What’s with the Statue?

The Seated Boxer, an iconic ancient Greek work of art, shows a grizzled veteran of the ring, equal parts resigned and ready to spring into action. 

What I like is a sense of respite from competition, the powerful athletic physique and the tiredness that surrounds his humanity.  Is he a winner this day? Are there more fights to go?  How will his efforts be remembered?

These are questions that all of us encounter, in literal or figurative ways, in our daily efforts. 

Continue reading “What’s with the Statue?”

Examples of Hope

With the avalanche of news about anti-ICE marches, Epstein file updates, military deployments, Guthrie kidnapping, and stock market records, it was easy to overlook an unprecedented arrival in DC.

This past Tuesday, 19 Buddhist monks and their rescue dog completed a  four-month, 108 day walk from Fort Worth to DC to pray for peace.   One account of this human effort and public response is below.   Not only is the story completely out of the ordinary,  as one interviewee states, it also gives us hope.

(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=13I_7f8pH78)

Hope Closer to Home

Yesterday’s SECU-Just Asking blog was about Lending Hope, a community self-help project in Warren County, North Carolina.

Following  are excerpts of the Feburary 4th Warren Herald’s story, Ceremony Marks Official Launch of Lending Hope Initiative.  (link)

Key elements of the program  include:

The Warren Ministries United purpose: “Our mission is to offer small, interest-free loans that assist applicants in managing rent, mortgage payments, utility bills, and deposits.”

The Rev. Philip Sharp, the organization’s executive director, said that local residents who would like to apply should bring the following:

  • Proof of income, such as a pay stub or bank statement
  • Verification that they live in Warren County, such as a driver’s license, pay stub or bill

“We will do the application process with them and do a budget with them,” Sharp said.

After the budget is completed, those seeking funding will complete an application form that asks them a range of questions, including what help is needed, and the amount that is being requested.

Warren Ministries United will consider such factors as income level and amount. Applicants will be asked to contribute what they can, and the Lending Hope Initiative will make up the difference. The applicant will sign a payment agreement.

“When the money comes back, we will give to someone else in need,” Sharp said.

Donations have enabled the Lending Hope Initiative to have enough money to start and will continue to help fund the program moving forward. Thanks to the initiative, a family who lost their home to fire was able to pay an electric bill so that electricity could be set up at their new home, Sharp said.

Warren Ministries United hopes that the Lending Hope Initiative will prove to be sustainable well into the future.

A CEO’s Criteria for Success

Does this Lending Hope’s process remind you of a another institution’s role?  Except the part about no interest?

A former CEO Doug  Fecher used to state his criteria for whether the credit union was fulfilling its mission by asking:  “If Wright-Patt Credit Union went away would the members stand up and recreate us?  Or would they just go down the street and choose another option?”

He would then often add: We’re not there yet, but that is our goal.”

(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tE_3-ipOiPE)

The Lending Hope initiative is one answer to Fecher’s criteria for whether credit unions are fulfilling cooperative purpose. There is one credit union branch only in Warren County, North Carolina.  It is run by SECU, the second largest credit union in the country.

 The Common Thread in  Hope

Both examples of Hope from a walking prayer for peace, or making no-interest loans to local persons in need, share a common source.  They were initiated by religious leaders.

Society often describes these activities as movements.  Like the Civil Rights Movement.

I believe that hope is why credit unions were founded.  Are we still providing that for our members today?

Will NCUA’s Journey Be From Chartering a COOP Movement to a Regulatory Dead End?

What kind of financial regulator would be most effective to carry on the purpose of the credit union system stated in the FCU ACT? (see note on Congressional purpose at end)

Should the credit union system be overseen by a regulator of cooperatives or of financial institutions?

The arc of federal regulation from 1934 to today is simple.  The federal regulator evolved from the role of chartering, promoting and supervising cooperatives to just another financial supervisor safeguarding an insurance fund.

