Chapter 316 |
2024 -- H 7282 Enacted 06/25/2024 |
A N A C T |
RELATING TO FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS -- POWERS AND OPERATIONS |
Introduced By: Representatives Kennedy, Azzinaro, Finkelman, O'Brien, Solomon, Edwards, Kazarian, and Casimiro |
Date Introduced: January 26, 2024 |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: |
SECTION 1. Section 19-3-3 of the General Laws in Chapter 19-3 entitled "Powers and |
Operations" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
19-3-3. Maximum aggregate liability of one person or company. |
(a) No financial institution shall permit any person or entity to borrow or guaranty an |
amount(s), directly or indirectly, in the aggregate, that exceeds fifteen percent (15%) of its |
unimpaired capital. In calculating this limitation, a financial institution shall take into account the |
credit exposure to any such person or entity arising from derivative transactions. The director shall |
have the authority to establish the method for determining the credit exposure and the extent to |
which the credit exposure shall be taken into account. As used in this subsection, “derivative |
transaction” includes any transaction that is a contract, agreement, swap, warrant, note, or option |
that is based, in whole or in part, on the value of, any interest in, or any quantitative measure or the |
occurrence of any event leading to, one or more commodities, securities, currencies, interest or |
other rates, indices or other assets. The director may adopt regulations establishing the method for |
determining credit exposure to derivative transactiontransactions and the extent to which the credit |
exposure shall be taken into account. The director shall apply the limitation included herein to |
derivative transactiontransactions entered into on or after January 1, 2013. |
This limitation shall not include: |
(1) Obligations issued by the United States; |
(2) General obligations of the state of Rhode Island; |
(3) Loans or any portion thereof that are insured or guaranteed by the United States or any |
agency thereof; |
(4) Inter-bank transactions involving the transfer of immediately available funds resulting |
from credits to deposit balances at Federal Reserve banks or from credit to new or existing deposit |
balances due from a correspondent depository institution (commonly known as the sale of federal |
funds) with a maturity of one business day or less; or |
(5) Loans secured by deposits within the financial institution where a perfected interest in |
the deposits is on record. |
(b) To the extent that a deposit-taking institution regulated by the Federal Reserve System |
Office of Thrift Supervision and insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation is expressly |
permitted to make loans that would exceed the limitations set forth in this section, the lending |
limitations of the Office of Thrift Supervision Federal Reserve System shall apply. Nothing herein |
shall limit the department of business regulation from taking any action it deems appropriate to |
maintain appropriate safety and soundness standards relative to any loan or loans made by any |
financial institutions. |
SECTION 2. Sections 19-14-1 and 19-14-5 of the General Laws in Chapter 19-14 entitled |
"Licensed Activities" are hereby amended to read as follows: |
19-14-1. Definitions. |
Unless otherwise specified, the following terms shall have the following meanings |
throughout chapters 14, 14.1, 14.2, 14.3, 14.4, 14.6, 14.8, 14.10, and 14.11 of this title: |
(1) “Bona fide employee” shall mean an employee of a licensee who works under the |
oversight and supervision of the licensee. |
(2) “Check” means any check, draft, money order, personal money order, or other |
instrument for the transmission or payment of money. For the purposes of check cashing, travelers |
checks or foreign denomination instruments shall not be considered checks. “Check cashing” |
means providing currency for checks. |
(3) “Check casher” means a person or entity who or that, for compensation, engages, in |
whole or in part, in the business of cashing checks. |
(4) “Currency transmission” means engaging in the business of any of the following: |
(i) Sale or issuance of payment instruments or stored value primarily for personal, family, |
or household purposes; or |
(ii) Receiving money or monetary value for transmission or holding funds incidental to |
transmission within the United States or to locations abroad by any and all means, including |
payment instrument, stored value, wire, facsimile, or electronic transfer, primarily for personal, |
family, or household purposes. This includes maintaining control of virtual currency or transactions |
in virtual currency on behalf of others. |
(5) “Deferred-deposit transaction” means any transaction, such as those commonly known |
as “payday loans,” “payday advances,” or “deferred-presentment loans,” in which a cash advance |
is made to a customer in exchange for the customer’s personal check or in exchange for the |
customer’s authorization to debit the customer’s deposit account and where the parties agree either |
that the check will not be cashed or deposited, or that the customer’s deposit account will not be |
debited until a designated future date. |
(6) [Deleted by P.L. 2019, ch. 226, § 1 and P.L. 2019, ch. 246, § 1.] |
(7) “Deliver” means to deliver a check to the first person who, in payment for the check, |
makes, or purports to make, a remittance of, or against, the face amount of the check, whether or |
not the deliverer also charges a fee in addition to the face amount and whether or not the deliverer |
signs the check. |
(8) “Insurance premium finance agreement” means an agreement by which an insured, or |
prospective insured, promises to pay to an insurance premium finance company the amount |
advanced, or to be advanced, under the agreement to an insurer or to an insurance producer, in |
payment of a premium, or premiums, on an insurance contract, or contracts, together with interest |
and a service charge, as authorized and limited by this title. |
(9) “Insurance premium finance company” means a person or entity engaged in the |
business of making insurance premium finance agreements or acquiring insurance premium finance |
agreements from other insurance premium finance companies. |
(10)(i) “Lender” means any person who makes or funds a loan within this state with the |
person’s own funds, regardless of whether the person is the nominal mortgagee or creditor on the |
instrument evidencing the loan; |
(ii) A loan is made or funded within this state if any of the following conditions exist: |
