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Federal Reserve Bank
of Dallas

l l★K

HELEN E. HOLCOMB
DALLAS, TEXAS
75265-5906

FIRST VICE PRESIDENT AND
CHIEF OPERATING OFFICER

January 11, 1999
Notice 99-04

TO: The Chief Operating Officer of each
financial institution and others concerned
in the Eleventh Federal Reserve District

SUBJECT
Request for Public Comment on a Modification to Regulation CC
and Extension of Comment Period
DETAILS
The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System is requesting public comment
on a modification to Regulation CC (Availability of Funds and Collection of Checks) that would
shorten the maximum hold time from five business days to four for many nonlocal checks.
Comments must be received by March 15, 1999, and should refer to Docket No. R-1031.
The Board also has extended the comment period on proposed amendments to Regulation CC that would allow banks that consummate a merger on or after July 1, 1998, and before
June 1, 1999, greater time to implement software changes related to the merger. Comments,
originally requested by January 4, 1999, must be received by February 1, 1999. Comments
should refer to Docket No. R-1027.
Please address all comments to Jennifer J. Johnson, Secretary, Board of Governors of
the Federal Reserve System, 20th Street and Constitution Avenue, N.W., Washington, DC
20551.
ATTACHMENT
A copy of the Board’s notice regarding availability of nonlocal checks as it appears on
pages 69027–30, Vol. 63, No. 240 of the Federal Register dated December 15, 1998, is attached.

For additional copies, bankers and others are encouraged to use one of the following toll-free numbers in contacting the Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas: Dallas Office (800) 333-4460; El Paso Branch Intrastate (800) 592-1631, Interstate (800) 351-1012;
Houston Branch Intrastate (800) 392-4162, Interstate (800) 221-0363; San Antonio Branch Intrastate (800) 292-5810.

-2-

MORE INFORMATION
For more information, please contact Don Jackson, (214) 922-5431, at the Dallas
Office; Eloise Guinn, (915) 521-8201, at the El Paso Branch; Rene Gonzales, (713) 652-1543, at
the Houston Branch; or Herb Barbee, (210) 978-1402, at the San Antonio Branch.
For additional copies of this Bank’s notice, contact the Public Affairs Department at
(214) 922-5254.
Sincerely,

Federal Register / Vol. 63, No. 240 / Tuesday, December 15, 1998 / Proposed Rules

FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Part 229
[Regulation CC; Docket No. R–1031]

Availability of Funds and Collection of
Checks
Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System.
ACTION: Advance notice of proposed
rulemaking.
AGENCY:

The Board requests comment
on the potential benefits and drawbacks
of a modification to its Regulation CC,
Availability of Funds and Collection of
Checks, that would shorten the
maximum hold for many nonlocal
checks. This modification would
shorten the availability schedule for
nonlocal checks from five to four
business days except that a depositary
bank could retain a five-day schedule
for categories of nonlocal checks for
which it certifies that it does not receive
a sufficient proportion of returned
checks within four business days. This
proposal is one of several alternative
modifications to the nonlocal check
availability schedule that the Board is
considering. The Board may request
comment on this or alternative
modifications in a future notice of
proposed rulemaking after analyzing the
comments received in response to this
notice.
DATES: Comments must be submitted on
or before March 15, 1999.
ADDRESSES: Comments, which should
refer to Docket No. R–1031, may be
mailed to Ms. Jennifer Johnson,
Secretary, Board of Governors of the
SUMMARY:

