82_FR_15065 82 FR 15009 - Request for Information Regarding Remittance Rule Assessment

82 FR 15009 - Request for Information Regarding Remittance Rule Assessment

BUREAU OF CONSUMER FINANCIAL PROTECTION

Federal Register Volume 82, Issue 56 (March 24, 2017)

Page Range15009-15014
FR Document2017-05681

The Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection (Bureau) is conducting an assessment of certain of the Bureau's regulations related to consumer remittance transfers under the Electronic Fund Transfer Act (subpart B of Regulation E) in accordance with section 1022(d) of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act. The Bureau is requesting public comment on its plans for assessing these regulations as well as certain recommendations and information that may be useful in conducting the planned assessment.

Federal Register, Volume 82 Issue 56 (Friday, March 24, 2017)
[Federal Register Volume 82, Number 56 (Friday, March 24, 2017)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 15009-15014]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2017-05681]


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BUREAU OF CONSUMER FINANCIAL PROTECTION

12 CFR Part 1005

[Docket No. CFPB-2017-0004]


Request for Information Regarding Remittance Rule Assessment

AGENCY: Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection.

ACTION: Notice of assessment of remittance rule and request for public 
comment.

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SUMMARY: The Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection (Bureau) is 
conducting an assessment of certain of the Bureau's regulations related 
to consumer remittance transfers under the Electronic Fund Transfer Act 
(subpart B of Regulation E) in accordance with section 1022(d) of the 
Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act. The Bureau 
is requesting public comment on its plans for assessing these 
regulations as well as certain recommendations and information that may 
be useful in conducting the planned assessment.

DATES: Comments must be received on or before: May 23, 2017.

ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by Docket No. CFPB-2017-
0004, by any of the following methods:
     Electronic: http://www.regulations.gov. Follow the 
instructions for submitting comments.
     Email: [email protected]. Include Docket 
No. CFPB-2017-0004 in the subject line of the email.
     Mail: Monica Jackson, Office of the Executive Secretary, 
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, 1700 G Street NW., Washington, DC 
20552.
     Hand Delivery/Courier: Monica Jackson, Office of the 
Executive Secretary, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, 1275 First 
Street NE., Washington, DC 20002.
    Instructions: All submissions should include the document title and 
docket number. Because paper mail in the Washington, DC area and at the 
Bureau is subject to delay, commenters are encouraged to submit 
comments electronically. In general, all comments received will be 
posted without change to http://www.regulations.gov. In addition, 
comments will be available for public inspection and copying at 1275 
First Street NE., Washington, DC 20002 on official business days 
between the hours of 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. Eastern Time. You can make an 
appointment to inspect the documents by telephoning (202) 435-7275.
    All comments, including attachments and other supporting materials, 
will become part of the public record and subject to public disclosure. 
Sensitive personal information, such as account numbers or Social 
Security numbers, should not be included. Comments generally will not 
be edited to remove any identifying or contact information.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Scott Fulford, Economist; Paul 
Rothstein, Section Chief; Jane Raso, Counsel; Max Bentovim, Financial 
Analyst; Division of Research, Markets, and Regulations at (202) 435-
9798.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 

I. Background

    Congress established the Bureau in the Dodd-Frank Wall Street 
Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank Act).\1\ In the Dodd-
Frank Act, Congress generally consolidated in the Bureau the rulemaking 
authority for Federal consumer financial laws previously vested in 
certain other Federal agencies. Congress also provided the Bureau with 
the authority to, among other things, prescribe rules as may be 
necessary or appropriate to enable the Bureau to administer and carry 
out the purposes and objectives of the Federal consumer financial laws 
and to prevent evasions thereof.\2\ Since 2011, the Bureau has issued a 
number of rules adopted under Federal consumer financial law.\3\
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    \1\ Public Law 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376 (2010).
    \2\ 12 U.S.C. 5512(b)(1).
    \3\ 12 U.S.C. 5512(d).
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    Section 1022(d) of the Dodd-Frank Act requires the Bureau to 
conduct an assessment of each significant rule or order adopted by the 
Bureau under Federal consumer financial law. The Bureau must publish a 
report of the assessment not later than five years after the effective 
date of such rule or order. The assessment must address, among other 
relevant factors, the rule's effectiveness in meeting the purposes and 
objectives of title X of the Dodd-Frank Act and the specific goals 
stated by the Bureau. The assessment must reflect available evidence 
and any data that the Bureau reasonably may collect. Before publishing 
a report of its assessment, the Bureau must invite public comment on 
recommendations for modifying, expanding, or eliminating the 
significant rule or order.
    In February 2012, the Bureau published a final rule concerning 
consumer remittance transfers to individuals and businesses in foreign 
countries in the Federal Register titled ``Electronic Fund Transfers 
(Regulation E)'' (February 2012 Final Rule) to implement section 1073 
of the Dodd

[[Page 15010]]

Frank Act.\4\ The Bureau amended the February 2012 Final Rule on 
several occasions both before and after it took effect on October 28, 
2013.\5\ As discussed further below, the Bureau has determined that the 
February 2012 Final Rule and all the amendments related to it that the 
Bureau made and that took effect on October 28, 2013 collectively make 
up a significant rule for purposes of section 1022(d) and will conduct 
an assessment of the rule. This document refers to the February 2012 
Final Rule as amended when it took effect on October 28, 2013 as the 
``Remittance Rule.'' Further, the Bureau will consider certain 
amendments to it that the Bureau issued shortly after the Remittance 
Rule's October 28, 2013 effective date to the extent doing so will 
facilitate a more meaningful assessment of the Remittance Rule. 
Specifically, the Bureau is incorporating into the assessment certain 
amendments related to the extension of an exception in the Remittance 
Rule that permits insured institutions to provide estimated amounts 
instead of exact amounts under certain circumstances. Those amendments 
were published in a final rule in the Federal Register in September 
2014 and became effective in November 2014.\6\ In this document, the 
Bureau is requesting public comment on the issues identified below 
regarding the Remittance Rule and these certain subsequent amendments.
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    \4\ 77 FR 6194 (February 7, 2012).
    \5\ As discussed below, one of the amendments is a temporary 
delay of the original effective date, February 7, 2013.
    \6\ 78 FR 55970 (Sept. 18, 2014).
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II. Assessment Process

    Assessments pursuant to section 1022(d) of the Dodd-Frank Act are 
for informational purposes only and are not part of any formal or 
informal rulemaking proceedings under the Administrative Procedure 
Act.\7\ The Bureau plans to consider relevant comments and other 
information received as it conducts the assessment and prepares an 
assessment report. The Bureau does not, however, expect that it will 
respond in the assessment report to each comment received pursuant to 
this document. Furthermore, the Bureau does not anticipate that the 
assessment report will include specific proposals by the Bureau to 
modify any rules, although the findings made in the assessment will 
help to inform the Bureau's thinking as to whether to consider 
commencing a rulemaking proceeding in the future.\8\ Upon completion of 
the assessment, the Bureau plans to issue an assessment report no later 
than October 28, 2018.
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    \7\ Public Law 79-404, 60 Stat. 237 (1946).
    \8\ The Bureau announces its rulemaking plans in semiannual 
updates of its rulemaking agenda, which are posted as part of the 
federal government's Unified Agenda of Regulatory and Deregulatory 
Actions. See http://www.reginfo.gov/public/do/eAgendaMain.
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III. The Remittance Rule

    Section 1073 of the Dodd Frank Act amended the Electronic Fund 
Transfer Act (EFTA) to create a comprehensive new system of consumer 
protection for remittance transfers sent by consumers in the United 
States to individuals and businesses in foreign countries. Consumers 
transfer tens of billions of dollars from the United States each year. 
However, these transactions were generally excluded from existing 
Federal consumer protection regulation in the United States until the 
Dodd-Frank Act expanded the scope of the EFTA to provide for their 
regulation.\9\
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    \9\ 15 U.S.C. 1693 et seq. EFTA section 919 is codified in 15 
U.S.C. 1693o-1.
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    On February 7, 2012, the Bureau published the February 2012 Final 
Rule in the Federal Register to implement section 919 of the EFTA, as 
set forth in section 1073 of the Dodd-Frank Act. The rule was published 
in a new subpart B to the Bureau's Regulation E.\10\ The February 2012 
Final Rule, among other things, defined remittance transfers \11\ and 
which persons must comply with the rule because they are remittance 
transfer providers; \12\ established certain consumer disclosures that 
must be given to consumers who send remittance transfers and certain 
exceptions to these disclosures; provided consumers with cancellation 
and refund rights, and required providers to resolve errors. Further, 
the February 2012 Final Rule implemented a statutory exception that 
permits remittance transfer providers that are insured institutions to 
estimate, under certain circumstances, the amount of currency that a 
designated recipient will receive (the ``temporary exception'').\13\
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    \10\ 77 FR 6194 (Feb. 7, 2012).
    \11\ 12 CFR 1005.30(e) (defining a remittance transfer generally 
to be a transfer of funds requested by a sender to a designated 
recipient that is sent by a remittance transfer provider). There are 
specific exclusions for certain kinds of transfers, specifically, 
small value transactions of $15 or less, and transfers for the 
purchase or sale of securities or commodities provided that certain 
conditions are met. A designated recipient is any natural person or 
organization such as a corporation specified by the sender as the 
authorized recipient of a remittance transfer to be received at a 
location in a foreign country. 12 CFR 1003.30(c) and comment 30(c)-
1.
    \12\ 77 FR 6194, 6285 (providing that a remittance transfer 
provider is any person that provides remittance transfers for a 
consumer in the normal course of its business, regardless of whether 
the consumer holds an account with such person).
    \13\ EFTA section 919(a)(4) established that the temporary 
exception would expire on July 21, 2015, but permitted the Bureau to 
extend the exception for up to ten years after the enactment of the 
Dodd-Frank Act (i.e., July 21, 2020), if it determined that the 
expiration of the exception on July 21, 2015, would negatively 
affect the ability of insured institutions to send remittances to 
locations in foreign countries. The Bureau extended the exception to 
July 21, 2020, in September 2014 based on its determination that the 
expiration of the exception on July 21, 2015, would negatively 
affect the ability of insured institutions to send remittances to 
locations in foreign countries. See 79 FR 55970 (Sept. 18, 2014).
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    As discussed above, the Bureau subsequently amended the February 
2012 Final Rule several times before the effective date of October 28, 
2013 to revise the rule, temporarily delay the effective date of the 
February 2012 Final Rule,\14\ and to address important questions raised 
by industry, consumer advocacy groups, and other stakeholders. The 
Bureau believed that these amendments were warranted to increase 
certain consumer protections, avoid potentially significant disruption 
to the provision of remittance transfers, and clarify the regulations 
by making technical corrections and conforming changes.
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    \14\ 78 FR 6025 (Jan. 29, 2013). The February 2012 Final Rule 
had an effective date of February 7, 2013. The Bureau temporarily 
delayed the effective date because it had published additional 
proposed amendments to the February 2012 Final Rule in December 
2012. In a final rule published in May 2013, the Bureau finalized 
these amendments and set the effective date as October 28, 2013.
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    First, in July 2012, the Bureau published amendments to correct 
certain technical aspects of the February 2012 Final Rule and to make 
certain non-substantive, conforming changes.\15\ Then, in August 2012, 
the Bureau published amendments to the February 2012 Final Rule that, 
among other things, added a safe harbor that clarified that persons 
that provide 100 or fewer remittance transfers in both the prior and 
the current calendar years are deemed not to be providing remittance 
transfers in the normal course of business, and thus are not remittance 
transfer providers and are not required to comply with the February 
2012 Final Rule.\16\ The August 2012 final rule also contained 
provisions that apply to remittance transfers scheduled in advance of 
the transfer date, including a provision that permits a remittance 
transfer provider to provide estimates for certain disclosures for 
certain of these transfers.\17\
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    \15\ 77 FR 40459 (July 10, 2012).
    \16\ 12 CFR 1005.30(f)(2)(i).
    \17\ 12 CFR 1005.32(b)(2); 1005.36.
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    Subsequently, as noted above, the Bureau temporarily delayed the