The coop design is unique in American financial options. The users are the sole owners of the service.  The intent was to create shared community resources not private wealth.  The structure was to be perpetual with the common equity always “paid forward” to benefit future generations.

Moreover, financial soundness was underwritten by  this shared purpose of borrowers and savers.  Governance was democratic–each member-owners had one vote. No proxies.

The Impact of NCUSIF On Coop Regulation

The  turning point in cooperative regulation was the 1970 passage of a federal deposit insurance (NCUSIF) option modeled after the FDIC and FSLIC.  The banking funds were created in the early 1930’s in response to the  “banking holiday” failures in the depression.   The nascent state chartered credit union movement had no such system failures.  Deposit insurance was not  part of  the FCU act passed in 1934. It wasn’t needed.

The need for the NCUSIF was much debated by credit unions in the lated 1960’s.  CUNA opposed the option arguing such an institution would eventually dominate the system’s functioning.  A new trade association, NAFCU, was formed to lobby for and pass this federal option for cooperatives.

The NCUSIF was not created because of system failures.  Rather it was a recognition that cooperatives, while different in design, were just as safe as any for-profit banking option.

As NCUSIF insurance spread, so did federal regulation mimicking other banking regulations.

From Cooperative Partner to Financial Overseer

When implementing deregulation from 1981-1985, NCUA Chairman Callahan asserted credit unions were unique.  The so-called level playing field arguments, he believed, would undermine the cooperative advantages of member-ownership.

Callahan believed regulations should promote cooperative purpose and collaborative actions.  Both tenets were key tp the financial restructure of the NCUSIF and achieving 100% credit union participation in the unique CLF’s-coop system liquidity partnership.

But the bureaucratic pull of Washington prompted later NCUA leaders to emulate the example and practices of banking regulators.  Safety and soundness, not member service, became the regulator’s mantra.

Both NCUA and credit unions sought Congressional hearing seats at the tables with the titans of America’s financial services.

Today NCUA has copied banking regulators with rules such as risk-based capital and, expanding market sources of capital.  New charters are non-existent.  Cooperative purpose is never mentioned in supervisory priorities.

NCUA oversight has fluctuated between laissez faire (let the free market decide) to embracing the administration’s political ideology from DEI to government downsizing.

The absence of any reference to coop design is that there is no protection for for member-owner rights or their collective savings.  NCUA like the banking regulators has reduced their oversight to merely offering a $250,000 payout in the event of institutional failure.

This neglect of member-owners’ rights has resulted in boards staying in power perpetually.  Owners are kept out of any governance or voting role.  Bylaws are modified with NCUA approval to prevent member initiatives.  Boards and CEO’s feel free to take a credit union’s business model and its billions in legacy assets in any direction they choose.

Transparency for cu leaders’ conduct is non-existent.  Director fiduciary duties flouted. Accountability for outcomes occurs only after a financial crisis. Then the system’s leadership shortcomings are quickly swept under the rug via mergers.

When new CEO’s arrive from outside the coop system, often former for-profit financial professionals, they bring their prior experiences with them. They act like teenagers given a new high-powered formula 1 car.  With board assent, they jump into the driver’s seat and try to see how fast they can make their new institution grow.

The NCUA’s Future

Today NCUA acts and sounds like the other banking regulators.   Credit unions applaud the Trump adminisration policy of government tear down and relaxed o exam oversight.    NCUA appears  alongside the other financial overseers in Congressional hearings, states all is well, and makes no effort to describe how the tax exempt coop system is fulfilling any public duty.

The consequence is that credit unions no longer see their organization as part of an interdependent financial system. Institutional success is celebrated versus cooperative’s  ability to create better financial solutions for those who have the least or know the least about personal finances.

Individual credit union priorities look more and more like capitalist business plans.  They attempt to acquire, not support their peers, via merger takeovers.  If that fails, just buy a bank.

