CFPB Intro’s New Steps, Including Awards for Whistleblowers

WASHINGTON— The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau said it has introduced three steps to advance a key priority of “preventing consumer harm” and has submitted proposed language to Congress to allow certain changes to take place.

According to the Bureau, the three steps are:

  • Implementing an advisory opinion program to provide clear guidance to assist companies in better understanding their legal and regulatory obligations through advisory opinions
  • Amending and reissuing its responsible business conduct bulletin, which articulates that the Bureau intends to provide credit to entities for their responsible conduct based on its extent and significance
  • Engaging with Congress to advance proposed legislation that would authorize the Bureau to award whistleblowers who report violations of Federal consumer financial law.

The Bureau said it has submitted the proposed legislative language to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and U.S. Senate President Mike Pence, as well as the chairs and ranking members of the authorizing committees in both chambers. The language would amend Title X of the Dodd-Frank Act and provide authority to establish a whistleblower award program. “The incentive created for employees to report wrongdoing to the Bureau will assist in advancing enforcement cases, especially as it relates to fair lending violations,” the Bureau said.

Paying Award

Under the proposed legislation, in cases where a whistleblower provides voluntary information that leads to a successful enforcement action, the Bureau further said it will be able to pay an award based on a percentage of the monetary sanctions collected in the action.

“These steps reinforce the Bureau’s commitment to preventing consumer harm. Advisory opinions will ensure that companies know what compliance entails and what constitutes a violation,” said CFPB Director Kathleen L. Kraninger in a statement. “We also want to incentivize whistleblowers to contact us if they believe their employer is not complying with the law.”

The CFPB said under the advisory opinion program, parties will submit requests for an advisory opinion to the Bureau via its website. The Bureau said it will issue additional procedures for how requests will be addressed, including how the Bureau will prioritize requests.

“To increase transparency and to provide regulatory certainty to all regulated entities and other stakeholders, the Bureau will publish the responding advisory opinion in the Federal Register and on its website,” the CFPB said. “The opinion will include an interpretation of the Bureau’s existing rules. Under a current guidance process, responses to individual regulatory inquiries are generally available to the individual requestor. That process will remain available alongside the advisory opinion program, as will the Bureau’s other efforts to provide clear guidance to the public.”

Four Categories

The Bureau noted it originally published a responsible business conduct bulletin in June 2013, and the new bulletin updates and strengthens the original bulletin and is intended to clarify the Bureau’s approach to responsible business conduct and emphasize the importance of such conduct.

The bulletin identifies four categories of responsible conduct: self-assessing, self-reporting, remediation, and cooperation. If an entity meaningfully engages in these activities, the Bureau said it will favorably consider it, along with other relevant factors, in addressing violations of Federal consumer financial law in supervisory and enforcement matters.

The proposed legislative language is available here.

The Responsible Business Conduct Bulletin is available here

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