[[Page 15011]]

effective date of the February 2012 Final Rule pending the finalization 
of proposed amendments it published in the Federal Register in December 
2012 to further amend the February 2012 Final Rule.\18\ Then, in May 
2013, the Bureau finalized the proposed amendments it published in 
December 2012 in a final rule. Among other things, the May 2013 final 
rule created a permanent exception for transfers through open networks 
that made optional in certain circumstances the disclosure of fees 
imposed by the designated recipient's institution and the disclosure of 
taxes collected on the remittance transfer by a person other than the 
provider.\19\ It also provided that for these charges, estimates may be 
provided.\20\ These amendments also created certain exceptions to the 
general error resolution provisions in situations in which a remittance 
transfer is not delivered to a designated recipient because the sender 
provided an incorrect account number or recipient institution 
identifier that results in the transferred funds being deposited in the 
wrong account.\21\ Lastly, in August 2013, the Bureau published a 
clarificatory amendment and a technical correction to the May 2013 
final rule.\22\
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    \18\ 77 FR 77188 (Dec. 31, 2012).
    \19\ 78 FR 30662 (May 22, 2013); 12 CFR 1005.31(b)(1)(vii).
    \20\ 12 CFR 1005.32(b)(3).
    \21\ 12 CFR 1005.33(h).
    \22\ 78 FR 49365 (Aug. 14, 2013).
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    As noted above and discussed further below, the Bureau has 
determined that the Remittance Rule is a significant rule for purposes 
of Dodd-Frank section 1022(d) and will conduct an assessment of the 
rule.\23\
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    \23\ As noted above, in September 2014, the Bureau published a 
final rule that, among other things, extended the temporary 
exception to July 21, 2020. The effective date of this final rule 
was November 17, 2014. In September 2014, the Bureau also published 
a final rule that extended its supervisory authority to any nonbank 
international money transfer provider that has at least one million 
aggregate annual international money transfers to determine 
compliance with, among other things, the Remittance Rule. 79 FR 
56631 (Sept. 23, 2014). In October 2016, the Bureau amended 
Regulation E by issuing two final rules. The first final rule 
focused on prepaid accounts and made clarificatory amendments to the 
Remittance Rule to clarify its application to prepaid accounts. As 
stated in the final rule, the effective date of these clarifications 
is October 1, 2017. 81 FR 83934 (Nov. 22, 2016). However, on March 
15, 2017, the Bureau published a proposal to extend the effective 
date by six months to April 1, 2018. 82 FR 13782 (Mar. 15, 2017). 
The second final rule made certain clerical and non-substantive 
corrections to errors it has identified in Regulation E, including 
in certain provisions of the Remittance Rule. 81 FR 70319 (Oct. 12, 
2016). This rule became effective on November 14, 2016. The Bureau 
has discretion to choose the relevant time frame for the analysis 
and thus the most appropriate way to address amendments to any 
particular significant rule for purposes of an assessment of such 
rule. In this notice, except with respect to amendments related to 
the extension of the temporary exception, the Bureau is not seeking 
comment on the amendments to the Remittance Rule that became or will 
become effective after the October 28, 2013 effective date.
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    The Remittance Rule applies to remittance transfers sent by 
traditional financial institutions such as banks and credit unions; 
non-banks, such as money transmitters; and Internet and mobile 
providers. Further, a remittance transfer could be a consumer-to-
consumer transfer, or it could be a consumer-to-business transfer. The 
Remittance Rule applies to remittance transfers sent over open 
networks. The most common form of open network remittance transfer is a 
wire transfer. The rule also applies to remittance transfers sent over 
closed networks, in which a remittance transfer provider typically uses 
either its own operators or a network of agents or other partners to 
collect funds from senders in the United States and distribute those 
funds to the designated recipient abroad. The rule additionally applies 
to remittance transfers sent through the automated clearinghouse system 
(ACH), although use of ACH for consumer transfers is limited compared 
to its use for non-consumer (i.e., business-to-business) transfers.

A. Major Provisions of the Remittance Rule

    The Remittance Rule addressed three major topics, which are 
summarized below.
    1. Disclosures. Consistent with the disclosure requirements 
established by section 919(a) of EFTA, the Remittance Rule generally 
requires a remittance transfer provider to provide a written pre-
payment disclosure when the sender requests a transfer and generally 
requires the provider to provide a written receipt when payment is 
made.\24\ The pre-payment disclosure must contain specific information 
about a remittance transfer, such as the fee a remittance transfer will 
impose on the remittance transfer,\25\ the exchange rate, if any,\26\ 
certain applicable fees and taxes that will be imposed on the 
transfer,\27\ and the amount to be received by the designated 
recipient.\28\ The receipt must include the information provided on the 
pre-payment disclosure,\29\ as well as certain additional information, 
such as the date of availability of the funds \30\ and information 
regarding the sender's error resolution and cancellation rights.\31\ 
Disclosures must always be made in English. In certain circumstances, a 
remittance transfer provider must also provide foreign language 
disclosures.\32\
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    \24\ 12 CFR 1005.31(b)(1) and (2). As an alternative to 
providing a written receipt, the rule permits a remittance transfer 
provider to give a single written disclosure prior to payment 
containing all of the information required on the receipt, so long 
as the provider also provides proof of payment. 12 CFR 
1004.31(b)(3).
    \25\ 12 CFR 1005.31(b)(1)(ii).
    \26\ 12 CFR 1005.31(b)(1)(iv).
    \27\ 12 CFR 1005.31(b)(1)(ii) and (vi).
    \28\ 12 CFR 1005.31(b)(1)(vii).
    \29\ 12 CFR 1005.31(b)(2)(i).
    \30\ 12 CFR 1005.31(b)(2)(ii).
    \31\ 12 CFR 1005.31(b)(2)(iv).
    \32\ EFTA section 919(b); 12 CFR 1005.31(g). The remittance 
transfer provider must either provide a sender disclosures in each 
of the foreign languages principally used by the remittance transfer 
provider to advertise, solicit, or market remittance transfer 
services at the office in which a sender conducts a transaction or 
asserts an error, or provide disclosures in the language primarily 
used by the sender to conduct the remittance transfer or to assert 
an error.
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    The Remittance Rule requires that disclosures regarding the 
exchange rate and amount of currency that will be received by the 
designated recipient must be exact, unless an exception applies. The 
rule contains four exceptions to this general requirement, which permit 
providers to disclose estimates of certain amounts instead of actual 
amounts.\33\ Specifically, in addition to the temporary exception 
discussed above, the Remittance Rule implements a statutory exemption 
that permits estimates where a remittance transfer provider is unable 
to determine exact amounts due to either the laws of the recipient 
country or the method by which transactions are made in the recipient 
country.\34\ The third exception, as discussed above, makes it optional 
for remittance transfer providers to disclose fees imposed by the 
designated recipient's institution in certain circumstances and taxes 
collected on the remittance transfer by third parties, and that to the 
extent such charges are disclosed, a remittance transfer provider may 
disclose estimates instead of actual amounts.\35\ Lastly, also as 
discussed above, the Bureau permits a remittance transfer provider to 
provide certain estimates for certain transfers scheduled before the 
date of transfer.\36\ The temporary exception is generally limited to 
insured institutions (i.e.,

[[Page 15012]]

