority under Sections 268 and 269 of
TISA. See § 230.11(a)(1). As under the
current rule, institutions must provide
these totals for both the statement
period and the calendar year to date.
See § 230.11(a)(2). Comment is
requested on the potential benefits to
consumers and compliance burden for
institutions for the proposed approach.
Format of Aggregate Fee Disclosures
Board staff’s review of current
periodic statement disclosures for
institutions that promote overdraft
services indicates the aggregate fee
totals are often disclosed in a manner
that may not be effective in informing
consumers of the totals. Accordingly,
pursuant to its authority under Section
269 of TISA, the Board is proposing to
require that these disclosures be
provided in close proximity to fees
identified under § 230.6(a)(3). See
proposed § 230.11(a)(3). For example,
the aggregate fee totals could appear
immediately after the transaction
history on the periodic statement
reflecting the fees that have been
imposed on the account during the
statement period. The proposed format
requirement has been informed to a
significant degree by the Board’s
consumer testing in the context of credit
card disclosures. In that testing,
consumers consistently reviewed
transactions identified on their periodic
statements and noticed totals for fees
and interest charges when they were
grouped together with transactions. See
72 FR at 32996. Similarly, the Board
believes that the requirement to provide
the aggregate cost disclosures for
overdraft and returned item fees will be
more noticeable to consumers when
grouped together with the itemized fees,
thus enabling them to act as appropriate
to manage their accounts effectively. In
addition, the proposed rule requires the
information to be presented in a tabular
format similar to the proposed interest
charge and fees total disclosures under
the Board’s June 2007 proposal under
Regulation Z. See 72 FR at 32996,
33052; proposed 12 CFR 226.7(b)(6).
The proposal includes two alternatives
for Sample Form B–11 to illustrate how
institutions may provide the aggregate
cost information on their periodic
statements. Following issuance of this
proposal, the Board intends to conduct
additional consumer testing to test the
format, placement, and content of this
periodic statement disclosure.
The proposal contains additional
revisions to the provisions in § 230.11(a)
and accompanying staff commentary to
reflect the revised scope of institutions
subject to the disclosure requirement,
including deletion as unnecessary of the

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examples in § 230.11(a)(2) of
communications that would not trigger
the aggregate fee disclosure
requirement.

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11(b) Advertising Disclosures for
Overdraft Services
Section 230.11(b) contains a list of
communications about the payment of
overdrafts that are not subject to
additional advertising disclosures. The
Board proposes to add a new example
under § 230.11(b) to include the
proposed opt-out notice under § 230.10
of this rule. See proposed
§ 230.11(b)(2)(xii).
11(c) Disclosure of Account Balances
Section 230.11(b)(1) currently
requires institutions that promote the
payment of overdrafts to include certain
disclosures in their advertisements
about the service to avoid confusion
between overdraft services and
traditional lines of credit. The May 2005
final rule provided additional guidance
in the staff commentary in the form of
examples of institutions promoting the
payment of overdrafts and stated that an
institution must include the additional
advertising disclosures if it ‘‘discloses
an overdraft limit or includes the dollar
amount of an overdraft limit in a
balance disclosed on an automated
system, such as a telephone response
machine, ATM screen or the
institution’s Internet site.’’ See comment
11(b)–1.iii; see also § 230.11(b)(1); 70 FR
at 29,590. To facilitate responsible use
of overdraft services and ensure that
consumers receive accurate information
about their account balances, the Board
is proposing additional restrictions on
account balances that may be disclosed
in response to a consumer inquiry.
Specifically, to avoid consumer
confusion with respect to account
balances disclosed in response to an
inquiry, proposed § 230.11(c) would
prohibit institutions from including in
the consumer’s disclosed balance any
funds the institution may provide to
cover an overdraft item. The proposed
provision would apply to any
automated system used by an institution
to provide balance information. The
proposed rule would not apply to inperson discussions or telephone
discussions or Internet chats with live
personnel due to concerns about the
compliance burden associated with
monitoring individual conversations
and responses. Of course, such
discussions may not be deceptive.
The proposed provision implements
the prohibition in TISA § 263(e) (12
U.S.C. 4303(e)) on misleading or
inaccurate advertisements,
announcement, or solicitations relating