(A) The loan is secured by real property located in this state; |
(B) An application for a loan is taken by an employee, agent, or representative of the lender |
within this state; |
(C) The loan closes within this state; |
(D) A retail installment contract as defined herein is created; |
(E) The loan solicitation is done by an individual with a physical presence in this state; or |
(F) The lender maintains an office in this state; |
(iii) The term “lender” shall also include any person engaged in a transaction whereby the |
person makes or funds a loan within this state using the proceeds of an advance under a line of |
credit over which proceeds the person has dominion and control and for the repayment of which |
the person is unconditionally liable. This transaction is not a table-funding transaction. A person is |
deemed to have dominion and control over the proceeds of an advance under a line of credit used |
to fund a loan regardless of whether: |
(A) The person may, contemporaneously with, or shortly following, the funding of the |
loan, assign or deliver to the line of credit lender one or more loans funded by the proceeds of an |
advance to the person under the line of credit; |
(B) The proceeds of an advance are delivered directly to the settlement agent by the line- |
of-credit lender, unless the settlement agent is the agent of the line-of-credit lender; |
(C) One or more loans funded by the proceeds of an advance under the line of credit is |
purchased by the line-of-credit lender; or |
(D) Under the circumstances, as set forth in regulations adopted by the director, or the |
director’s designee, pursuant to this chapter. |
(11) “Licensee” means any person licensed under this chapter. |
(12) “Loan” means any advance of money or credit including, but not limited to: |
(i) Loans secured by mortgages; |
(ii) Insurance premium finance agreements; |
(iii) The purchase or acquisition of retail installment contracts or advances to the holders |
of those contracts; |
(iv) Educational loans; |
(v) Any other advance of money; or |
(vi) Any transaction, such as those commonly known as “payday loans,” “payday |
advances,” or “deferred-presentment loans,” in which a cash advance is made to a customer in |
exchange for the customer’s personal check, or in exchange for the customer’s authorization to |
debit the customer’s deposit account, and where the parties agree either, that the check will not be |
cashed or deposited, or that the customer’s deposit account will not be debited, until a designated |
future date. |
(13) “Loan broker” means any person or entity who or that, for compensation or gain, or |
in the expectation of compensation or gain, either directly or indirectly, solicits, processes, |
negotiates, places, or sells a loan within this state for others in the primary market, or offers to do |
so. A loan broker shall also mean any person who is the nominal mortgagee or creditor in a table- |
funding transaction. A loan is brokered within this state if any of the following conditions exist: |
(i) The loan is secured by real property located in this state; |
(ii) An application for a loan is taken or received by an employee, agent, or representative |
of the loan broker within this state; |
(iii) The loan closes within this state; |
(iv) The loan solicitation is done by an individual with a physical presence in this state; or |
(v) The loan broker maintains an office in this state. |
(14) “Loan-closing services” means providing title services, including title searches, title |
examinations, abstract preparation, insurability determinations, and the issuance of title |
commitments and title insurance policies, conducting loan closings, and preparation of loan-closing |
documents when performed by, or under the supervision of, a licensed attorney, licensed title |
agency, or licensed title insurance company. |
(15) “Loan solicitation” shall mean an effectuation, procurement, delivery and offer, or |
advertisement of a loan. Loan solicitation also includes providing or accepting loan applications |
and assisting persons in completing loan applications and/or advising, conferring, or informing |
anyone regarding the benefits, terms and/or conditions of a loan product or service. Loan |
solicitation does not include loan processing or loan underwriting as defined in this section. Loan |
solicitation does not include telemarketing that is defined, for purposes of this section, to mean |
contacting a person by telephone with the intention of collecting such person’s name, address, and |
telephone number for the sole purpose of allowing a mortgage loan originator to fulfill a loan |
inquiry. |
(16) “Loan underwriting” shall mean a loan process that involves the analysis of risk with |
respect to the decision whether to make a loan to a loan applicant based on credit, employment, |
assets, and other factors, including evaluating a loan applicant against a lender’s various lending |
criteria for creditworthiness, making a determination for the lender as to whether the applicant |
meets the lender’s pre-established credit standards, and/or making a recommendation regarding |
loan approval. |
(17) “Monetary value” means a medium of exchange, whether or not redeemable in fiat |
currency. |
(18) “Mortgage loan” means a loan secured in whole, or in part, by real property located |
in this state. |
(19) “Mortgage loan originator” has the same meaning set forth in § 19-14.10-3(6). |
(20) “Nationwide Multistate Licensing System” means a system involving more than one |
state, the District of Columbia, or the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico and that is established to |
facilitate the sharing of regulatory information and the licensing, application, reporting, and |
payment processes, by electronic or other means, for mortgage lenders and loan brokers and other |
licensees required to be licensed under this chapter. |
(21) “Natural person employee” shall mean any natural person performing services as a |
bona fide employee for a person or entity licensed under § 19-14-1 et seq., in return for a salary, |
wage, or other consideration, where such salary, wage, or consideration is reported by the licensee |
on a federal form W-2 payroll record. The term does not include any natural person or business |
entity performing services for a person licensed under the provisions of Rhode Island general laws |
in return for a salary, wage, or other consideration, where such salary, wage, or consideration is |
reported by the licensee on a federal form 1099. |
(22) “Negative equity” means the difference between the value of an asset and the |
