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By Marc Rapport, Credit Union Times |
January 16, 2012
Callahan & Associates named Omaha businessman Sean Hession as the new president/CEO of the analytical services and data provider. And the firm said it is “transitioning ownership of the company to its management team.”
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By Marc Rapport |
January 9, 2012
Omaha businessman Sean Hession takes over as Washington, D.C., analysis, data firm "transitioning ownership" to management team.
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By Michelle A. Samaad |
August 24, 2011
With much more at stake, it is no surprise that credit union service organizations are sounding the alarm louder than credit unions regarding an NCUA proposal that would alter how CUSO relationships are regulated.
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By Jim Rubenstein |
August 10, 2011
Two ad hoc industry groups, one in Michigan and the other in Tennessee, that have been among the most vocal in lambasting NCUA policies on corporates, salaries and compliance all year, held firm in their critical stands again last week. And they issued new complaints.
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By Jim Rubenstein |
August 3, 2011
Two ad hoc industry groups among the most vocal in stirring critical debate about the NCUA said their stands are unchanged.
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By Jim Rubenstein |
March 23, 2011
The attack on NCUA policies spearheaded last December in a petition drive by a Michigan CUSO group entered a new phase last week when a Tennessee group joined the fray.
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By Jim Rubenstein |
March 16, 2011
NCUA was the object of more heat this week from an ad hoc group of 32 CEOs and credit union executives submitting a complaining petition to Congressional committees.
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By Jim Rubenstein |
February 2, 2011
The head of a Grand Rapids, Mich. CUSO leading a petition drive sharply critical of NCUA policies and hoping to marshal industry action to bring about major changes, acknowledged Wednesday his campaign may be stalling.
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By Sarah Snell Cooke |
January 12, 2011
The 2010 holiday season was not the normal slowdown period in the news business.
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January 12, 2011
The NCUA has consistently swept its oversight failures beneath a rug woven with our members' money. And, to add insult to injury, the NCUA simply shuffled the deck and some of the responsible parties have either showed up