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DCUC calls for Pennsylvania and New York lawmakers to reject harmful interchange legislation 

WASHINGTON, DC (May 27, 2026) |

The Defense Credit Union Council (DCUC) recently sent letters to  Pennsylvania House and Senate leaders and New York Senate leaders urging opposition to  proposed interchange-fee legislation. In the letters, DCUC warned the measures would impose  state-specific operating mandates on the national payments system and create unintended  consequences to the communities credit unions serve and support, including military and  vulnerable populations. 

In Pennsylvania, DCUC urged lawmakers not to advance HB 2090 or SB 1202 as drafted. 

“These bills are often described as narrow fee-relief measures, but their actual effect is broader:  they would impose Pennsylvania-specific operating rules on a national payments system,” said  Jason Stverak, DCUC Chief Advocacy Officer on behalf of DCUC. 

DCUC voiced how the Pennsylvania legislation goes beyond pricing adjustments by requiring  changes to payment settlement, dispute handling, fee structures, merchant-credit workflows,  and tax documentation processes. DCUC warned the proposals would create new compliance  costs and reduce card-program revenue for not-for-profit credit unions, with downstream effects  on member pricing, rewards programs, fraud prevention tools, and credit availability. 

DCUC also stressed the connection between financial readiness and military readiness, citing  Military OneSource and the 2024 Active-Duty Spouse Survey, which found financial stress  influences retention decisions among servicemembers and their families. 

The letter further noted that prior interchange regulation has not consistently produced lower  consumer prices. DCUC cited findings from the Richmond Fed showing 75% of merchants  reported no price changes after federal debit interchange regulation, while only 2% reported  decreases. DCUC also referenced an April 2026 OCC determination concluding federal law 

preempts Illinois’ similar interchange law for national banks and federal savings associations  due to operational complexity and cost concerns. 

Separately, DCUC urged New York lawmakers to oppose S5587A, the Interchange Fee  Prohibition Act, and related interchange-fee legislation pending in the state: 

“These bills would not operate as a simple pricing correction. They would instead impose state specific operating rules on a national payment system, with material risk for consumers, smaller  financial institutions, and military households.” 

DCUC warned the proposal would create new requirements for authorization, settlement,  reconciliation, compliance, and data governance across the payments system, and a state-by state carveout approach would fragment national payment rails, increase operational  complexity, and create litigation and compliance risks. 

In April 2026, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency reached a determination regarding  Illinois’ interchange law, which warned multiple state-level carveouts could create a “complex,  potentially unworkable, and destabilizing standard” for the payments system.  

“[T]he agency warned that the problem would be worse if multiple states adopted similar or  conflicting rules. The OCC further estimated that, absent preemption, OCC-supervised  institutions would face more than $232 million in one-time system-upgrade costs, about $145  million per year in manual documentation processing costs for the first several years, and  around $200 million in lost issuer revenue. New York should not invite the same operational  chaos, charter-based patchwork, and litigation risk.” 

The letter also cited research indicating interchange regulations have not reliably produced  lower consumer prices and may instead shift costs to consumers through higher fees, reduced  rewards, or reduced credit access. 

“DCUC will continue forcefully advocating against harmful policies that would weaken the ability  of credit unions to serve military families, local communities, and the broader economy, while  fragmenting the integrity of the national payments system,” said Anthony Hernandez, DCUC  President/CEO, Ret. U.S. Air Force Colonel. “Credit unions are mission-driven institutions built  to serve people, not shareholders, and lawmakers must ensure public policy strengthens that  mission instead of undermining the financial stability, access, and support millions of Americans  rely on every day.” 

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