outstanding portion of the loan taken out to pay for the asset, when the latter exceeds the former |
amount. |
(23) “Negotiates” shall mean, with respect to a loan, to confer directly with, or offer advice |
directly to, a loan applicant or prospective loan applicant for a loan product or service concerning |
any of the substantive benefits, terms, or conditions of the loan product or service. |
(24) “Nonprofit organization” means a corporation qualifying as a 26 U.S.C. § 501(c)(3) |
nonprofit organization, in the operation of which no member, director, officer, partner, employee, |
agent, or other affiliated person profits financially other than receiving reasonable salaries if |
applicable. |
(25) “Operating subsidiary” shall mean a majority-owned subsidiary of a financial |
institution or banking institution that engages only in activities permitted by the parent financial |
institution or banking institution. |
(26) “Oversight and supervision of the licensee” shall mean that the licensee provides |
training to the employee, sets the employee’s hours of work, provides the employee with the |
equipment required to perform the employee’s duties, and supervises the services provided by the |
employee to the licensee. |
(27) “Personal money order” means any instrument for the transmission or payment of |
money in relation to which the purchaser or remitter appoints, or purports to appoint, the seller as |
his or her agent for the receipt, transmission, or handling of money, whether the instrument is signed |
by the seller, or by the purchaser, or remitter, or some other person. |
(28) “Primary market” means the market in which loans are made to borrowers by lenders, |
whether or not through a loan broker or other conduit. |
(29) “Principal owner” means any person or entity who or that owns, controls, votes, or |
has a beneficial interest in, directly or indirectly, ten percent (10%) or more of the outstanding |
capital stock and/or equity interest of a licensee. |
(30) “Processes” shall mean, with respect to a loan, any of a series of acts or functions, |
including the preparation of a loan application and supporting documents, performed by a person |
that leads to, or results in, the acceptance, approval, denial, and/or withdrawal of a loan application, |
including, without limitation, the rendering of services, including loan underwriting, obtaining |
verifications, credit reports or appraisals, communicating with the applicant and/or the lender or |
loan broker, and/or other loan processing and origination services, for consideration by a lender or |
loan broker. Loan processing does not include the following: |
(i) Providing loan closing services; |
(ii) Rendering of credit reports by an authorized credit reporting agency; and |
(iii) Rendering of appraisal services. |
(31) “Provisional employee” means a natural person who, pursuant to a written agreement |
between the natural person and a wholly owned subsidiary of a financial holding company, as |
defined in the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956 (12 U.S.C. § 1841 et seq.), as amended, a bank- |
holding company, savings-bank-holding company, or thrift-holding company, is an exclusive agent |
for the subsidiary with respect to mortgage loan originations and the subsidiary: (a) Holds a valid |
loan broker’s license; and (b) Enters into a written agreement with the director, or the director’s |
designee, to include: |
(i) An “undertaking of accountability,” in a form prescribed by the director, or the director’s |
designee, for all of the subsidiary’s exclusive agents to include full-and-direct financial and |
regulatory responsibility for the mortgage loan originator activities of each exclusive agent as if |
said exclusive agent were an employee of the subsidiary; |
(ii) A business plan, to be approved by the director, or the director’s designee, for the |
education of the exclusive agents, the handling of consumer complaints related to the exclusive |
agents, and the supervision of the mortgage loan origination activities of the exclusive agents; and |
(iii) A restriction of the exclusive agents’ mortgage loan originators’ activities to loans to |
be made only by the subsidiary’s affiliated bank. |
(32) “Remote location” means a location meeting the requirements of § 19-14-25(b) at |
which an employee of a licensee may provide services for the licensee notwithstanding that the |
location differs from the place of business named in the license or a branch certificate issued to the |
licensee. |
(33) “Retail installment contract” means any security agreement negotiated or executed in |
this state, or under the laws of this state, including, but not limited to, any agreement in the nature |
of a mortgage, conditional sale contract, or any other agreement whether or not evidenced by any |
written instrument to pay the retail purchase price of goods, or any part thereof, in installments over |
any period of time and pursuant to which any security interest is retained or taken by the retail seller |
for the payment of the purchase price, or any part thereof, of the retail installment contract. |
(34) “Sell” means to sell, to issue, or to deliver a check. |
(35) “Servicing” means receiving a scheduled, periodic payment from a borrower, pursuant |
to the terms of a loan, including amounts for escrow accounts, and making the payments to the |
owner of the loan or other third party of principal and interest and other payments with respect to |
the amounts received from the borrower as may be required pursuant to the terms of the servicing |
loan documents or servicing contract. In the case of a home equity conversion mortgage or a reverse |
mortgage, servicing includes making payment to the borrower. |
(36) “Simple interest” means interest computed on the principal balance outstanding |
immediately prior to a payment for one plus the actual number of days between payments made on |
a loan over the life of a loan. |
(37) “Small loan” means a loan of less than five thousand dollars ($5,000), not secured by |
real estate, made pursuant to the provisions of chapter 14.2 of this title. |
(38) “Small-loan lender” means a lender engaged in the business of making small loans |
within this state. |
(39) “Stored value” means monetary value representing a claim against the issuer that is |
stored on an electronic or digital medium and is evidenced by an electronic or digital record, and |
that is intended and accepted for use as a means of redemption for money or monetary value or |
payment for goods or services. The term does not include stored value that is redeemable by the |