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to a deposit account. Thus, under
proposed § 230.11(c), institutions must
disclose an account balance that solely
includes funds that are available for the
consumer’s immediate use or
withdrawal, and may not include any
additional amount that the institution
may provide to cover an overdraft. For
example, as part of its overdraft service,
an institution may add a $500 cushion
or overdraft limit to the consumer’s
account balance when determining
whether to pay an overdrawn item; the
additional $500 could not be included
in this balance disclosed to the
consumer in response to an inquiry. The
proposed provision incorporates a best
practice recommended by the February
2005 Joint Guidance. Similarly, as
provided in the February 2005 Joint
Guidance, institutions may, at their
option, disclose a second balance that
includes funds that may be advanced
through the institution’s overdraft
service, provided that the institution
prominently discloses at the same time
that the second balance includes funds
provided by the institution to cover
overdrafts.
Proposed comment 11(c)–1 clarifies
that for purposes of this provision, the
institution may, but need not, include
funds that are deposited in the
consumer’s account, such as from a
check, but that are not yet made
available for withdrawal in accordance
with the funds availability rules under
the Board’s Regulation CC (12 CFR part
229). Similarly, the balance may, but
need not, include any funds that are
held by the bank to satisfy a prior
obligation of the consumer (for example,
to cover a hold for an ATM or debit card
transaction that has been authorized but
for which the bank has not settled). The
proposed comment recognizes that the
methods used by depository institutions
for determining the balances that are
available for the consumer’s use or
withdrawal may vary significantly by
institution. For example, smaller
institutions may only consider a balance
that reflects the ledger balance for the
consumer’s account at the end of the
previous day after the institution has
completed its processing activities.
Other institutions may update the
balance on a near-or real-time basis to
reflect recent transactions that have
been authorized, but have not been
presented for settlement. The proposed
comment is intended to make clear that
institutions are not expected to
reconfigure their internal systems to
provide ‘‘real-time’’ balance disclosures.
Regardless of the transactions that are
reflected in the account balance
disclosed to consumers, the proposed

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rule is intended only to require that the
balance must not include any additional
amounts that the institution may
provide to pay an overdraft.
Proposed comment 11(c)–2 provides
that the balance disclosure requirement
applies to any automated system
through which the consumer requests a
balance, including, but not limited to, a
telephone response machine (such as an
interactive voice response system), at an
ATM (both on the ATM screen and on
receipts), or on an institution’s Internet
site (other than live chats with an
account representative). The proposed
comment further clarifies that the
reference to ATM inquiries applies
equally to inquiries at ATMs owned or
operated by a consumer’s accountholding institution, as well as to
inquiries at foreign ATMs, including
those operated by non-depository
institutions.
While the Board considered
addressing concerns about potentially
deceptive balances under its separate
rulemaking authority under Section 5(a)
of the FTC Act (15 U.S.C. 45(n)), the
Board is proposing to address this issue
under its TISA authority because such
rules (if similarly adopted under the
NCUA’s separate authority under TISA,
see 12 CFR part 707) would also extend
to state-chartered credit unions.13
Nevertheless, the Board believes that
adoption of this rule under TISA would
not preclude a separate determination
by a federal banking agency that it is a
deceptive practice under the FTC Act to
disclose a single balance that includes
funds that an institution may provide to
cover an overdraft, if the institution
does not state that fact.
V. Initial 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 impact a rule is
expected to have on small entities.
However, under section 605(b) of the
RFA, 5 U.S.C. 605(b), the regulatory
flexibility analysis otherwise required
under section 604 of the RFA is not
required if an agency certifies, along
with a statement providing the factual
basis for such certification, that the rule
will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. Based on its analysis and for
the reasons stated below, the Board
believes that this proposed rule will not
13 The Board notes that rules promulgated by the
NCUA under the FTC Act do not apply to statechartered credit unions. As noted above, following
the Board’s adoption of final rules under Regulation
DD, NCUA intends to issue substantially similar
amendments to 12 CFR part 707.

