CUNA Urges Senator to Rethink Bill Giving NCUA Third Party Oversight

WASHINGTON—CUNA is calling on Sen. Jon Ossoff (D-GA) to reconsider his Improving Cybersecurity of Credit Union Act, a bill that would give NCUA authority over third-party vendors.

Jon Ossoff

“We are concerned that extending supervisory authority over these firms to NCUA could require the agency to increase its budget to hire personnel with appropriate expertise,” CUNA wrote in a letter to the Senator. “This is a concern to credit unions because credit union member resources fund the agency, and credit unions question why they should be required to send more of their members’ savings to NCUA when the agency has demonstrated it is doing a good job absent this authority.

“If Congress conveys this authority to NCUA, the agency should commit to funding this new authority by reducing expenditures elsewhere,” the letter adds.

CUNA stated while NCUA has requested this authority for years, it hasn’t development a clear vision for the scope of the authority or how it would be implemented.

“It is possible that extending this authority to NCUA could, over time, lead to a reduction in credit union costs if such supervision leads to reduced losses to the National Credit Union Share Insurance Fund (NCUSIF) or reduces credit unions due diligence requirements for engaging vendors subject to NCUA supervision,” the letter states. “Not knowing how the agency will use this authority makes it difficult for us to see this as a probable outcome.”

League Weighs In

The League of Southeastern Credit Unions shared CUNA’s concerns.

“While we share and appreciate Senator Jon Ossoff’s interest in strengthening cybersecurity, we know the broad scope of this legislation is not the solution,” said Samantha Beeler, president of the League of Southeastern Credit Unions. “Credit unions are concerned that expanding the authority of the NCUA would likely result in lengthier exams with less in-depth audits. As the role of the NCUA is to regulate federally chartered credit unions, we affirm the agency should focus on examining credit unions and simply ensure that credit unions are up to date with cybersecurity standards and following new guidance as it is proposed. Furthermore, credit unions should not be burdened with funding the NCUA’s third-party vendor authority for organizations that may not even be examined.”

The Very Best in CU Reporting. For You. For Free. Or Your Money Back.

Don’t forget to check your Spam/Junk email folder if you haven’t been receiving your free, popular and daily CUToday.info news headlines.

And if you haven’t yet signed up for the new email solution on which CUToday.info has partnered with ResponseGenius, you can do so here. Signing up requires less than one minute of your time.

CUToday.info has received very positive response from readers following the move to an improved provider of the daily headlines, but many also noted they did need to go to their Spam/Junk folder and mark it as safe.

The new email solution has not only improved every reader’s delivery experience, but it also features a fresh, new format that is easy to read, especially on mobile devices.

Please note and/or make your IT department or email administrator aware the emails will be coming from the domains CUTodayinfo.com and CUTodayinfoReply.com.

 

Section: Standard
Word Count: 662
Copyright Holder: CUToday.info
Copyright Year: 2026
Is Based On:
URL: https://cuto-admin.flux5.ccplatform.net/Fresh-Today/CUNA-Urges-Senator-to-Rethink-Bill-Giving-NCUA-Third-Party-Oversight