SAFE Banking Act Would Open the Door (Wider) to Cannabis Banking

Wednesday, May 15, 2019

The Secure and Fair Enforcement (SAFE) Banking Act of 2019 has garnered bipartisan support and may even have a shot at passage. It would not remove cannabis from Schedule I of the CSA, but it would prohibit federal bank regulators from penalizing financial institutions that provide services to state-legal cannabis businesses. Under current federal law, all proceeds of cannabis businesses are unlawful even if the company is operating in full compliance with state law. Federally chartered and insured financial institutions therefore risk sanctions, loss of access to payment systems, cancellation of deposit insurance, and even loss of charters for serving the cannabis industry.

Notably, the SAFE Banking Act would prohibit forfeiture of collateral taken as security for loans to cannabis companies and would prevent regulators from cancelling deposit insurance or otherwise sanctioning banks for providing products and services to state-law compliant cannabusinesses. Maine’s Bureau of Financial Institutions is apparently following the issue. On April 15, 2019, it, along with state banking supervisors from many other states, sent a letter to the leaders of the House and Senate urging the passage of legislation that would create a safe harbor for financial institutions to serve legal cannabis businesses. A group of 33 state attorneys general, including Maine Attorney General Aaron M. Frey, sent a letter on May 8, 2019, urging Congress to enact a federal banking safe harbor to help get cash off the streets and into banks where it belongs. The American Bankers Association also submitted a letter to the Senate in support of the SAFE Banking Act. 

Many people believe this law could be the final push that federally chartered banks need to feel comfortable providing services to the growing industry. If adopted, it would open access more broadly to checking accounts, credit cards, payment systems, payroll services, and loans, and may even help provide some relief to the access to capital issue that so many burgeoning cannabis businesses are presently struggling with.

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