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have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities. A
final regulatory flexibility analysis will
be conducted after consideration of
comments received during the public
comment period.
1. Statement of the need for, and
objectives of, the proposed rule. TISA
was enacted, in part, for the purpose of
requiring clear and uniform disclosures
regarding deposit account terms and
fees assessable against these accounts.
Such disclosures allow consumers to
make meaningful comparisons between
different accounts and also allow
consumers to make informed judgments
about the use of their accounts. 12
U.S.C. 4301. TISA requires the Board to
prescribe regulations to carry out the
purpose and provisions of the statute.
12 U.S.C. 4308(a)(1).
The Board is revising Regulation DD
to set forth content, timing and format
requirements for a notice provided to
consumers about their right to opt out
of an institution’s overdraft service. The
proposed requirements are intended to
ensure that consumers receive effective
disclosures about the opt-out right. In
addition, current requirements for
disclosing totals for overdraft and
returned item fees on periodic
statements would be expanded to apply
to all institutions and not solely to
institutions that promote the payment of
overdrafts. Thus, all consumers that use
overdraft services will receive
additional information about fees to
help them better understand the costs
associated with their accounts,
regardless of whether the service is
marketed to them. Lastly, the proposed
rule would ensure that consumers are
not misled about the funds they have
available for a transaction by requiring
institutions that provide balance
information through an automated
system in response to a consumer
inquiry, to only include funds available
for the consumer’s immediate use or
withdrawal pursuant to the terms of the
account agreement, and not any funds
that may be advanced through the
institution’s overdraft service.
2. Small entities affected by the
proposed rule. Approximately 12,117
depository institutions in the United
States that must comply with TISA have
assets of $150 million or less and thus
are considered small entities for
purposes of the RFA, based on 2007 call
report data. Approximately 4,774 are
institutions that must comply with the
Board’s Regulation DD; approximately
7,343 are credit unions that must
comply with NCUA’s Truth in Savings
regulations which must be substantially
similar to the Board’s Regulation DD.

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Under the proposed rule, all small
depository institutions that pay
overdrafts will have to revise their
disclosures both at account opening (or
before the overdraft service is provided)
and on periodic statements, to reflect
the proposed consumer right to opt out.
(The rule provides alternative means for
complying with the periodic statement
opt-out disclosure requirement, such as
by providing the opt-out disclosure on
a notice sent promptly after an
overdraft. To the extent a depository
institution elects to comply with this
alternative means, it will have to revise
those disclosures, as appropriate.) The
Board notes, however, that some
depository institutions likely already
provide some form of consumer opt-out
based on their implementation of best
practices under the February 2005 Joint
Guidance.
In addition, institutions that did not
previously revise their periodic
statement disclosures to comply with
the prior May 2005 Regulation DD
amendments because they did not
promote their overdraft service will
need to do so to reflect aggregate
overdraft and aggregate returned-item
fees for the statement period and year to
date. Lastly, institutions will have to
reprogram their automated systems to
provide balances that exclude
additional funds the institution may
provide to cover an overdraft in
response to consumer balance inquiries,
if the institution has not done so as
previously recommended by the
February 2005 Joint Guidance.
3. Recordkeeping, reporting, and
compliance requirements. The proposed
revisions to Regulation DD require all
depository institutions to provide
consumers notice of their right to opt
out of the institution’s overdraft service
before the service is provided, and on
each periodic statement reflecting an
overdraft fee or charge (or alternatively,
on a notice sent promptly after an
overdraft informing the consumer of
that fact). In addition, as discussed in
more detail above, institutions that have
not previously provided total dollar
amounts of fees imposed on the account
for paying overdrafts and total dollar
amounts of fees for returning items
unpaid will be required to do so for both
the statement period and the calendar
year to date. Disclosures of account
balances that include funds that the
institution may provide to cover an
overdraft will be prohibited, unless the
institution specifically discloses that
fact.
4. Other federal rules. The Board has
not identified any federal rules that
duplicate, overlap, or conflict with the
proposed revisions to Regulation DD.

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5. Significant alternatives to the
proposed revisions. The Board solicits
comment about additional ways to
reduce regulatory burden associated
with this proposed rule.
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 Federal
Reserve by the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB). The collection of
information that is subject to the PRA by
this proposed rulemaking is found in 12
CFR part 230. The Federal Reserve 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 7100–0271.
This information collection is
required to provide benefits for
consumers and is mandatory (15 U.S.C.
1601 et seq.). Since the Board does not
collect any information, no issue of
confidentiality arises. The respondents/
recordkeepers are creditors and other
entities subject to Regulation DD,
including for-profit financial
institutions and small businesses.
Section 269 of the Truth in Savings
Act (TISA) (12 U.S.C. 4308) authorizes
the Board to issue regulations to carry
out the provisions of TISA. TISA and
Regulation DD require depository
institutions to disclose yields, fees, and
other terms concerning deposit accounts
to consumers at account opening, upon
request, and when changes in terms
occur. Depository institutions that
provide periodic statements are required
to include information about fees
imposed, interest earned, and the
annual percentage yield earned during
those statement periods. The act and
regulation mandate the methods by
which institutions determine the
account balance on which interest is
calculated. They also contain rules
about advertising deposit accounts. To
ease the compliance cost (particularly
for small entities), model clauses and
sample forms are appended to the
regulation. Depository institutions are
required to retain evidence of
compliance for twenty-four months, but
the regulation does not specify types of
records that must be retained.
Regulation DD applies to all
depository institutions except credit
unions. Credit unions are covered by a
substantially similar rule issued by the
National Credit Union Administration.
Under the PRA, the Federal Reserve
accounts for the paperwork burden
associated with Regulation DD only for