insured depository institutions or insured credit unions),\37\ but the 
other exceptions are available to any remittance transfer provider that 
meets their criteria.
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    \33\ The Remittance Rule also sets forth certain estimate 
methodologies.
    \34\ 12 CFR 1005.32(b)(1). The Bureau has published a safe 
harbor list of countries. See 78 FR 66251 (Nov. 5, 2013). A 
remittance transfer provider may provide estimates instead of exact 
amounts when sending to one of the countries on the list unless the 
provider has information that it is possible to disclose exact 
amounts. The rule permits a remittance transfer provider to make its 
own determination that the laws of countries, not on the list, do 
not permit a determination of exact amounts.
    \35\ 12 CFR 1005.32(b)(3).
    \36\ 12 CFR 1005.32(b)(2).
    \37\ Staff of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) wrote 
a no-action letter on December 14, 2012, that concludes it will not 
recommend enforcement actions to the SEC under Regulation E if a 
broker-dealer provides disclosures as though the broker-dealer were 
an insured institution for purposes of the temporary exception. The 
letter is available at https://www.sec.gov/divisions/marketreg/mr-noaction/2012/financial-information-forum-121412-rege.pdf.
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    2. Cancellation and refund. The rule also provides consumers with 
cancellation and refund rights.\38\ As a general matter, if a 
remittance transfer provider receives an oral or written request from a 
sender to cancel a remittance transfer within 30 minutes after the 
sender pays for the remittance transfer, then the remittance transfer 
provider must comply with the request, provided that the request 
contains certain identifying information and the transferred funds have 
not been picked up by the designated recipient or deposited into the 
designated recipient's account.\39\ Within three business days of 
receiving a sender's cancellation request, a remittance transfer 
provider must provide a refund of the total amount of funds the sender 
provided in connection with the remittance transfer, including, to the 
extent not prohibited by law, taxes, at no additional cost to the 
sender.\40\
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    \38\ EFTA section 919(d)(3) (establishing that the Board must 
issue rules regarding remittance transfer cancellation and refund 
policies for consumers).
    \39\ 12 CFR 1005.34(a).
    \40\ 12 CFR 1005.34(b).
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    3. Error resolution. Consistent with EFTA section 919(d), the 
Remittance Rule requires remittance transfer providers to remedy 
certain errors related to remittance transfers.\41\ A remittance 
transfer provider is generally required to investigate errors upon 
receiving oral or written error notice from a sender within 180 days 
after the disclosed date of availability of the remittance transfer. 
The remittance transfer provider must investigate and determine whether 
an error has occurred within 90 days of receiving an error notice and 
must report its investigation results to the consumer in writing within 
three business days after completing the investigation. If an error 
occurred, the remittance transfer provider must correct the error 
within one business day of, or as soon as reasonably practicable, after 
receiving the sender's instructions regarding the appropriate remedy.
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    \41\ 12 CFR 1005.33. The Remittance Rule defines what ``error'' 
under the rule includes and also what it does not include. 12 CFR 
1005.33(a)(1) and (2).
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    The type of remedy that is available depends on the type of error 
that the remittance transfer provider has determined to have 
occurred.\42\ Additionally, the Remittance Rule requires remittance 
transfer providers to develop and maintain written policies and 
procedures to ensure compliance with the rule's error resolution 
requirements and to keep certain records related to error 
investigations. The rule also provides that remittance transfer 
providers are liable for the acts of their agents when those agents act 
on their behalf.
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    \42\ The May 2013 final rule adopted provisions that provide 
that mistakes due to senders providing incorrect account numbers or 
recipient institution identifiers are not errors under certain 
circumstances. This amendment and the amendment to make optional the 
disclosure of recipient institution fees and certain taxes in 
connection with open network transfers are examples of how the 
Bureau made significant changes to the February 2012 Final Rule to 
ease compliance and prevent market disruptions, especially for 
remittance transfers sent through open networks to bank accounts.
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B. Significant Rule Determination

    The Bureau has determined that the Remittance Rule is a significant 
rule for purposes of Dodd-Frank section 1022(d). The Bureau makes this 
determination partly on the basis of the estimated aggregate annual 
cost to industry of complying with the rule.\43\ In addition, as the 
Bureau stated at the time of issuance, the Bureau expected the February 
2012 Final Rule to have important effects on remittance transfer 
service features, provider operations, and the overall market. For 
example, the Remittance Rule required providers to give consumers new 
pre-payment disclosures that contained information that providers did 
not uniformly provide consumers prior to the rule. The rule also 
established new procedures for resolving and remedying errors. The 
Bureau stated that these requirements would likely necessitate changes 
in business operations so firms could collect and provide consumers the 
information required in the disclosures and track and resolve errors 
consumers asserted. The improved disclosures might put downward 
pressure on pricing, but the Bureau also recognized in its 
consideration of benefits, costs and impacts (conducted pursuant to 
Dodd-Frank section 1022(b)(2)(A)) that the additional costs of the new 
regime might have the opposite effect. The Bureau was uncertain about 
the combined effect on price and quantity levels and observed that 
certain providers, though not necessarily providers with significant 
market shares, might attempt to increase prices or stop providing 
remittance transfers altogether at least in certain corridors. The 
Bureau also considered that the Remittance Rule would create important 
new compliance risks for providers although, as noted, there are 
several important exceptions that reduce these risks. The rule also 
states that providers are liable for violations by an agent when the 
agent acts for the provider.
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    \43\ In the Paperwork Reduction Act Analysis (PRA Analysis) 
published with the February 2012 Final Rule, the Bureau estimated an 
additional 4,253,000 in ongoing burden hours (as well as an 
additional 3,431,000 in one-time burden hours) from the February 
2012 Final Rule. 77 FR 6194, 6285 (Feb. 7, 2012). In the Supporting 
Statement submitted to OMB, the Bureau valued the ongoing burden 
hours at $29.64 per hour. Thus, there was approximately $126 million 
in additional ongoing burden from the February 2012 Final Rule. In 
the PRA Analysis published with the August 2012 Final Rule, the 
Bureau estimated that the amendments reduced annual burden by 
532,784 hours; and that the amendments in the May 2013 Final Rule 
reduced annual burden by an additional 276,000 hours. Taking into 
account these reductions, there was approximately $102 million in 
additional ongoing burden from the rule that took effect. The Bureau 
noted, however, that the decrease in burden was likely larger than 
the estimated amounts since the estimated reductions did not take 
full account of the downward revision in the number of state 
licensed money transmitters that offer remittance transfer services. 
See 77 FR 50244, 50282 (Aug. 20, 2012) and 78 FR 30662, 30701 (May 
22, 2013).
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    Information received by the Bureau related to these effects has 
generally been consistent with Bureau expectations. Taking all of these 
factors into consideration, including the annual costs of the 
Remittance Rule, the Bureau concludes that the Remittance Rule is 
``significant'' for purposes of section 1022(d).

IV. The Assessment Plan

    Because the Bureau has determined that the Remittance Rule is a 
significant rule for purposes of 1022(d), section 1022(d) requires the 
Bureau to assess the rule's effectiveness in meeting the purposes and 
objectives of title X of the Dodd-Frank Act and the specific goals 
stated by the Bureau. Section 1021 of the Dodd-Frank Act states that 
the Bureau's purpose is to implement and, where applicable, enforce 
Federal consumer financial law consistently for the purpose of ensuring 
that all consumers have access to markets for consumer financial 
products and services and that markets for consumer financial products 
and services are fair, transparent, and competitive. Section 1021 also 
sets forth the Bureau's objectives, which are to ensure that, with 
respect to consumer financial products and services:
     Consumers are provided with timely and understandable 
information

[[Page 15013]]

to make responsible decisions about financial transactions;
     Consumers are protected from unfair, deceptive, or abusive 
acts and practices and from discrimination;
     Outdated, unnecessary, or unduly burdensome regulations 
are regularly identified and addressed in order to reduce unwarranted 
regulatory burdens;
     Federal consumer financial law is enforced consistently, 
without regard to the status of a person as a depository institution, 
in order to promote fair competition; and
     Markets for consumer financial products and services 
operate transparently and efficiently to facilitate access and 
innovation.
    Section 1022(d) also requires the Bureau to assess the Remittance 
Rule's effectiveness in meeting the specific goals stated by the 
Bureau. As discussed above, the Remittance Rule provides three 
significant consumer protections: (1) Reliable disclosures including 
the price of a remittance transfer, the amount of currency to be 
delivered to the recipient, and the date of availability; (2) 
cancellation rights following a transfer; (3) error resolution 
provisions requiring providers to investigate disputes and remedy 
errors.\44\ The objectives of the Remittance Rule include improving the 
predictability of remittance transfers,\45\ providing consumers with 
better information for comparison shopping,\46\ and, with regard to 
amendments made in 2012 and 2013, limiting potential market disruption 
that might have resulted from implementing the February 2012 Remittance 
Rule as originally adopted.\47\
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    \44\ 77 FR 6193, 6194 (Feb. 7, 2012).
    \45\ 77 FR 6193, 6194 (Feb. 7, 2012).
    \46\ Id.
    \47\ See e.g., 78 FR at 30683 (May 22, 2013).
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    To assess the effectiveness of the Remittance Rule in meeting these 
purposes, goals, and objectives, the Bureau intends to focus its 
assessment of the Remittance Rule in two areas: (1) Whether the market 
for remittances has evolved after the Remittance Rule in ways that 
promote access, efficiency, and limited market disruption by 
considering how remittance volumes, prices, and competition in the 
remittance market may have changed; and, (2) whether the new system of 
consumer protections has brought more information, transparency, and 
greater predictability of prices to the market.
    To assess the Remittance Rule, the Bureau plans to analyze a 
variety of metrics and data to the extent feasible. Feasibility will 
depend on the availability of data and the cost to obtain any new data. 
The Bureau will seek to gather information about activities and 
outcomes including the ones listed below and seek to understand how 
these activities and outcomes relate to each other:
    (1) Provider activities undertaken to comply with the Remittance 
Rule such as provision of disclosures; responses to errors; and 
provision of cancellation rights;
    (2) Consumer activities including utilization of their error 
resolution rights;
    (3) Consumer outcomes that the Remittance Rule sought to affect 
including whether the new system has brought greater transparency and 
predictability of the costs of sending remittances and allowed for 
comparison shopping; and
    (4) Other market outcomes that the Remittance Rule may have 
affected including the number and types of providers, the number of 
remittances sent, and the price of transfers.
    In conducting the assessment, the Bureau will seek to compare 
consumer outcomes to a baseline that would exist if the Remittance 
Rule's requirements were not in effect. Doing so is challenging because 
the Bureau cannot directly observe what the remittance market would 
look like had the Remittance Rule not come into effect. The Bureau may 
have access to data from before the effective date of the Remittance 
Rule that is informative about the outcomes absent the Remittance Rule. 
In addition, some of the provisions of the rule that allow exemptions, 
applicable State laws in effect before the rule, or other institutional 
factors may allow the Bureau to observe outcomes similar to outcomes 
one might observe without the rule. The Bureau will draw conclusions as 
supported by the data, taking into account that factors other than the 
rule itself may affect observable outcomes.
    The Bureau may also seek to compare outcomes observed with the 
Remittance Rule to counterfactual outcomes if specific elements of the 
Remittance Rule had not been in effect. For example, the Bureau may 
seek to understand the effects of specific amendments, provisions, or 
exceptions, which only makes sense when compared to a baseline in which 
the balance of the Remittance Rule is in effect. In addition, the 
Bureau may consider how other possible provisions might have changed 
the effects of the rule.
    The Bureau has existing data sources, currently available or in 
development, with which to undertake these analyses, and the Bureau is 
also planning to secure additional data. Existing data sources include 
the World Bank Migration and Remittance Database,\48\ consumer 
complaints submitted to the Bureau, and information obtained from 
Bureau supervision and enforcement activities. The Bureau plans to use 
information provided by banks and credit unions in their Call Reports 
on their remittance activities. The Bureau is also exploring the 
availability and utility of other sources of data including State level 
assessments and reports on money transmitters operating within 
individual States.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \48\ The database is available at https://www.worldbank.org/en/topic/migrationremittancesdiasporaissues/brief/migration-remittances-data, accessed February 14, 2017.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Bureau intends to interview various market participants, 
including remittance transfer providers and potential remittance 
transfer providers, as it analyzes the data described above and 
interprets the findings. The Bureau may also request information from 
remittance transfer providers about, for example, error assertions and 
resolutions and sample disclosures, including, if applicable, foreign 
language disclosures.
    As it conducts its assessment of the Remittance Rule, the Bureau 
expects to consider effects of specific provisions of the rule to the 
extent feasible. For example, the Bureau may collect and analyze 
information about the use of the temporary exception allowing insured 
institutions to estimate certain third-party fees and exchange rates 
that expires in July 2020. In addition, where practical and reasonable 
the Bureau may also collect and analyze information about: (1) The 100-
transfer safe harbor; (2) exceptions to the rule's error resolution 
regime for certain sender mistakes involving incorrect account numbers 
and recipient institution identifiers; (3) optional disclosure of 
recipient institution fees for remittance transfers conducted over open 
networks; (4) optional disclosure of taxes imposed on a remittance 
transfer by a person other than the remittance transfer provider; and 
(5) the requirement to provide foreign language disclosures under 
certain circumstances.

