LUA; Board Development; Newsletters
Posted by Anthony Demangone
Yesterday, NCUA published an LUA that was issued to a small federal credit union in Texas. Â The LUA indicates that the credit union's recordkeeping and lending practices were not up to NCUA expectations. Â The credit union has roughly $750,000 in assets. Â My general thoughts:
- An NCUA official told me that NCUA would be taking a tougher stance with credit union problems for the foreseeable futures. Â Cease and desist orders. Public LUAs. Â Conservatorships. Â I cannot say for sure that the publication of this LUA is part of this new way of handling problems, but it did get my attention.Â
- Small credit unions do not get a break when it comes to regulatory requirements.  A credit union is a credit union, so NCUA's requirements apply to all. In other words, "but we're small" is not necessarily a good defense to a problem.
- Usually, an LUA or a cease and desist order addresses an issue that has been festering between the credit union and NCUA. Â NCUA officials have indicated that LUAs or cease and desist orders usually start as a finding following an NCUA exam. Â If the credit union does not address the finding adequately, then NCUA escalates its response.Â
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Here's a very good article on board development from the most recent issue of  The Metropolitan Corporate Counsel.  It is a short read, but it may give you a number of good ideas on how you can increase the effectiveness of your credit union's board of directors.Â
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Here's a tip. Law firms often publish a ton of nice, free information. Â It is a way for them to show their expertise. In a perfect world, an article they write saves your day, and you reach out to that attorney for additional help. Â Here are a few sources for this wonderful information, in no particular order:
Why would we point you to other sources of information? Â Here's why:
- NAFCU's compliance team is not afraid to say the following: we do not know everything. Â We probably do not know everything about any one thing. Â We may know a few things about a lot of things, but we don't know something about everything. Â We also are not afraid to admit the following: we are not the only people in this game. We try to be honest with you, and point you to sources of information that can make your job less grindyourteethandwaily. Â If that is not a word, it should be.
- There is no better way to get a great answer than to hear a number of good answers from a number of different people. When our thoughts are challenged and we listen to those with different ideas and positions, we get better results.
- Let's be honest.  Now these guys owe me.  And I take payments in baseball tickets and pints of brew.  Seriously, though, all of the firms listed above know credit unions.  I think you'll see that knowledge reflected in their materials.Â