2023 -- H 5836 | |
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LC001944 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2023 | |
____________ | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO STATE AFFAIRS AND GOVERNMENT -- RHODE ISLAND ECONOMIC | |
GROWTH BLOCKCHAIN ACT | |
| |
Introduced By: Representative David J. Place | |
Date Introduced: March 01, 2023 | |
Referred To: House Corporations | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Title 42 of the General Laws entitled "STATE AFFAIRS AND |
2 | GOVERNMENT" is hereby amended by adding thereto the following chapter: |
3 | CHAPTER 64.35 |
4 | RHODE ISLAND ECONOMIC GROWTH BLOCKCHAIN ACT |
5 | 42-64.35-1. Short title. |
6 | This chapter shall be known and may be cited as the "Rhode Island Economic Growth |
7 | Blockchain Act." |
8 | 42-64.35-2. Legislative Findings. |
9 | The general assembly finds and declares: |
10 | (1) It is declared to be the policy of the state to promote a vigorous and growing economy, |
11 | to prevent economic stagnation, and to encourage the creation of new job opportunities in order to |
12 | ameliorate the hazards of unemployment and underemployment, reduce the level of public |
13 | assistance, increase revenues to the state and its municipalities, and to achieve a stable diversified |
14 | economy. |
15 | (2) The State of Rhode Island understands that to compete in the twenty-first century |
16 | economy, Rhode Island must offer one of the best business environments in the United States for |
17 | blockchain and technology innovators, and should offer a comprehensive regulatory technology |
18 | sandbox for these innovators to develop the next generation of digital products and services in |
| |
1 | Rhode Island; |
2 | (3) Building a more robust public-private partnership framework is mandatory for |
3 | economic success; |
4 | (4) The State of Rhode Island understands that further developing technology industries |
5 | within a robust public-private partnership brings better efficiency, trust, and accountability between |
6 | Rhode Island state government, businesses, and residents. |
7 | (5) The state understands a public-private partnership developing an immutable |
8 | interagency-industry-operability blockchain filing system is vital and redevelopment investment in |
9 | opportunity zones that shall install, maintain, and organize within the system of blockchain records |
10 | throughout the state is advantageous. |
11 | (6) Financial and health technology is undergoing a transformational period in which new |
12 | technologies are providing greater automation, connectivity and transparency for provenance of |
13 | products and services: |
14 | (i) Existing legal frameworks are restricting technology innovation because these |
15 | frameworks were largely established at a time when technology was not a fundamental component |
16 | of products and services; |
17 | (ii) Technology innovators require a supervised, flexible regulatory sandbox to test new |
18 | products and services using waivers of specified statutes and rules under defined conditions; |
19 | (iii) Jurisdictions which establish regulatory sandboxes are more likely to provide a |
20 | welcoming business environment for technology innovators and may experience significant |
21 | business growth; |
22 | (iv) Other jurisdictions have enacted, or are considering, regulatory sandboxes for financial |
23 | technology innovators in their jurisdictions; |
24 | (v) Other jurisdictions have enacted, or are considering public-private partnerships for |
25 | health technology innovators in their jurisdictions; |
26 | (vi) Other jurisdictions have enacted or are considering blockchain track and trace |
27 | identifiers for highly regulated products and industry such as hemp; while recognizing there are |
28 | legitimate concerns on implementing a widespread hemp industry in the state, necessitating |
29 | incremental rollout of newly licensed and credentialed entities to best ensure public health and |
30 | safety: Rhode Island seeks to establish a best in the nation blockchain technology hub for twenty- |
31 | first century commerce that will increase economic opportunity; including highly regulated |
32 | industries that otherwise left unchecked could cause continued harm to public health and safety. |
33 | (7)(i) The rapid innovation of blockchain technology including the growing use of virtual |
34 | currency and other digital assets has resulted in many blockchain innovators being unable to access |
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1 | secure and reliable banking services thereby hampering development of blockchain services and |
2 | products in the marketplace; |
3 | (ii) Federally insured financial institutions are not generally permitted to manage accounts |
4 | in virtual currency or hold other digital assets; |
5 | (iii) Blockchain innovators have greater compliance challenges with federal customer |
6 | identification, anti-money laundering and beneficial ownership requirements because of the |
7 | complex nature of these obligations and the unfamiliarity of regulators with blockchain innovators' |
8 | businesses; |
9 | (iv) These intricate obligations have resulted in many financial institutions in Rhode Island |
10 | and across the United States refusing to provide banking services to blockchain innovators and also |
11 | refusing to accept deposits in United States currency obtained from the sale of virtual currency or |
12 | other digital assets; |
13 | (v) Compliance with applicable federal and state laws is critical to ensuring the future |
14 | growth and reputation of the blockchain and technology industries as a whole; |
15 | (vi) Most financial institutions today do not have the requisite expertise or familiarity with |
16 | the challenges facing blockchain innovators which is required to provide secure and reliable |
17 | banking services to these innovators; |
18 | (vii) A new type of Rhode Island financial payments and depository institution that has |
19 | expertise with customer identification, anti-money laundering and beneficial ownership |
20 | requirements could seamlessly integrate these requirements into its operating model; and |
21 | (viii) Authorizing special purpose depository institutions to be chartered in Rhode Island |
22 | will provide a necessary and valuable service to blockchain innovators, emphasize Rhode Island's |
23 | partnership with the technology and financial industry and safely grow this state's developing |
24 | financial sector. |
25 | 42-64.35-3. Definitions. |
26 | As used in this chapter the following words and phrases shall have the following meanings, |
27 | unless the context otherwise requires: |
28 | (1) "Agency" or "public body" means any executive, legislative, judicial, regulatory, |
29 | administrative body of the state, or any political subdivision thereof: including, but not limited to, |
30 | any department, division, agency, commission, board, office, bureau, authority, any school, fire, or |
31 | water district, or other agency or quasi-public agency of Rhode Island state or local government |
32 | which exercises governmental functions or any other public or private agency, person, partnership, |
33 | corporation, or business entity acting on behalf of any public agency. |
34 | (2) "Bank" means any corporation, excluding national banks, having a place of business |
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1 | within this state which engages in banking business, and includes a special purpose depository |
2 | institution, subject to the limitations set forth in § 42-64.34-9. |
3 | (3) "Batch" means a specific quantity of real or digital product that is part of a regulated |
4 | industry, such as hemp or vital records. |
5 | (4) "Blockchain" means a digital ledger or database which is chronological, consensus- |
6 | based, decentralized and mathematically verified in nature. |
7 | (5) "Bureau" means an office or department in charge of administering any agency or bank |
8 | regulated by the provisions of this chapter. |
9 | (6) "Commercial hemp activity" means and includes the cultivation, possession, |
10 | manufacture, distribution, processing, storing, laboratory testing, packaging, labeling, |
11 | transportation, delivery, or sale of hemp and hemp products as provided for in this chapter. |
12 | (7) "Commissioner" means the state banking commissioner. |
13 | (8) "Compassion Center" as defined under § 21-28.6-3. |
14 | (9) "Consumer" means a person, whether a natural person or a legal entity, in Rhode Island |
15 | who purchases or enters into an agreement to receive an innovative financial product or service |
16 | made available through the financial technology sandbox; |
17 | (10) "Consumptive" means a circumstance when a token is exchangeable for, or provided |
18 | for the receipt of, services, software, content or real or tangible personal property, including rights |
19 | of access to services, content or real or tangible personal property. |
20 | (11) "Control" means: |
21 | (i) When used in reference to a transaction or relationship involving virtual currency, the |
22 | power to execute unilaterally or prevent indefinitely a virtual currency transaction; and |
23 | (ii) When used in reference to a person, the direct or indirect power to direct the |
24 | management, operations, or policies of the person through legal or beneficial ownership of twenty- |
25 | five percent (25%) or more of the voting power in the person or under a contract, arrangement, or |
26 | understanding. |
27 | (12) "Cultivation" means any activity involving the planting, growing, harvesting, drying, |
28 | curing, grading, or trimming of hemp. |
29 | (13) "Cultivation site" means a location where hemp is planted, grown, harvested, dried, |
30 | cured, graded, or trimmed, or a location where any combination of those activities occurs. |
31 | (14) "Custodial services" means the safekeeping and management of customer currency |
32 | and digital assets through the exercise of fiduciary and trust powers under this section as a |
33 | custodian, and includes fund administration and the execution of customer instructions. |
34 | (15) "Customer" means a natural person twenty-one (21) years of age or older or a natural |
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1 | person eighteen (18) years of age or older who possesses a physician's recommendation, or a |
2 | primary caregiver. |
3 | (16) "Database" means a set of data held on a secured computer software program or |
4 | encrypted electronic storage system providing an immutable distributed ledger of records. |
5 | (17) "Department" means the department of business regulation, division of banking. |
6 | (18) "Developer" means the person primarily responsible for creating an open blockchain |
7 | token or otherwise designing the token, including by executing the technological processes |
8 | necessary to create the token; |
9 | (19) "Digital asset" means a representation of economic, proprietary or access rights that |
10 | is stored in a computer readable format, and includes digital consumer assets, digital securities and |
11 | virtual currency; |
12 | (20) "Digital consumer asset" means a digital asset that is used or bought primarily for |
13 | consumptive, personal or household purposes and includes: |
14 | (i) An open blockchain token constituting intangible personal property as otherwise |
15 | provided by law; and |
16 | (ii) Any other digital asset which does not fall within the scope of this chapter. |
17 | (21) "Exchange," used as a verb, means to assume control of virtual currency from or on |
18 | behalf of a resident, at least momentarily, to sell, trade, or convert: |
