View original document

The full text on this page is automatically extracted from the file linked above and may contain errors and inconsistencies.

Acute Audit Appendicitis
February 19, 2019
My son came home from school the other day and told me that his friend’s kidney
had "popped." With great concern and further investigation, I found out that his
friend had suffered from appendicitis but had since recovered. Luckily, fifth grade
boys and most of the human race can get along fine without an appendix. And, as it
turns out, there is another type of appendix people can live without: Appendix
Eight—Audit Requirements—in the NACHA Operating Rules. NACHA members
recently voted to cut this part out.
But wait—don’t celebrate too soon. The change doesn’t eliminate the requirement
to conduct an annual ACH rules compliance audit. Rather, members voted to
modify "the Rules to provide financial institutions [FI] and third-party service
providers with greater flexibility in conducting annual Rules compliance audits."
Specifically, the change—which was effective January 1, 2019—affected the
following areas of the NACHA Operating Rules:
• Article One, Subsection 1.2.2 (Audits of Rules Compliance): Consolidates the
core audit requirements described within Appendix Eight under the general
obligation of participating DFIs and third-party service providers/senders to
conduct an audit.
• Appendix Eight (Rule Compliance Audit Requirements): Eliminates the
current language contained within Appendix Eight; combines relevant
provisions with the general audit obligation required under Article One,
Subsection 1.2.2.
FIs and ACH payment processors must still conduct, either internally or
outsourced, an annual audit of their compliance with the ACH rules each year. They
also must retain adequate proof of completion for no less than six years and may,
during that term, need to provide proof to NACHA or a regulator. And they will
have to adjust their audit methodologies to ensure that they comply with all
relevant rules rather than just rely on the former Appendix Eight checklist.
The new audit process necessitates a risk-based approach, which is a strategy
regulators have been encouraging in recent years. With so many emerging
technologies, products, and services in the payments industry, FIs and ACH
payment processors can no longer take a one-size-fits-all approach for compliance.
They also no longer have a single access point to ACH—rather, they must consider
many access points when auditing for Rules compliance.
These institutions may not have previously had to take into account other areas that
touch payments. For example, the risk-based audit doesn’t explore just the deposit
operations department; it analyzes how the whole enterprise interacts with ACH
systems. Additionally, it may need to include loan operations, online account
opening, person-to-person (P2P) products, investment management, and other new
digital channels.
Life without Appendix Eight will be an adjustment, but its removal won’t be fatal. I

think ACH participants will recover quickly and be even healthier—embracing the
new risk-based compliance model will likely strengthen enterprise risk
management and promote increased safety and stability in our payment systems.

By Jessica Washington, AAP, payments risk expert in the Retail Payments
Risk Forum at the Atlanta Fed
• February 19, 2019 in
◦ ACH
◦ supervision and regulation
• Permalink
• Comments