Federal Reserve System, 20th Street and
Constitution Avenue, N.W., Washington
DC 20551. Comments may also be
delivered to the Board’s mail room
between 8:45 a.m. and 5:15 p.m. on
weekdays and to the security control
room at all other times. The mail room
and the security control rooms are
accessible from the courtyard entrance
on 20th Street between Constitution
Avenue and C Street, N.W. Comments
will be available for inspection and
copying by members of the public in the
Freedom of Information Office, Room
MP–500, between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00
p.m. weekdays, except as provided in
Section 261.14 of the Board’s Rules
Regarding Availability of Information.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jack
K. Walton II, Manager, Check Payments
Section (202/452–2660) or Michele
Braun, Project Leader (202/452–2819),
Division of Reserve Bank Operations
and Payment Systems. For the hearing
impaired only, contact Diane Jenkins,
Telecommunications Device for the Deaf
(TDD) (202/452–3544).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Overview
As a result of concerns about some
banks’ practice of delaying funds
availability by placing holds on the
proceeds of checks deposited into
customers’ transaction accounts,
Congress passed the Expedited Funds
Availability Act (EFAA) in 1987 (12
U.S.C. 4001–4010).1 The EFAA specifies
maximum time limits on the holds that
banks may place on funds deposited
into transaction accounts.
Prior to enactment of the EFAA, some
banks had argued that their availability
schedules reflected the time needed for
the collection and return of checks that
were not paid and provided a measure
of protection against the risk that the
bank could not recover funds from the
depositor if those funds had already
been withdrawn from the depositor’s
account. To balance depositors’ interest
in receiving prompt access to their
funds with banks’ ability to manage
their risks, Congress required the Board
to reduce the EFAA’s funds availability
schedules to as short a time as possible
and equal to the period achievable
under the improved check clearing
system for a receiving depository
institution to reasonably expect to learn
of the nonpayment of most items for
1 As used in this notice and in Regulation CC, the
term bank includes commercial banks, savings
institutions, and credit unions. Depositary bank
refers to the bank of first deposit (see 12 CFR
§ 229.2 (e) and (o)).

69027

each category of checks. (12 U.S.C.
4002(d))
The Board’s Regulation CC (12 CFR
part 229), which implements the EFAA,
includes maximum availability
schedules for funds deposited into
transaction accounts as well as
provisions designed to accelerate the
check return system. Currently, funds
deposited by most nonlocal checks
(checks payable by banks located in
different check processing regions than
the depositary bank) must be made
available for withdrawal within five
business days (five-day availability).2
The Board is investigating whether it
would be appropriate to define separate
categories for various types of nonlocal
checks so that it can assign maximum
availability schedules to these categories
of nonlocal checks. These categories
would be designed to preserve hold
periods as a fraud-protection tool while
providing depositors earlier access to
their funds. Analysis of available data
suggests that several alternative
methods for defining categories of
nonlocal checks might reasonably meet
the Congressional mandate. Several of
these alternatives rely on data collected
by the Reserve Banks. One alternative
relies on data collected by depositary
banks that elect to use the full five-day
hold period for some nonlocal checks.
The purpose of this notice is to gather
information on the potential benefits
and drawbacks of this latter alternative
for assigning availability schedules to
categories of checks because it relies on
a self-certification procedure that differs
from the approach the Board has
previously used in Regulation CC. Based
on its analysis of the comments to this
notice, the Board will assess the
feasibility of this method and may
request comment on one or more
specific regulatory proposals to modify
the nonlocal check availability
schedule.

69028

Federal Register / Vol. 63, No. 240 / Tuesday, December 15, 1998 / Proposed Rules

II. Background
When Congress established the EFAA
funds availability schedules, it
attempted to balance banks’ concerns
about managing their risk with
consumers’ concerns about the
availability of their funds. Congress
recognized that banks would be exposed
to risks if they were required to make
funds available before they had a
reasonable opportunity to learn of the
return of an unpaid check.
Congress’s 1987 Conference Report on
the EFAA tied availability schedules to
banks’ ability to reasonably expect to
learn of the nonpayment of a significant
number of checks. The Report suggested
that if improvements in the check
clearing system make it possible for
two-thirds of the items in a category of
checks to meet this test in a shorter
period of time, then the Federal Reserve
must shorten the schedules
accordingly.3 The Board has considered
this ‘‘two-thirds test’’ in evaluating
alternative amendments to Regulation
CC that would implement the statutory
requirement for shortened availability
schedules for nonlocal checks.
The Conference Report also
recognized that geographic proximity or
transportation arrangements between
check processing regions would permit
the Federal Reserve to provide shorter
times than the general schedule for
nonlocal checks would require. The
Conference Report noted that shorter
times would be possible for checks
transported between such nearby
territories as New York City and Jericho,
Long Island, and for checks transported