19 | (i) Virtual currency for legal tender, bank credit, or one or more forms of virtual currency; |
20 | or |
21 | (ii) Legal tender or bank credit for one or more forms of virtual currency. |
22 | (22) "Facilitator" means a person who, as a business, makes open blockchain tokens under |
23 | this section available for resale to the public after a token has been purchased by an initial buyer. |
24 | (23) "Fees" means charge(s) imposed by the private entity of a qualifying project for use |
25 | of all or a portion of such qualifying project pursuant to a comprehensive agreement; |
26 | (24) "Financial investment" means a contract, transaction or arrangement where a person |
27 | invests money in a common enterprise and is led to expect profits solely from the efforts of a |
28 | promoter or a third party. |
29 | (25) "Financial product or service" means a product or service related to finance, including |
30 | banking, securities, consumer credit or money transmission, which is subject to statutory or rule |
31 | requirements identified in title 19 and is under the jurisdiction of the commissioner or secretary. |
32 | (26) "Financial technology sandbox" means the program created by this chapter which |
33 | allows a person to make an innovative financial product or service available to consumers during a |
34 | sandbox period through a waiver of existing statutory and rule requirements, or portions thereof, |
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1 | by the commissioner or secretary. |
2 | (27) "Hemp" means marijuana and all parts of the plant of the genus hemp, whether |
3 | growing or not; the seeds thereof; the resin extracted from any part of the plant; and every |
4 | compound, manufacture, salt, derivative, mixture, or preparation of the plant, its seeds, or resin. It |
5 | does not include hemp, the mature stalks of the plant, fiber produced from the stalks, oil or cake |
6 | made from the seeds of the plant, or any other compound, manufacture, salt, derivative, mixture, |
7 | or preparation of the mature stalks (except the resin extracted from it), fiber, oil, or cake, or the |
8 | sterilized seed of the plant that is incapable of germination. |
9 | (28) "Hemp cultivation facility" means an entity that is licensed pursuant to chapter 26 of |
10 | title 2, to be exempt from state penalties for manufacturing hemp or hemp products, cultivating, |
11 | preparing, packaging, and selling hemp to a retailer, processor, or another hemp cultivation facility, |
12 | but not for selling hemp products or selling hemp to the general public. |
13 | (29) "Hemp processor" means an entity licensed pursuant to chapter 26 of title 2 to be |
14 | exempt from state penalties for purchasing hemp from hemp cultivation facilities, manufacturing |
15 | hemp products, and selling, giving, or transferring hemp products to a hemp retailer or a hemp |
16 | testing facility. |
17 | (29) "Hemp products" means all parts of the plant hemp sativa linnaeus, hemp indica, or |
18 | hemp ruderalis, whether growing or not. |
19 | (30) "Hemp testing facility" means an entity that is licensed pursuant to chapter 26 of title |
20 | 2 to be exempt from state penalties for testing hemp and hemp products for potency and |
21 | contaminants. |
22 | (31) "Innovative" means new or emerging technology, or new uses of existing technology, |
23 | that provides a product, service, business model or delivery mechanism to the public and has no |
24 | substantially comparable, widely available analogue in Rhode Island including blockchain |
25 | technology. |
26 | (32) "Issuer" means a person that issues or proposes to issue a security |
27 | (33) "Legal tender" means a medium of exchange or unit of value, including the coin or |
28 | paper money of the United States, issued by the United States or by another government. |
29 | (34) "License'' means a state license issued under this division, and includes both a |
30 | cultivation license and a medicinal use license, as well as a testing laboratory license. |
31 | (35) "Licensee" means any person holding a license under this chapter, regardless of the |
32 | license held, and includes the holder of a testing laboratory license. |
33 | (36) "Licensing authority" means the state agency responsible for the issuance, renewal, or |
34 | reinstatement of the license, or the state agency authorized to take disciplinary action against the |
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1 | licensee. |
2 | (37) "Local jurisdiction" means a city or town. |
3 | (38) "M-license" means a state license issued for commercial activity involving hemp or |
4 | medicinal cannabis. |
5 | (39) "M-licensee" means any person holding a license under this chapter for commercial |
6 | hemp activity involving hemp or medicinal cannabis. |
7 | (40) "Manufacture" means to compound, blend, extract, infuse, or otherwise make or |
8 | prepare a hemp product. |
9 | (41) "Manufacturer" means a licensee that conducts the production, preparation, |
10 | propagation, or compounding of hemp or hemp products either directly or indirectly or by |
11 | extraction methods or independently by means of chemical synthesis, or by a combination of |
12 | extraction and chemical synthesis at a fixed location that packages or repackages hemp or hemp |
13 | products or labels or relabels its container. |
14 | (42) "Medicinal cannabis" or "medicinal cannabis product" means cannabis or a cannabis |
15 | product, respectively, intended to be sold for use, pursuant to chapter 28.6 of title 21, by a medicinal |
16 | cannabis patient in Rhode Island who possesses a physician's recommendation. |
17 | (43) "Monetary value" means a medium of exchange, whether or not redeemable in money. |
18 | (44) "Nursery" means a licensee that produces only clones, immature plants, seeds, and |
19 | other agricultural products used specifically for the propagation and cultivation of hemp. |
20 | (45) "Open blockchain token" means a digital unit which is: |
21 | (i) Created in response to the verification or collection of a specified number of transactions |
22 | relating to a digital ledger or database; |
23 | (ii) Created by deploying computer code to a digital ledger or database, which may include |
24 | a blockchain, that allows for the creation of digital tokens or other units; |
25 | (iii) Created by using a combination of the methods specified in §§ 42-64.35-7 or 42-64.35- |
26 | 8. |
27 | (iv) Recorded to a digital ledger or database, which may include a blockchain; or |
28 | (v) Capable of being traded or transferred between persons without an intermediary or |
29 | custodian of value. |
30 | (46) "Operation" means any act for which licensure is required under the provisions of this |
31 | chapter, or any commercial transfer of hemp or hemp products. |
32 | (47) "Opportunity zones" means designated areas included in the Tax cuts and Jobs Act of |
33 | 2017. Rhode Island opportunity zones are located in twenty-five (25) census tracts spread across |
34 | the following fifteen (15) municipalities: Bristol, Central Falls, Cranston, Cumberland, East |
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1 | Providence, Narragansett, Newport, North Providence, Pawtucket, Providence, South Kingstown. |
2 | Warren, West Warwick, Westerly, and Woonsocket. |
3 | (48) "Owner" means any of the following: |
4 | (i) A person with an aggregate ownership interest of twenty percent (20%) or more in the |
5 | person applying for a license or a licensee, unless the interest is solely a security, lien, or |
6 | encumbrance; |
7 | (ii) The chief executive officer of a nonprofit or other entity; |
8 | (iii) A member of the board of directors of a nonprofit; |
9 | (iv) An individual who will be participating in the direction, control, or management of the |
10 | person applying for a license. |
11 | (49) "Person" means and includes any individual, firm, partnership, joint venture, |
12 | association, corporation, limited-liability company, estate, trust, business trust, receiver, syndicate, |
13 | or any other group or combination acting as a unit, and the plural as well as the singular. |
14 | (50) "Premises" means the designated structure or structures and land specified in the |
15 | application that is owned, leased, or otherwise held under the control of the applicant or licensee |
16 | where the commercial hemp activity will be or is conducted. The premises shall be a contiguous |
17 | area and shall only be occupied by one licensee. |
18 | (51) "Private entity" means any natural person, corporation, general partnership, limited |
19 | liability company, limited partnership, joint venture, business trust, public benefit corporation, |
20 | nonprofit entity, or one other private business entity. |
21 | (52) "Proposal" means a plan for a qualifying project with detail beyond a conceptual level |
22 | for which terms such as fixing costs, payment schedules, financing, deliverables, and project |
23 | schedules are defined. |
24 | (53) "Public record(s)" means all documents, papers, letters, maps, books, tapes, |
25 | photographs, films, sound recordings, or other material regardless of physical form or |
26 | characteristics made or received pursuant to law or ordinance or in connection with the transaction |
27 | of official business by any agency. |
28 | (54) "Purchaser" means the customer who is engaged in a transaction with a licensee for |
29 | purposes of obtaining hemp or hemp products. |
30 | (55) "Qualifying project" means: |
31 | (i) A facility or project that serves a public purpose, including, but not limited to, any ferry |
32 | or mass transit facility, vehicle parking facility, airport or seaport facility, rail facility or project, |
33 | transportation facilities, technology infrastructure, fuel supply facility, oil or gas pipeline, medical |
34 | or nursing care facility, or educational facility or other building or facility that is used or will be |
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1 | used by a public educational institution, or any other public facility or infrastructure that is used or |
2 | will be used by the public at large or in support of an accepted public purpose or activity; |
3 | (ii) An improvement, including equipment, of a building that will be principally used by a |
4 | public entity or the public at large or that supports a service delivery system in the public sector; |
5 | (iii) A water, wastewater, or surface water management facility or other related |
6 | infrastructure; or |
7 | (iv) Notwithstanding any provision of this section, for projects that involve a facility owned |
8 | or operated by the governing board of a city or town, district, or hospital or health care system, or |
9 | projects that involve a facility owned or operated by an electric utility, only those projects that the |
10 | governing board designates as qualifying projects pursuant to this section. |
11 | (56) "Reciprocity agreement" means an arrangement between the department and the |
12 | appropriate licensing agency of another state that permits a licensee operating under a license |
13 | granted by the other state to engage in currency transmission business activity with or on behalf of |
14 | a resident. |
15 | (57) "Record" means information that is inscribed on a tangible medium or that is stored |
16 | in an electronic or other medium and is retrievable in perceivable form. |
17 | (58) "Registry" means the Nationwide Multistate Licensing System. |
18 | (59) "Regulated Products" means any raw materials, ingredients, pharmaceuticals, |
19 | fabricated devices, manufactured goods, media, health, finance, identification records, or other |
20 | goods and services requiring local, state, or federal regulatory compliance. |