issuer exclusively in goods or services; stored value that is redeemable exclusively in goods or |
services limited to transactions involving a defined merchant or location or set of locations, such |
as a specific retailer or retail chain, college campus, or program points, miles, or other units issued |
in connection with a customer affinity or rewards program, even if there is a secondary market for |
the stored value. |
(40) “Table-funding transaction” means a transaction in which there is a contemporaneous |
advance of funds by a lender and an assignment by the mortgagee or creditor of the loan to the |
lender. |
(41) "Tangible net worth" means the aggregate assets of a licensee excluding all intangible |
assets, less liabilities, as determined in accordance with United States generally accepted |
accounting principles. |
(41)(42) “Third-party loan servicer” means a person or entity who or that, directly or |
indirectly, engages in the business of servicing a loan secured by residential real estate located in |
Rhode Island, for a personal, family, or household purpose, owed or due, or asserted to be owed or |
due, another, or a person or entity that owns the servicing rights to a loan secured by residential |
real estate located in Rhode Island whether or not that owner services the loan themselves or |
contracts with another person or entity for the servicing. |
(42)(43) “Virtual currency”: |
(i) Means a digital representation of value that: |
(A) Is used as a medium of exchange, unit of account, or store of value; and |
(B) Is not legal tender, whether or not denominated in legal tender; and |
(ii) Does not include: |
(A) A transaction in which a merchant grants, as part of an affinity or rewards program, |
value that cannot be taken from or exchanged with the merchant for legal tender, bank credit, or |
virtual currency; |
(B) A digital representation of value issued by or on behalf of a publisher and used solely |
within an online game, game platform, or family of games sold by the same publisher or offered |
on the same game platform; |
(C) Native digital token used in a proprietary blockchain service platform; or |
(D) A gift certificate; store gift card; general-use prepaid card; or loyalty, award, or |
promotional gift card, as these terms are defined in federal Regulation E, 12 C.F.R. § 1005.20(a), |
without giving effect to any exception as specified in 31 C.F.R. § 1010.100(kkk) or any card, code |
or device, or other device that can add funds to those products. |
(43)(44) “Writing” means hard-copy writing or electronic writing that meets the |
requirements of § 42-127.1-2(7). |
19-14-5. Minimum capital. |
Each licensee, licensed pursuant to an application for license filed after June 30, 1995, shall |
maintain the following minimum-net worth to be evidenced in accordance with regulations |
promulgated by the director, or the director’s designee.: |
(1) Small-loan lenders, the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000); |
(2) Loan brokers, the sum of ten thousand dollars ($10,000); |
(3) Lenders, the sum of one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000); |
(4) Currency transmission licensees, the sum of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000). If a |
licensee limits its actions to virtual currency, the licensee may include in its calculation of net worth |
virtual currency, measured by the average value of the virtual currency in U.S. Dollar equivalent |
over the prior six (6) months;: |
(i) Shall maintain at all times a tangible net worth of the greater of one hundred thousand |
dollars ($100,000) or three percent (3%) of total assets for the first one hundred million dollars |
($100,000,000), two percent (2%) of additional assets for one hundred million dollars |
($100,000,000) to one billion dollars ($1,000,000,000), and five-tenths (0.5%)percent (0.5%) of |
additional assets for over one billion dollars ($1,000,000,000); |
(ii) Tangible net worth must be demonstrated at initial application by the applicant’s most |
recent audited or unaudited financial statements pursuant to § 19-14-1; |
(iii) Notwithstanding the foregoing provisions of this section, the director shall have the |
authority, for good cause shown, to exempt, in part or in whole, from the requirements of this |
section any applicant or licensee; and |
(5) Third-party loan servicers, the sum of one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000). |
SECTION 3. Section 19-14.10-3 of the General Laws in Chapter 19-14.10 entitled "An |
Act Adopting the Federal Secure and Fair Enforcement for Mortgage Licensing Act of 2009" is |
hereby amended to read as follows: |
19-14.10-3. Definitions. |
For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions shall apply: |
(1) “Depository institution” has the same meaning as in section 3 of the Federal Deposit |
Insurance Act, and includes any credit union. |
(2) “Federal banking agencies” means the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve |
System, the Comptroller of the Currency, the Director of the Office of Thrift Supervision, the |
National Credit Union Administration, and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. |
(3) “Immediate family member” means a spouse, child, sibling, parent, grandparent, or |
grandchild. This includes stepparents, stepchildren, stepsiblings, and adoptive relationships. |
(4) “Individual” means a natural person. |
(5)(i) “Loan processor or underwriter” means an individual who performs clerical or |
support duties as an employee at the direction of, and subject to the supervision and instruction of, |
a person licensed as a lender or as a loan broker, or exempt from licensing under chapter 14 or 14.1 |
of this title. |
(ii) For purposes of subsection (5)(i), “clerical or support duties” may include subsequent |
to the receipt of an application: |
(A) The receipt, collection, distribution, and analysis of information common for the |
processing or underwriting of a residential mortgage loan; and |
(B) Communicating with a consumer to obtain the information necessary for the processing |
or underwriting of a loan, to the extent that such communication does not include offering or |
negotiating loan rates or terms, or counseling consumers about residential mortgage loan rates or |
terms. |
(iii) An individual engaging solely in loan processor or underwriter activities shall not |
represent to the public, through advertising or other means of communicating or providing |
information including the use of business cards, stationery, brochures, signs, rate lists, or other |