between banks in cities with Federal
Reserve check processing offices, such
as banks in Boston and San Francisco.4
The Board recognized regional
differences in the times needed to return
checks in Regulation CC by establishing
appendix B–1 under the temporary
schedule and appendix B–2 under the
permanent schedule.5 Appendix B–1
identified Federal Reserve check
processing regions in which depositary
banks were required to make funds from
specified nonlocal checks available
within four or five business days from
the day of deposit, compared with the
seven business days otherwise
applicable under the temporary
schedule. Appendix B–2 provided a
similar listing for nonlocal checks for
which proceeds must be made available
within three business days from the day
of deposit rather than the five days
otherwise applicable under the
permanent schedule.6
III. Shortening the Nonlocal Check
Availability Schedule
The Board is currently considering
whether the check clearing system has
improved sufficiently to warrant
amending Regulation CC to require that
funds deposited by nonlocal checks be
made available earlier than now
provided. The legislative history does
not indicate whether the Board should
interpret the two-thirds test precisely,
and the EFAA requirement that the
Board reduce maximum holds to as
short a time as possible in which a bank
could reasonably expect to learn of the
nonpayment appears to provide the
Board with some discretion. The Board

is also exploring various methods that
are reasonable and cost effective for
defining categories of nonlocal checks
for the purposes of determining
appropriate funds availability
schedules.
A. Returned Check Surveys
The Board drew on data from four
surveys to determine whether it would
be appropriate to reduce the nonlocal
hold period. In 1996, the Board’s
comprehensive survey of check-fraud
losses at banks asked respondents to
indicate the proportion of returned
checks that they typically received on
each business day following the initial
deposit of a check (1996 bank survey).
In conjunction with that check-fraud
study, Federal Reserve staff also
collected detailed data from a sample of
checks processed during one week
through the Federal Reserve Banks
(1996 Reserve Bank survey).7 In 1997,
Federal Reserve staff repeated the
Reserve Bank survey for six weeks and
thereby increased the number of
nonlocal returned checks sampled
compared with the prior survey (1997
Reserve Bank survey).8 The results of
the 1997 survey were generally
consistent with those of the 1996
survey. For historical comparison, the
Board also reviewed a survey of checks
returned through the Reserve Banks
conducted shortly after the
implementation of Regulation CC (1990
Reserve Bank survey).9 The table below
summarizes the average nonlocal return
cycles observed in the 1990, 1996, and
1997 surveys.

CUMULATIVE PERCENTAGE OF NONLOCAL CHECKS RETURNED WITHIN NUMBER OF BUSINESS DAYS
1997 reserve
bank survey 1
3 business days ..............................................................
4 business days ..............................................................
5 business days ..............................................................
Number of nonlocal checks sampled .............................

27.8
59.9
82.8
31,646

1996 reserve
bank survey 1
33.3
64.1
83.3
5,707

1996 bank survey
32.0
64.9
84.3
2 773

1990 reserve
bank survey
21.0
47.0
73.0
n.a.

Percent improvement
1990–97
32.4
27.5
13.4
n.a.

1 Excludes outlier observations defined as nonlocal checks that exceed 15 business days. For example, the 1997 survey data exclude 1.6 percent of nonlocal checks sampled.
2 Reflects the number of commercial banks, savings institutions, and credit unions sampled. Source. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. See text notes 7, 8, and 9 for sources of data.

In the 1996 and 1997 surveys, over
eighty percent of nonlocal unpaid
checks were returned to the depositary
3 H.R.