21 | (60) "Resident" means a person that: |
22 | (i) Is domiciled in this state; |
23 | (ii) Is physically located in this state for more than one hundred eighty-three (183) days of |
24 | the previous three hundred sixty-five (365) days; or |
25 | (iii) Has a place of business in this state and includes a legal representative of a person that |
26 | satisfies subsection (60)(i) of this section. |
27 | (61) "Responsible individual" means an individual who has managerial authority with |
28 | respect to a licensee's currency transmission business activity with or on behalf of a resident. |
29 | (62) "Responsible public entity" means the state, a city, town, district, school board, or any |
30 | other political subdivision of the state; a public body corporate and politic; or a regional entity that |
31 | serves a public purpose and is authorized to develop or operate a qualifying project. |
32 | (63) "Revenue" means the income, earnings, user fees, lease payments, or other service |
33 | payments relating to the development or operation of a qualifying project, including, but no limited |
34 | to, money received as grants or otherwise from the federal government, a public entity, or an agency |
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1 | or instrumentality thereof in aid of the qualifying project. |
2 | (64) "Sandbox period" means the period of time, initially not longer than twenty-four (24) |
3 | months, in which the commissioner or secretary has authorized an innovative financial product or |
4 | service to be made available to consumers, which shall also encompass any extension granted under |
5 | §§ 42-64.35-l through 42-64.35-8. |
6 | (65) "Secretary" means the secretary of state; |
7 | (66) "Sell" or "sale" means any transaction whereby, for any consideration, title to hemp |
8 | or hemp products is transferred from one person to another, and includes the delivery of hemp or |
9 | hemp products pursuant to an order placed for the purchase of the same and soliciting or receiving |
10 | an order for the same, but does not include the return of hemp or hemp products by a licensee to |
11 | the licensee from whom the hemp or hemp product was purchased. |
12 | (67) "Seller" means a person who makes an open blockchain token available for purchase |
13 | to an initial buyer. |
14 | (68) "Service contract" means a contract between a public entity and the private entity |
15 | which defines the terms of the services to be provided with respect to a qualifying project. |
16 | (69) "Sign" means with present intent to authenticate or adopt a record, to execute or adopt |
17 | a tangible symbol or to attach to or logically associate with the record an electronic symbol, sound, |
18 | or process. |
19 | (70) "Special purpose depository institution" means a corporation operating pursuant to § |
20 | 42-64.35-8; |
21 | (71) "State" means a state of the United States, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the |
22 | United States Virgin Islands, or any territory or insular possession subject to the jurisdiction of the |
23 | United States. |
24 | (72) "Store," except in the phrase "store of value," means to maintain control of virtual |
25 | currency on behalf of a resident by a person other than the resident. "Storage" and "storing" have |
26 | corresponding meanings. |
27 | (73) "Supervisor of the regulatory body" means the chief or head of a section having |
28 | enforcement responsibility for a particular statute or set of rules and regulations within a regulatory |
29 | agency |
30 | (74) "System of vital records" means the registration, collection, preservation, amendment, |
31 | and certification of vital statistics records, and activities related to them including the tabulation, |
32 | analysis, and publication of statistical data derived from those records. |
33 | (75) "Transfer" means to assume control of virtual currency from or on behalf of a resident |
34 | and to: |
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1 | (i) Credit the virtual currency to the account of another person; |
2 | (ii) Move the virtual currency from one account of a resident to another account of the |
3 | same resident; or |
4 | (iii) Relinquish control of virtual currency to another person. |
5 | (76) "Unique identifier" means an alphanumeric code or designation used for reference to |
6 | a specific plant on a licensed premises and any hemp or hemp product derived or manufactured |
7 | from that plant. |
8 | (77) "U.S. Dollar equivalent of virtual currency" means the equivalent value of a particular |
9 | virtual currency in United States dollars shown on a virtual currency exchange based in the United |
10 | States for a particular date or period specified in this chapter. Virtual currency or a digital security, |
11 | as defined in §§ 19-14-1 and 19-14.3-1.1, shall not constitute an open blockchain token as defined |
12 | within §§ 42-64.35-7 and 42-64.35-8. |
13 | 42-64.35-4. Council established. |
14 | There is hereby created a Rhode Island blockchain technology advisory council to consist |
15 | of thirteen (13) members: three (3) of whom shall be appointed by the governor, with two (2) of |
16 | those so appointed to be designated by the governor as co-chairs; six (6) of whom shall be directors |
17 | from the Rhode Island commerce corporation, as established by chapter 64 of title 42; four (4) |
18 | members shall be appointed by majority of the nine (9) members appointed by the governor and |
19 | Rhode Island commerce corporation; two (2) of the four members shall be appointed from the |
20 | private sector: with one holding expertise in complex financial services, and one with expertise in |
21 | cybersecurity; two (2) of the four members shall be appointed from academia: with one holding |
22 | expertise in financial systems, and one with expertise in computer engineering. The membership |
23 | of said council shall receive no compensation for their services. The council shall support the state's |
24 | research institutions, promote entrepreneurial development, enable all organizations to become |
25 | more innovative, and perform any other advisory functions as the legislature may designate. |
26 | 42-64.35-5. Filing System. |
27 | Relating to § 42-64.35-4 authorizing the thirteen (13) member council to develop and |
28 | implement a blockchain filing system specific only to record council actions; authorizing the |
29 | promulgation of rules; and providing for an effective date. |
30 | (a) Not later than December 31, 2024, the council may develop and implement an industry |
31 | leading filing system through which the council shall endeavor to use blockchain technology and |
32 | include an application programming interface as components of the filing system, as well as robust |
33 | security measures and other components determined by the secretary of state to be best practices |
34 | or which are likely to increase the effective and efficient administration of the laws of this state, if |
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1 | adapted by future legislation. The council may create a blockchain for the purposes of this section |
2 | or contract for the use of a privately created blockchain to best meet its needs. |
3 | (b) The council may: |
4 | (i) Consult with all interested parties before developing the filing system specified by §§ |
5 | 42-64.35-5 through 4-64.35-8, including businesses, registered agents, attorneys, law enforcement |
6 | and other interested persons; |
7 | (ii) If possible, partner with technology innovators and private companies to develop |
8 | necessary components of the system. |
9 | 42-64.35-6. Coordination with existing programs. |
10 | (a) To the maximum extent possible, the directors of the departments shall provide special |
11 | assistance to the council for review of blockchain and related technology, and provide opinions as |
12 | to how all the administrative powers and duties vested by law in the several state departments, |
13 | boards, divisions, bureaus, commissions, and other agencies vested in the following departments |
14 | and other agencies which are specified in this chapter might benefit from further innovation of |
15 | blockchain technology: |
16 | (1) Executive department (chapter 7 of title 42); |
17 | (2) Department of state (chapter 8 of title 42); |
18 | (3) Department of the attorney general (chapter 9 of title 42); |
19 | (4) Treasury department (chapter 10 of title 42); |
20 | (5) Department of administration (chapter 11 of title 42); |
21 | (6) Department of business regulation (chapter 14 of title 42); |
22 | (7) Department of children, youth and families (chapter 72 of title 42); |
23 | (8) Department of corrections (chapter 56 of title 42): |
24 | (9) Department of elderly affairs (chapter 66 of title 42); |
25 | (10) Department of elementary and secondary education (chapter 60 of title 16): |
26 | (11) Department of environmental management (chapter 17.1 of title 42); |
27 | (12) Department of health (chapter 18 of title 42); |
28 | (13) Council on postsecondary education (chapter 59 of title 16); |
29 | (14) Department of labor and training (chapter 16.1 of title 42); |
30 | (15) Department of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals (chapter |
31 | 12.1 of title 42); |
32 | (16) Department of human services (chapter 12 of title 42); |
33 | (17) Department of transportation (chapter 13 of title 42); |
34 | (18) Public utilities commission (chapter 14.3 of title 42); |
| LC001944 - Page 12 of 34 |
1 | (19) Department of revenue (chapter 142 of title 42); |
2 | (20) Department of public safety (chapter 7.3 of title 42); |
3 | This shall include, but not be limited to: |
4 | (i) Expedited processing; |
5 | (ii) Priority funding: |
6 | (iii) Program set asides. |
7 | 42-64.35-7. Financial Sandbox -Financial technology sandbox waiver; applicability of |
8 | criminal and consumer protection statutes; referral to investigatory agencies; civil liability. |
9 | (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a person who makes an innovative |
10 | financial product or service available to consumers in the financial technology sandbox may be |
11 | granted a waiver of specified requirements imposed by statute or rule, or portions thereof, if these |
12 | statutes or rules do not currently permit the product or service to be made available to consumers. |
13 | A waiver under this subsection shall be no broader than necessary to accomplish the purposes and |
14 | standards set forth in this act, as determined by the commissioner or secretary. |
15 | (b) A person who makes an innovative financial product or service available to consumers |
16 | in the financial technology sandbox is: |
17 | (1) Not immune from civil damages for acts and omissions relating to this act; and |
18 | (2) Subject to all criminal and consumer protection laws, including, but not limited to, |
19 | violations of any provisions of title 11, title 19, and title 21. |
20 | (c) The commissioner or secretary may refer suspected violations of law relating to this |
21 | chapter to appropriate state or federal agencies for investigation, prosecution, civil penalties and |
22 | other appropriate enforcement actions, including, but not limited to, suspension or revocation of |
23 | any license or authorization granted under this chapter. |
24 | (d) If service of process, relative to any civil proceeding, on a person making an innovative |
25 | financial product or service available to consumers in the financial technology sandbox is not |
26 | feasible, service on the secretary of state shall be deemed service on the person. |
27 | (e) Financial technology sandbox application; standards for approval; consumer protection: |