promotional items, that such individual can or will perform any of the activities of a mortgage loan |
originator. |
(6)(i) “Mortgage loan originator” means: |
(A) An individual who, for compensation or gain or in the expectation of compensation or |
gain: |
(I) Takes a residential mortgage loan application; or |
(II) Offers or negotiates terms of a residential mortgage loan; |
(B) Does not include an individual engaged solely as a loan processor or underwriter except |
as otherwise provided in § 19-14.10-4(c); |
(C) Does not include a person or entity who or that only performs real estate brokerage |
activities and is licensed or registered in accordance with Rhode Island law, unless the person or |
entity is compensated by a lender, a mortgage broker, or other mortgage loan originator or by any |
agent of such lender, mortgage broker, or other mortgage loan originator; |
(D) Does not include a person or entity solely involved in extensions of credit relating to |
timeshare plans, as that term is defined in 11 U.S.C. § 101(53D), as amended; and |
(E) Does not include a person (or its employees) engaged in servicing mortgage loans. For |
purposes of this exclusion, “servicing mortgage loans” means, on behalf of the note holder, |
collecting and receiving payments, including payments of principal, interest, escrow amounts, and |
other sums due, on obligations due and owing to the note holder pursuant to a residential mortgage |
loan, and, when the borrower is in default or in reasonably foreseeable likelihood of default, |
working with the borrower on behalf of the note holder and pursuant to the contract between the |
person servicing mortgage loans and the note holder, to modify but not refinance, either temporarily |
or permanently, the obligations, or otherwise finalizing collection of the obligation through the |
foreclosure process. |
(ii) “Real estate brokerage activity” means any activity that involves offering or providing |
real estate brokerage services to the public, including: |
(A) Acting as a real estate agent or real estate broker for a buyer, seller, lessor, or lessee of |
real property; |
(B) Bringing together parties interested in the sale, purchase, lease, rental, or exchange of |
real property; |
(C) Negotiating, on behalf of any party, any portion of a contract relating to the sale, |
purchase, lease, rental, or exchange of real property (other than in connection with providing |
financing with respect to any such transaction); |
(D) Engaging in any activity for which a person engaged in the activity is required to be |
registered or licensed as a real estate agent or real estate broker under any applicable law; and |
(E) Offering to engage in any activity, or act in any capacity, described in subsection |
(6)(ii)(A), (B), (C), or (D) of this section. |
(7) “Nationwide Multistate Licensing System” means a mortgage licensing system |
developed and maintained by the Conference of State Bank Supervisors and the American |
Association of Residential Mortgage Regulators for the licensing and registration of licensed |
mortgage loan originators. |
(8) “Nontraditional mortgage product” means any mortgage product other than a thirty- |
year (30), fixed-rate mortgage. |
(9) “Person” means a natural person, corporation, company, limited-liability company, |
partnership, association, or any other entity however organized. |
(10) “Registered mortgage loan originator” means any individual who: |
(i) Meets the definition of mortgage loan originator and is an employee of: |
(A) A depository institution; |
(B) A subsidiary that is: |
(I) Owned and controlled by a depository institution; and |
(II) Regulated by a Federal banking agency; or |
(C) An institution regulated by the Farm Credit Administration; and |
(ii) Is registered with, and maintains a unique identifier through, the Nationwide Multistate |
Licensing System. |
(11) “Residential mortgage loan” means any loan primarily for personal, family, or |
household use that is secured by a mortgage, deed of trust, or other equivalent, consensual security |
interest on a dwelling (as defined in § 103(v) of the Truth in Lending Act) or residential real estate |
upon which is constructed or intended to be constructed a dwelling (as so defined). |
(12) “Residential real estate” means any real property located in Rhode Island upon which |
is constructed, or intended to be constructed, a dwelling. |
(13) “SAFE Act” means the Secure and Fair Enforcement for Mortgage Licensing Act, |
comprising §§ 1501-1517 of the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008, Pub. L. No. 110- |
289. |
(14) “Unique identifier” means a number or other identifier assigned by protocols |
established by the Nationwide Multistate Licensing System. |
SECTION 4. Section 19-33-8 of the General Laws in Chapter 19-33 entitled "Student Loan |
Bill of Rights Act" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
19-33-8. Responsibilities of student loan servicers. |
(a) A student loan servicer shall provide annually, and at the request of a student loan |
borrower, the terms of their loan, progress toward repayment, and eligibility for any loan relief |
programs including, but not limited to, income-driven repayment plans, public service loan |
forgiveness, forbearance, and deferment. |
(b) A student loan servicer shall establish policies and procedures, and implement them |
consistently, in order to facilitate evaluation of private student loan alternative repayment |
arrangement requests, including providing accurate information regarding any private student loan |
alternative repayment arrangements that may be available to the borrower through the promissory |
note, or that may have been marketed to the borrower through marketing materials. |
(c) A private student loan alternative repayment arrangement shall consider the |
affordability of repayment plans for a distressed borrower, as well as the investor, guarantor, and |
insurer guidelines, and previous outcome and performance information. |
(d) If a student loan servicer offers private student loan repayment arrangements, a student |
loan servicer shall consistently present and offer those arrangements to borrowers with similar |
financial circumstances. |
(e) If a borrower inquires of a servicer of private student loans about consolidating or |
refinancing a federal student loan into a private student loan, the servicer of private student loans |
must disclose in advance of the refinancing or consolidation, any benefits or protections exclusive |
to federal student loans that may be lost as a result of the consolidation or refinancing. |
(f)(1) A student loan servicer shall respond to a written inquiry from a student loan |
