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The Green Sheet Online Edition

January 28, 2008 • Issue 08:01:02

Comerica tapped for prepaid benefits

The U.S. Department of the Treasury's Financial Management Service (FMS) selected Comerica Bank to be the financial agent in the implementation of the Direct Express Card program for electronic prepaid Social Security payments. Comerica, a Dallas-based Fortune 500 financial services company, is a subsidiary of Comerica Inc.

The FMS selected Comerica partly because of its experience as a prepaid card issuer for state government benefit programs. Comerica is partnered with Dallas-based payment processor Affiliated Computer Services Inc., which is expected to be the payment processor for the program. In January 2007, the FMS initiated the Direct Express card in a pilot program for Social Security and Supplemental Security Income benefit recipients in Illinois. JPMorgan Chase & Co. was the card issuer for that program.

Starting in April 2008, about 600,000 benefit check recipients in at least four states - Texas, Louisiana, Oklahoma and Arkansas - will be able to receive benefit payments on prepaid debit cards. FMS' goal is to go national with the program by the end of summer 2008.

The beneficiaries of the Direct Express Card program are unbanked consumers, also known as the underbanked or underserved, who do not have access to traditional bank accounts.

Because the unbanked rely on the mail to receive paper checks, they are at greater risk of check delivery delays due to bad weather, natural or manmade catastrophes, and other problems such as lost or stolen checks, the FMS stated.

Monthly benefit payments will be loaded electronically on Direct Express cards. Using the open loop, network-branded prepaid card - a card Association has not been chosen yet - funds can be accessed at automated teller machines and financial institutions nationwide.

The cards will be PIN-protected, Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.-insured, and subject to consumer protection regulations, namely the Electronic Fund Transfer Act, also known as Regulation E.

Payments industry research firm Mercator Advisory Group predicted $31.2 billion will be loaded on network-branded government benefit prepaid cards by 2010, only topped by the $43.3 billion expected to be loaded onto prepaid payroll cards.

"Direct Express represents a significant step forward in the evolution of federal benefit payments," said Judy Tillman, Commissioner of the FMS. "We ultimately would like to see an all-electronic Treasury - with all the security, efficiency and cost savings that would entail.

"This card takes us closer to that goal by combining the best in payment innovation with sound public policy.

"If every unbanked federal check recipient signed up to use the card, it would save taxpayers about $44 million per year." end of article

The Green Sheet Inc. is now a proud affiliate of Bankcard Life, a premier community that provides industry-leading training and resources for payment professionals. Click here for more information.

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