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Maine BFI Guidance on Financial Institutions Assisting Coronavirus-Affected Customers

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Published March 27th, 2020
Detected March 18th, 2026
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Summary

The Maine Bureau of Financial Institutions issued guidance encouraging financial institutions to assist customers affected by the Coronavirus. The Bureau will provide regulatory assistance and will not criticize prudent efforts to modify loan terms or waive fees for affected customers.

What changed

The Maine Bureau of Financial Institutions (Bureau) has issued guidance encouraging financial institutions to provide assistance to customers impacted by the Coronavirus (COVID-19). The guidance encourages institutions to work with affected customers by waiving fees, increasing withdrawal limits, easing check cashing restrictions, increasing credit limits, and offering payment accommodations to avoid delinquencies and negative credit reporting. Crucially, the Bureau states that prudent efforts to modify terms on existing loans, such as restructuring debt due to temporary hardships, will not be subject to examiner criticism. The Bureau also indicated it would consider unusual circumstances when reviewing an institution's financial condition and determining supervisory responses, and may reduce burden by making greater use of off-site reviews.

Financial institutions should review this guidance to understand the types of customer accommodations that will be supported and not criticized by the Bureau. This includes proactive engagement with customers experiencing financial difficulties due to COVID-19. Institutions facing challenges meeting regulatory reporting requirements are encouraged to contact the Bureau to discuss their specific situations. While this guidance does not impose new mandatory requirements, it signals a supportive regulatory stance for institutions that prudently assist their customers during this crisis, potentially mitigating negative impacts on both customers and the institutions themselves.

What to do next

  1. Review guidance on customer accommodations for COVID-19 impacts
  2. Contact Bureau if facing difficulties meeting regulatory reporting requirements

Source document (simplified)

Statement on Financial Institutions Working with Customers Affected by the Coronavirus and Regulatory Assistance

Mar 27, 2020

The Maine Bureau of Financial Institutions (Bureau) recognizes the potential for the Coronavirus Disease (referred to as COVID-19) to adversely affect the customers and operations of financial institutions. The Bureau encourages financial institutions to take steps to meet the financial services needs of affected customers and communities. The Bureau will provide appropriate regulatory assistance to affected financial institutions subject to their supervision, as warranted.

Working with Customers: The Bureau encourages financial institutions to work with affected customers and communities. The Bureau recognizes that such efforts serve the long-term interests of communities and the financial system when conducted with appropriate management oversight and consistent with safe and sound banking practices and applicable laws. These efforts may include, but are not limited to:

  • Waiving certain fees, such as:

    • Automated teller machine (ATM) fees for customers and non-customers,
    • Overdraft fees,
    • Late payment fees on credit cards and other loans, and
    • Early withdrawal penalties on time deposits;
  • Increasing ATM daily cash withdrawal limits;

  • Easing restrictions on cashing out-of-state and non-customer checks;

  • Increasing credit card limits for creditworthy borrowers; and

  • Offering payment accommodations which would avoid delinquencies and negative credit bureau reporting caused by COVID-19-related disruptions.

The Bureau emphasizes that prudent efforts to modify the terms on existing loans for affected customers will not be subject to examiner criticism. For example, when appropriate, a financial institution may restructure a borrower's debt obligations due to temporary hardships resulting from COVID-19 related issues. Such cooperative efforts can ease cash flow pressures on affected borrowers, improve their capacity to service debt, and facilitate the financial institution’s ability to collect on its loans.

Financial institutions may also ease terms for new loans to affected borrowers, consistent with prudent banking practices. Such practices may help borrowers to recover or maintain their financial capacity and enhance their ability to service their debt.
The Bureau recognizes there may be other accommodations that could assist customers and communities in responding to challenges from COVID-19. The Bureau supports and will not criticize efforts to accommodate customers in a safe and sound manner. The Bureau encourages financial institutions to work with their regulator regarding additional actions that may more effectively manage or mitigate any adverse impact due to COVID-19.

Financial Condition Review, Supervisory Response, and Regulatory Relief: The Bureau appreciates that some financial institutions with customers affected by COVID-19 related issues may experience an increase in their levels of delinquent and nonperforming loans. Consistent with long-standing practices, the Bureau will consider the unusual circumstances these financial institutions face when reviewing an institution’s financial condition and determining any supervisory response. As needed, the Bureau will work with affected financial institutions to reduce burden when scheduling examinations or inspections, including making greater use of off-site reviews, consistent with applicable legal and regulatory requirements.

Regulatory Reporting Requirements: Financial institutions affected by COVID-19 related issues that expect to encounter difficulty meeting regulatory reporting requirements, including audited financial statements and related reports, as applicable, are encouraged to contact the Bureau to discuss their situation. The Bureau's staff stand ready to work with affected financial institutions that may experience problems fulfilling their reporting responsibilities, considering each financial institution’s circumstances.

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
State Banking
Published
March 27th, 2020
Instrument
Guidance
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive

Who this affects

Applies to
Banks
Geographic scope
State (Maine)

Taxonomy

Primary area
Banking
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Consumer Finance Public Health

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