Bill113th Congress

H.R. 719

Capital Access for Small Businesses and Jobs Act

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Introduced
Feb 14, 2013
Origin Chamber
House
Policy Area
Finance and Financial Sector
Latest Action
Feb 14, 2013

Sponsor

Rep. King, Peter T. [R-NY-2]

Republican·NY-2
Bioguide ID: K000210
First Name: PETER
Middle Name: T.
Last Name: KING
By Request: N
54
Cosponsors
1
Committees
3
Actions
0
Amendments
0
Related Bills
4
Subjects
1
Summaries
3
Titles
1
Text Versions

Bill Details

Update Date
Nov 15, 2022
Origin Chamber
House
Bill Type
HR
Bill Number
719
Congress
113
Introduced Date
Feb 14, 2013
Policy Area
Finance and Financial Sector
Is Law
No
Feb 14, 2013IntroReferralH11100

Referred to the House Committee on Financial Services.

Source: House floor actions

Feb 14, 2013IntroReferralIntro-H

Introduced in House

Source: Library of Congress

Feb 14, 2013IntroReferral1000

Introduced in House

Source: Library of Congress

Introduced in House· Feb 14, 20130

Capital Access for Small Businesses and Jobs Act - Amends the Federal Credit Union Act to empower federal credit unions to receive payments on certain uninsured non-share accounts, subject to such terms, rates, and conditions as may be established by the board of directors, within limitations prescribed by the National Credit Union Administration Board (Board).

Requires any Board-prescribed system of prompt corrective action to take into account that credit unions rely predominantly (under current law, must rely) upon retained earnings to build net worth.

Redefines "net worth" with respect to any insured credit union (other than a low-income credit union) to include uninsured non-share capital accounts that: (1) do not alter the cooperative nature of the credit union; (2) are subordinate to all other claims against the credit union, including the claims of creditors, shareholders, and the National Credit Union Share Insurance Fund; (3) are available to cover operating losses in excess of retained earnings and, to the extent so applied, will not be replenished; (4) if they have a stated maturity, have an initial maturity of at least five years, and their net worth may be discounted at the Board's discretion when the remaining maturity is less than five years; (5) are subject to disclosure and consumer protection requirements as determined by the Board; (6) are offered by a credit union that is sufficiently capitalized and well-managed, and (7) are subject to such rules and regulations as the Board may establish.

Financial Services Committee

House· Standing
Administrative law and regulatory proceduresBank accounts, deposits, capitalBanking and financial institutions regulationNational Credit Union Administration

Introduced in House

Feb 14, 2013

Capital Access for Small Businesses and Jobs Act — Informed