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OVERVIEW OF THE CHECK 21 ACT Intended in part to keep the country's financial industries operational in the event of a catastrophe that could make long-distance transportation impossible--like the September 11, 2001 Attacks --the Check 21 Act makes the digital image of a check legally acceptable for payment purposes, just like a traditional paper check. Before 2004, if someone deposited a check from one bank (for example, Wells Fargo ) into his account at a different bank (for example, Bank Of America ), the banks would have to physically exchange the paper check before the money would be credited to his account. But under Check 21, one bank can simply send an image of the check to the other bank. The practical effect of the law is that checks can still be deposited and cleared, even if a disaster makes it impossible for banks to exchange the physical paper checks with each other. IMPLICATIONS FOR BUSINESSES AND CONSUMERS A side effect of the Check 21 act is that, because the digital image of a check is now considered a legal document, bank customers who get paid with a check can scan an image of the check and deposit it into the bank from their home or office. However, an image is only legally acceptable if captured with a special Scanner capable of reading the Magnetic Ink Character Recognition (or MICR ) coding printed at the bottom of a check. Such scanners often cost several hundred dollars; for this reason, businesses that handle a lot of checks have shown interest in the technology, but it is not yet practical for individuals to use remote deposit from their homes. Advocates of Check 21 claim that remote deposit saves time and money because businesses who use it no longer have to send an employee or a courier to take their checks to the bank. Another potential benefit is that it cuts down on paperwork, and therefore reduces the chances of making mistakes or losing checks in the process of depositing them. Bounced checks also show up faster when processed through remote deposit. Critics contend that remote deposit--and by extension, the entire Check 21 Act--is an attempt by the banking industry to eliminate " Float ," the standard one- or two-day waiting period between the time someone writes a check and the time the money is actually taken out of their account. Now that checks can be cashed and cleared electronically, it is theoretically possibly for a bank to take the money out of your checking account on the same day you wrote the check. This would make checks behave much like Debit Cards --making it impossible to, for example, write a check to pay your bill at the grocery store, then rush to the bank to make a deposit so the check doesn't bounce. So far, all banks in the United States still operate with at least a one-day float period. USAGE OF REMOTE DEPOSIT Remote deposit has not yet come into widespread use: A December 2005 study by the non-profit group Independent Community Bankers of America found that just 4 percent of banks in the United States were current users of remote deposit, although 41 percent have plans to adopt the technology by 2008. A few major banks that currently allow remote deposit include:
The banking industry does not keep an official tally of how many businesses use remote deposit nationwide; however, the number is generally believed to be in the tens of thousands. Several independent companies such as Alogent, BankServ , RDM Corporation, and NetDeposit each claim to have signed up a few thousand customers, although a number of major banks have also developed their own systems and may eventually wind up handling the lion's share of remote deposit traffic. FOOTNOTES EXTERNAL LINKS
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