borrower, or the representative of a student loan borrower, within ten (10) business days after |
receipt of the request, and provide information relating to the request and, if applicable, the action |
the student loan servicer will take to correct the account or an explanation for the student loan |
servicer’s position that the borrower’s account is correct. |
(2) The ten-day (10) period described in subsection (f)(1) may be extended for not more |
than fifteen (15) days, if before the end of the ten-day (10) period the student loan servicer notifies |
the borrower or the borrower’s representative of the extension and the reasons for the delay in |
responding. |
(3) After receipt of a written request related to a credit reporting dispute on a borrower’s |
payment on a student education loan, a student loan servicer shall not furnish adverse information |
to a consumer reporting agency regarding a payment that is the subject of the written inquiry. |
(g) Except as provided by federal law or required by a student loan agreement, a student |
loan servicer shall inquire of a borrower how to apply an overpayment to a student education loan. |
A borrower’s direction on how to apply an overpayment to a student education loan shall stay in |
effect for any future overpayments during the term of a student education loan until the borrower |
provides different directions. For purposes of this section, “overpayment” means a payment on a |
student education loan in excess of the monthly amount due from a borrower on a student education |
loan, also commonly referred to as a prepayment. |
(h) Where a borrower has multiple loans at the same level of delinquency, a student loan |
servicer shall apply partial payments in a manner that minimizes late fees and negative credit |
reporting by applying such payments to satisfy as many individual loan payments as possible on a |
borrower’s account. For purposes of this section, “partial payment” means a payment on a student |
loan account that contains multiple individual loans in an amount less than the amount necessary |
to satisfy the outstanding payment due on all loans in the student loan account, also commonly |
referred to as an underpayment. |
(i) In the event of the sale, assignment, or other transfer of the servicing of a student |
education loan that results in a change in the identity of the person to whom a student loan borrower |
is required to send payments or direct any communication concerning the student education loan, |
the following provisions apply: |
(1) As a condition of a sale, an assignment, or any other transfer of the servicing of a student |
education loan, a student loan lender shall require the new student loan servicer to honor all benefits |
originally represented as available to a student loan borrower during the repayment of the student |
education loan and preserve the availability of the benefits, including any benefits for which the |
student loan borrower has not yet qualified. |
(2) A student loan servicer shall transfer to the new student loan servicer all records |
regarding the student loan borrower, the account of the student loan borrower, and the student |
education loan of the student loan borrower. |
(3) The records required under subsection (hi)(2) shall include the repayment status of the |
student loan borrower and any benefits associated with the student education loan of the student |
loan borrower. |
(4) The student loan servicer shall complete the transfer of records required under |
subsection (hi)(2) within forty-five (45) days after the sale, assignment, or other transfer of the |
servicing of a student education loan. |
(5) The parties shall notify all student loan borrowers impacted by the sale, assignment, or |
other transfer of the servicing of a student education loan at least seven (7) days before the next |
payment on the loan is due. Notice must include: The identity of the new loan holder and/or |
servicer; the effective date of the transfer; the date on which the old servicer will no longer accept |
payments; the date on which the new servicer will begin to accept payments; and contact and billing |
information for loan payments. |
(j) A student loan servicer that services a student education loan shall adopt policies and |
procedures to verify that the student loan servicer has received all records regarding the student |
loan borrower; the account of the student loan borrower; and the student education loan of the |
student loan borrower, including the repayment status of the student loan borrower and any benefits |
associated with the student education loan of the student loan borrower. |
(k) When a prior student loan servicer receives a payment intended for the new student |
loan servicer, the prior student loan servicer must promptly transfer the payment to the new |
servicer, along with the date the prior servicer received the payment. |
(l) When a new servicer receives a payment from a prior servicer under subsection (jk), the |
payment must be applied as of the date received by the prior servicer. A student loan servicer must |
implement processes and controls to ensure a student loan borrower does not incur additional |
interest, fees, or delinquency due to complications related to the sale, assignment, or other transfer |
of the servicing of a student education loan. |
(m) A student loan servicer may not withhold student transcripts from borrowers that are |
or were delinquent in student loan payments. |
SECTION 5. Section 34-25.2-11 of the General Laws in Chapter 34-25.2 entitled "Rhode |
Island Home Loan Protection Act" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
34-25.2-11. Exemption. |
The provisions of this chapter shall not apply to: |
(1) Any national bank, federal savings bank, federal credit union, credit union, or financial |
institution, or regulated institution, as defined under § 19-1-1, or their wholly-owned subsidiary; |
and |
(2) The Federal Housing Administration, the Department of Veterans Affairs, or other state |
or federal housing finance agencies. |
SECTION 6. Section 19-14.3-2 of the General Laws in Chapter 19-14.3 entitled "Currency |
Transmissions" is hereby repealed. |
19-14.3-2. Securities in lieu of bonds. |
In lieu of the required surety bond or bonds, or of any portion as required by chapter 14, |
the applicant may deposit with the director, or the director’s designee, with the financial |
institutions, credit unions, or national banks in this state that the applicant may designate and the |
director, or the director’s designee, may approve, United States government/agency obligation or |
