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Federal Recipients May Continue Receiving Paper Checks

There has been much confusion in recent months about the 1996 federal law requiring that all federal payments -- except tax refunds -- be made electronically by January 1, 1999.(1) Although the law provides that some individuals can qualify for a waiver, if they would experience a hardship as a result of the requirement for electronic deposit, many recipients have been concerned about the criteria that would enable people to avoid the requirement.

Finally, on September 25, 1998 Treasury addressed many of these concerns when it issued the Final Regulations for implementing the new law. The most important aspects of the final rules are the criteria established for eligibility for the hardship waiver, and how that eligibility is determined, and who is eligible for the special Treasury "approved" bank account --called the ETA.

Treasury envisions that recipients will receive their federal payment in one of five ways:

1) recipients will continue receiving a paper check because they qualify for a hardship waiver;

2) the federal payments will be electronically deposited in an existing bank accounts;

3) recipients will voluntarily establish new accounts to receive the electronic deposit of the federal payments;

4) recipients will sign up for the Treasury controlled "ETA" account, which will presumably be low cost; or

5) if recipients receives state benefits electronically, they could choose to receive both federal and state benefits over the same electronic card (this is called the EBT option).

Hardship Waivers.(2) In a significant change from the proposed regulation, Treasury has declared that electronic deposit is not required where the recipient "determines, in his or her sole discretion, that payment by electronic funds would impose a hardship . . . ."(3) The grounds for the hardship waiver include:

  • physical disability
  • mental disability
  • geographic barrier
  • language barrier
  • literacy barrier
  • financial.(4)

In addition all recipients without bank accounts are automatically excluded from the requirement of electronic funds transfer, regardless of whether they want to claim eligibility for a hardship waiver, until the ETA is available.(5)

Waiver Can Be Claimed At Any Time. One of the most important aspects of these new waiver rules is that a recipient can claim a hardship waiver based on any of these criteria at any time.(6) The proposed regulations had delineated between recipients based on their date of eligibility for federal payments. The final rule makes no such distinction. This means that any federal recipient, regardless of the date of eligibility for federal payments, regardless of whether they have a bank account, and regardless of whether they have previously signed up to have their federal moneys electronically deposited, can clam a hardship waiver.

Recipients determine their own eligibility and simply inform the agency of that determination. Further, a failure to inform the agency of a waiver, requires the agency to maintain payment by check:

[T]he final rule makes clear Treasury's intent that the waiver process will be based on an individual's self-determination that a hardship exists. By changing the language from "certifies" to "determines" and adding the phrase "in his or her sole discretion," Treasury is indicating that an individual has the right to determine whether he or she qualifies for a waiver. . . . [A]n agency may request that the individual inform the agency of his or her election to rely upon a waiver. However, the agency may not require evidence of any condition underlying the recipient's election of a waiver. In addition, if the agency receives no response from a recipient, the agency must continue to make payment by check.(7)

Treasury's ETA Account to Be Available to All. Treasury has redefined the account that it will provide it to recipients. This account -- called the "ETA" -- will be available to all recipients of federal payments,(8) whether or not they had previously waived the requirement for electronic deposit, or had elected to receive payments electronically through an existing bank account or had established a new account just to receive electronic deposit.(9) Banks and other federally insured financial institutions will have the option to offer these ETAs based on guidelines to be developed by Treasury with public comment.(10)

Unfortunately, Treasury has not specifically articulated its verbal commitment to advocates to ensure access by federal recipients directly to the ETA only through the bank or other financial institution. Nothing in the Final Regulation indicates that check cashers and others will be prohibited from participating in the access to federal payments through ETAs. On the other hand, there is also nothing to indicate that access will be permitted either. This issue should be resolved when Treasury publishes the ETA guidelines.

Voluntary Accounts Still Not Regulated. Many federal recipients have been erroneously told by Social Security staff(11) and by alternative financial providers(12) that recipients must have a bank account to continue receiving their federal funds. As a result, we believe that many have signed up for accounts through check cashers and other non-regulated financial providers that may only provide access to the federal funds through these alternative financial providers.(13) These accounts are likely to be expensive with few real benefits for recipients.(14)

Despite vigorous advocacy from consumer and community advocates from all over the nation regarding the importance for Treasury to limit access to federal payments to financial institutions, and to regulate the costs in some way,(15) Treasury has refused to do this in the context of this Final Regulation. Instead, the Supplementary Information discusses the potential problems that may result from these types of accounts and promises that Treasury will monitor the situation and may yet propose a regulation covering these arrangements.(16)

Treasury has verbally informed NCLC staff and others that before the end of 1998, it will propose a number of different regulatory schemes over these Voluntary Accounts, and ask for public comment. These requests for comments will also ask for examples of problems which result from the lack of regulation.