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Board-supervised institutions.
Regulation DD defines Board-regulated
institutions as: State member banks,
branches and agencies of foreign banks
(other than federal branches, federal
agencies, and insured state branches of
foreign banks), commercial lending
companies owned or controlled by
foreign banks, and organizations
operating under section 25 or 25A of the
Federal Reserve Act. Other federal
agencies account for the paperwork
burden imposed on the depository
institutions for which they have
administrative enforcement authority.
As mentioned in the preamble, the
proposed rulemaking sets forth content,
timing and format requirements for a
notice provided to consumers about
their right to opt out of an institution’s
overdraft service. Current requirements
for disclosing totals for overdraft and
returned item fees on periodic
statements would be extended to apply
to all institutions and not solely to
institutions that promote the payment of
overdrafts. The proposed rule would
also require institutions that provide
balance information in response to a
balance inquiry by the consumer, to
only include funds available for the
consumer’s immediate use or
withdrawal without incurring an
overdraft, and not any funds added
through the institution’s overdraft
service.
The Board estimates that 1,172
respondents regulated by the Board
would take, on average, 40 hours (one
business week) to re-program and
update their systems to comply with the
proposed disclosure requirements.
These disclosure requirements include
opt-out disclosures for overdraft
services (§ 230.10), disclosure of total
fees on periodic statements (§ 230.11(a)),
and disclosure of account balances
(§ 230.11(c)). The Board estimates the
total annual one-time burden to be
46,880 hours and believes that, on a
continuing basis, there would be no
increase in burden as the proposed
disclosures would be sufficiently
accounted for once incorporated into
the current account disclosures (§ 230.4)
and periodic statement disclosure
(§ 230.6). To ease the compliance cost
model clauses, B–10 consumer opt-out
from overdraft services sample form
(§ 230.10) and B–11 aggregate overdraft
and returned item fees sample form
(§ 230.11), are proposed in Appendix B.
The current total annual burden is
estimated to be 176,177 hours for 1,172
Board-covered institutions. The
proposed total annual burden is
estimated to be 223,057 hours, an
increase of 46,880 hours.

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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. Using the Board’s method,
the total estimated annual burden for all
financial institutions subject to
Regulation DD, including Boardsupervised institutions, would be
approximately 2,898,548 hours. The
proposed amendments would impose a
one-time increase in the estimated
annual burden for all institutions
subject to Regulation DD by 772,000
hours to 3,670,548 hours. The above
estimates represent an average across all
respondents and reflect variations
between institutions based on their size,
complexity, and practices. All covered
institutions, including depository
institutions (of which there are
approximately 19,300), potentially are
affected by this collection of
information, and thus are respondents
for purposes of the PRA.
Comments are invited on: (1) Whether
the proposed collection of information
is necessary for the proper performance
of the Board’s functions; including
whether the information has practical
utility; (2) the accuracy of the Board’s
estimate of the burden of the proposed
information collection, including the
cost of compliance; (3) ways to enhance
the quality, utility, and clarity of the
information to be collected; and (4)
ways to minimize the burden of
information collection on respondents,
including through the use of automated
collection techniques or other forms of
information technology. Comments on
the collection of information should be
sent to Michelle Shore, Federal Reserve
Board Clearance Officer, Division of
Research and Statistics, Mail Stop 151–
A, Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, Washington, DC 20551,
with copies of such comments sent to
the Office of Management and Budget,
Paperwork Reduction Project (7100–
0271), Washington, DC 20503.
Text of Proposed Revisions
Certain conventions have been used
to highlight the proposed changes to the
text of the regulation and staff
commentary. New language is shown
inside bold-faced arrows, while
language that would be deleted is set off
with bold-faced brackets.
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 230
Advertising, Banks, Banking,
Consumer protection, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Truth in
savings.

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28747

Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Board proposes to amend
Regulation DD, 12 CFR part 230, and the
Official Staff Commentary, as set forth
below:
PART 230—TRUTH IN SAVINGS
(REGULATION DD)
1. The authority citation for part 230
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 4301 et seq.

2. Section 230.1 is amended by
revising paragraph (a) to read as follows:
§ 230.1 Authority, purpose, coverage, and
effect on state laws.