28 | A person shall apply to the commissioner or secretary to make an innovative financial product or |
29 | service available to consumers in the financial technology sandbox, based on the office that |
30 | administers the statute, regulation, rule or portion thereof, for which a waiver is sought. If both the |
31 | commissioner and the secretary jointly administer a statute or regulation or rule, or if the |
32 | appropriate office is not known, an application may be filed with either the commissioner or the |
33 | secretary. If an application is filed with an office that does not administer the statute, regulation or |
34 | rule for which a waiver is sought, the receiving office shall forward the application to the correct |
| LC001944 - Page 13 of 34 |
1 | office. The person shall specify in an application the statutory or rule requirements for which a |
2 | waiver is sought and the reasons why these requirements prohibit the innovative financial product |
3 | or service from being made available to consumers. The commissioner and secretary shall each, by |
4 | rule, prescribe a method of application. |
5 | (f) A business entity making an application under this section shall be a domestic |
6 | corporation or other organized domestic entity with a physical presence, other than that of a |
7 | registered office or agent, in Rhode Island. |
8 | (g) Before an employee applies on behalf of an institution, firm or other entity intending to |
9 | make an innovative financial product or service available through the financial technology sandbox, |
10 | the employee shall obtain the consent of the institution, firm or entity before filing an application |
11 | under this section. |
12 | (h) The individual filing an application under this section and the individuals who are |
13 | substantially involved in the development, operation or management of the innovative financial |
14 | product or service shall, as a condition of an application, submit to a criminal history background |
15 | check with the department of attorney general. |
16 | (i) An application made under this section shall be accompanied by a fee of five hundred |
17 | dollars ($500). The fee shall be deposited into the financial technology innovation account as |
18 | required by title 19. |
19 | (j) The commissioner or secretary, as applicable, shall authorize or deny a financial |
20 | technology sandbox application in writing within ninety (90) days of receiving the application. The |
21 | commissioner or secretary and the person who has made an application may jointly agree to extend |
22 | the time beyond ninety (90) days. The commissioner or secretary may impose conditions on any |
23 | authorization, consistent with this chapter. In deciding to authorize or deny an application under |
24 | this section, the commissioner or secretary shall consider each of the following: |
25 | (1) The nature of the innovative financial product or service proposed to be made available |
26 | to consumers in the sandbox, including all relevant technical details which may include whether |
27 | the product or service utilizes blockchain technology; |
28 | (2) The potential risk to consumers and methods which will be used to protect consumers |
29 | and resolve complaints during the sandbox period; |
30 | (3) A business plan proposed by the person, including proof of capital requirements; |
31 | (4) Whether the person has the necessary personnel, adequate financial and technical |
32 | expertise and a sufficient plan to test, monitor and assess the innovative financial product or service; |
33 | (5) Whether any person substantially involved in the development, operation or |
34 | management of the innovative financial product or service has been convicted of, or is currently |
| LC001944 - Page 14 of 34 |
1 | under investigation for, fraud, state or federal securities violations or any property based offense; |
2 | (6) A copy of the disclosures required under this chapter that will be provided to |
3 | consumers; |
4 | (7) Any other factor that the commissioner or secretary determines to be relevant. |
5 | (k) If an application is authorized under subsection (j) of this section, the commissioner or |
6 | secretary shall specify the statutory or rule requirements, or portions thereof, for which a waiver is |
7 | granted and the length of the initial sandbox period. The commissioner or secretary shall also post |
8 | notice of the approval of a sandbox application under this section, a summary of the innovative |
9 | financial product or service and the contact information of the person making the product or service |
10 | available through the sandbox on the Internet website of the commissioner or secretary. |
11 | (l) A person authorized under section (j) of this section to enter into the financial |
12 | technology sandbox shall post a consumer protection bond with the commissioner or secretary as |
13 | security for potential losses suffered by consumers. The bond amount shall be determined by the |
14 | commissioner or secretary in an amount not less than ten thousand dollars ($10,000) and shall be |
15 | commensurate with the risk profile of the innovative financial product or service. The |
16 | commissioner or secretary may require that a bond under this subsection be increased or decreased |
17 | at any time based on risk profile. Unless the bond is enforced, the commissioner or secretary shall |
18 | cancel or allow the bond to expire two (2) years after the date of the conclusion of the sandbox |
19 | period. |
20 | (m) A person authorized under subsection (j) of this section to enter into the financial |
21 | technology sandbox shall be deemed to possess an appropriate license for the purposes of federal |
22 | law requiring state licensure or authorization. |
23 | (n) Authorization under subsection (j) of this section shall not be construed to create a |
24 | property right. |
25 | (o) Financial technology innovation account: |
26 | (1) There is created the financial technology innovation account. Funds within the account |
27 | shall only be expended by legislative appropriation. All funds within the account shall be invested |
28 | by the state treasurer and all investment earnings from the account shall be credited to the general |
29 | fund. The account shall be divided into two (2) sub-accounts controlled by the commissioner and |
30 | secretary, respectively, for the purposes of administrative management. For the purposes of |
31 | accounting and investing only, the subaccounts shall be treated as separate accounts. |
32 | (2) Subject to legislative appropriation, application fees remitted to the account shall be |
33 | deposited into the subaccount controlled by the commissioner or secretary, as applicable, based on |
34 | the receiving official. These funds, and any additional funds appropriated by the legislature, shall |
| LC001944 - Page 15 of 34 |
1 | be used only for the purposes of administering this act, including processing of sandbox |
2 | applications and monitoring, examination and enforcement activities relating to this chapter. |
3 | (p) Operation of financial technology sandbox: |
4 | (1) Except as otherwise provided under chapter 56 of title 6 ("uniform supplemental |
5 | commercial law for the uniform regulation of virtual-currency businesses act"), chapter 14 of title |
6 | 19 ("licensed activities"), and chapter 14.3 of title 19 ("currency transmissions"). a person |
7 | authorized under this chapter to enter into the financial technology sandbox may make an |
8 | innovative financial product or service available to consumers during the sandbox period. |
9 | (2) The commissioner or secretary may, on a case by case basis, specify the maximum |
10 | number of consumers permitted to receive an innovative financial product or service, after |
11 | consultation with the person authorized under this chapter to make the product or service available |
12 | in the financial technology sandbox. |
13 | (3) Before a consumer purchases or enters into an agreement to receive an innovative |
14 | financial product or service through the financial technology sandbox the person making the |
15 | product or service available shall provide a written statement of the following to the consumer: |
16 | (i) The name and contact information of the person making the product or service available |
17 | to consumers; |
18 | (ii) That the product or service has been authorized to be made available to consumers for |
19 | a temporary period by the commissioner or secretary, as applicable, under the laws of Rhode Island; |
20 | (iii) That the State of Rhode Island does not endorse the product or service and is not |
21 | subject to liability for losses or damages caused by the product or service; |
22 | (iv) That the product or service is undergoing testing, may not function as intended and |
23 | may entail financial risk; |
24 | (v) That the person making the product or service available to consumers is not immune |
25 | from civil liability for any losses or damages caused by the product or service; |
26 | (vi) The expected end date of the sandbox period; |
27 | (vii) The name and contact information of the commissioner or secretary, as applicable, |
28 | and notification that suspected legal violations, complaints or other comments related to the product |
29 | or service may be submitted to the commissioner or secretary; |
30 | (viii) Any other statements or disclosures required by rule of the commissioner or secretary |
31 | which are necessary to further the purposes of this act. |
32 | (q) A person authorized to make an innovative financial product or service available to |
33 | consumers in the financial technology sandbox shall maintain comprehensive records relating to |
34 | the innovative financial product or service. The person shall keep these records for not less than |
| LC001944 - Page 16 of 34 |
1 | five (5) years after the conclusion of the sandbox period. The commissioner and secretary may |
2 | specify further records requirements under this subsection by rule. |
3 | (r) The commissioner or secretary, as applicable, may examine the records maintained |
4 | under by any depository or financial technology innovation account opened pursuant to this |
5 | chapter, with or without notice. All direct and indirect costs of an examination conducted under |
6 | this subsection shall be paid by the person making the innovative financial product or service |
7 | available in the financial technology sandbox. Records made available to the commissioner or |
8 | secretary under this subsection shall be confidential and shall not be subject to disclosure under the |
9 | Rhode Island public records act but may be released to appropriate state and federal agencies for |
10 | the purposes of investigation. |
11 | (s) Unless granted an extension pursuant to not less than thirty (30) days before the |
12 | conclusion of the sandbox period, a person who makes an innovative financial product or service |
13 | available in the financial technology sandbox shall provide written notification to consumers |
14 | regarding the conclusion of the sandbox period and shall not make the product or service available |
15 | to any new consumers after the conclusion of the sandbox period until legal authority outside of |
16 | the sandbox exists to make the product or service available to consumers. The person shall wind |
17 | down operations with existing consumers within sixty (60) days after the conclusion of the sandbox |
18 | period, except that, after the sixtieth day, the person may: |
19 | (1) Collect and receive money owed to the person and service loans made by the person, |
20 | based on agreements with consumers made before the conclusion of the sandbox period; |