V. Request for Comment

    To inform the assessment, the Bureau hereby invites members of the 
public to submit information and other comments relevant to the issues 
identified below, as well as any information relevant to assessing the 
effectiveness of the Remittance Rule in meeting the purposes and 
objectives of title X of the Dodd-Frank Act (section 1021) and the 
specific goals of the Bureau (enumerated

[[Page 15014]]

above). In particular, the Bureau invites the public, including 
consumers and their advocates, remittance transfer providers and other 
industry representatives, industry analysts, and other interested 
persons to submit the following:
    (1) Comments on the feasibility and effectiveness of the assessment 
plan, the objectives of the Remittance Rule that the Bureau intends to 
emphasize in the assessment, and the outcomes, metrics, baselines and 
analytical methods for assessing the effectiveness of the rule as 
described in part IV above;
    (2) Data and other factual information that may be useful for 
executing the Bureau's assessment plan, as described in part IV above;
    (3) Recommendations to improve the assessment plan, as well as 
data, other factual information, and sources of data that would be 
useful and available to execute any recommended improvements to the 
assessment plan including data on the exceptions and provisions 
discussed at the end of part IV;
    (4) Data and other factual information about the benefits and costs 
of the Remittance Rule for consumers, remittance transfer providers, 
and others; and about the impacts of the rule on transparency, 
efficiency, access, and innovation in the remittance market;
    (5) Data and other factual information about the rule's 
effectiveness in meeting the purposes and objectives of Title X of the 
Dodd-Frank Act (section 1021), which are listed in part IV above;
    (6) Recommendations for modifying, expanding, or eliminating the 
Remittance Rule.

    Dated: March 15, 2017.
Richard Cordray,
Director, Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection.
[FR Doc. 2017-05681 Filed 3-23-17; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 4810-AM-P



                                                                              Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 56 / Friday, March 24, 2017 / Proposed Rules                                                  15009

                                                    protection, Reporting and recordkeeping                 BUREAU OF CONSUMER FINANCIAL                            All comments, including attachments
                                                    requirements, Security measures, Spent                  PROTECTION                                            and other supporting materials, will
                                                    fuel, Whistleblowing.                                                                                         become part of the public record and
                                                                                                            12 CFR Part 1005                                      subject to public disclosure. Sensitive
                                                      For the reasons set out in the                                                                              personal information, such as account
                                                    preamble and under the authority of the                 [Docket No. CFPB–2017–0004]
                                                                                                                                                                  numbers or Social Security numbers,
                                                    Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended;                                                                        should not be included. Comments
                                                    the Energy Reorganization Act of 1974,                  Request for Information Regarding
                                                                                                            Remittance Rule Assessment                            generally will not be edited to remove
                                                    as amended; the Nuclear Waste Policy                                                                          any identifying or contact information.
                                                    Act of 1982, as amended; and 5 U.S.C.                   AGENCY:  Bureau of Consumer Financial                 FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
                                                    552 and 553; the NRC is adopting the                    Protection.                                           Scott Fulford, Economist; Paul
                                                    following amendment to 10 CFR part 72:
                                                                                                            ACTION: Notice of assessment of                       Rothstein, Section Chief; Jane Raso,
                                                    PART 72—LICENSING                                       remittance rule and request for public                Counsel; Max Bentovim, Financial
                                                    REQUIREMENTS FOR THE                                    comment.                                              Analyst; Division of Research, Markets,
                                                    INDEPENDENT STORAGE OF SPENT                                                                                  and Regulations at (202) 435–9798.
                                                                                                            SUMMARY:    The Bureau of Consumer                    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
                                                    NUCLEAR FUEL, HIGH-LEVEL                                Financial Protection (Bureau) is
                                                    RADIOACTIVE WASTE, AND                                  conducting an assessment of certain of                I. Background
                                                    REACTOR-RELATED GREATER THAN                            the Bureau’s regulations related to                      Congress established the Bureau in
                                                    CLASS C WASTE                                           consumer remittance transfers under the               the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and
                                                                                                            Electronic Fund Transfer Act (subpart B               Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank
                                                    ■ 1. The authority citation for part 72                 of Regulation E) in accordance with                   Act).1 In the Dodd-Frank Act, Congress
                                                    continues to read as follows:                           section 1022(d) of the Dodd-Frank Wall                generally consolidated in the Bureau the
                                                      Authority: Atomic Energy Act of 1954,                 Street Reform and Consumer Protection                 rulemaking authority for Federal
                                                    secs. 51, 53, 57, 62, 63, 65, 69, 81, 161, 182,         Act. The Bureau is requesting public                  consumer financial laws previously
                                                    183, 184, 186, 187, 189, 223, 234, 274 (42              comment on its plans for assessing these              vested in certain other Federal agencies.
                                                    U.S.C. 2071, 2073, 2077, 2092, 2093, 2095,              regulations as well as certain                        Congress also provided the Bureau with
                                                    2099, 2111, 2201, 2210e, 2232, 2233, 2234,              recommendations and information that                  the authority to, among other things,
                                                    2236, 2237, 2238, 2273, 2282, 2021); Energy             may be useful in conducting the                       prescribe rules as may be necessary or
                                                    Reorganization Act of 1974, secs. 201, 202,             planned assessment.                                   appropriate to enable the Bureau to
                                                    206, 211 (42 U.S.C. 5841, 5842, 5846, 5851);            DATES: Comments must be received on                   administer and carry out the purposes
                                                    National Environmental Policy Act of 1969                                                                     and objectives of the Federal consumer
                                                                                                            or before: May 23, 2017.
                                                    (42 U.S.C. 4332); Nuclear Waste Policy Act                                                                    financial laws and to prevent evasions
                                                    of 1982, secs. 117(a), 132, 133, 134, 135, 137,         ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
                                                                                                            identified by Docket No. CFPB–2017–                   thereof.2 Since 2011, the Bureau has
                                                    141, 145(g), 148, 218(a) (42 U.S.C. 10137(a),                                                                 issued a number of rules adopted under
                                                    10152, 10153, 10154, 10155, 10157, 10161,               0004, by any of the following methods:
                                                                                                                                                                  Federal consumer financial law.3
                                                    10165(g), 10168, 10198(a)); 44 U.S.C. 3504                 • Electronic: http://
                                                                                                                                                                     Section 1022(d) of the Dodd-Frank
                                                    note.                                                   www.regulations.gov. Follow the
                                                                                                                                                                  Act requires the Bureau to conduct an
                                                                                                            instructions for submitting comments.                 assessment of each significant rule or
                                                    ■ 2. In § 72.214, Certificate of                           • Email: FederalRegisterComments@                  order adopted by the Bureau under
                                                    Compliance 1042 is added to read as                     cfpb.gov. Include Docket No. CFPB–                    Federal consumer financial law. The
                                                    follows:                                                2017–0004 in the subject line of the                  Bureau must publish a report of the
                                                                                                            email.                                                assessment not later than five years after
                                                    § 72.214 List of approved spent fuel
                                                    storage casks.
                                                                                                               • Mail: Monica Jackson, Office of the              the effective date of such rule or order.
                                                                                                            Executive Secretary, Consumer                         The assessment must address, among
                                                    *      *     *     *     *                              Financial Protection Bureau, 1700 G                   other relevant factors, the rule’s
                                                       Certificate Number: 1042.                            Street NW., Washington, DC 20552.                     effectiveness in meeting the purposes
                                                       Initial Certificate Effective Date: June                • Hand Delivery/Courier: Monica                    and objectives of title X of the Dodd-
                                                    7, 2017.                                                Jackson, Office of the Executive                      Frank Act and the specific goals stated
                                                                                                            Secretary, Consumer Financial                         by the Bureau. The assessment must
                                                       SAR Submitted by: TN Americas LLC.                   Protection Bureau, 1275 First Street NE.,             reflect available evidence and any data
                                                       SAR Title: Final Safety Analysis                     Washington, DC 20002.                                 that the Bureau reasonably may collect.
                                                    Report for the NUHOMS® EOS Dry                             Instructions: All submissions should               Before publishing a report of its
                                                    Spent Fuel Storage System.                              include the document title and docket                 assessment, the Bureau must invite
                                                       Docket Number: 72–1042.                              number. Because paper mail in the                     public comment on recommendations
                                                                                                            Washington, DC area and at the Bureau                 for modifying, expanding, or
                                                       Certificate Expiration Date: [DATE 20                is subject to delay, commenters are
                                                    YEARS AFTER PUBLICATION IN THE                                                                                eliminating the significant rule or order.
                                                                                                            encouraged to submit comments                            In February 2012, the Bureau
                                                    Federal Register].                                      electronically. In general, all comments              published a final rule concerning
                                                       Model Number: EOS–37PTH, EOS–                        received will be posted without change                consumer remittance transfers to
                                                    89BTH.                                                  to http://www.regulations.gov. In
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                                                                                                                                  individuals and businesses in foreign
                                                      Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this 9th day            addition, comments will be available for              countries in the Federal Register titled
                                                    of March 2017.                                          public inspection and copying at 1275                 ‘‘Electronic Fund Transfers (Regulation
                                                      For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
                                                                                                            First Street NE., Washington, DC 20002                E)’’ (February 2012 Final Rule) to
                                                                                                            on official business days between the                 implement section 1073 of the Dodd
                                                    Victor M. McCree,
                                                                                                            hours of 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. Eastern
                                                    Executive Director for Operations.                      Time. You can make an appointment to                    1 Public Law 111–203, 124 Stat. 1376 (2010).
                                                    [FR Doc. 2017–05897 Filed 3–23–17; 8:45 am]             inspect the documents by telephoning                    2 12 U.S.C. 5512(b)(1).
                                                    BILLING CODE 7590–01–P                                  (202) 435–7275.                                         3 12 U.S.C. 5512(d).