With self-perpetuating board oversight, regulatory withdrawal, no transparency about transfers using tens of millions of member-owners’ capital, the cooperative system may lack the capacity for self-correction.  Industry hegemony, not cooperative purpose, becomes the institution’s endgame.

How much longer will Congress or public policy think tanks not pose the existential questions: Why does America need a financial system that emulates its competitors, but with a tax exemption?  Will NCUA become part of Treasury’s financial oversight, just like the OCC?  Why have two federally managed deposit insurance funds that provide the same function?

“It Makes No Sense:” One Analyst’s Assessment

Yesterday’s post gave a brief history of federal regulatory evolution, It  tracked the various federal governmental departments that shepard credit union’s evolution.  And subsequent events under NCUA as an independent agency. This is that author, Ancin Coolley’s  concern, about where the coop movement stands today.

 When you read credit union regulatory  history and go back to the arguments, it keeps bringing me to this point: the FDIC and other agencies did not want credit unions. And it calls to mind the question, why did they not want them? 

They did not want them because credit unions were not treated the same way as other financial institutions. They were viewed as something that drifted into a social-services posture.   

And honestly, the more I dig into the history and the legal history, the more it feels like I’m finding out Santa Claus isn’t real. The more I learn about the lack of standing for members in court, and the reality that there’s often no remedy for members against directors who effectively give away capital, the more disorienting it feels.  

It’s like there’s the reality I want to believe in, and then there’s the legal reality of what a credit union actually does.  

And what I can’t even begin to reconcile conceptually is this: credit unions want to maintain their tax exemption while also purchasing banks. In good conscience, I can’t even argue against someone who says, “How are you going to maintain your tax exemption if you’re buying a bank, when you were originally given a tax exemption for not being a bank?”   

It makes absolutely no sense.  

Editor’s Note on Cooperative Purpose:

Congress added the following language to the Federal Credit Union Act on August 7, 1998.

The text was included as part of the Congressional Findings in Section 2 of Public Law 105–219, also known as the Credit Union Membership Access Act.

This specific language was crafted to affirm the Mission and reassert that credit unions serve people of “modest means.”

The Congress finds the following:

  1. The American Credit Union movement began as a cooperative effort to serve the productive and provident credit needs of individuals of modest means.
  2. Credit unions continue to fulfill this public purpose, and current members and membership groups should not face divestiture from the financial services institution of their choice as result of recent court action.
  3. To promote thrift and credit extension, a meaningful affinity and bond among members, manifested by a commonality of routine interaction, shared and related work experiences, interests, or activities, or of an otherwise well understood sense of cohesion or identity is essential to the fulfillment of the public mission of credit unions.
  4. Credit unions, unlike many other participants in the financial services market, are exempt from Federal and most state taxes, because they are member-owned, democratically operated, not-for-profit organizations generally managed by volunteer boards of directors and because they have the specified mission of meeting the credit and savings needs of consumers, especially persons of modest means.
  5. Improved credit union safety and soundness provisions will enhance the public benefit that citizens receive from these cooperative financial services institutions.

A Short History of Federal Credit Union Regulators

History matters.  It provides perspective for how we  arrived at our present circumstance.  This context can highlight critical prior assumptions.  It teaches about successes and failings.

Most critically, knowledge of the past can help identify important issues for future sustainability.

In the summary which follows, Ancin Cooley provides insight about the motivations during credit unions founding era.  And what has been lost from that generation’s experiences.

Tomorrow I address the underlying question from this history lesson: What kind of regulator is most likely to sustain an independent cooperative financial option for America?

A  Short History of Credit Union Federal Regulation

By Ancin Cooley

Did you know that between 1934 and 1970, credit unions had four different federal regulators, and none of them actually wanted the job?

Here’s the journey:

1934–1942: Farm Credit Administration
When the Federal Credit Union Act was passed, the Federal Reserve and the Treasury Department were the “logical agencies” to oversee a financial institution. Both said “Nah, we’ll pass.”