21 | (2) Take necessary legal action; and |
22 | (3) Take other actions authorized by the commissioner or secretary by rule which are not |
23 | inconsistent with this subsection. |
24 | (t) The commissioner and the secretary may, jointly or separately, enter into agreements |
25 | with state, federal or foreign regulatory agencies to allow persons who make an innovative financial |
26 | product or service available in Rhode Island through the financial technology sandbox to make |
27 | their products or services available in other jurisdictions and to allow persons operating in similar |
28 | financial technology sandboxes in other jurisdictions to make innovative financial products and |
29 | services available in Rhode Island under the standards of this chapter. |
30 | (u) Revocation or suspension of financial technology sandbox authorization: |
31 | (1) The commissioner or secretary may, by order, revoke or suspend authorization granted |
32 | to a person under this chapter if: |
33 | (i) The person has violated or refused to comply with this chapter or any lawful rule, order |
34 | or decision adopted by the commissioner or secretary; |
| LC001944 - Page 17 of 34 |
1 | (ii) A fact or condition exists that, if it had existed or become known at the time of the |
2 | financial technology sandbox application, would have warranted denial of the application or the |
3 | imposition of material conditions; |
4 | (iii) A material error, false statement, misrepresentation or material omission was made in |
5 | the financial technology sandbox application; or |
6 | (iv) After consultation with the person, continued testing of the innovative financial |
7 | product or service would: |
8 | (A) Be likely to harm consumers; or |
9 | (B) No longer serve the purposes of this chapter because of the financial or operational |
10 | failure of the product or service. |
11 | (v) Written notification of a revocation or suspension order made under subsection (c) of |
12 | this section shall be served using any means authorized by law, and if the notice relates to a |
13 | suspension, include any conditions or remedial action which shall be completed before the |
14 | suspension will be lifted by the commissioner or secretary. |
15 | (w) Extension of sandbox period: |
16 | (1) A person granted authorization under subsection (j) of this section may apply for an |
17 | extension of the initial sandbox period for not more than twelve (12) additional months. An |
18 | application for an extension shall be made not later than sixty (60) days before the conclusion of |
19 | the initial sandbox period specified by the commissioner or secretary. The commissioner or |
20 | secretary shall approve or deny the application for extension in writing not later than thirty-five |
21 | (35) days before the conclusion of the initial sandbox period. An application for extension by a |
22 | person shall cite one of the following reasons as the basis for the application and provide all relevant |
23 | supporting information that: |
24 | (i) Statutory or rule amendments are necessary to conduct business in Rhode Island on a |
25 | permanent basis; or |
26 | (ii) An application for a license or other authorization required to conduct business in |
27 | Rhode Island on a permanent basis has been filed with the appropriate office and approval is |
28 | currently pending. |
29 | (x) Rules and orders; enforcement of bond; restitution: |
30 | (1) The commissioner and secretary shall each adopt rules to implement this act. The rules |
31 | adopted by the commissioner and secretary under this chapter shall be as consistent as reasonably |
32 | possible, but shall account for differences in the statutes and programs administered by the |
33 | commissioner and secretary. |
34 | (2) The commissioner or secretary may issue: |
| LC001944 - Page 18 of 34 |
1 | (i) All necessary orders to enforce this chapter, including, but not limited to, ordering the |
2 | payment of restitution and enforcement of these orders in any court of competent jurisdiction; |
3 | (ii) An order under subsection (x)(2)(i) of this section to enforce the bond or portion of the |
4 | bond posted under this chapter, and use proceeds from the bond to offset losses suffered by |
5 | consumers as a result of an innovative financial product or service. |
6 | (3) All actions of the commissioner or secretary under this chapter shall be subject to the |
7 | rules and regulations under title 19 and chapter 14 of title 42. |
8 | (y) Access to, and dissemination of, information: |
9 | (1) Criminal history record information shall be disseminated by criminal justice agencies |
10 | in this state, whether directly or through any intermediary, only to the banking commissioner or the |
11 | secretary of state for purposes of obtaining background information on persons applying for |
12 | financial technology sandbox authorization; provided, however, that all officers and directors |
13 | subsequently hired or appointed, shall be required to submit to a criminal history background check. |
14 | (z) State or national criminal history record information: |
15 | (1) The following persons shall be required to submit to fingerprinting in order to obtain |
16 | state and national criminal history record information: |
17 | (i) Applicants for a financial technology sandbox authorization: |
18 | (aa) The financial technology sandbox definitions shall apply to this chapter. |
19 | (bb) Electronic records and signatures; applicability: |
20 | (1) This chapter modifies, limits, and supersedes the federal Electronic Signatures in |
21 | Global and National Commerce Act, but does not modify, limit, or supersede section 10l(c) of that |
22 | act (15 U.S.C. § 7001 (c)) or authorize electronic delivery of any of the notices described in section |
23 | 103(b) of that act (15 U.S.C. § 7003(b)). This chapter authorizes the filing of records and signatures, |
24 | when specified by provisions of this chapter or by a rule adopted or order issued under this chapter, |
25 | in a manner consistent with section 104(a) of that act (15 U.S.C. § 7004(a)). |
26 | 42-64.35-8. Special depository institutions. |
27 | (a) The legislature shall create special purpose depository institutions as a new financial |
28 | institution, providing that the following rules shall apply to these institutions: |
29 | (1) Special purpose depository institutions shall be corporations; |
30 | (2) Require that depositors be business entities; |
31 | (3) Specify compliance with applicable federal laws; |
32 | (4) Establish procedures for the incorporation, chartering and operation of special purpose |
33 | depository institutions; |
34 | (5) Establish procedures for liquidation, conservatorship and voluntary dissolution; |
| LC001944 - Page 19 of 34 |
1 | (6) Require a surety bond or pledged investments and specified private insurance; |
2 | (7) Authorize special purpose depository institutions to obtain federal deposit insurance; |
3 | (8) Make conforming amendments; |
4 | (9) Authorize positions; |
5 | (10) Provide an appropriation; and |
6 | (11) Provide for effective dates. |
7 | (b) Applicability of other provisions. Except as otherwise provided in this section, if any |
8 | provision of law conflicts with this chapter, this chapter shall control, except as to those provisions |
9 | set forth in §42-64.35-9. |
10 | (c) Special purpose depository institutions created as corporations; operating authority; |
11 | powers; prohibition on lending. |
12 | (1) Consistent with this chapter, special purpose depository institutions shall be organized |
13 | as corporations under chapter 1.2 of title 7, (the "Rhode Island business corporation act"), to |
14 | exercise the powers set forth in this section; |
15 | (2) Each special purpose depository institution may: |
16 | (i) Make contracts as a corporation under Rhode Island law; |
17 | (ii) Sue and be sued; |
18 | (iii) Receive notes and buy and sell gold and silver coins and bullion as permitted by federal |
19 | law; |
20 | (iv) Carry on a non-lending banking business for depositors, consistent with subsection (d) |
21 | of this section; |
22 | (v) Provide payment services upon the request of a depositor; |
23 | (vi) Make an application to become a member bank of the Federal Reserve System; |
24 | (vii) Engage in any other activity that is usual or incidental to the business of banking, |
25 | subject to the prior written approval of the commissioner. The commissioner shall not approve a |
26 | request to engage in an incidental activity if he or she finds that the requested activity will adversely |
27 | affect the solvency or the safety and soundness of the special purpose depository institution or |
28 | conflict with any provision of this chapter; |
29 | (viii) Exercise powers and rights otherwise authorized by law which are not inconsistent |
30 | with this chapter. |
31 | (d) Except as otherwise provided in this subsection, a special purpose depository institution |
32 | shall not make loans, including the provision of temporary credit relating to overdrafts. A special |
33 | purpose depository institution may purchase debt obligations consistent with provisions of title 19. |
34 | (e) A special purpose depository institution shall maintain its principal operating |
| LC001944 - Page 20 of 34 |
1 | headquarters and the primary office of its chief executive officer in Rhode Island. |
2 | (f) As otherwise authorized by this section, the special purpose depository institution may |
3 | conduct business with depositors outside this state. |
4 | (g) Subject to the laws of the host state, a special purpose depository institution may open |
5 | a branch in another state upon obtaining a certificate of good standing from the commissioner or |
6 | secretary, as long as any new branch located outside of this state is in compliance with state and |
7 | federal regulations. A special purpose depository institution, including any branch of the institution, |
8 | may only accept deposits or provide other services under this chapter to depositors engaged in a |
9 | bona fide business which is lawful under the laws of Rhode Island, the laws of the host state and |
10 | federal law. |
11 | (h) Requirements relating to depositors; nature of business: |
12 | (1) No depositor shall maintain an account with a special purpose depository institution or |
13 | otherwise receive any services from the institution unless the depositor meets the criteria of this |
14 | subsection. A depositor shall: |
15 | (i) Be a legal entity other than a natural person; |
16 | (ii) Be in good standing with the jurisdiction in the United States in which it is incorporated |
17 | or organized; |
18 | (iii) Maintain deposits with the institution totaling not less than five thousand dollars |
19 | ($5,000); |
20 | (iv) Be engaged in a lawful, bona fide business; and |
21 | (v) Make sufficient evidence available to the special purpose depository institution to |
22 | enable compliance with anti-money laundering practices, customer identification and beneficial |
23 | ownership requirements, as determined by the institution. |
24 | (2) A depositor which meets the criteria of subsection (h) of this section shall be issued a |
25 | depository account and otherwise receive services from the special purpose depository institution |
26 | contingent on the availability of sufficient insurance as required under § 19-4-10. |
27 | (3) Consistent with subsection (h) of this section and in addition to any requirements |
28 | specified by federal law, a special purpose depository institution shall require that a potential |
29 | depositor provide reasonable evidence that the person is engaged in a lawful, bona fide business or |