state obligations, to an aggregate amount, based upon principal amount or market value, whichever |
is lower, of not less than the amount of the required surety bond. The securities shall be deposited |
and held to secure the same obligations as would the surety bond, but the licensee shall be entitled |
to receive all interest and dividends thereon, shall have the right, with the approval of the director, |
or the director’s designee, to substitute other securities for those deposited, and shall be required to |
substitute securities on the written order of the director, or the director’s designee. |
SECTION 7. Chapter 19-14.3 of the General Laws entitled "Currency Transmissions" is |
hereby amended by adding thereto the following sections: |
19-14.3-2.1. Maintenance of permissible investments. |
(a) A licensee shall maintain at all times permissible investments that have a market value |
computed in accordance with United States generally accepted accounting principles of not less |
than the aggregate amount of all of its outstanding money transmission obligations. |
(b) Except for permissible investments enumerated in § 19-14.3-2.2(a), the director, or |
designee, with respect to any licensee, may by rule or order limit the extent to which a specific |
investment maintained by a licensee within a class of permissible investments may be considered |
a permissible investment, if the specific investment represents undue risk to customers, not |
reflected in the market value of investments. |
(c) Permissible investments, even if commingled with other assets of the licensee, are held |
in trust for the benefit of the purchasers and holders of the licensee's outstanding money |
transmission obligations in the event of insolvency, the filing of a petition by or against the licensee |
under the United States Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. Section 101-110, as amended or recodified |
from time to time, for bankruptcy or reorganization, the filing of a petition by or against the licensee |
for receivership, the commencement of any other judicial or administrative proceeding for its |
dissolution or reorganization, or in the event of an action by a creditor against the licensee who is |
not a beneficiary of this statutory trust. No permissible investments impressed with a trust pursuant |
to this section shall be subject to attachment, levy of execution, or sequestration by order of any |
court, except for a beneficiary of this statutory trust. |
(d) Upon the establishment of a statutory trust in accordance with subsection (c) of this |
section or when any funds are drawn on a letter of credit pursuant to § 19-14.3-2.2(a)(4), the |
director, or designee, shall notify the applicable regulator of each state in which the licensee is |
licensed to engage in money transmission, if any, of the establishment of the trust or the funds |
drawn on the letter of credit, as applicable. Notice shall be deemed satisfied if performed pursuant |
to a multistate agreement or through the National Multistate Licensing Service (NMLS). Funds |
drawn on a letter of credit, and any other permissible investments held in trust for the benefit of the |
purchasers and holders of the licensee's outstanding money transmission obligations, are deemed |
held in trust for the benefit of such purchasers and holders on a pro rata and equitable basis in |
accordance with statutes pursuant to which permissible investments are required to be held in this |
state, and other states, as applicable. Any statutory trust established hereunder shall be terminated |
upon extinguishment of all of the licensee's outstanding money transmission obligations. |
(e) The director, or designee, by rule or by order may allow other types of investments that |
the director, or designee, determines are of sufficient liquidity and quality to be a permissible |
investment. The director, or designee, is authorized to participate in efforts with other state |
regulators to determine that other types of investments are of sufficient liquidity and quality to be |
a permissible investment. |
19-14.3-2.2. Maintenance of permissiblePermissible investments. |
(a) The following investments are permissible under § 19-14.3-2.1: |
(1) Cash including demand deposits, savings deposits, and funds in such accounts held for |
the benefit of the licensee's customers in a federally insured depository financial institution and |
cash equivalents including ACH items in transit to the licensee and ACH items or international |
wires in transit to a payee, cash in transit via armored car, cash in smart safes, cash in licensee- |
owned locations, debit card or credit card-funded transmission receivables owed by any bank, or |
money market mutual funds rated "AAA" by S&P, or the equivalent from any eligible rating |
service; |
(2) Certificates of deposit or senior debt obligations of an insured depository institution, as |
defined in Section 3 of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act, 12 U.S.C. Section 1813, as amended or |
recodified from time to time, or as defined under the federal Credit Union Act, 12 U.S.C. Section |
1781, as amended or recodified from time to time; |
(3) An obligation of the United States or a commission, agency, or instrumentality thereof; |
an obligation that is guaranteed fully as to principal and interest by the United States; or an |
obligation of a state or a governmental subdivision, agency, or instrumentality thereof; |
(4) The full drawable amount of an irrevocable standby letter of credit for which the stated |
beneficiary is the director, or designee, that stipulates that the beneficiary need only draw a sight |
draft under the letter of credit and present it to obtain funds up to the letter of credit amount within |
seven (7) days of presentation of the items required by subsection (a)(4)(iii) of this section;. |
(i) The letter of credit must: |
(A) Be issued by a federally insured depository financial institution, a foreign bank that is |
authorized under federal law to maintain a federal agency or federal branch office in a state or |
states, or a foreign bank that is authorized under state law to maintain a branch in a state that: |
(I) Bears an eligible rating or whose parent company bears an eligible rating; and |
(II) Is regulated, supervised, and examined by United States federal or state authorities |
having regulatory authority over banks, credit unions, and trust companies; |
(B) Be irrevocable, unconditional, and indicate that it is not subject to any condition or |
qualifications outside of the letter of credit; |