(a) Authority. This regulation, known
as Regulation DD, is issued by the Board
of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System to implement the Truth in
Savings Act of 1991 (the act), contained
in the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation Improvement Act of 1991
(12 U.S.C. 3201 et seq., Pub. L. 102–242,
105 Stat. 2236). Information-collection
requirements contained in this
regulation have been approved by the
Office of Management and Budget under
the provisions of 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
and have been assigned OMB No.
ø7100–0255¿ fl7100–0271fi.
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3. Section 230.10 is added to read as
follows:
§ 230.10 flOpt-out disclosure
requirements for overdraft services.

(a) General rule. If a depository
institution provides a consumer the
right to opt out of the institution’s
payment of overdrafts pursuant to the
institution’s overdraft service, as
defined in 12 CFR 227.31(c), the
institution must provide written notice
of that right in accordance with the
requirements of this section.
(b) Format and content. The notice
described in paragraph (a) of this
section must use a format substantially
similar to Sample Form B–10, and
include the following information:
(1) Overdraft policy. The categories of
transactions for which a fee for paying
an overdraft may be imposed;
(2) Fees imposed. The dollar amount
of any fees or charges imposed for
paying checks or other items when there
are insufficient or unavailable funds and
the account becomes overdrawn;
(3) Potential impact of fee in relation
to overdraft amount. A statement that a
fee may be charged for overdrafts as low
as $1, or the lowest dollar amount for
which the institution may charge an
overdraft fee;
(4) Limits on fees charged. The
maximum amount of overdraft fees or

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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 97 / Monday, May 19, 2008 / Proposed Rules

charges that may be assessed per day
and per statement period, or, if
applicable, that there is no limit to the
fees that can be imposed;
(5) Disclosure of opt-out right. An
explanation of the consumer’s right to
opt out of the institution’s payment of
overdrafts, including the method(s) by
which the consumer may exercise that
right; and
(6) Alternative payment options. As
applicable, a statement that the
institution offers other alternatives for
the payment of overdrafts. In addition,
if the institution offers a line of credit
subject to the Board’s Regulation Z (12
CFR part 226) for the payment of
overdrafts, the institution must also
state that fact. An institution may, but
is not required to, list additional
alternatives for the payment of
overdrafts.
(c) Timing. As applicable, the notice
described in paragraph (a) of this
section must be provided:
(1) Prior to the institution’s
imposition of any fee for paying a check
or other item when there are insufficient
or unavailable funds in the consumer’s
account, provided that the consumer
has a reasonable opportunity to exercise
the opt-out right prior to the assessment
of any fee for paying an overdraft; and
(2)(i) On each periodic statement
reflecting any fee(s) or charge(s) for
paying an overdraft, in close proximity
to the disclosures required by
§ 230.11(a); or
(ii) At least once per statement period
on any notice sent promptly after the
institution’s payment of an overdraft.fi
4. Section 230.11 is amended by
revising the heading, paragraphs (a)
(b)(2)(x) and (b)(2)(xi), and adding
paragraphs (b)(2)(xii) and (c) to read as
follows:

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§ 230.11 Additional disclosure
requirements øfor institutions advertising
the payment of overdrafts¿ flfor overdraft
services.fi

(a) øPeriodic statement disclosures¿
flDisclosure of total fees on periodic
statementsfi—(1) Disclosure of total
fees¿ flGeneralfi. ø(i) Except as
provided in paragraph (a)(2) of this
section, if a depository institution
promotes the payment of overdrafts in
an advertisement, the¿ flA
depositoryfi institution must separately
disclose on each periodic statementfl,
as applicablefi:
ø(A)¿ fl(i)fi The total dollar amount
for all fees or charges imposed on the
account for paying checks or other items
when there are insufficient funds and
the account becomes overdrawn; and
ø(B)¿ fl(ii)fi The total dollar amount
for all fees imposed on the account for
returning items unpaid.