30 | is likely to open a lawful, bona fide business within the next six (6) months. As used in this |
31 | subsection, "reasonable evidence" includes business entity filings, articles of incorporation or |
32 | organization, bylaws, operating agreements, business plans, promotional materials, financing |
33 | agreements or other evidence. |
34 | (i) Required liquid assets: |
| LC001944 - Page 21 of 34 |
1 | (1) At all times, a special purpose depository institution shall maintain unencumbered |
2 | liquid assets valued at not less than one hundred percent (100%) of its depository liabilities; |
3 | (2) As used in this section, "liquid assets" means: |
4 | (i) United States currency held on the premises of the special purpose depository |
5 | institution; |
6 | (ii) United States currency held for the special purpose depository institution by a federal |
7 | reserve bank or a federally insured financial institution; |
8 | (iii) Investments which are highly liquid, and obligations of the United States treasury or |
9 | other federal agency obligations consistent with rules adopted by the commissioner. |
10 | (j) Required contingency account: |
11 | (1) A special purpose depository institution shall maintain a contingency account to |
12 | account for unexpected losses and expenses. A special purpose depository institution may require |
13 | the payment of contributions from depositors to fund a contingency account. Sufficient funding as |
14 | determined and required by the commissioner for the initial capitalization shall constitute |
15 | compliance with this subsection for the first three (3) years a special purpose depository institution |
16 | is in operation. After the conclusion of the first three (3) years of operation, a special purpose |
17 | depository institution shall maintain a contingency account totaling not less than two percent (2%) |
18 | of the depository liabilities of the special purpose depository institution; provided, however, that |
19 | the contingency account shall be adequate and reasonable in light of current and prospective |
20 | business conditions. as determined by the commissioner; |
21 | (2) A depositor shall obtain a refund of any contingency account contributions made under |
22 | this subsection after closing an account with the special purpose depository institution. |
23 | (k) Applicable federal and state law. A special purpose depository institution shall comply |
24 | with all applicable federal laws, including, but not limited to, those relating to anti-money |
25 | laundering practices, customer identification and beneficial ownership. |
26 | (l) Required disclosures: |
27 | (1) A special purpose depository institution shall display on any Internet website it |
28 | maintains, and at each window or place where it accepts deposits, a sign conspicuously stating that |
29 | deposits are not insured by the federal deposit insurance corporation, if applicable. |
30 | (2) Upon opening an account and if applicable, a special purpose depository institution |
31 | shall require each depositor to execute a statement acknowledging that all deposits at the special |
32 | purpose depository institution are not insured by the federal deposit insurance corporation. The |
33 | special purpose depository institution shall permanently retain this acknowledgment; |
34 | (3) A special purpose depository institution shall include in all advertising a disclosure that |
| LC001944 - Page 22 of 34 |
1 | deposits are not insured by the federal deposit insurance corporation, if applicable. |
2 | (m) Formation; articles of incorporation: |
3 | (1) Except as otherwise provided, five (5) or more adult persons may form a special purpose |
4 | depository institution. The incorporators shall subscribe the articles of incorporation and transmit |
5 | them to the commissioner as part of an application for a charter under title 19. |
6 | (2) The articles of incorporation shall include the following information: |
7 | (i) The corporate name; |
8 | (ii) The purpose for which the corporation is organized; |
9 | (iii) The term of its existence, which may be perpetual; |
10 | (iv) The place where its office shall be located and its operations conducted; |
11 | (v) The amount of capital stock and the number of shares; |
12 | (vi) The name and residence of each shareholder subscribing to more than ten percent |
13 | (10%) of the stock and the number of shares owned by that shareholder; |
14 | (vii) The number of directors and the names of those who shall manage the affairs of the |
15 | corporation for the first year; and |
16 | (viii) A statement that the articles of incorporation are made to enable the incorporators to |
17 | avail themselves of the advantages of the laws of the state. |
18 | (n) Copies of all amended articles of incorporation shall be filed in the same manner as the |
19 | original articles of incorporation. |
20 | (o) The incorporators shall raise sufficient capital prior to filing an application for a charter |
21 | with the commissioner, consistent with § 19-2-2. In the event an application for a charter is not |
22 | filed or is denied by the board, all capital shall be promptly returned without loss, to each person |
23 | or entity investing. |
24 | (p) Subject to applicable federal and state law, a bank holding company may apply to hold |
25 | a special purpose depository institution to raise required initial capital and surplus and additional |
26 | capital. |
27 | (q) The capital stock of each special purpose depository institution chartered under this |
28 | chapter shall be subscribed for as fully paid stock. No special purpose depository institution shall |
29 | be chartered with capital stock less than five million dollars ($5,000,000). |
30 | (r) No special purpose depository institution shall commence business until the full amount |
31 | of its authorized capital is subscribed and all capital stock is fully paid in. No special purpose |
32 | depository institution may be chartered without a paid up surplus fund of not less than three (3) |
33 | years of estimated operating expenses in an amount to be determined by the commissioner; |
34 | (s) A special purpose depository institution may acquire additional capital prior to the |
| LC001944 - Page 23 of 34 |
1 | granting of a charter and may report this capital in its charter application. |
2 | (t) Application for charter; fee; sub-account created: |
3 | (1) No person shall act as a special purpose depository institution without first obtaining a |
4 | charter and certificate of authority to operate from the commissioner under this chapter |
5 | (2) The incorporators, under title 19, shall apply to the commissioner for a charter. The |
6 | application shall contain the special purpose depository institution's articles of incorporation, a |
7 | detailed business plan, a comprehensive estimate of operating expenses for the first three (3) years |
8 | of operation, a complete proposal for compliance with the provisions of this chapter and evidence |
9 | of the capital as required under subsection (s) of this section. The commissioner may prescribe the |
10 | form of application by rule. |
11 | (3) Each application for a charter shall be accompanied by an application fee established |
12 | by the commissioner pursuant to rule, which shall be no greater than the costs incurred by the |
13 | commissioner in reviewing the application. The application fee shall be credited to the special |
14 | purpose depository institutions subaccount created by subsection (o) of this section |
15 | (u) Special purpose depository institutions subaccount. Funds in the subaccount shall be |
16 | used by the commissioner to supervise special purpose depository institutions and to otherwise |
17 | carry out the duties specified by this chapter. Funds in the subaccount are continuously appropriated |
18 | to the subaccount and shall not lapse at the end of any fiscal period. For purposes of accounting |
19 | and investing only the special purpose depository institutions subaccount shall be treated as a |
20 | separate account from the financial institutions administration account. |
21 | (v) Procedure upon filing application: |
22 | (1) Upon receiving an application for a special purpose depository charter, the |
23 | commissioner shall notify the applicants in writing within thirty (30) calendar days of any |
24 | deficiency in the required information or that the application has been accepted for filing. When |
25 | the commissioner is satisfied that all required information has been furnished, he or she shall notify |
26 | the chairman of the board who shall establish a time and place for a public hearing which shall be |
27 | conducted not less than sixty (60) days, nor more than one hundred twenty (120) days, after notice |
28 | from the commissioner to the applicants that the application is in order. |
29 | (2) Within thirty (30) days after receipt of notice of the time and place of the public hearing |
30 | the applicants shall cause notice of filing of the application and the hearing to be published at the |
31 | applicant's expense in a newspaper of general circulation within the county where the proposed |
32 | special purpose depository institution is to be located. Publication shall be made at least once a |
33 | week for three (3) consecutive weeks before the hearing and shall state: the proposed location of |
34 | the special purpose depository institution; the names of the applicants for a charter; the nature of |
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1 | the activities to be conducted by the proposed institution and other information required by rule. |
2 | The applicants shall furnish proof of publication to the commissioner not more than ten (10) days |
3 | prior to the hearing. The commissioner shall send notice of the hearing to state and national banks, |
4 | federal savings and loan associations and other financial institutions in the state and federal |
5 | agencies who have requested notice from the commissioner. |
6 | (w) Procedure for hearings on charter applications. The hearing for a charter application |
7 | shall be conducted as a contested case under chapter 35 of title 42 ("administrative procedures") |
8 | and shall comply with the requirements of that chapter. |
9 | (x) Investigation and examination by commissioner: |
10 | (1) Upon receiving the articles of incorporation, the application for a charter and other |
11 | information required by the commissioner, the commissioner shall make a careful investigation and |
12 | examination of the following: |
13 | (i) The character, reputation, financial standing and ability of the incorporators; |
14 | (ii) The character, financial responsibility, banking or other financial experience and |
15 | business qualifications of those proposed as officers and directors; and |
16 | (iii) The application for a charter, including the adequacy and plausibility of the business |
17 | plan of the special purpose depository institution and whether the institution has offered a complete |
18 | proposal for compliance with the provisions of this chapter. |
19 | (2) The commissioner shall submit the results of his or her investigation and examination |
20 | at the public hearing on the charter application and shall be subject to cross examination by any |
21 | interested party. No relevant information shall be excluded by the board as hearsay. |
22 | (y) Approval or disapproval of application; criteria for approval; action upon application: |
23 | (1) Within ninety (90) days after receipt of the transcript of the public hearing the board |
24 | shall render a decision on the charter application based solely on the following criteria: |
25 | (i) Whether the character, reputation, financial standing and ability of the incorporators is |
