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DCUC submits comments to NCUA, reinforcing commitment to balanced, accountable deregulation

WASHINGTON, DC (April 28, 2026) |

The Defense Credit Union Council (DCUC) today submitted six separate  comment letters to the National Credit Union Administration (NCUA) in response to the agency’s  sixth round of deregulation proposals. With these submissions, DCUC has now submitted a total  of 25 comment letters as part of the NCUA’s ongoing Deregulation Project.

In its latest letters, DCUC expressed support for several proposals aimed at modernizing and  streamlining regulatory requirements. These include removing the requirement that certain  service agreements be in writing, simplifying rules governing eligible obligations, rescinding  redundant provisions already addressed in the Federal Credit Union Act (FCUA), clarifying  statutory lien authority language, and updating compensation rules to allow more flexible,  performance-based incentives tied to overall institutional health.

At the same time, DCUC opposed the proposal to eliminate the requirement that credit union  board members maintain a “working familiarity” with basic financial practices. DCUC  emphasized that removing this standard could weaken board oversight, reduce financial literacy  at the governance level, and increase risk in areas such as audit response and supervisory  compliance.

“DCUC’s focus amid the NCUA’s Deregulation Project reflects a core advocacy priority of  ensuring that regulatory reform strengthens the credit union system,” says Jason Stverak,  DCUC Chief Advocacy Officer. “We support efforts that reduce unnecessary burden and provide  operational flexibility, but we will continue to push back where changes could undermine  governance, accountability, or member protection. This is about maintaining the right balance so  credit unions can continue delivering value to the communities they serve.”

DCUC’s comments highlight the importance of tailoring regulatory changes to preserve safety  and soundness while enabling credit unions to adapt to evolving financial and operational  demands.

“We’re commitment to ensuring that the voice of credit union members is strongly represented and will continue working closely with the NCUA to provide continued feedback on future  rulemakings as the agency advances its regulatory modernization efforts,” says Stverak.

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