Conf. Rep. No. 100–261, at 179 (1987).
Conf. Rep. No. 100–261, at 179 (1987).
5 Appendix B–1 was removed and appendix B–2
was redesignated as appendix B in 1995 (60 FR
51669, Oct. 3, 1995).
6 Locations were included in these appendixes
based on an informal survey of the transportation
4 H.R.

bank within the maximum availability
period of five business days, up from 73
percent in 1990. The percentage of

nonlocal checks returned unpaid within
four business days ranged from 60 to 65
percent in the 1996 and 1997 surveys,

arrangements that existed when Regulation CC was
developed.
7 Report to the Congress on Funds Availability
Schedules and Check Fraud at Depository
Institutions (Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, October 1996).
8 The 1997 survey was designed to provide a
sufficient number of checks to estimate the
proportion of nonlocal checks returned within four

and five days nationwide. The sample was not
intended to provide statistically valid results
between each possible pairing of check processing
regions throughout the country (previously
unpublished 1997 Reserve Bank data).
9 Report to Congress Under the Expedited Funds
Availability Act (Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, March 1990).

Federal Register / Vol. 63, No. 240 / Tuesday, December 15, 1998 / Proposed Rules
roughly a 30 percent improvement over
1990. Although returns within four days
remained slightly below two-thirds,
they were close to that threshold. The
survey results suggest that it may be
appropriate for the Board to reduce
availability schedules for all or some
categories of nonlocal checks from five
business days to four.10
B. Alternative Approaches
In developing guidelines to identify
categories of nonlocal checks that could
be subject to shorter availability
schedules, the Board sought to define as
precisely as possible those check
categories returned to the depositary
bank in fewer than five days at least
two-thirds of the time, taking into
consideration the practical limitations
of the data collection needed to support
the categorization. Identifying a large
number of categories of nonlocal checks
should increase the likelihood that the
checks are accurately categorized based
on when they are returned. The greater
accuracy afforded by a large number of
categories would lower the risk that a
particular check would have to be made
available before it would normally be
returned. Similarly, a higher degree of
accuracy would increase the probability
that customers would receive faster
availability for those checks that are
normally returned within fewer than
five days. Thus, a large number of
categories of nonlocal checks should
provide a better balance, as sought by
Congress, between banks’ needs to
manage their fraud-loss risk and their
customers’ interests in having as early
access to their funds as possible.
The Board has been exploring
alternative approaches for defining
appropriately precise categories of
nonlocal checks that should receive
earlier availability. These approaches
range from categorizing the almost 2,000
possible pairs of check processing
regions to a more aggregated approach
that would group nonlocal checks into
only three categories nationwide based
on the availability zone (city, RCPC, or
country) of the paying bank.11 Each
10 The General Accounting Office (GAO) recently
conducted a study to identify, among other things,
whether electronic check presentment affects the
length of time necessary for a dishonored check to
be returned to the depositary bank. The GAO
concluded that the check return performance of
electronically presented nonlocal checks was not
very different from that of physically presented
checks. (U.S. General Accounting Office, GAO
Report, Retail Payment Issues: Experience with
Electronic Check Presentment, (July 14, 1998)).
11 In general, nonlocal checks payable by banks
located closest to Federal Reserve check processing
offices are returned fastest. Nonlocal checks payable
by banks located further away require somewhat
more time. The first four digits of the routing
number (the routing symbol) on every check