26 | sufficient to afford reasonable promise of a successful operation; |
27 | (ii) Whether the character, financial responsibility, banking or other financial experience |
28 | and business qualifications of those proposed as officers and directors is sufficient to afford |
29 | reasonable promise of a successful operation; |
30 | (iii) The adequacy and plausibility of the business plan of the special purpose depository |
31 | institution; |
32 | (iv) Compliance with the capital and surplus requirements as set forth in this section; |
33 | (v) The special purpose depository institution is being formed for no other purpose than |
34 | legitimate objectives authorized by law; |
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1 | (vi) That the name of the proposed special purpose depository institution does not resemble |
2 | so closely the name of any other financial institution transacting business in the state so as to cause |
3 | confusion; and |
4 | (vii) Whether the applicants have complied with all applicable provisions of state law. |
5 | (2) The board shall approve an application upon making favorable findings on the criteria |
6 | set forth in this section. If necessary, the board may either conditionally approve an application by |
7 | specifying conditions relating to the criteria or may disapprove the application. The board shall |
8 | state findings of fact and conclusions of law as part of its decision. If the board approves the |
9 | application, the commissioner shall endorse upon the articles of incorporation the approval of the |
10 | board and shall transmit one copy to the secretary of state, retain one copy and return a copy to the |
11 | applicants within twenty (20) days after the date of the decision of the board approving the |
12 | application. If the board conditionally approves an application and upon compliance with necessary |
13 | conditions required by the board, the commissioner shall proceed as provided in the preceding |
14 | sentence. If the board disapproves the application, the commissioner shall mail notice of the |
15 | disapproval to the applicants within twenty (20) days of the board's disapproval. |
16 | (z) Certificate of authority to commence business required; application; approval or denial; |
17 | failure to commence business: |
18 | (1) If an application is approved and a charter granted by the board, the special purpose |
19 | depository institution shall not commence business before receiving a certificate of authority to |
20 | operate from the commissioner. The application for a certificate of authority shall be made to the |
21 | commissioner and shall certify the address at which the special purpose depository institution will |
22 | operate and that all adopted bylaws of the institution have been attached as an exhibit to the |
23 | application. The application shall state the identities and contact information of officers and |
24 | directors. The commissioner shall approve or deny an application for a certificate of authority to |
25 | operate within thirty (30) days after a complete application has been filed. The authority of the |
26 | commissioner to disapprove any application shall be restricted solely to noncompliance with this |
27 | section; provided that, if the commissioner approves the application, he or she shall issue a |
28 | certificate of authority to the applicants within twenty (20) days. If the commissioner denies the |
29 | application he or she shall mail a notice of denial to the applicants within twenty (20) days, stating |
30 | the reasons for denying the application, and grant to the applicants a period of ninety (90) days to |
31 | resubmit the application with the necessary corrections. If the applicants fail to comply with |
32 | requirements of the notice of denial within ninety (90) days from the receipt of the notice, the |
33 | charter of the special purpose depository institution shall be revoked by the commissioner. The |
34 | failure of the commissioner to act upon an application for a certificate of authority within thirty |
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1 | (30) days shall be deemed an approval |
2 | (2) If an approved special purpose depository institution fails to commence business in |
3 | good faith within six (6) months after the issuance of a certificate of authority to operate by the |
4 | commissioner, the charter and certificate of authority shall expire. The board, for good cause and |
5 | upon an application filed prior to the expiration of the six (6) month period, may extend the time |
6 | within which the special purpose depository institution may open for business. |
7 | (aa) Decisions by board appealable. Grounds. Any decision of the board or commissioner |
8 | in approving, conditionally approving or disapproving a charter for a special purpose depository |
9 | institution or the issuance or denial of a certificate of authority to operate is appealable to the district |
10 | court of the county in which the institution is to be located, in accordance with the provisions of |
11 | chapter 35 of title 42 ("administrative procedures"). In addition to the grounds for appeal contained |
12 | in chapter 35 of title 42 ("administrative procedures"), an appellant may appeal if the board or the |
13 | commissioner fails to make any of the required findings or otherwise take an action required by |
14 | law. |
15 | (bb) Surety bond; pledged investments; investment income; bond or pledge increases- |
16 | hearings: |
17 | (1) Except as otherwise provided by this section, a special purpose depository institution |
18 | shall, before transacting any business, pledge or furnish a surety bond to the commissioner to cover |
19 | costs likely to be incurred by the commissioner in a liquidation or conservatorship of the special |
20 | purpose depository institution. The amount of the surety bond or pledge of assets under this section |
21 | shall be determined by the commissioner in an amount sufficient to defray the costs of a liquidation |
22 | or conservatorship. |
23 | (2) In lieu of a bond, a special purpose depository institution may irrevocably pledge |
24 | specified capital equivalent to a bond to satisfy this section. Any capital pledged to the |
25 | commissioner under this subsection shall be held in a state or nationally chartered bank or savings |
26 | and loan association having a principal or branch office in this state. All costs associated with |
27 | pledging and holding such capital are the responsibility of the special purpose depository |
28 | institution. |
29 | (3) Capital pledged to the commissioner shall be of the same nature and quality as those |
30 | required for state financial institutions under title 19. |
31 | (4) Surety bonds shall run to the state of Rhode Island, and shall be approved under the |
32 | terms and conditions established by the commissioner pursuant to his/her authority under title 19. |
33 | (5) The commissioner may adopt rules to establish additional investment guidelines or |
34 | investment options for purposes of the pledge or surety bond required by this section. |
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1 | (6) In the event of a liquidation or conservatorship of a special purpose depository |
2 | institution pursuant chapters 10, 11 or 12 of title 19, the commissioner may, without regard to |
3 | priorities, preferences or adverse claims, reduce the surety bond or capital pledged under this |
4 | section to cash as soon as practicable and utilize the cash to defray the costs associated with the |
5 | liquidation or conservatorship. |
6 | (7) Income from capital pledged under subsection (bb)(2) of this section shall be paid to |
7 | the special purpose depository institution, unless a liquidation or conservatorship takes place. |
8 | (8) Upon evidence that the current surety bond or pledged capital is insufficient, the |
9 | commissioner may require a special purpose depository institution to increase its surety bond or |
10 | pledged capital by providing not less than thirty (30) days' written notice to the institution. The |
11 | special purpose depository institution may request a hearing before the board not more than thirty |
12 | (30) days after receiving written notice from the commissioner under this subsection. Any hearing |
13 | before the board shall be held pursuant to chapter 35 of title 42 ("administrative procedures"). |
14 | (cc) Reports and examinations; supervisory fees: required private insurance or bond: |
15 | (1) The commissioner may call for reports verified under oath from a special purpose |
16 | depository institution at any time as necessary to inform the commissioner of the condition of the |
17 | institution. |
18 | (2) All reports required of special purpose depository institutions by the commissioner and |
19 | all materials relating to examinations of these institutions shall be subject to the provisions of |
20 | chapter 4 of title 19. |
21 | (3) Every special purpose depository institution is subject to the examination of the |
22 | commissioner. The commissioner or a duly appointed examiner shall visit and examine special |
23 | purpose depository institutions on a schedule established by rule. The commissioner or a duly |
24 | appointed examiner shall make a complete and careful examination of the condition and resources |
25 | of a special purpose depository institution, the mode of managing institution affairs and conducting |
26 | business, the actions of officers and directors in the investment and disposition of funds, the safety |
27 | and prudence of institution management, compliance with the requirements of this chapter and such |
28 | other matters as the commissioner may require. After an examination, the special purpose |
29 | depository institution shall remit to the commissioner an amount equal to the total cost of the |
30 | examination. This amount shall be remitted to the state treasurer and deposited into the special |
31 | purpose depository institutions subaccount established under this chapter. |
32 | (4) On or before January 31 and July 31 of each year, a special purpose depository |
33 | institution shall compute and pay supervisory fees to the commissioner based on the total assets of |
34 | the special purpose depository institution as of the preceding December 31 and June 30 |
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1 | respectively. Supervisory fees under this section shall provide for the operating costs of the office |
2 | of the commissioner and the administration of the laws governing special purpose depository |
3 | institutions. Such fees shall be established by rule of the commissioner and shall be adjusted by the |
4 | commissioner to ensure consistency with the cost of supervision. Supervisory fees shall be |
5 | deposited by the commissioner with the state treasurer and credited to the special purpose |
6 | depository institutions subaccount established under this chapter |
7 | (5) A special purpose depository institution shall maintain appropriate insurance or a bond |
8 | covering the operational risks of the institution, which shall include coverage for directors' and |
9 | officers' liability, errors and omissions liability and information technology infrastructure and |
10 | activities liability. |
11 | (dd) Suspension or revocation of charter: |
12 | (1) The commissioner may suspend or revoke the charter of a special purpose depository |
13 | institution if, after notice and opportunity for a hearing, the commissioner determines that: |
14 | (i) The special purpose depository institution has failed or refused to comply with an order |
15 | issued by the commissioner or other regulatory body; |