1942–1948: FDIC
During World War II, credit unions were temporarily transferred to the FDIC. But the FDIC didn’t want them either.

1948–1953: Social Security Administration
When the FDIC pushed credit unions out, they didn’t go to another financial regulator. Credit unions were placed in the Social Security Administration.

1953–1970: Department of Health, Education, and Welfare
When HEW was created, credit unions moved again.

In 1970, the NCUA was established and the NCUSIF created.

What does this tell us?

Credit unions weren’t seen as financial institutions in the same category as banks. The St. Louis Fed wrote: “Credit unions are exempt from federal taxation because Congress views them as member cooperatives and, therefore, quite different from banks and thrifts.”

But why?

Why were credit unions classified differently and given a non-profit status? Many credit unions from that era were born out of crisis. The Great Depression wasn’t an abstraction for the people who built these institutions; it was a lived experience.

From the 1929 crash through 1933, about 9,000 U.S. banks failed. Those failures resulted in approximately $1.3B in losses. (I am sure someone can convert that into today’s dollars)

If you’ve ever known someone from that generation, you know it changed them. My grandmother is 93 years old. She hid money in places we have not yet found. That era shaped how an entire generation related to trust, to institutions, and to one another. Credit unions didn’t grow from a clever marketing campaign. They grew as a community in response to a collapse of trust.

A note on where we are now.

I’ve been wondering why the norms in the credit union movement began to deteriorate about 25 to 30 years ago. I believe the early builders reached a point at which they could no longer protect their institutions.

Many of the things we are watching today would have been harder to pull off if those original guardians were still in the boardroom. I find myself often whispering to myself, “Now, you know this wouldn’t have gone like this if Mr. John were still alive.”

The people who built many of these institutions carried a lived memory of bank failures. They remembered what it felt like to lose everything. That memory did something important. It created guardrails. Because when you have experienced a trust collapse, you do not treat a cooperative as a commodity.

Next post: how the S&L crisis reshaped the credit union landscape, including the entry of bankers who both helped and harmed the movement.

Editor’s note:  I will post my response to Ancin’s insight tomorrow.

 

Can Credit Unions Buy Their Way to Success?.

For the first 75 years of credit union history, member, share and asset growth was from internal, “organic “ business efforts versus external acquisitions.

Some of the factors requiring this approach were regulation, field of membership limits, the absence of external capital or liquidity, and the cooperative design’s  “local” advantage.

After deregulation of financial services became government policy in the 1980’s, many of these constraints were modified.  Growth options expanded. FOM regulations were broadened.  New membership strategies such as indirect lending were introduced.  Credit union leaders expanded their market ambitions.

Purchasing New Accounts

Today many credit union strategies involve both organic and external acquisition growth tactics.

This market bidding for new members is illustrated by financial institutions’ multiple offers for new checking accounts. Here are some recent cash bounties sent to me:

From an airline credit card issuer:

 As a valued  Chase customer we’re thanking you with an up to $900 offer.  Open a new Chase total Checking account and the new Chase Savings account with qualifying business activities. 

One of my credit unions emailed this offer:

Dear Charles,  

You can still earn up to $100 when you open a new Patelco Checking and Money Market account.  Here’s how.

USAA’s post card appeal had this headline; $400 Cash Bonus.  The offer:  When you apply for and open your first USAA Classic Checking account and receive a qualifying direct deposit.  Offer is nontransferable.

A new local bank, Atlantic Union, promised  a $400 welcome bonus in three easy steps.

  1. Open a checking account.
  2. Set up direct deposit.
  3. Collect you $400 bonus.

Not to be outdone, PenFed offers up to $300 for opening a new checking account with  a qualified deposit.  To receive the full $300  requires an initial $20,000  deposit.  The average daily balance must remain above this amount for five months to receive the $300.

Can Credit Unions Win These Bidding Battles?