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                                                    15010                     Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 56 / Friday, March 24, 2017 / Proposed Rules

                                                    Frank Act.4 The Bureau amended the                      completion of the assessment, the                        recipient will receive (the ‘‘temporary
                                                    February 2012 Final Rule on several                     Bureau plans to issue an assessment                      exception’’).13
                                                    occasions both before and after it took                 report no later than October 28, 2018.                      As discussed above, the Bureau
                                                    effect on October 28, 2013.5 As                                                                                  subsequently amended the February
                                                    discussed further below, the Bureau has                 III. The Remittance Rule                                 2012 Final Rule several times before the
                                                    determined that the February 2012 Final                    Section 1073 of the Dodd Frank Act                    effective date of October 28, 2013 to
                                                    Rule and all the amendments related to                  amended the Electronic Fund Transfer                     revise the rule, temporarily delay the
                                                    it that the Bureau made and that took                                                                            effective date of the February 2012 Final
                                                                                                            Act (EFTA) to create a comprehensive
                                                    effect on October 28, 2013 collectively                                                                          Rule,14 and to address important
                                                                                                            new system of consumer protection for
                                                    make up a significant rule for purposes                                                                          questions raised by industry, consumer
                                                    of section 1022(d) and will conduct an                  remittance transfers sent by consumers
                                                                                                                                                                     advocacy groups, and other
                                                    assessment of the rule. This document                   in the United States to individuals and                  stakeholders. The Bureau believed that
                                                    refers to the February 2012 Final Rule                  businesses in foreign countries.                         these amendments were warranted to
                                                    as amended when it took effect on                       Consumers transfer tens of billions of                   increase certain consumer protections,
                                                    October 28, 2013 as the ‘‘Remittance                    dollars from the United States each year.                avoid potentially significant disruption
                                                    Rule.’’ Further, the Bureau will consider               However, these transactions were                         to the provision of remittance transfers,
                                                    certain amendments to it that the                       generally excluded from existing                         and clarify the regulations by making
                                                    Bureau issued shortly after the                         Federal consumer protection regulation                   technical corrections and conforming
                                                    Remittance Rule’s October 28, 2013                      in the United States until the Dodd-                     changes.
                                                    effective date to the extent doing so will              Frank Act expanded the scope of the                         First, in July 2012, the Bureau
                                                    facilitate a more meaningful assessment                 EFTA to provide for their regulation.9                   published amendments to correct
                                                    of the Remittance Rule. Specifically, the                  On February 7, 2012, the Bureau                       certain technical aspects of the February
                                                    Bureau is incorporating into the                        published the February 2012 Final Rule                   2012 Final Rule and to make certain
                                                    assessment certain amendments related                   in the Federal Register to implement                     non-substantive, conforming changes.15
                                                    to the extension of an exception in the                 section 919 of the EFTA, as set forth in                 Then, in August 2012, the Bureau
                                                    Remittance Rule that permits insured                                                                             published amendments to the February
                                                                                                            section 1073 of the Dodd-Frank Act. The
                                                    institutions to provide estimated                                                                                2012 Final Rule that, among other
                                                                                                            rule was published in a new subpart B
                                                    amounts instead of exact amounts under                                                                           things, added a safe harbor that clarified
                                                    certain circumstances. Those                            to the Bureau’s Regulation E.10 The
                                                                                                            February 2012 Final Rule, among other                    that persons that provide 100 or fewer
                                                    amendments were published in a final                                                                             remittance transfers in both the prior
                                                    rule in the Federal Register in                         things, defined remittance transfers 11
                                                                                                                                                                     and the current calendar years are
                                                    September 2014 and became effective in                  and which persons must comply with
                                                                                                                                                                     deemed not to be providing remittance
                                                    November 2014.6 In this document, the                   the rule because they are remittance
                                                                                                                                                                     transfers in the normal course of
                                                    Bureau is requesting public comment on                  transfer providers; 12 established certain
                                                                                                                                                                     business, and thus are not remittance
                                                    the issues identified below regarding the               consumer disclosures that must be given                  transfer providers and are not required
                                                    Remittance Rule and these certain                       to consumers who send remittance                         to comply with the February 2012 Final
                                                    subsequent amendments.                                  transfers and certain exceptions to these                Rule.16 The August 2012 final rule also
                                                                                                            disclosures; provided consumers with                     contained provisions that apply to
                                                    II. Assessment Process                                  cancellation and refund rights, and                      remittance transfers scheduled in
                                                       Assessments pursuant to section                      required providers to resolve errors.                    advance of the transfer date, including
                                                    1022(d) of the Dodd-Frank Act are for                   Further, the February 2012 Final Rule                    a provision that permits a remittance
                                                    informational purposes only and are not                 implemented a statutory exception that                   transfer provider to provide estimates
                                                    part of any formal or informal                          permits remittance transfer providers                    for certain disclosures for certain of
                                                    rulemaking proceedings under the                        that are insured institutions to estimate,               these transfers.17
                                                    Administrative Procedure Act.7 The                      under certain circumstances, the                            Subsequently, as noted above, the
                                                    Bureau plans to consider relevant                       amount of currency that a designated                     Bureau temporarily delayed the
                                                    comments and other information
                                                    received as it conducts the assessment                  which are posted as part of the federal government’s       13 EFTA section 919(a)(4) established that the
                                                    and prepares an assessment report. The                  Unified Agenda of Regulatory and Deregulatory            temporary exception would expire on July 21, 2015,
                                                    Bureau does not, however, expect that it                Actions. See http://www.reginfo.gov/public/do/           but permitted the Bureau to extend the exception
                                                    will respond in the assessment report to                eAgendaMain.                                             for up to ten years after the enactment of the Dodd-
                                                    each comment received pursuant to this                     9 15 U.S.C. 1693 et seq. EFTA section 919 is          Frank Act (i.e., July 21, 2020), if it determined that
                                                                                                            codified in 15 U.S.C. 1693o–1.                           the expiration of the exception on July 21, 2015,
                                                    document. Furthermore, the Bureau                          10 77 FR 6194 (Feb. 7, 2012).                         would negatively affect the ability of insured
                                                    does not anticipate that the assessment                    11 12 CFR 1005.30(e) (defining a remittance           institutions to send remittances to locations in
                                                    report will include specific proposals by               transfer generally to be a transfer of funds requested   foreign countries. The Bureau extended the
                                                    the Bureau to modify any rules,                         by a sender to a designated recipient that is sent by    exception to July 21, 2020, in September 2014 based
                                                                                                            a remittance transfer provider). There are specific      on its determination that the expiration of the
                                                    although the findings made in the                                                                                exception on July 21, 2015, would negatively affect
                                                                                                            exclusions for certain kinds of transfers,
                                                    assessment will help to inform the                      specifically, small value transactions of $15 or less,   the ability of insured institutions to send
                                                    Bureau’s thinking as to whether to                      and transfers for the purchase or sale of securities     remittances to locations in foreign countries. See 79
                                                    consider commencing a rulemaking                        or commodities provided that certain conditions are      FR 55970 (Sept. 18, 2014).
                                                                                                                                                                       14 78 FR 6025 (Jan. 29, 2013). The February 2012
                                                    proceeding in the future.8 Upon                         met. A designated recipient is any natural person
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                                                                                                            or organization such as a corporation specified by       Final Rule had an effective date of February 7, 2013.
                                                                                                            the sender as the authorized recipient of a              The Bureau temporarily delayed the effective date
                                                      4 77  FR 6194 (February 7, 2012).                     remittance transfer to be received at a location in      because it had published additional proposed
                                                      5 As  discussed below, one of the amendments is                                                                amendments to the February 2012 Final Rule in
                                                                                                            a foreign country. 12 CFR 1003.30(c) and comment
                                                    a temporary delay of the original effective date,       30(c)–1.                                                 December 2012. In a final rule published in May
                                                    February 7, 2013.                                          12 77 FR 6194, 6285 (providing that a remittance      2013, the Bureau finalized these amendments and
                                                       6 78 FR 55970 (Sept. 18, 2014).
                                                                                                            transfer provider is any person that provides            set the effective date as October 28, 2013.
                                                       7 Public Law 79–404, 60 Stat. 237 (1946).                                                                       15 77 FR 40459 (July 10, 2012).
                                                                                                            remittance transfers for a consumer in the normal
                                                       8 The Bureau announces its rulemaking plans in                                                                  16 12 CFR 1005.30(f)(2)(i).
                                                                                                            course of its business, regardless of whether the
                                                    semiannual updates of its rulemaking agenda,            consumer holds an account with such person).               17 12 CFR 1005.32(b)(2); 1005.36.