16 | (ii) The application for a charter contained a false statement or material misrepresentation |
17 | or material omission; or |
18 | (iii) An officer, director or agent of the special purpose depository institution, in connection |
19 | with an application for a charter, examination, report or other document filed with the |
20 | commissioner, knowingly made a false statement, material misrepresentation or material omission |
21 | to the board, the commissioner or the duly authorized agent of the board or commissioner. |
22 | (ee) Continuing jurisdiction. If the charter of a special purpose depository institution is |
23 | surrendered, suspended or revoked, the institution shall continue to be subject to the provisions of |
24 | this chapter during any liquidation or conservatorship. |
25 | (ff) Failure of institution; unsound or unsafe condition; applicability of other insolvency |
26 | and conservatorship provisions: |
27 | (1) If the commissioner finds that a special purpose depository institution has failed or is |
28 | operating in an unsafe or unsound condition, as defined in this section, that has not been remedied |
29 | within the time prescribed under chapter 4 of title 19 or an order of the commissioner, the |
30 | commissioner shall conduct a liquidation or appoint a conservator pursuant to chapters 11 or 12 of |
31 | title 19; |
32 | (2) As used in this section: |
33 | (i) "Failed" or "failure" means, consistent with rules adopted by the commissioner, a |
34 | circumstance when a special purpose depository institution has not: |
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1 | (A) Complied with the requirements of this chapter; |
2 | (B) Maintained a contingency account, as required by this section; |
3 | (C) Paid, in the manner commonly accepted by business practices, its legal obligations to |
4 | depositors on demand or to discharge any certificates of deposit, promissory notes or other |
5 | indebtedness when due. |
6 | (ii) "Unsafe or unsound condition" means, consistent with rules adopted by the |
7 | commissioner, a circumstance relating to a special purpose depository institution which is likely |
8 | to: |
9 | (A) Cause the failure of the institution as defined in subsection (2)(i) of this subsection; |
10 | (B) Cause a substantial dissipation of assets or earnings: |
11 | (C) Substantially disrupt the services provided by the institution to depositors; |
12 | (D) Otherwise substantially prejudice the depository interests of depositors. |
13 | (gg) Voluntary dissolution of special purpose depository institution; liquidation; |
14 | reorganization; application for dissolution; filing fee; filing with the secretary of state; revocation |
15 | of charter. |
16 | (1) A special purpose depository institution may voluntarily dissolve in accordance with |
17 | the provisions of this section. Voluntary dissolution shall be accomplished by either liquidating the |
18 | special purpose depository institution or reorganizing the institution into an appropriate business |
19 | entity that does not engage in any activity authorized only for a special purpose depository |
20 | institution. Upon complete liquidation or completion of the reorganization, the commissioner shall |
21 | revoke the charter of the special purpose depository institution and afterward, the company shall |
22 | not use the word "special purpose depository institution" or "bank" in its business name or in |
23 | connection with its ongoing business. |
24 | (2) The special purpose depository institution may dissolve its charter either by liquidation |
25 | or reorganization. The board of directors shall file an application for dissolution with the |
26 | commissioner, accompanied by a filing fee established by rule of the commissioner. The |
27 | application shall include a comprehensive plan for dissolution setting forth the proposed disposition |
28 | of all assets and liabilities, in reasonable detail to effect a liquidation or reorganization, and any |
29 | other plans required by the commissioner. The plan of dissolution shall provide for the discharge |
30 | or assumption of all of the known and unknown claims and liabilities of the special purpose |
31 | depository institution. Additionally, the application for dissolution shall include other evidence, |
32 | certifications, affidavits, documents or information as the commissioner may require, including a |
33 | demonstration of how assets and liabilities will be disposed, the timetable for effecting disposition |
34 | of the assets and liabilities and a proposal of the special purpose depository institution for |
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1 | addressing any claims that are asserted after dissolution has been completed. The commissioner |
2 | shall examine the application for compliance with this section, the business entity laws applicable |
3 | to the required type of dissolution and applicable rules. The commissioner may conduct a special |
4 | examination of the special purpose depository institution consistent with chapter 4 of title 19 and |
5 | the guidelines set forth in this chapter for purposes of evaluating the application. |
6 | (3) If the commissioner finds that the application is incomplete, the commissioner shall |
7 | return it for completion not later than sixty (60) days after it is filed. If the application is found to |
8 | be complete by the commissioner, the commissioner shall approve or disapprove the application |
9 | not later than thirty (30) days after it is filed. If the commissioner approves the application the |
10 | special purpose depository institution may proceed with the dissolution pursuant to the plan |
11 | outlined in the application subject to any further conditions the commissioner may prescribe. If the |
12 | special purpose depository institution subsequently determines that the plan of dissolution needs to |
13 | be amended to complete the dissolution, it shall file an amended plan with the commissioner and |
14 | obtain approval to proceed under the amended plan. If the commissioner does not approve the |
15 | application or amended plan, the special purpose depository institution may appeal the decision to |
16 | the board pursuant to chapter 35 of title 42 ("administrative procedures"). |
17 | (4) Upon completion of all actions required under the plan of dissolution and satisfaction |
18 | of all conditions prescribed by the commissioner, the special purpose depository institution shall |
19 | submit a written report of its actions to the commissioner. The report shall contain a certification |
20 | made under oath that the report is true and correct. Following receipt of the report, the |
21 | commissioner, no later than sixty (60) days after the filing of the report, shall examine the special |
22 | purpose depository institution to determine whether the commissioner is satisfied that all required |
23 | actions have been taken in accordance with the plan of dissolution and any conditions prescribed |
24 | by the commissioner. If all requirements and conditions have been met, the commissioner shall, |
25 | within thirty (30) days of the examination, notify the special purpose depository institution in |
26 | writing that the dissolution has been completed and issue a certificate of dissolution. |
27 | (5) Upon receiving a certificate of dissolution, the special purpose depository institution |
28 | shall surrender its charter to the commissioner. The special purpose depository institution shall then |
29 | file articles of dissolution and other documents required by § 7-1.2-1309. In the case of |
30 | reorganization, the special purpose depository institution shall file the documents required by the |
31 | secretary of state to finalize the reorganization. |
32 | (6) If the commissioner determines that all required actions under the plan for dissolution, |
33 | or as otherwise required by the commissioner, have not been completed the commissioner shall |
34 | notify the special purpose depository institution not later than thirty (30) days after this |
| LC001944 - Page 31 of 34 |
1 | determination, in writing what additional actions shall be taken in order for the institution to be |
2 | eligible for a certificate of dissolution. The commissioner shall establish a reasonable deadline for |
3 | the submission of evidence that additional actions have been taken and the commissioner may |
4 | extend any deadline upon good cause. If the special purpose depository institution fails to file a |
5 | supplemental report showing that the additional actions have been taken before the deadline, or |
6 | submits a report that is found not to be satisfactory by the commissioner, the commissioner shall |
7 | notify the special purpose depository institution in writing that its voluntary dissolution is not |
8 | approved, and the institution may appeal the decision to the board pursuant to chapter 35 of title 42 |
9 | ("administrative procedures"). |
10 | (hh) Failure to submit required report; fees; rules. If a special purpose depository institution |
11 | fails to submit any report required by this chapter or by rule within the prescribed period, the |
12 | commissioner may impose and collect a fee of up to one thousand dollars ($1000) for each day the |
13 | report is overdue, as established by rule. |
14 | (ii) Each officer, director, employee or agent of a special purpose depository institution, |
15 | following written notice from the commissioner is subject to removal upon order of the |
16 | commissioner if he/she knowingly or willfully fails to perform any duty required by this chapter or |
17 | other applicable law or conform to any rule or order of the commissioner. |
18 | 42-64.35-9. Severability in a pari material construction with other chapters. |
19 | (a) Except as provided in subsection (b) of this section, if any provision of this chapter or |
20 | the application of this chapter to any person or circumstances is held invalid or unconstitutional, |
21 | the invalidity or unconstitutionality shall not affect other provisions or applications of this chapter |
22 | that can be given effect without the invalid or unconstitutional provision or application, and to this |
23 | end the provisions of this chapter are declared to be severable. |
24 | (b) The provisions of this chapter 64.34 of title 42 ("this chapter") shall be interpreted to |
25 | be in pari material with, consistent with, and harmonized with the provisions of chapter 56 of title |
26 | 6 ("uniform supplemental commercial law for the uniform regulation of virtual-currency businesses |
27 | act"), chapter 14 of title 19 ("licensed activities"), and chapter 14.3 of title 19 ("currency |
28 | transmissions"). To the extent any provision of this chapter 64.3 of title 42 is determined to be |
29 | inconsistent with and cannot be harmonized with the provisions of any of the aforesaid chapters, |
30 | the provisions of chapter 56 of title 6, chapter 14 of title 19, and chapter 14.3 of title 19 shall control |
31 | and prevail over the provisions of this chapter. |
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1 | SECTION 2. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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LC001944 | |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO STATE AFFAIRS AND GOVERNMENT -- RHODE ISLAND ECONOMIC | |
GROWTH BLOCKCHAIN ACT | |
*** | |
1 | This act would establish an economic growth blockchain act, which would regulate virtual |
2 | and digital assets, and establish depository banks for these purposes. |
3 | This act would take effect upon passage. |
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LC001944 | |
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