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ø(ii)¿ fl(2) Totals required.fi The
disclosures required by øthis¿
paragraph fl(a)(1) of this sectionfi
must be provided for the statement
period and for the calendar year to date
øfor any account to which the
advertisement applies¿;
fl(3) Format requirements. The
aggregate fee disclosures required by
paragraph (a) of this section must be
disclosed in close proximity to fees
identified under § 230.6(a)(3), using a
format substantially similar to Sample
Form B–11 in appendix B.fi
ø(2) Communications not triggering
disclosure of total fees. The following
communications by a depository
institution do not trigger the disclosures
required by paragraph (a)(1) of this
section:
(i) Promoting in an advertisement a
service for paying overdrafts where the
institution’s payment of overdrafts will
be agreed upon in writing and subject to
the Board’s Regulation Z (12 CFR part
226);
(ii) Communicating (whether by
telephone, electronically, or otherwise)
about the payment of overdrafts in
response to a consumer-initiated inquiry
about deposit accounts or overdrafts.
Providing information about the
payment of overdrafts in response to a
balance inquiry made through an
automated system, such as a telephone
response machine, an ATM, or an
institution’s Internet site, is not a
response to a consumer-initiated inquiry
for purposes of this paragraph;
(iii) Engaging in an in-person
discussion with a consumer;
(iv) Making disclosures that are
required by federal or other applicable
law;
(v) Providing a notice or including
information on a periodic statement
informing a consumer about a specific
overdrawn item or the amount the
account is overdrawn;
(vi) Including in a deposit account
agreement a discussion of the
institution’s right to pay overdrafts;
(vii) Providing a notice to a consumer,
such as at an ATM, that completing a
requested transaction may trigger a fee
for overdrawing an account, or
providing a general notice that items
overdrawing an account may trigger a
fee; or
(viii) Providing informational or
educational materials concerning the
payment of overdrafts if the materials do
not specifically describe the
institution’s overdraft service.
(3) Time period covered by
disclosures. An institution must make
the disclosures required by paragraph
(a)(1) of this section for the first
statement period that begins after an

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institution advertises the payment of
overdrafts. An institution may disclose
total fees imposed for the calendar year
by aggregating fees imposed since the
beginning of the calendar year, or since
the beginning of the first statement
period that year for which such
disclosures are required.
(4) Termination of promotions.
Paragraph (a)(1) of this section shall
cease to apply with respect to a deposit
account two years after the date of an
institution’s last advertisement
promoting the payment of overdrafts
applicable to that account.
(5) Acquired accounts. An institution
that acquires an account must thereafter
provide the disclosures required by
paragraph (a)(1) of this section for the
first statement period that begins after
the institution promotes the payment of
overdrafts in an advertisement that
applies to the acquired account. If
disclosures under paragraph (a)(1) of
this section are required for the acquired
account, the institution may, but is not
required to, include fees imposed prior
to acquisition of the account.¿
(b) * * *
*
*
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*
(2) * * *
(x) A notice provided to a consumer,
such as at an ATM, that completing a
requested transaction may trigger a fee
for overdrawing an account, or a general
notice that items overdrawing an
account may trigger a fee; øor¿
(xi) Informational or educational
materials concerning the payment of
overdrafts if the materials do not
specifically describe the institution’s
overdraft serviceø.¿fl; or
(xii) An opt-out notice regarding the
institution’s payment of overdrafts
under § 230.10 of this part.fi
*
*
*
*
*
fl(c) Disclosure of account balances.
In response to an account balance
inquiry by a consumer through an
automated system, an institution must
provide a balance that solely includes
funds that are available for the
consumer’s immediate use or
withdrawal, and may not include
additional amounts that the institution
may provide to cover an item when
there are insufficient or unavailable
funds in the consumer’s account. The
institution may, at its option, disclose a
second account balance that includes
such an additional amount, if the
institution prominently indicates that
this balance includes funds provided by
the institution to cover overdrafts.fi
5. In Appendix B to Part 230, and new
forms B–10 Overdraft Services Opt-Out
Notice Sample Form and B–11
Aggregate Overdraft And Returned Item
Fees Sample Form to read as follows:

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28749

Appendix B to Part 230—Model Clauses
and Sample Forms
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 97 / Monday, May 19, 2008 / Proposed Rules

Supplement I to Part 230—Official Staff
Interpretations

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Section 230.10 Opt-out Disclosure
Requirements for the Payment of Overdrafts
fl1. Disclosure of opt-out right. Section
230.10 sets forth the disclosures that must be
provided if a depository institution provides
a consumer the right to opt out of the
institution’s payment of overdrafts.
Institutions may be required to provide
consumers with the right to opt out in
accordance with federal or other applicable
law. See, e.g., § 227.31(a) of the Board’s
Regulation AA (12 CFR part 227).
2. Methods of opting out. Reasonable
methods that a consumer may use to opt out
of an institution’s payment of overdrafts
include mailing a form and calling a toll-free
telephone number.
3. Additional opt-out notice content. In the
opt-out notice provided under § 230.10(a) of
this part, an institution may briefly describe
the consequences of the consumer’s election
to opt out of the institution’s payment of

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overdrafts. For example, the institution may
state that if a consumer opts out, the
consumer’s payment may be denied, or
returned unpaid, and that the consumer may
incur returned item fees from both the
institution as well as the payee.fi

*

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*

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*

Section 230.11 Additional Disclosures
Regarding the Payment of Overdrafts
(a) Disclosure of total fees on periodic
statements.
(a)(1) General.