approach recognizes the roles of
geographic proximity and transportation
arrangements in the check clearing and
return cycle. It is not clear, however,
what might be the most appropriate
(reasonable and cost effective) way to
identify those categories of nonlocal
checks that should receive earlier
availability. Collecting data, however, to
support a valid analysis of return cycles
for nonlocal checks becomes
increasingly expensive and, in some
cases, impractical as the number of
categories increases.12
The Board is considering reducing the
availability schedules for nonlocal
checks from five to four business days
but permitting an individual bank to
delay funds availability for a particular
category of nonlocal check for five
business days if it certifies that it does
not receive at least two-thirds of
nonlocal returned checks in that
category within fewer than five days.
This approach would match the bank’s
actual return experience for nonlocal
checks with permitted availability
schedules more precisely than any
approach that relies on data that the
Reserve Banks could collect. Under this
alternative, banks that wished to use a
five business day availability schedule
for a category of checks would be
required to conduct their own periodic
data collection, based on criteria that
would be included in Regulation CC,
and to certify that they do not receive
at least two-thirds of that category of
nonlocal returned checks in fewer than
five days.13 The bank’s primary
identify the location of the paying bank in
relationship to the local Federal Reserve office. The
locations are organized roughly in concentric
circles. City checks are payable by banks located
relatively close to a Federal Reserve office, RCPC
checks are payable by banks located somewhat
further from a Federal Reserve office, and country
checks are payable by banks even more
geographically remote. Only eight of forty-four
check processing regions have country availability
zones.
12 While the alternatives thus far analyzed rely on
data collected from nonlocal checks returned
through a Federal Reserve Bank, the results of the
1996 bank and the 1996 Reserve Bank surveys
suggest that there is little difference between
nonlocal return times for checks returned through
the Reserve Banks and for all nonlocal returned
checks.
13 If a bank imposes an exception hold on a
customer’s deposit in accordance with § 229.13, it
may extend the time within which it is required to
make funds available for withdrawal by a
reasonable period. Regulation CC deems a six
business day extension of its nonlocal check
available schedule to be reasonable; a longer
extension may be reasonable, but the bank has the
burden of so establishing. This safe-harbor
extension would be added to the four-day nonlocal
check schedule or to the five-day schedule for those
categories of nonlocal checks that a bank certifies
are eligible for the longer hold.
A bank that has a policy of generally making
deposited funds available for withdrawal sooner

69029

supervisor would be responsible for
reviewing the self-certification and
supporting data.
Permitting a bank to certify that it
qualifies to use five-day availability
schedules for some categories of
nonlocal checks gives it the flexibility to
weigh; (1) the costs of collecting data
with which to certify that it should be
permitted to hold certain categories of
nonlocal checks for five days, (2) the
fraud risk associated with its hold
policy, and (3) the customer benefits of
that policy. If a bank determines, for
example, that the administrative cost
associated with demonstrating that
certain categories of nonlocal checks
should be subject to five-day availability
and the resulting increased complexity
of its availability schedules outweighs
the incremental fraud protection, then it
could simply adopt a four-day or shorter
schedule for all of its nonlocal check
deposits.14
IV. Request for Comment
The Board requests comment on the
benefits and drawbacks of modifying
Regulation CC to shorten the availability
schedule for nonlocal checks from five
business days to four unless a
depositary bank certifies that it does not
receive most of its nonlocal returned
checks in fewer than five business days.
Commenters’ overall perspectives on the
issues raised in this notice as well as
their answers to the specific questions
listed below will be useful in the
Board’s analysis of the alternative
approaches to modify the nonlocal
check availability schedules. Comments
will help the Board balance consumers’
interests in receiving access to their
funds and banks’ interest in minimizing
check-fraud losses and will help the
Board develop an appropriate method to
implement Congress’s directive to
improve funds availability to match
improvements in the check clearing
system.
The Board does not plan to
implement any changes to Regulation
CC’s nonlocal check availability
schedules prior to the spring of 2000 so
that banks can minimize changes to
than required may extend the hold up to the time
allowed by the regulation on a case-by-case basis.
(Under § 229.16(c), a bank must provide a notice
when funds from a particular deposit will not be
available by the time a bank generally make funds
available for withdrawal.) A bank would be
permitted to hold a nonlocal check on a case-bycase basis up to five business days for those
categories of nonlocal checks that the bank certifies
are eligible for the longer hold.
14 The Board’s 1996 check-fraud study found that
70 percent of banks make funds deposited by
nonlocal checks available to their customers earlier
than Regulation CC now requires. Report to the
Congress on Funds Availability Schedules and
Check Fraud at Depository Institutions, p. 39.

