Title 12 › Chapter CHAPTER 53— - WALL STREET REFORM AND CONSUMER PROTECTION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER V— - BUREAU OF CONSUMER FINANCIAL PROTECTION › Part Part A— - Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection › § 5493
The Director must hire and manage the Bureau’s employees, including attorneys, examiners, economists, and other needed staff. The Director can set pay rates and must at least match the pay and benefits paid by the Board of Governors for similar jobs. Hiring rules from title 5 may be waived for certain appointments so the Bureau can use hiring terms like those for the Federal Reserve, but veterans’ preference rules still apply and that waiver authority ends 5 years after July 21, 2010. New employees may choose to join the Federal Reserve Retirement and Thrift Plans or, if they were already in them, the Civil Service or Federal Employees retirement systems. Employees must make that election within 1 year of joining or transferring to the Bureau. The Bureau will make employer contributions to the Federal Reserve plans at rates like those used under the Federal Employees Retirement System. Chapter 71 (collective bargaining rules) applies. The Bureau must appoint an ombudsman within 180 days after the transfer date to help people with problems and protect complainant confidentiality. The Director must create units for research, help for underserved communities, and a centralized complaint system with a toll-free number, website, and database. The Bureau may share complaints with the FTC, other federal agencies, prudential regulators, and State agencies while protecting personally identifiable information, and must report to Congress each year by March 31 about complaints from the prior year. The Bureau must also set up an Office of Fair Lending and Equal Opportunity, an Office of Financial Education, and an Office of Service Member Affairs within 1 year after the transfer date. The Financial Education office must make a strategy with measurable goals, offer counseling and information (including help with credit, savings, debt, and tax-credit filing), coordinate internally, and report to Congress within 24 months and annually after that. The Comptroller General must study certification and best practices for financial counselors and report within 1 year after July 21, 2010. The Bureau must create an Office of Financial Protection for Older Americans within 180 days after the transfer date to serve people age 62+, headed by an assistant director, and provide research, counseling programs, adviser-certification monitoring, and recommendations to Congress and the Commission within 18 months of the Office’s start. Advisory committees must follow chapter 10 rules.
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Banks and Banking — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
12 U.S.C. § 5493
Title 12 — Banks and Banking
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73