Indirect auto loans illustrate the ultimate challenge of external asset purchases. Can these new customers  be converted to loyal members.  Or is the transacton a one and done event?

Before deregulation the credit union option was itself compelling.  Word of mouth was the most common marketing effort.  Credit union membership was thought to be a valuable benefit.

One proof of this belief is the many times members moved away from a job or their community, but chose to retain their credit union affiliation-just in case I need it.

In what some CEO’s  view as a commoditized financial services arena, the quickest way to grow is to go buy it.  These efforts include third party loan originations, purchasing individual participations, acquiring whole banks and the ever present offers to merge facilitated by golden parachutes for the selling CEO.

Is offering a better price sustainable?

Will these “bonus” pricing strategies result in long term  loyalty?

What is the Coop Competitive Advantage?

Buying growth seems easy at first.  The costs and immediate increases in size are seen.  The longer term question of whether these relationships last, is down the road.

The tactics of purchasing initial market success raises important  questions:

  • Does cooperative design, other than the federal tax exemption, give the credit unions a competitive advantage in these price/bonus competitions?
  • Does acquisition of new accounts via third parties result in new member relationships, or a temporary lift?
  • If growth via acquisition becomes an important strategic effort, does a cooperative’s internal capability for organic market efforts atrophy?

Buying growth is not a unique market capability.   It is very visible and easy.  Just call up a broker or other third party originator. The real work of relationship building just begins with the booking.

Purchasing growth is constrained by internal resources and market competition. Is attracting new members with a better price the best way to present the cooperative value advantage?

Learning from the Past

The capabilities and reputation that created a $2.3 trillion ciiperative financial system today were built on a foundation of multiple factors.  These included convenience, personal service, local familiarity and a fair price. All wrapped in values centered on collective community care.

The challenge of creating real organizational value is ever present.  The answers are not simple and often unique to a credit union’s situation and leadership skills.

The response is not to go back to a prior era or model. Rather it is a simple lesson from generations of coop success.  If an organization wants to be a credit union, then it must decide to be one.  Not perfect, but at least good.  America has plenty of banks.

P.S.  Here is a case study published by CUDaily of a credit union expansion effort based on credit union advanages: Why a California Credit Union Intro’d a New Digital Brand in Georgia.

 

 

 

 

 

What Are Credit Union Schools Teaching?

One of the important collaborative efforts is the system of credit union professional courses.  These multi-year commitments are preparing junior staff members for leadership roles in their careers.

I received the following note from a person attending one of the oldest and largest of these programs:

I am in my third and final year at Western Credit Union Management school.  In working on my final project, I came across a past high honors project that I wanted to share with you. 
It details one larger credit union’s growth strategy through mergers and acquisitions. What is particularly interesting is how they view the Small Credit Union category, which they define as $500 million and less.
“A very desirable new market or a significant new strategic capability would need to be evident for our cedit union to consider a merger with a small credit union. Otherwise, the operational disruption would not be worth it.”
 
She attached the full project of almost 200 pages.  It is very professionally done.  Well organized, lots of data, tables and clear presentation strucure. The student’s own credit union is analyzed with a SWOT framework.  Various consultant views are offered and footnoted. 
Mergers and acquisitions are just one of five goals to try to restart the credit union’s slowing member growth.
I did not thoroughly read the entire thesis.  My question would be who is providing feedback on these major academic efforts?
For the work is filled with data and other documentation,  current in its references, and  logical in the recommendations.
I did not study all the points. It is written from an institutional perspective.  I did not see any reference to two areas: credit union system’s future as a unique alternative for members, and what parts of the consumer market are in most in need of cooperative solutions.  Growth was the goal.
The thesis is a well written document that should be used as a starting point, not a final plan of what this credit union aspires to be.  Who are the readers and evaluators for these academic exercises?

When Music Transforms Words

The folk singer Jesse Welles and retired credit union CEO Jim Blaine are separated by two generations of lived experience.  Yet they share a vision and common mission for the country.