69030

Federal Register / Vol. 63, No. 240 / Tuesday, December 15, 1998 / Proposed Rules

their internal systems during the period
surrounding the century rollover.
A. Defining Categories of Checks
For the purpose of assigning
availability schedules, the Board is
exploring several methods for
categorizing nonlocal checks that rely
on the check processing region and the
availability zones in which banks are
located. Because proximity and
transportation infrastructure affect the
time period needed to present and
return nonlocal checks, the Board is
considering several possible methods to
define categories of nonlocal checks,
including:
(a) Pairs of check processing regions,
for example checks deposited at banks
in the Columbus check processing
region and payable by banks located in
the Utica check processing region;
(b) The check processing region of the
depositary bank and the availability
zone of the paying bank, for example
checks deposited at banks in the
Columbus check processing region and
payable by nonlocal banks in city
availability zones; and
(c) The availability zone of the paying
bank, regardless of the location of the
depositary bank, that is, any check
payable by a nonlocal bank located in a
city availability zone.
Regulation CC could be modified to
define appropriate categories of
nonlocal checks for the analysis of
return cycles. Alternatively, the
regulation could permit banks to define
their own categories, perhaps within
some guidelines.
1. Should Regulation CC define
categories of checks for which a bank
could certify that it should be permitted
to hold funds for five days? If yes, what
categories would be appropriate? If not,
should a bank be permitted to define its
own categories or select from among a
variety of categories?
2. Given the pace of change in the
improvement of the check clearing
system, how frequently should a bank
be required to re-certify that it should be
permitted to withhold the funds
availability of a category of nonlocal
returned checks for five business days?
Every two years? Every five years? Some
other time period?
B. Bank Hold Policies
3. If this approach is adopted, to what
extent will banks use the certification
process to continue placing five-day
holds on certain categories of nonlocal
checks to protect themselves against
some check-fraud losses?

C. Data Collection and Statistical
Significance
Under the approach being considered
in this notice, the Board anticipates
requiring banks to use the two-thirds
test indicated by Congress to assess
whether a category of nonlocal checks at
a bank should be subject to four- or fiveday availability. Banks that choose to
hold some categories of checks for five
business days would be required to
collect representative data that
demonstrates that, for those categories
of checks, they do not receive two-thirds
of the returned nonlocal checks within
four business days.
4. What information should a bank be
required to collect to certify that it does
not receive at least two-thirds of a
category of nonlocal returned checks
within four business days? What would
constitute representative data for a bank
and over what period should it be
collected? What procedures would
reasonably ensure that a bank
appropriately certifies that it is eligible
to use five-day holds? Should the same
methodology apply to small, medium,
and large banks?
5. Do banks currently collect the data
needed for certification?
D. Consumer Disclosures
Section 229.16(a) of Regulation CC
provides that disclosures reflect the
policy followed by the bank in most
cases. The commentary to that section
provides that a bank may not place a
hold longer than the period disclosed.
Therefore, a bank that discloses that it
generally makes funds from nonlocal
checks available in four business days
but certifies that it is eligible to use the
five-day availability schedule for some
categories of nonlocal checks would
have to disclose which categories of
nonlocal checks would be available in
five business days.15
6. If the proportion of nonlocal checks
available in five business days does not
represent ‘‘most cases,’’ to what extent
would the complexity of the disclosure
requirement affect a bank’s decision to
use five-day availability for some
categories of nonlocal checks?
7. What amendments to the disclosure
rules would assist banks in adopting a
policy to hold some categories of
nonlocal checks for four days and others
for five days as well as assist customers
to understand which nonlocal checks
15 In contrast, based on guidance in the
supplementary information to the Board’s notice
adopting the initial Regulation CC, a bank that
discloses that it generally makes funds from
nonlocal checks available in five business days
would have to disclose the reduction in schedules
to customers only upon request. (53 FR 19400, May
27, 1988)

would be available for withdrawal in
four days and which in five days?
Would it be sufficient to provide
detailed information as to which checks
will receive four or five day availability
only when requested by a customer or
prospective customer?
By order of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, December 9, 1998.
Jennifer J. Johnson,
Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. 98–33175 Filed 12–14–98; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6210–01–P