*

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*

*

*

2. Fees for paying overdrafts. øAn
institution that advertises the payment of
overdrafts¿ flInstitutionsfi must disclose on
periodic statements a total dollar amount for
all fees charged to the account for paying
overdrafts. The institution must disclose
separate totals for the statement period and
for the calendar year to date. The total dollar
amount includes per-item fees as well as
interest charges, daily or other periodic fees,
or fees charged for maintaining an account in
overdraft status, whether the overdraft is by
check or by other means. It also includes fees
charged when there are insufficient funds
because previously deposited funds are
subject to a hold or are uncollected. It does
not include fees for transferring funds from
another account to avoid an overdraft, or fees
charged when the institution has previously
agreed in writing to pay items that overdraw
the account and the service is subject to the
Board’s Regulation Z, 12 CFR part 226.
3. Fees for returning items unpaid. øAn
institution that advertises the payment of
overdrafts must disclose a¿ flThefi total
dollar amount floffi øfor all¿ fees flfor

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returning items unpaid must include all
feesfi charged to the account for dishonoring
or returning checks or other items drawn on
the account. The institution must disclose
separate totals for the statement period and
for the calendar year to date. Fees imposed
when deposited items are returned are not
included.

*

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*

*

*

fl(c) Disclosure of account balances.
1. Funds available for consumer’s
immediate use or withdrawal. For purposes
of the balance disclosure requirement in
§ 230.11(c), an institution must generally
disclose a balance that solely reflects the
funds that are available for the consumer’s
immediate use or withdrawal, without the
consumer incurring an overdraft. The balance
disclosed may, but need not, include funds
that are deposited in the consumer’s account,
such as from a check, that are not yet made
available for withdrawal in accordance with
the funds availability rules under the Board’s
Regulation CC (12 CFR part 229). In addition,
the balance disclosed may, but need not,
include any funds that are held by the
institution to satisfy a prior obligation of the
consumer (for example, to cover a hold for
an ATM or debit card transaction that has
been authorized but for which the bank has
not settled).
2. Balance inquiry channels. The balance
disclosure requirement in § 230.11 applies to
any automated system through which the
consumer requests a balance, including, but
not limited to, a telephone response system,
the institution’s Internet site or an automated
teller machine (ATM) (whether or not the
ATM is owned or operated by the
institution). If the balance is obtained at an

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6. In Supplement I to part 230:
a. In Section 230.10, the heading is revised
and new paragraphs 1. through 3. are added.
b. In Section 230.11 and Section 230.11(a),
the headings are revised and paragraphs
(a)(1)1. and (a)(1)2. are removed.
c. In Section 230.11, paragraphs (a)(1)3.
through (a)(1)8. are redesignated as
paragraphs (a)(1)1. through (a)(1)6.,
respectively.
d. In Section 230.11, new paragraphs
(a)(1)2. and (a)(1)3. are revised.
e. In Section 230.11, new paragraphs (c)1.
and (c)2. are added.

Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 97 / Monday, May 19, 2008 / Proposed Rules
ATM, the disclosure requirement applies
whether the balance is disclosed on the ATM
screen or on a paper receipt.fi

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By order of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, May 2, 2008.
Jennifer J. Johnson,
Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. E8–10243 Filed 5–16–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6210–01–P

DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Part 39
[Docket No. FAA–2008–0556; Directorate
Identifier 2007–NM–028–AD]
RIN 2120–AA64

Airworthiness Directives; Various
Aircraft Equipped With Honeywell
Primus II RNZ–850( )/–851(–)
Integrated Navigation Units
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), Department of
Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking
(NPRM).