Each person has their own professional “lane” for implementing their commitment.  Side by side they illuminate each other’s core values.

Most credit union people of a certain era know about Jim Blaine’s career at SECU (NC).  Over five decades he built the country’s second largest credit union by not following conventional industry practice.

His two guiding principles to staff were simple:  Do the right thing and Bring us your Momma.  Folksy, yet profound.

No risk-based pricing–a member either qualified or not for the loan. No indirect lending allowing a third party to set the rate.  No frills credit cards.  Focus on real estate as the surest means to enhance member long term well-being.

He created a Warren Buffet like organization with centralized funding but local decision making and implementation,  SECU built a statewide network of ATM’s  and over 200 branches. He chartered a unique member-funded foundation supporting education, health and other community needs throughout his home market, the Tar Heel state.

He was outspoken about his approach to cooperative purpose, often challenging peers’ priorities.

“A prophet is not without honor, except in his hometown” is a biblical phrase that summarizes Jim Blaine’s most recent efforts.

For the past four years he has spoken his mind about the direction SECU’s board and senior management have taken.  His blog, SECU just Asking is plain spoken, factual, and sometimes personal when publicly challenging the credit union’s change of philosophy.

Over five decades Jim built one of the most successful cooperative financial charters in America by following one simple rule: “What’s good for the least of us, is good for all of us.”   A phrase with multiple meanings. 

The purpose of the tax exempt cooperative system is to serve a vital  segment of America’s consumers.  He described that group as: Those who have the least or know he least pay the most for financial services in America today.”  

Many peers misunderstood this approach, believing his business model was archaic, lacking innovation and missing the most important market, the A credits and well-to-do.

Enter Jesse Welles

I was listening to recent protest songs from community sings in Minneapolis, now under federal armed siege. My algorithm offered a  Woody Guthrie, Pete Seeger-style activist folk singer.

Born in 1992 in Arkansas, Jesse Welles has, over the last ten years, written hundreds of single ballads about life, politics and those left out of America’s promise.

One commentator describes his voice as sounding like burnt toast.  To which he replied, but you can still eat it.

One ballad that caught my ear was called The Poor.  The chorus has these ironical lines to support the common view that the poor just need to work a little harder: “It ain’t the banks / And it ain’t the taxes / It ain’t the payday loans and high-rent homes / And predatory fees and practices”. 

(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I6vjaimSK4E)

Jim Blaine is the counter example to Jesse’s satirical critique of those who blame the poor for being poor.

A Common Mission

Both men are outspoken, but grounded in the belief that change can happen. They are unconventional in their approach to their professions so are unlikely to be honored by the establishment.

Both believe in protecting the vulnerable, standing up for justice and caring for “the least of these” in our communities.   For them economic justice is moral justice.  We cannot remain silent when individuals and families are preyed upon by a system that celebrates profit as its highest priority.

These two voices illuminate a shared vision. Together they  challenge us to live into our better selves.

A Post Every Credit Union Employee Should Read

This is a CEO’s statement  from the monthly staff update:

Our credit union is in a very commoditized business of financial services, most of our products and services can be purchased elsewhere. So our difference is you, how we treat each other and our members to truly change lives one person at a time in our community.

And then a reminder of two guiding principles:  Every person has a story-do the right thing.

Recently consultant Ancin Cooley in a LinkedIn post described why doing the right thing happens rarely to employees in a merged credit union.

His  recent blog should be posted in the employee lounge of every credit union office.  Mergers of well- run credit unions not only eliminate a local grounded financial institution.  They also end employees’ investment in their professional future.   Following is his analysis of the impact of mergers on the most important “difference makers” in every credit union.

How Credit Union Mergers Rob the Next Generation  of What Was Freely Given to the Last (Attention!!! hashtagMillennials and hashtagGenZ)

The consolidation cheerleaders talk about member impact, technology investments, and competitive positioning.

