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Public
Deposit Protection Information
Overview
The
Colorado Division of Financial Services regulates 11 savings
and loan associations and savings banks that are designated
to hold Colorado public deposits. Public deposits in commercial
banks are regulated under different, but similar, laws and
regulations. Please contact the Colorado Division of Banking
at (303) 894-7575 for information concerning commercial
bank public deposit protection. If you are not sure which
agency oversees your particular institution, feel free to
call on either of us to answer that question for you.
The
purpose of the Savings and Loan Association Public Deposit
Protection Act ("PDPA") is to ensure that public
funds held on deposit in savings and loan associations are
protected in the event that the institution holding the
public deposits becomes insolvent.
How
public deposits are protected
Federal
deposit insurance provides protection for public deposits
under U. S. Code Section 330.15. In very general terms,
the official custodian of a public unit is insured at least
up to $250,000 per institution. The PDPA then requires institutions
to deliver eligible assets (usually mortgage loans or securities)
to a third party to be held in safekeeping, and such assets
are pledged to the Colorado Division of Financial Services.
In the event that an institution becomes insolvent, the
Commissioner of Financial Services will seize and sell the
pledged assets and distribute the proceeds to the public
entities for the amount of their deposits not covered by
federal deposit insurance.
How
the Division of Financial Services ensures compliance with
the PDPA
1.
Eligible public depositories are required to report to the
Division of Financial Services their total level of public
deposits held, the amount of these deposits that are covered
by federal deposit insurance, and the amount of uninsured
public deposits. They are also required to report the market
value of assets pledged to cover these uninsured deposits.
These reports are normally required to be filed with us
quarterly, although we reserve the right to obtain them
more frequently if we feel it is necessary.
2. We also conduct periodic examinations of the eligible
public depositories to review their source records and procedures
to ensure that their reports to the Division are being prepared
accurately. During these examinations, the collateral that
is pledged to cover uninsured deposits is also reviewed
to ensure that it complies with all applicable laws and
regulations.
If
you have any questions on the PDPA for savings and loan
associations, please call: Dave Francis, Supervisory Examiner at
(303) 894-2336.
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