Citations, Citations, Citations; Happy Holidays
Posted by Anthony Demangone
As we look toward 2011, I thought I'd spend the next week or so discussing some ideas that might help you in the coming year. Â Today, I'd like to talk about citations. Not the kind that you get for double-parking. Â I mean legal or regulatory citations that point to a specific part of a law, regulation, or guidance document.
If you hire an outside auditor, attorney, or other consultant, I'd demand that they provide a citation for every finding or recommendation.  Each and every one.  (You're paying them, right?) And if they tell you something is a best practice, I'd follow up with this question: A best practice based on what? All too often, we get calls or emails from credit unions that are trying to understand a recommendation from an auditor or consultant who failed to provide a citation.  So we spend 20 minutes or so trying to track down a citation to confirm the auditor's position.  And that assumes the auditor is correct.  An outside consultant should have no problem providing a citation that is the basis for his or her opinion. (The only exception to this is the negative opinion.  Example: NCUA does not regulate the color of your credit union's logo. You can look as long as you want, but you won't find a citation to support that position.)
Oh, and the same goes for examiners.
So, in 2011, ask for citations. Â It will help you verify that an auditor, consultant, attorney or examiner is correct. Â And it might force them to be a bit more judicious with their recommendations, knowing that they have to provide some legal or regulatory authority each time they tell you to do something.Â
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Happy Holidays, everyone. NAFCU's offices will be closed tomorrow in observation of Christmas. Â We'll get back at it on Monday.Â
The more I think about it, the next photo is a bit more aligned with the life of a compliance office in 2010. Â You hold on for dear life and hope for the best. Here's hoping Santa is good to each and every one of you!