The executives advocating loudest for mergers  built careers in an industry that had room for them. They were given opportunities for hashtagCEO, hashtagCFO, and hashtagCLO roles at shops, and VP positions at institutions that no longer exist because they’ve since been absorbed. Those jobs paid mortgages, put kids through college, and built retirements.

The Ladder They Climbed Is Being Pulled Up Behind Them

Every merger eliminates leadership positions—CEO, CFO, CLO, and VPs. Two credit unions become one, and half the top roles vanish.For early-career workers, this means fewer rungs up the corporate ladder to reach for. The CEO role at that $350 million credit union that could have been theirs in fifteen years? Absorbed into a $1 billion merger. Gone. “Good luck bud…”

For mid-career professionals who’ve spent a decade building expertise, the chair they were positioning for no longer exists. They did everything right.

The “Efficiencies” Folks Celebrate Are Your Career and Your Money.

When merger advocates toast economies of scale and eliminated redundancies, translate that: they’re toasting eliminated people.
Early-career workers lose the broad exposure that builds future executives. The young professional at a $200 million credit union who might touch lending, compliance, member service, and strategy? At the merged $3 billion institution, they’re a specialist in a silo, building narrow skills with no line of sight to leadership.

Mid-career professionals find their expertise deemed “redundant” when two departments become one. One compliance officer survives. One lending director. One marketing lead. Senior professionals get offered early retirement packages or the dignity of reporting to someone who was their peer last quarter.

The Mission Is Being Sold Off by People It Already Paid

Many younger workers chose credit unions over banks because they wanted work that meant something. The idea that finance could serve people rather than extract from them. Now they watch executives who built wealth and reputation on cooperative principles abandon those principles for scale and extraction. The same leaders who gave conference speeches about “people helping people” or “Main Street Values” now give conference speeches about “competitive positioning” and “Market Forces.”

To the Millennials, Gen Z, and future Gen Alpha workers in this movement: the path is narrower than it should be. And they owe you more than a picture with a politician and the ability to “crash” an event. But the mission that drew you here is still worth fighting for, and you might be the generation that reclaims and rebuilds it.

Every Person’s Chance to Act

Every proposed merger of a sound credit union depends on the overt support or quiet acceptance of staff.  In these situations, they are the first line of defense for “doing the right thing” for members and their communities.

Remaining  obedient or quiescent as leaders plan the demise of their institutions’ integrity and future will compromise the values underpinning both personal and corporate purpose.

Speaking up is never easy.  But that is what makes a democracy work in a credit union or a country.

Today The People are the Press

Yesterday’s scripture reading was from the Sermon on the Mount. The lesson includes Jesus’s multiple teachings (Beatitudes) beginning with Blessed are the meek. . . Blessed  are the poor in spirit….

On the sign in front of the church, the  sermon title was Blessed are Those Blowing Whistles.

Individuals are doing more than making noise. People are recording and publishing videos, interviews and pictures of federal troop immigration occupations-and the resulting abuses and cruelties -in towns and cities across the country.

Citizen Journalists

The people have become the press, taking their first amendment rights of freedom of speech seriously.  They have used virtual channels and networks to post their stories and pictures.   It reminds one of the pamphleteers during the Revolutionary War.

But citizen journalism is not limited to tracking immigration abuses. Individuals are finding ways to raise concerns about their credit unions.

I am a three decade member of XYZ Credit Union. I was shocked by the proposed merger with YYY which was sprung on our community and membership without warning or advance notice.

I attended the annual membership meeting and there was zero mention of this. The Board of Directors has acted in secrecy and this sellout is now presented as a done deal.

 These kinds of deep worry are sent to my blog address two or three times per month.   Sometimes the opening will begin: As a former employee and long-time member of XXX I am deeply concerned about . . .

These members want to know how to amplify their voice.  And that is the first goal of the member-journalist, to make their concerns public and bring transparency to situations.