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AGENCY:

SUMMARY: The FAA proposes to
supersede an existing airworthiness
directive (AD) that applies to various
aircraft equipped with certain
Honeywell Primus II RNZ–850( )/–
851( ) integrated navigation units
(INUs). The existing AD, as one
alternative for compliance, provides for
a one-time inspection to determine
whether a certain modification has been
installed on the Honeywell Primus II
NV–850 navigation receiver module
(NRM), which is part of the INU. In lieu
of accomplishing this inspection, and
for aircraft found to have an affected
NRM, that AD provides for revising the
aircraft flight manual to include new
limitations for instrument landing
system approaches. That AD also
requires an inspection to determine
whether certain other modifications
have been done on the NRM; and doing
related investigative, corrective, and
other specified actions, as applicable; as
well as further modifications to address
additional anomalies. This proposed AD
would extend the compliance time for a
certain inspection and associated
actions. This proposed AD would also
revise the applicability to include
additional affected INUs. This proposed
AD results from reports indicating that
erroneous localizer and glideslope
indications have occurred on certain
aircraft equipped with the subject INUs.
We are proposing this AD to ensure that

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the flight crew has accurate localizer
and glideslope deviation indications.
An erroneous localizer or glideslope
deviation indication could lead to the
aircraft making an approach off the
localizer, which could result in impact
with an obstacle or terrain.
DATES: We must receive comments on
this proposed AD by July 3, 2008.
ADDRESSES: You may send comments by
any of the following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to
http://www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Fax: 202–493–2251.
• Mail: U.S. Department of
Transportation, Docket Operations, M–
30, West Building Ground Floor, Room
W12–140, 1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE.,
Washington, DC 20590.
• Hand Delivery: U.S. Department of
Transportation, Docket Operations, M–
30, West Building Ground Floor, Room
W12–140, 1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE.,
Washington, DC 20590, between 9 a.m.
and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday,
except Federal holidays.
For service information identified in
this proposed AD, contact https://
pubs.cas.honeywell.com or contact
Honeywell International, Inc.,
Commercial Electronic Systems, 21111
North 19th Avenue, Phoenix, Arizona
85027–2708.
Examining the AD Docket
You may examine the AD docket on
the Internet at http://
www.regulations.gov; or in person at the
Docket Management Facility between 9
a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through
Friday, except Federal holidays. The AD
docket contains this proposed AD, the
regulatory evaluation, any comments
received, and other information. The
street address for the Docket Office
(telephone 800–647–5527) is in the
ADDRESSES section. Comments will be
available in the AD docket shortly after
receipt.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: J.
Kirk Baker, Aerospace Engineer,
Systems and Equipment Branch, ANM–
130L, FAA, Los Angeles Aircraft
Certification Office, 3960 Paramount
Boulevard, Lakewood, California
90712–4137; telephone (562) 627–5345;
fax (562) 627–5210.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Comments Invited
We invite you to send any written
relevant data, views, or arguments about
this proposed AD. Send your comments
to an address listed under the
ADDRESSES section. Include ‘‘Docket No.
FAA–2008–0556; Directorate Identifier
2007–NM–028–AD’’ at the beginning of

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your comments. We specifically invite
comments on the overall regulatory,
economic, environmental, and energy
aspects of this proposed AD. We will
consider all comments received by the
closing date and may amend this
proposed AD because of those
comments.
We will post all comments we
receive, without change, to http://
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information you provide. We
will also post a report summarizing each
substantive verbal contact we receive
about this proposed AD.
Discussion
On October 13, 2006, we issued AD
2006–22–05, amendment 39–14802 (71
FR 62907, October 27, 2006), for various
aircraft equipped with certain
Honeywell Primus II RNZ–850( )/–
851( ) integrated navigation units
(INUs). That AD, as one alternative for
compliance, provides for a one-time
inspection to determine whether a
certain modification has been installed
on the Honeywell Primus II NV–850
navigation receiver module (NRM),
which is part of the INU. In lieu of
accomplishing this inspection, and for
aircraft found to have an affected NRM,
that AD provides for revising the aircraft
flight manual to include new limitations
for instrument landing system
approaches. That AD also requires an
inspection to determine whether certain
other modifications have been done on
the NRM; and doing related
investigative, corrective, and other
specified actions, as applicable; as well
as further modifications to address
additional anomalies. That AD resulted
from reports indicating that erroneous
glideslope indications have occurred on
certain aircraft equipped with the
subject INUs. We issued that AD to
ensure that the flightcrew has an
accurate glideslope deviation
indication. An erroneous glideslope
deviation indication could lead to the
aircraft making an approach off the
glideslope, which could result in impact
with an obstacle or terrain.
Actions Since Existing AD Was Issued
Since we issued AD 2006–22–05, we
have become aware of the need to
change three aspects of the existing AD:
1. Additional INU part numbers need
to be added to the applicability.
2. Paragraph (j) of the existing AD
requires related investigative, corrective,
and other specified actions for certain
NRMs before further flight. Our
intention was to allow the full
compliance time for both the inspection
for the discrepant NRMs and the other
associated actions for those NRMs.

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