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                                                                               Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 56 / Friday, March 24, 2017 / Proposed Rules                                                    15011

                                                    effective date of the February 2012 Final                   The Remittance Rule applies to                       payment disclosure,29 as well as certain
                                                    Rule pending the finalization of                         remittance transfers sent by traditional                additional information, such as the date
                                                    proposed amendments it published in                      financial institutions such as banks and                of availability of the funds 30 and
                                                    the Federal Register in December 2012                    credit unions; non-banks, such as                       information regarding the sender’s error
                                                    to further amend the February 2012                       money transmitters; and Internet and                    resolution and cancellation rights.31
                                                    Final Rule.18 Then, in May 2013, the                     mobile providers. Further, a remittance                 Disclosures must always be made in
                                                    Bureau finalized the proposed                            transfer could be a consumer-to-                        English. In certain circumstances, a
                                                    amendments it published in December                      consumer transfer, or it could be a                     remittance transfer provider must also
                                                    2012 in a final rule. Among other things,                consumer-to-business transfer. The                      provide foreign language disclosures.32
                                                    the May 2013 final rule created a                        Remittance Rule applies to remittance                      The Remittance Rule requires that
                                                    permanent exception for transfers                        transfers sent over open networks. The                  disclosures regarding the exchange rate
                                                    through open networks that made                          most common form of open network                        and amount of currency that will be
                                                    optional in certain circumstances the                    remittance transfer is a wire transfer.                 received by the designated recipient
                                                    disclosure of fees imposed by the                        The rule also applies to remittance                     must be exact, unless an exception
                                                    designated recipient’s institution and                   transfers sent over closed networks, in                 applies. The rule contains four
                                                    the disclosure of taxes collected on the                 which a remittance transfer provider                    exceptions to this general requirement,
                                                    remittance transfer by a person other                    typically uses either its own operators                 which permit providers to disclose
                                                    than the provider.19 It also provided that               or a network of agents or other partners                estimates of certain amounts instead of
                                                    for these charges, estimates may be                      to collect funds from senders in the                    actual amounts.33 Specifically, in
                                                    provided.20 These amendments also                        United States and distribute those funds                addition to the temporary exception
                                                    created certain exceptions to the general                to the designated recipient abroad. The                 discussed above, the Remittance Rule
                                                    error resolution provisions in situations                rule additionally applies to remittance                 implements a statutory exemption that
                                                    in which a remittance transfer is not                    transfers sent through the automated                    permits estimates where a remittance
                                                    delivered to a designated recipient                      clearinghouse system (ACH), although                    transfer provider is unable to determine
                                                    because the sender provided an                           use of ACH for consumer transfers is                    exact amounts due to either the laws of
                                                    incorrect account number or recipient                    limited compared to its use for non-                    the recipient country or the method by
                                                    institution identifier that results in the               consumer (i.e., business-to-business)                   which transactions are made in the
                                                    transferred funds being deposited in the                 transfers.                                              recipient country.34 The third
                                                    wrong account.21 Lastly, in August                       A. Major Provisions of the Remittance                   exception, as discussed above, makes it
                                                    2013, the Bureau published a                             Rule                                                    optional for remittance transfer
                                                    clarificatory amendment and a technical                                                                          providers to disclose fees imposed by
                                                    correction to the May 2013 final rule.22                    The Remittance Rule addressed three
                                                                                                                                                                     the designated recipient’s institution in
                                                       As noted above and discussed further                  major topics, which are summarized
                                                                                                                                                                     certain circumstances and taxes
                                                    below, the Bureau has determined that                    below.
                                                                                                                1. Disclosures. Consistent with the                  collected on the remittance transfer by
                                                    the Remittance Rule is a significant rule                                                                        third parties, and that to the extent such
                                                    for purposes of Dodd-Frank section                       disclosure requirements established by
                                                                                                             section 919(a) of EFTA, the Remittance                  charges are disclosed, a remittance
                                                    1022(d) and will conduct an assessment                                                                           transfer provider may disclose estimates
                                                    of the rule.23                                           Rule generally requires a remittance
                                                                                                             transfer provider to provide a written                  instead of actual amounts.35 Lastly, also
                                                                                                             pre-payment disclosure when the                         as discussed above, the Bureau permits
                                                      18 77  FR 77188 (Dec. 31, 2012).
                                                      19 78                                                  sender requests a transfer and generally                a remittance transfer provider to provide
                                                             FR 30662 (May 22, 2013); 12 CFR
                                                    1005.31(b)(1)(vii).                                      requires the provider to provide a                      certain estimates for certain transfers
                                                       20 12 CFR 1005.32(b)(3).
                                                                                                             written receipt when payment is                         scheduled before the date of transfer.36
                                                       21 12 CFR 1005.33(h).
                                                                                                             made.24 The pre-payment disclosure                      The temporary exception is generally
                                                       22 78 FR 49365 (Aug. 14, 2013).
                                                                                                             must contain specific information about                 limited to insured institutions (i.e.,
                                                       23 As noted above, in September 2014, the Bureau
                                                                                                             a remittance transfer, such as the fee a
                                                    published a final rule that, among other things,                                                                   29 12  CFR 1005.31(b)(2)(i).
                                                    extended the temporary exception to July 21, 2020.       remittance transfer will impose on the                    30 12  CFR 1005.31(b)(2)(ii).
                                                    The effective date of this final rule was November       remittance transfer,25 the exchange rate,                  31 12 CFR 1005.31(b)(2)(iv).
                                                    17, 2014. In September 2014, the Bureau also             if any,26 certain applicable fees and                      32 EFTA section 919(b); 12 CFR 1005.31(g). The
                                                    published a final rule that extended its supervisory     taxes that will be imposed on the                       remittance transfer provider must either provide a
                                                    authority to any nonbank international money
                                                    transfer provider that has at least one million          transfer,27 and the amount to be                        sender disclosures in each of the foreign languages
                                                                                                             received by the designated recipient.28                 principally used by the remittance transfer provider
                                                    aggregate annual international money transfers to
                                                                                                                                                                     to advertise, solicit, or market remittance transfer
                                                    determine compliance with, among other things,           The receipt must include the                            services at the office in which a sender conducts a
                                                    the Remittance Rule. 79 FR 56631 (Sept. 23, 2014).       information provided on the pre-                        transaction or asserts an error, or provide
                                                    In October 2016, the Bureau amended Regulation E
                                                                                                                                                                     disclosures in the language primarily used by the
                                                    by issuing two final rules. The first final rule
                                                                                                             purposes of an assessment of such rule. In this         sender to conduct the remittance transfer or to
                                                    focused on prepaid accounts and made clarificatory
                                                                                                             notice, except with respect to amendments related       assert an error.
                                                    amendments to the Remittance Rule to clarify its                                                                    33 The Remittance Rule also sets forth certain
                                                    application to prepaid accounts. As stated in the        to the extension of the temporary exception, the
                                                    final rule, the effective date of these clarifications   Bureau is not seeking comment on the amendments         estimate methodologies.
                                                    is October 1, 2017. 81 FR 83934 (Nov. 22, 2016).         to the Remittance Rule that became or will become          34 12 CFR 1005.32(b)(1). The Bureau has

                                                    However, on March 15, 2017, the Bureau published         effective after the October 28, 2013 effective date.    published a safe harbor list of countries. See 78 FR
                                                                                                                24 12 CFR 1005.31(b)(1) and (2). As an alternative   66251 (Nov. 5, 2013). A remittance transfer provider
                                                    a proposal to extend the effective date by six
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                    months to April 1, 2018. 82 FR 13782 (Mar. 15,           to providing a written receipt, the rule permits a      may provide estimates instead of exact amounts
                                                    2017). The second final rule made certain clerical       remittance transfer provider to give a single written   when sending to one of the countries on the list
                                                    and non-substantive corrections to errors it has         disclosure prior to payment containing all of the       unless the provider has information that it is
                                                    identified in Regulation E, including in certain         information required on the receipt, so long as the     possible to disclose exact amounts. The rule
                                                    provisions of the Remittance Rule. 81 FR 70319           provider also provides proof of payment. 12 CFR         permits a remittance transfer provider to make its
                                                                                                             1004.31(b)(3).                                          own determination that the laws of countries, not
                                                    (Oct. 12, 2016). This rule became effective on              25 12 CFR 1005.31(b)(1)(ii).
                                                    November 14, 2016. The Bureau has discretion to                                                                  on the list, do not permit a determination of exact
                                                    choose the relevant time frame for the analysis and
                                                                                                                26 12 CFR 1005.31(b)(1)(iv).                         amounts.
                                                                                                                27 12 CFR 1005.31(b)(1)(ii) and (vi).                   35 12 CFR 1005.32(b)(3).
                                                    thus the most appropriate way to address
                                                    amendments to any particular significant rule for           28 12 CFR 1005.31(b)(1)(vii).                           36 12 CFR 1005.32(b)(2).




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                                                    15012                     Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 56 / Friday, March 24, 2017 / Proposed Rules