Several CEO’s even embrace these individual voices.  One publishes Net Promoter Score comments in the monthly staff update, but not just the 9 and 10 ratings, also the 4s and 5s which are often complaints about a service, policy or  member disappointment.

The credit union press primarily relies on the publicity releases of the industry.  Rare are the occasions for member comment except when picked up from a news story.  Or very occasionally from member comments opposing mergers.

Both credit union media as well as the public press rarely have the resources to pursue individual cases of self-dealing orworse.

Democracy Requires Speaking Out

In a democracy, and especially in organizations claiming to be governed by their members, they will find ways to speak out.  It is the American way.  And ultimately it will lead to organized opposition should their concerns be ignored.

With the emergence of local digital media, these stories are now receiving greater coverage. Here is an example from the Baltimore Banner, an online non-profit news source for the greater Baltimore community.

Project Salt Box: How citizen sleuths are monitoring ICE in Maryland

First they unearthed U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement contracts for 42,000 ready-to-eat meals coming to Maryland. 

Then they built data map of how the federal Department of Homeland Security was distributing its funding.

Last week, two-month-old Project Salt Box and its seven-person team revealed what some say is a sign that an ICE surge could be coming to the state.

The group, which works to unearth and explain the public documents behind federal immigration enforcement, was the first to report on Tuesday that DHS had purchased a warehouse near Hagerstown. In correspondence with Washington County officials, federal officials described how they could retrofit the space to become an immigration detention facility. . . .

The American citizenry is finding its voice.   It will not wait for elections.  Rather it will seek to change leaders’ behaviors now.

Credit unions were nurtured in the grassroots of local activism.  They found sponsor support to create new collaborative options for their community.

This latent activism is just below the surface.  In the transfer of hundreds of millions of member equity and billions of assets to third party control, their voices will rise.  And they should.

Blessed are those cooperators who use whistles of words to rouse their fellow members to stand for economic justice for all. Future generations will honor them.

Icy Snow Days

Last three nights the low temperature was in single digits: 6 degrees.  High during daytime is in mid 20’s.  No melt at all.

Schools still closed.  Roads open but too cold for kids to walk to school.

Potomac started to freeze.  So you want to be careful about using the phrase, “Until hell freezes over”-it could happen.

Ice on snow, hard as iron.  Only way in or out.  Even mailman missed two days.

A Japaese snow lantern in its true setting.

Roads open, but snow on sides will be there for weeks.  Solid ice.

A local ice fort.  Note how walls have been made like  stone slabs.

Cleaning walks and porches is a three person effort.  Snow blowers no good on ice packed snow.  Use dirt shovels. spades and even pick axes.  Normal snow shovels not strong enough, laying on ground.

Essential work.

No tennis today.  Have to go to Florida.

Plant covers could save some bushes and flowers.

But power is still on in area.  Just need more hot air.

For This Weekend’s Snowmaggedon

  1. The Harvard Kennedy School just put out an online course, completely free, to help you understand the science and implications of AI, including video lectures, slides and case studies.

Here’s the link.

2. Explosion of new banking applications at OCC.

This BankingDive article says the eighteen new charter applications in 2025 exceeds the total of the prior four years.

Applicants include Nissan and PayPal for industrial bank charters, the license that Thrivent FCU converted to in 2025. (link)

Other applicants include fintechs such as checkout.com.  Six applicants have received conditional approval.

The article includes this quote from the OCC head:

Gould has said the influx is “a return to the norm” for the agency, and that it “signals healthy competition, a commitment to innovation, and should be encouraging to all of us.”

3. Tired of News about Greenland’s Future?

Here is an AI generated video about the Greenland’s territorial defense force that should put to rest  all US concerns.  Composed by some cheeky Irish balladeers.

(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KOpymCZ0PAU)

Have a productive weekend watching or shoveling the fluffy white stuff.