The
Check Clearing for the 21st Century Act went into effect
Oct. 28. The Act, known as "Check 21," encourages
the banking industry's use of image technology to create
electronic versions of checks, called Image Replacement
Documents (IRD).
The
law also changes the manner in which checks are processed
and returned to the creator.
This
new law removes the requirement that banks handle paper.
Instead, banking institutions may process electronic images
of your original checks.
The
time between writing a check and it being paid is known
as "float." Under Check 21, checks that you write
will be processed in a matter of hours (maybe even seconds),
not days. In the past, typical float times were between
two and four days. That time lag is now virtually gone.
Businesses
and individuals commonly utilize float to their advantage.
Banks themselves even offered predictive services so customers
could keep their funds in interest-bearing accounts until
the last possible moment.
Float
taken to the extreme is called "kiting." Kiting
is the process of moving imaginary money within the check-clearing
cycle. For example, you have $10 in bank A but you write
a check on the account for $500 and deposit it in bank B.
Before that deposit can be processed, you go back and tell
the teller at bank B that you want to withdraw $400. The
teller gives you $400 in cash, and you disappear before
the check bounces.
Another
service that will change is the "stop payment."
With such fast processing times, it will become harder to
prevent a check you've written from being paid. With just
a few hours to enter a stop-payment notice, the ability
to control purchase rescission and high-pressure conflict
situations is greatly diminished.
Under
the new act, any bank in the processing sequence can convert
your paper check into an electronic image, discarding the
original. Canceled checks that are converted into an IRD
won't be returned with your statement and are unrecoverable
from your bank.
However,
IRDs have the same legal standing of an original check.
Presenting an IRD will serve as presenting the original.
Banks routinely save copies of canceled checks (and IRDs)
for seven years.
On
the other hand, there isn't yet a limit on what banks will
be allowed to charge for providing electronic checks. You
may also have more difficult time proving fraud. Pen pressure
or ink color variations are common fraud-detection techniques.
The
banking industry has known for quite awhile that electronic
check processing could save perhaps as much as $2 billion
a year. Under previous law, financial institutions normally
needed to return paper checks to the issuing bank in order
to be paid, moving them by air, truck and courier. Check
21 eliminates this transportation cost. At $200 billion
in checks processed every business day, this is a enormous
savings for banking institutions.
Another
important piece of the Code of Federal Regulations, namely
Title 12, Section, 205, Regulation E, now becomes even more
critical. The Electronic Fund Transfer Act, " ... establishes
the basic rights, liabilities, and responsibilities of consumers
who use electronic fund transfer services and of financial
institutions that offer these services. The primary objective
of the act and this part is the protection of individual
consumers engaging in electronic fund transfers."
Here
are some recommendations for dealing with the changes brought
about by Check 21:
-
Use a debit card for in-person transactions. Debit cards
are covered under Regulation E, which gives you the powerful
"right of re-credit." If a mistake is made in
the transaction, the bank must resolve the problem or put
the disputed amount back in your account within 10 business
days.
-
However, if the card will be out of your sight, such as
at a restaurant, use a credit card instead. Though banks
will restore any money stolen using your debit card within
a few days, you may have to live with an empty checking
account if you've used a direct debit card.
-
Use automatic debit for recurring bills. Although still
resisted, you actually have more rights under Regulation
E to deal with any errors related to automatic debit than
when writing a check. Now that float will be a thing of
the past, the advantage to paper checks has disappeared.
-
Use online bill payment. Again, Regulation E protects electronic
payments. If you use online bill payment, take steps to
keep yourself safe, such as not using public computers or
wireless hotspots for financial transactions and keeping
your anti-virus software up to date.
For
more information and suggestions, visit NACHA, the Electronic
Payments Association at ecc.nacha.org.