                                                    insured depository institutions or                      the sender’s instructions regarding the               provide consumers prior to the rule. The
                                                    insured credit unions),37 but the other                 appropriate remedy.                                   rule also established new procedures for
                                                    exceptions are available to any                            The type of remedy that is available               resolving and remedying errors. The
                                                    remittance transfer provider that meets                 depends on the type of error that the                 Bureau stated that these requirements
                                                    their criteria.                                         remittance transfer provider has                      would likely necessitate changes in
                                                       2. Cancellation and refund. The rule                 determined to have occurred.42                        business operations so firms could
                                                    also provides consumers with                            Additionally, the Remittance Rule                     collect and provide consumers the
                                                                                                            requires remittance transfer providers to             information required in the disclosures
                                                    cancellation and refund rights.38 As a
                                                                                                            develop and maintain written policies                 and track and resolve errors consumers
                                                    general matter, if a remittance transfer
                                                                                                            and procedures to ensure compliance                   asserted. The improved disclosures
                                                    provider receives an oral or written
                                                                                                            with the rule’s error resolution                      might put downward pressure on
                                                    request from a sender to cancel a
                                                                                                            requirements and to keep certain                      pricing, but the Bureau also recognized
                                                    remittance transfer within 30 minutes
                                                                                                            records related to error investigations.              in its consideration of benefits, costs
                                                    after the sender pays for the remittance
                                                                                                            The rule also provides that remittance                and impacts (conducted pursuant to
                                                    transfer, then the remittance transfer
                                                                                                            transfer providers are liable for the acts            Dodd-Frank section 1022(b)(2)(A)) that
                                                    provider must comply with the request,
                                                                                                            of their agents when those agents act on              the additional costs of the new regime
                                                    provided that the request contains
                                                                                                            their behalf.                                         might have the opposite effect. The
                                                    certain identifying information and the
                                                                                                            B. Significant Rule Determination                     Bureau was uncertain about the
                                                    transferred funds have not been picked
                                                                                                                                                                  combined effect on price and quantity
                                                    up by the designated recipient or                         The Bureau has determined that the                  levels and observed that certain
                                                    deposited into the designated recipient’s               Remittance Rule is a significant rule for             providers, though not necessarily
                                                    account.39 Within three business days of                purposes of Dodd-Frank section                        providers with significant market
                                                    receiving a sender’s cancellation                       1022(d). The Bureau makes this                        shares, might attempt to increase prices
                                                    request, a remittance transfer provider                 determination partly on the basis of the              or stop providing remittance transfers
                                                    must provide a refund of the total                      estimated aggregate annual cost to                    altogether at least in certain corridors.
                                                    amount of funds the sender provided in                  industry of complying with the rule.43                The Bureau also considered that the
                                                    connection with the remittance transfer,                In addition, as the Bureau stated at the              Remittance Rule would create important
                                                    including, to the extent not prohibited                 time of issuance, the Bureau expected                 new compliance risks for providers
                                                    by law, taxes, at no additional cost to                 the February 2012 Final Rule to have                  although, as noted, there are several
                                                    the sender.40                                           important effects on remittance transfer              important exceptions that reduce these
                                                       3. Error resolution. Consistent with                 service features, provider operations,                risks. The rule also states that providers
                                                    EFTA section 919(d), the Remittance                     and the overall market. For example, the              are liable for violations by an agent
                                                    Rule requires remittance transfer                       Remittance Rule required providers to                 when the agent acts for the provider.
                                                    providers to remedy certain errors                      give consumers new pre-payment                           Information received by the Bureau
                                                    related to remittance transfers.41 A                    disclosures that contained information                related to these effects has generally
                                                    remittance transfer provider is generally               that providers did not uniformly                      been consistent with Bureau
                                                    required to investigate errors upon                                                                           expectations. Taking all of these factors
                                                                                                               42 The May 2013 final rule adopted provisions
                                                    receiving oral or written error notice                                                                        into consideration, including the annual
                                                                                                            that provide that mistakes due to senders providing
                                                    from a sender within 180 days after the                 incorrect account numbers or recipient institution    costs of the Remittance Rule, the Bureau
                                                    disclosed date of availability of the                   identifiers are not errors under certain              concludes that the Remittance Rule is
                                                    remittance transfer. The remittance                     circumstances. This amendment and the                 ‘‘significant’’ for purposes of section
                                                    transfer provider must investigate and                  amendment to make optional the disclosure of
                                                                                                            recipient institution fees and certain taxes in
                                                                                                                                                                  1022(d).
                                                    determine whether an error has                          connection with open network transfers are
                                                    occurred within 90 days of receiving an                                                                       IV. The Assessment Plan
                                                                                                            examples of how the Bureau made significant
                                                    error notice and must report its                        changes to the February 2012 Final Rule to ease          Because the Bureau has determined
                                                                                                            compliance and prevent market disruptions,
                                                    investigation results to the consumer in                especially for remittance transfers sent through
                                                                                                                                                                  that the Remittance Rule is a significant
                                                    writing within three business days after                open networks to bank accounts.                       rule for purposes of 1022(d), section
                                                    completing the investigation. If an error                  43 In the Paperwork Reduction Act Analysis (PRA    1022(d) requires the Bureau to assess
                                                    occurred, the remittance transfer                       Analysis) published with the February 2012 Final      the rule’s effectiveness in meeting the
                                                    provider must correct the error within                  Rule, the Bureau estimated an additional 4,253,000    purposes and objectives of title X of the
                                                                                                            in ongoing burden hours (as well as an additional
                                                    one business day of, or as soon as                      3,431,000 in one-time burden hours) from the          Dodd-Frank Act and the specific goals
                                                    reasonably practicable, after receiving                 February 2012 Final Rule. 77 FR 6194, 6285 (Feb.      stated by the Bureau. Section 1021 of
                                                                                                            7, 2012). In the Supporting Statement submitted to    the Dodd-Frank Act states that the
                                                       37 Staff of the Securities and Exchange              OMB, the Bureau valued the ongoing burden hours       Bureau’s purpose is to implement and,
                                                                                                            at $29.64 per hour. Thus, there was approximately
                                                    Commission (SEC) wrote a no-action letter on
                                                                                                            $126 million in additional ongoing burden from the    where applicable, enforce Federal
                                                    December 14, 2012, that concludes it will not                                                                 consumer financial law consistently for
                                                                                                            February 2012 Final Rule. In the PRA Analysis
                                                    recommend enforcement actions to the SEC under
                                                    Regulation E if a broker-dealer provides disclosures
                                                                                                            published with the August 2012 Final Rule, the        the purpose of ensuring that all
                                                                                                            Bureau estimated that the amendments reduced          consumers have access to markets for
                                                    as though the broker-dealer were an insured
                                                                                                            annual burden by 532,784 hours; and that the
                                                    institution for purposes of the temporary exception.
                                                                                                            amendments in the May 2013 Final Rule reduced         consumer financial products and
                                                    The letter is available at https://www.sec.gov/                                                               services and that markets for consumer
                                                                                                            annual burden by an additional 276,000 hours.
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                                                    divisions/marketreg/mr-noaction/2012/financial-
                                                    information-forum-121412-rege.pdf.
                                                                                                            Taking into account these reductions, there was       financial products and services are fair,
                                                       38 EFTA section 919(d)(3) (establishing that the
                                                                                                            approximately $102 million in additional ongoing      transparent, and competitive. Section
                                                                                                            burden from the rule that took effect. The Bureau
                                                    Board must issue rules regarding remittance transfer    noted, however, that the decrease in burden was       1021 also sets forth the Bureau’s
                                                    cancellation and refund policies for consumers).        likely larger than the estimated amounts since the    objectives, which are to ensure that,
                                                       39 12 CFR 1005.34(a).
                                                       40 12 CFR 1005.34(b).
                                                                                                            estimated reductions did not take full account of     with respect to consumer financial
                                                                                                            the downward revision in the number of state          products and services:
                                                       41 12 CFR 1005.33. The Remittance Rule defines       licensed money transmitters that offer remittance
                                                    what ‘‘error’’ under the rule includes and also what    transfer services. See 77 FR 50244, 50282 (Aug. 20,      • Consumers are provided with
                                                    it does not include. 12 CFR 1005.33(a)(1) and (2).      2012) and 78 FR 30662, 30701 (May 22, 2013).          timely and understandable information


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                                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 56 / Friday, March 24, 2017 / Proposed Rules                                                   15013

                                                    to make responsible decisions about                          obtain any new data. The Bureau will                  sources include the World Bank
                                                    financial transactions;                                      seek to gather information about                      Migration and Remittance Database,48
                                                       • Consumers are protected from                            activities and outcomes including the                 consumer complaints submitted to the
                                                    unfair, deceptive, or abusive acts and                       ones listed below and seek to                         Bureau, and information obtained from
                                                    practices and from discrimination;                           understand how these activities and                   Bureau supervision and enforcement
                                                       • Outdated, unnecessary, or unduly                        outcomes relate to each other:                        activities. The Bureau plans to use
                                                    burdensome regulations are regularly                            (1) Provider activities undertaken to              information provided by banks and
                                                    identified and addressed in order to                         comply with the Remittance Rule such                  credit unions in their Call Reports on
                                                    reduce unwarranted regulatory burdens;                       as provision of disclosures; responses to             their remittance activities. The Bureau
                                                       • Federal consumer financial law is                       errors; and provision of cancellation                 is also exploring the availability and
                                                    enforced consistently, without regard to                     rights;                                               utility of other sources of data including
                                                    the status of a person as a depository                          (2) Consumer activities including                  State level assessments and reports on
                                                    institution, in order to promote fair                        utilization of their error resolution                 money transmitters operating within
                                                    competition; and                                             rights;                                               individual States.
                                                       • Markets for consumer financial                             (3) Consumer outcomes that the                        The Bureau intends to interview
                                                    products and services operate                                Remittance Rule sought to affect                      various market participants, including
                                                    transparently and efficiently to facilitate                  including whether the new system has                  remittance transfer providers and
                                                    access and innovation.                                       brought greater transparency and                      potential remittance transfer providers,
                                                       Section 1022(d) also requires the                         predictability of the costs of sending                as it analyzes the data described above
                                                    Bureau to assess the Remittance Rule’s                       remittances and allowed for comparison                and interprets the findings. The Bureau
                                                    effectiveness in meeting the specific                        shopping; and                                         may also request information from
                                                    goals stated by the Bureau. As discussed                        (4) Other market outcomes that the                 remittance transfer providers about, for
                                                    above, the Remittance Rule provides                          Remittance Rule may have affected                     example, error assertions and
                                                    three significant consumer protections:                      including the number and types of                     resolutions and sample disclosures,
                                                    (1) Reliable disclosures including the                       providers, the number of remittances                  including, if applicable, foreign
                                                    price of a remittance transfer, the                          sent, and the price of transfers.                     language disclosures.
                                                    amount of currency to be delivered to                           In conducting the assessment, the                     As it conducts its assessment of the
                                                    the recipient, and the date of                               Bureau will seek to compare consumer                  Remittance Rule, the Bureau expects to
                                                    availability; (2) cancellation rights                        outcomes to a baseline that would exist               consider effects of specific provisions of
                                                    following a transfer; (3) error resolution                   if the Remittance Rule’s requirements                 the rule to the extent feasible. For
                                                    provisions requiring providers to                            were not in effect. Doing so is                       example, the Bureau may collect and
                                                    investigate disputes and remedy                              challenging because the Bureau cannot                 analyze information about the use of the
                                                    errors.44 The objectives of the                              directly observe what the remittance                  temporary exception allowing insured
                                                    Remittance Rule include improving the                        market would look like had the                        institutions to estimate certain third-
                                                    predictability of remittance transfers,45                    Remittance Rule not come into effect.                 party fees and exchange rates that
                                                    providing consumers with better                              The Bureau may have access to data                    expires in July 2020. In addition, where
                                                    information for comparison shopping,46                       from before the effective date of the                 practical and reasonable the Bureau may
                                                    and, with regard to amendments made                          Remittance Rule that is informative                   also collect and analyze information
                                                    in 2012 and 2013, limiting potential                         about the outcomes absent the                         about: (1) The 100-transfer safe harbor;
                                                    market disruption that might have                            Remittance Rule. In addition, some of                 (2) exceptions to the rule’s error
                                                    resulted from implementing the                               the provisions of the rule that allow                 resolution regime for certain sender
                                                    February 2012 Remittance Rule as                             exemptions, applicable State laws in                  mistakes involving incorrect account
                                                    originally adopted.47                                        effect before the rule, or other                      numbers and recipient institution
                                                       To assess the effectiveness of the                        institutional factors may allow the                   identifiers; (3) optional disclosure of
                                                    Remittance Rule in meeting these                             Bureau to observe outcomes similar to                 recipient institution fees for remittance
                                                    purposes, goals, and objectives, the                         outcomes one might observe without the                transfers conducted over open networks;
                                                    Bureau intends to focus its assessment                       rule. The Bureau will draw conclusions                (4) optional disclosure of taxes imposed
                                                    of the Remittance Rule in two areas: (1)                     as supported by the data, taking into                 on a remittance transfer by a person
                                                    Whether the market for remittances has                       account that factors other than the rule              other than the remittance transfer
                                                    evolved after the Remittance Rule in                         itself may affect observable outcomes.                provider; and (5) the requirement to
                                                    ways that promote access, efficiency,                           The Bureau may also seek to compare                provide foreign language disclosures
                                                    and limited market disruption by                             outcomes observed with the Remittance                 under certain circumstances.
                                                    considering how remittance volumes,                          Rule to counterfactual outcomes if
                                                                                                                 specific elements of the Remittance Rule              V. Request for Comment
                                                    prices, and competition in the
                                                                                                                 had not been in effect. For example, the                To inform the assessment, the Bureau
                                                    remittance market may have changed;
                                                                                                                 Bureau may seek to understand the                     hereby invites members of the public to
                                                    and, (2) whether the new system of
                                                                                                                 effects of specific amendments,                       submit information and other comments
                                                    consumer protections has brought more
                                                                                                                 provisions, or exceptions, which only                 relevant to the issues identified below,
                                                    information, transparency, and greater
                                                                                                                 makes sense when compared to a                        as well as any information relevant to
                                                    predictability of prices to the market.
                                                       To assess the Remittance Rule, the                        baseline in which the balance of the                  assessing the effectiveness of the
                                                                                                                 Remittance Rule is in effect. In addition,            Remittance Rule in meeting the
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                    Bureau plans to analyze a variety of
                                                                                                                 the Bureau may consider how other                     purposes and objectives of title X of the
                                                    metrics and data to the extent feasible.
                                                                                                                 possible provisions might have changed                Dodd-Frank Act (section 1021) and the
                                                    Feasibility will depend on the
                                                                                                                 the effects of the rule.                              specific goals of the Bureau (enumerated
                                                    availability of data and the cost to
                                                                                                                    The Bureau has existing data sources,
                                                                                                                                                                         48 The database is available at https://
                                                      44 77    FR 6193, 6194 (Feb. 7, 2012).                     currently available or in development,
                                                                                                                                                                       www.worldbank.org/en/topic/
                                                      45 77    FR 6193, 6194 (Feb. 7, 2012).                     with which to undertake these analyses,               migrationremittancesdiasporaissues/brief/
                                                      46 Id.                                                     and the Bureau is also planning to                    migration-remittances-data, accessed February 14,
                                                      47 See    e.g., 78 FR at 30683 (May 22, 2013).             secure additional data. Existing data                 2017.