(C) Not contain reference to any other agreements, documents, or entities, or otherwise |
provide for any security interest in the licensee; and |
(D) Contain an issue date and expiration date, and expressly provide for automatic |
extension, without a written amendment, for an additional period of one year from the present or |
each future expiration date, unless the issuer of the letter of credit notifies the director, or designee, |
in writing by certified or registered mail or courier mail or other receipted means, at least sixty (60) |
days prior to any expiration date, that the irrevocable letter of credit will not be extended. |
(ii) In the event of any notice of expiration or non-extension of a letter of credit issued |
under subsection (a)(4)(i)(D) of this section, the licensee shall be required to demonstrate to the |
satisfaction of the director, or designee, fifteen (15) days prior to expiration, that the licensee |
maintains and will maintain permissible investments in accordance with § 19-14.3-2.1(a) upon the |
expiration of the letter of credit. If the licensee is not able to do so, the director, or designee, may |
draw on the letter of credit in an amount up to the amount necessary to meet the licensee's |
requirements to maintain permissible investments in accordance with § 19-14.3-2.1(a). Any such |
draw shall be offset against the licensee's outstanding money transmission obligations. The drawn |
funds shall be held in trust by the director, or designee, or the designated agent, to the extent |
authorized by law, as agent for the benefit of the purchasers and holders of the licensee's |
outstanding money transmission obligations. |
(iii) The letter of credit shall provide that the issuer of the letter of credit will honor, at |
sight, a presentation made by the beneficiary to the issuer of the following documents on or prior |
to the expiration date of the letter of credit: |
(A) The original letter of credit including any amendments; and |
(B) A written statement from the beneficiary stating that any of the following events have |
occurred: |
(I) The filing of a petition by or against the licensee under the United States Bankruptcy |
Code, 11 U.S.C. Section 101-110, as amended or recodified from time to time, for bankruptcy or |
reorganization; |
(II) The filing of a petition by or against the licensee for receivership, or the commencement |
of any other judicial or administrative proceeding for its dissolution or reorganization; |
(III) The seizure of assets of a licensee by the director, or designee, pursuant to an |
emergency order issued in accordance with applicable law, on the basis of an action, violation, or |
condition that has caused or is likely to cause the insolvency of the licensee; or |
(IV) The beneficiary has received notice of expiration or non-extension of a letter of credit |
and the licensee failed to demonstrate to the satisfaction of the beneficiary that the licensee will |
maintain permissible investments in accordance with § 19-14.3-2.1(a) upon the expiration or non- |
extension of the letter of credit. |
(iv) The director, or designee, may designate an agent to serve on the director's behalf as |
beneficiary to a letter of credit so long as the agent and letter of credit meet requirements established |
by the director, or designee. The director's agent may serve as agent for multiple licensing |
authorities for a single irrevocable letter of credit if the proceeds of the drawable amount for the |
purposes of subsection (a)(4) of this section are assigned to the director. |
(v) The director, or designee, is authorized and encouraged to participate in multistate |
processes designed to facilitate the issuance and administration of letters of credit, including, but |
not limited to, services provided by the NMLS and State Regulatory Registry, LLC.; |
(5) One hundred percent (100%) of the surety bond provided for under this chapter 14.3 |
of title 19that exceeds the average daily money transmission liability in this state. |
(b) Unless permitted by the director, or designee, by rule or by order to exceed the limit as |
set forth herein, the following investments are permissible under § 19-14.3-2.1 to the extent |
specified: |
(1) Receivables that are payable to a licensee from its authorized delegates in the ordinary |
course of business that are less than seven (7) days old, up to fifty percent (50%) of the aggregate |
value of the licensee's total permissible investments; |
(2) Of the receivables permissible under § 19-14.3-2.2subsection (b)(l) of this section, |
receivables that are payable to a licensee from a single authorized delegate in the ordinary course |
of business may not exceed ten percent (10%) of the aggregate value of the licensee's total |
permissible investments.; |
(3) The following investments are permissible up to twenty percent (20%) per category and |
combined up to fifty percent (50%) of the aggregate value of the licensee's total permissible |
investments: |
(i) A short-term (up to six (6) months) investment bearing an eligible rating; |
(ii) Commercial paper bearing an eligible rating; |
(iii) A bill, note, bond, or debenture bearing an eligible rating; |
(iv) U.S. tri-party repurchase agreements collateralized at one hundred percent (100%) or |
more with U.S. government or agency securities, municipal bonds, or other securities bearing an |
eligible rating; |
(v) Money market mutual funds rated less than "AAA" and equal to or higher than "A-" by |
S&P, or the equivalent from any other eligible rating service; and |
(vi) A mutual fund or other investment fund composed solely and exclusively of one or |
more permissible investments listed in subsections (a)(1) through (a)(3) of this section.; |
(4) Cash (including demand deposits, savings deposits, and funds in such accounts held for |
the benefit of the licensee's customers) at foreign depository institutions are permissible up to ten |
percent (10%) of the aggregate value of the licensee's total permissible investments if the licensee |
has received a satisfactory rating in its most recent examination and the foreign depository |
institution: |
(i) Has an eligible rating; |
(ii) Is registered under the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act; |
(iii) Is not located in any country subject to sanctions from the Office of Foreign Asset |
Control; and |
(iv) Is not located in a high-risk or non-cooperative jurisdiction as designated by the |
Financial Action Task Force. |
SECTION 8. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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LC004395 |
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