Federal Payees May Also Use State EBT Systems to Receive Federal Money. Some recipients of federal payments may also receive food stamps, or other state administered benefits provided electronically through a state EBT system.(17) In some states, the federal payments, such as Social Security or SSI, can be combined with the state payment of food stamps on a single card.(18) The details of these joint programs have not been addressed in the Final Regulations.(19)

Authorized Payment Agents Can Must Have Fiduciary Duty to Recipients. Despite intense pressure from check cashers and other non-financial institutions to expand the definition of authorized payment agent to include themselves, Treasury chose the cautious route. Under the Final Rule, "authorized payment agent" is defined as "any individual or entity that is appointed or otherwise selected as a representative payee or fiduciary, under" the federal regulations governing the core payment program.(20)

Nursing homes, have in the past had their residents sign their monthly benefit checks over to them for payment of services rendered. The Treasury rules do not be permit nursing homes to be authorized payment agents just for purposes of receiving electronic deposit of federal payments. Recipients in nursing homes must either pay the nursing home by check or cash, or determine they are eligible for a waiver of the electronic deposit requirement and continue receiving the paper check and sign it over the home. Only if the nursing home qualifies to be a representative payee under the Social Security or VA rules, may it qualify as an authorized payment agent to receive direct electronic deposit of their federal payments to its residents.(21)

Agencies' Obligation To Notify Recipients. Federal agencies are only required to notify newly eligible recipients and those receiving checks about the rule on waiver.(22) Unfortunately, the Final Regulation provides that all recipients already receiving their payments electronically -- many of whom may be low income people who have signed up for overly expensive or inaccessible accounts through check cashers and the like -- will be only notified about this change in policy if they happen to hear about it through Treasury's public education campaign.(23)

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1. 31 U.S.C. §3332.

2. Additionally, electronic funds transfer is not required in various temporary or permanent situations such as where the recipient is in a foreign country which does not support electronic funds transfer (208.4(b)), in disaster areas (208.4(c)), in cases of war (208.4(d)); in cases where electronic transfer would compromise the physical safety of a person or a law enforcement action (208.4(f)); or "where an agency's need for good and services is of such unusual and compelling urgency that the Government would be seriously injured unless payment is made by a method other than electronic funds transfer (208.4(g)).

3. 31 CFR §208.4(a).

4. Id.

5. 31 CFR § 208.4(a).

6. See discussion of waivers, 31 CFR § 208.4, in Treasury's Supplementary Information, Federal Register: September 25, 1998 (Volume 63, Number 186), page 51495. As compared to the requirement in the Proposed Regulation, that certain of the waivers were unavailable to recipients who had bank accounts: "Treasury has deleted from the hardship waiver category any reference to persons having or not having an account at a financial institution."

7. Federal Register: September 25, 1998 (Volume 63, Number 186), page 51496.

8. Note that ETAs will only be available to recipient of federal benefits.

9. 31 CFR §208.5.

10. Federal Register: September 25, 1998 (Volume 63, Number 186), page 51497. In conversations with Treasury officials, NCLC staff have been assured of several important points relating to the ETA: 1) that set-off and attachment prohibitions will apply to these accounts; 2) that costs for the accounts will indeed be minimal; and 3) that check cashers and other alternative providers will not be permitted to provide access to the ETA, other than an ATM machine on the premises. But the proof is in the pudding -- we will see what the attributes will be only once they have been published by Treasury.

11. We have reports of this misinformation being distributed at SSA offices in Massachusetts, Minnesota, South Carolina, Maryland, as well as a host of other states.

12. There has been extensive, incorrect advertising by Western Union, for example.

13. Treasury has mandated that it will only deposit the federal money into an individual account at a financial institution in the name of the recipient. 31 CFR 208.6(a). However, check cashers have contracted with financial institutions to provide access to these accounts only through the check casher.

14. Recipients who sign up for accounts through alternative financial providers will likely pay more for access to their federal money, have fewer places and methods to access their money, and will be more likely to lose portions of their funds through illegal setoff and attachments imposed upon their federal moneys by the providers.

15. Advocates have based their arguments on the requirements of the federal law:

Regulations under this subsection shall ensure that individuals required under subsection (g) to have an account at a financial institution because of the application of subsection (f)(1)--

(A) will have access to such an account at a reasonable cost; and

(B) are given the same consumer protections with respect to the account as other account holders at the same financial institution. (Emphasis added.)

31 U.S.C. § 3332(i)(2); P.L. 104-134.

16. Federal Register: September 25, 1998 (Volume 63, Number 186), page 51498.

17. The Welfare Reform Act of 1996 (cite) mandated that all states provide food stamps electronically by 2002. Approximately one half of the states have already converted, or are in the process of converting, their delivery system to an EBT operation. See, Barbara Leyser, Clearinghouse Review, September, 1998.

18. Currently this program is only available in some southern states, members of the SAS - Southern Alliance of States. The SAS is the only region to have reached an accord with Treasury regarding the joint delivery of state and federal benefits. Even in the SAS states the joint program has not been too popular, as it is rarely a good idea to combine one's entire income and assets on a single electronic card. See, Leyser, >>> for more discussion.

19. In fact, we are concerned that Treasury has indicated that crucial details of the delivery system for the joint provision of state and federal benefits will be negotiated with the individual contractors providing the state EBT system. (Federal Register: September 25, 1998 (Volume 63, Number 186), page 51491.) It is highly inappropriate for the cost and the delivery mechanisms for one means of delivery of federal payments to low income recipients to not be published for public comment; and instead to be left to the vagaries of the Financial Agency Agreement negotiated.

20. 31 CFR § 208.2(b). Treasury requires that, unless the electronic payment is made to an authorized payment agent's account, the federal payments may only be deposited into an account in the name of the recipient. 31 CFR § 208.6. The only other exception to the requirement that the account be in the name of the recipient is for investment accounts with an investment company registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940.

21. Federal Register: September 25, 1998 (Volume 63, Number 186), page 51499.

22. 31 CFR § 208.7(a).

23. Federal Register: September 25, 1998 (Volume 63, Number 186), page 51501.


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