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                                                    15014                     Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 56 / Friday, March 24, 2017 / Proposed Rules

                                                    above). In particular, the Bureau invites               SUMMARY:   The Coast Guard proposes to                estimates 1,000 spectator craft will
                                                    the public, including consumers and                     adopt a temporary special local                       attend Sail Boston 2017 events. The
                                                    their advocates, remittance transfer                    regulation, multiple safety zones, and                proposed regulations would create
                                                    providers and other industry                            temporary spectator anchorages before,                temporary spectator anchorage
                                                    representatives, industry analysts, and                 during, and after Sail Boston 2017 in the             regulations, vessel movement control
                                                    other interested persons to submit the                  Port of Boston, Massachusetts, to be                  measures, a safety zone around each
                                                    following:                                              held between June 16, 2017 and June 22,               Tall Ship while anchored, transiting,
                                                       (1) Comments on the feasibility and                  2017. These regulations are necessary to              and moored, and a safety zone for the
                                                    effectiveness of the assessment plan, the               promote the safe navigation of vessels                restart of the Rendez-Vous 2017 Tall
                                                    objectives of the Remittance Rule that                  and the safety of life and property                   Ships Regatta. The proposed regulations
                                                    the Bureau intends to emphasize in the                  during this event. We invite your                     would be in effect at various times in
                                                    assessment, and the outcomes, metrics,                  comments on this proposed rulemaking.                 the Port of Boston between June 16,
                                                    baselines and analytical methods for                    DATES: Comments and related material                  2017 and June 22, 2017. Vessel
                                                    assessing the effectiveness of the rule as              must be received by the Coast Guard on                congestion, due to the anticipated large
                                                    described in part IV above;                             or before April 24, 2017. The Coast                   number of participating and spectator
                                                       (2) Data and other factual information               Guard anticipates that this proposed                  vessels, poses a significant threat to the
                                                    that may be useful for executing the                    rule will be effective from 12:00 a.m. on             safety of life.
                                                    Bureau’s assessment plan, as described                  June 16, 2017 until 7:00 p.m. on June                    This rule provides for the safety of life
                                                    in part IV above;                                       22, 2017.                                             on navigable waters and to protect the
                                                       (3) Recommendations to improve the                   ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
                                                                                                                                                                  participating Tall Ships, private vessels,
                                                    assessment plan, as well as data, other                 identified by docket number USCG–                     spectators, and the Port of Boston
                                                    factual information, and sources of data                2016–0949 using the Federal                           during these events.
                                                    that would be useful and available to                                                                            The Coast Guard proposes this
                                                                                                            eRulemaking Portal at http://
                                                    execute any recommended                                                                                       rulemaking under authorities in 33
                                                                                                            www.regulations.gov. See the ‘‘Public
                                                    improvements to the assessment plan                                                                           U.S.C. 1233 through 1236; 49 CFR 1.46;
                                                                                                            Participation and Request for
                                                    including data on the exceptions and                                                                          33 CFR 100.35, 33 U.S.C. 471; 33 U.S.C.
                                                                                                            Comments’’ portion of the
                                                    provisions discussed at the end of part                                                                       1221 through 1236, 2030, 2035, 2071; 49
                                                                                                            SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section for
                                                    IV;                                                                                                           CFR 1.46 and 33 CFR 1.05–1(g), 33
                                                                                                            further instructions on submitting
                                                       (4) Data and other factual information                                                                     U.S.C. 1225 and 1231; 50 U.S.C. 191; 49
                                                                                                            comments.
                                                    about the benefits and costs of the                                                                           CFR 1.46 and 33 CFR 1.05–1(G), 6.04–
                                                    Remittance Rule for consumers,                          FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:   If                 1, 6.04–6, and 160.5.
                                                    remittance transfer providers, and                      you have questions about this proposed
                                                                                                            rulemaking, call or email Mark Cutter,                III. Discussion of Proposed Rule
                                                    others; and about the impacts of the rule
                                                    on transparency, efficiency, access, and                Sector Boston Waterways Management                       Sail Boston, Inc is planning to host
                                                    innovation in the remittance market;                    Division, U.S. Coast Guard; telephone                 the Tall Ships involved in the Rendez-
                                                       (5) Data and other factual information               617–223–4000, email Mark.E.Cutter@                    Vous 2017 Tall Ships Regatta in the Port
                                                    about the rule’s effectiveness in meeting               uscg.mil.                                             of Boston. The Port of Boston will be the
                                                    the purposes and objectives of Title X of               SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
                                                                                                                                                                  only U.S. Port that the Rendez-Vous
                                                    the Dodd-Frank Act (section 1021),                                                                            2017 Tall Ships Regatta will visit. The
                                                                                                            I. Table of Abbreviations                             event will commence with a parade of
                                                    which are listed in part IV above;
                                                       (6) Recommendations for modifying,                   CFR Code of Federal Regulations                       sail into Boston Harbor on June 17,
                                                    expanding, or eliminating the                           DHS Department of Homeland Security                   2017, with the participating Tall Ships
                                                    Remittance Rule.                                        FR Federal Register                                   mooring in various berths throughout
                                                                                                            NPRM Notice of proposed rulemaking                    the Port of Boston until their departure
                                                      Dated: March 15, 2017.                                § Section                                             on June 22, 2017. Upon their departure
                                                    Richard Cordray,                                        U.S.C. United States Code                             on June 22, 2017, the Tall Ships will
                                                    Director, Bureau of Consumer Financial                                                                        transit to a position approximately 5
                                                                                                            II. Background, Purpose, and Legal
                                                    Protection.                                                                                                   nautical miles east of Rockport, MA for
                                                                                                            Basis
                                                    [FR Doc. 2017–05681 Filed 3–23–17; 8:45 am]                                                                   the restart of the Rendez-Vous 2017 Tall
                                                    BILLING CODE 4810–AM–P
                                                                                                               Sail Boston, Inc. is sponsoring Sail               Ships Regatta.
                                                                                                            Boston 2017, which has been designated                   At the time of this notice, Sail Boston
                                                                                                            a Marine Event of National Significance               2017 events are expected to include the
                                                                                                            by the U.S. Coast Guard. Scheduled                    following:
                                                    DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND                                  events will occur between June 16, 2017                  1. June 16 and June 17: 100-yard
                                                    SECURITY                                                and June 22, 2017 in the Port of Boston.              safety zone surrounding each
                                                                                                            Scheduled events will consist of Tall                 participating Tall Ship while anchored
                                                    Coast Guard
                                                                                                            Ships in a parade of sail into Boston                 in Broad Sound;
                                                                                                            Harbor on June 17, 2017, public tours of                 2. June 17: 1000-yard safety zone
                                                    33 CFR Parts 100, 110 and 165
                                                                                                            U.S. Navy vessels and Tall Ships, and                 ahead and astern and 100-yards on each
                                                    [Docket Number USCG–2016–0949]                          a U.S. Navy Blue Angels aerial                        side of participating Tall Ships during
                                                                                                            demonstration. Tall ships will depart                 the Parade of Sail;
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                    RIN 1625–AA08, AA01, AA87                               Boston on June 22, 2017 for the restart                  3. June 16 and June 17: Temporary
                                                                                                            of the Rendez-Vous 2017 Tall Ships                    spectator anchorages in effect for
                                                    Special Local Regulation, Temporary                     Regatta.                                              viewing the Parade of Tall Ships
                                                    Anchorages and Safety Zones: Sail                          The purpose of this rulemaking is to               occurring on June 17, 2017;
                                                    Boston 2017; Port of Boston, MA                         ensure the safety of vessels and                         4. June 17 through June 22: U.S. Navy
                                                    AGENCY:   Coast Guard, DHS.                             spectators in the vicinity of the Port of             Vessels and multiple Tall Ships moored
                                                                                                            Boston, before, during, and after the                 in various locations throughout the Port
                                                    ACTION:   Notice of proposed rulemaking.
                                                                                                            scheduled events. The Coast Guard                     of Boston;


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Document Created: 2018-02-01 15:10:44
Document Modified: 2018-02-01 15:10:44
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionProposed Rules
ActionNotice of assessment of remittance rule and request for public comment.
DatesComments must be received on or before: May 23, 2017.
ContactScott Fulford, Economist; Paul Rothstein, Section Chief; Jane Raso, Counsel; Max Bentovim, Financial Analyst; Division of Research, Markets, and Regulations at (202) 435- 9798.
FR Citation82 FR 15009 

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