HR-3709-119
Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs.
Sponsored by Joyce Beatty (D-OH)
What it does
This bill would establish a Financial Agent Mentor-Protégé Program within the Department of the Treasury. It would pair minority-owned depository institutions, rural depository institutions, and other small financial institutions (protégés) with large financial institutions or Treasury-designated financial agents (mentors). The program's goal would be to help protégé institutions build service capacity and qualify to act as financial agents for the federal government.
Who benefits
Minority-owned and rural depository institutions that gain access to expertise, networks, and operational knowledge from larger institutions. Communities historically underserved by large banks, who may gain improved access to local financial services. Small financial institutions seeking to expand their role as federal financial agents, which could increase their revenue and stability. Treasury, which would gain a broader pool of qualified financial agents to work with. Federal contractors and program recipients who interact with Treasury financial agents.
Who is hurt
Large financial institutions currently serving as Treasury financial agents, who may face increased competition from newly qualified smaller institutions. Treasury staff who would bear administrative costs of designing, running, and overseeing the program. Taxpayers who may indirectly bear program administration costs. Institutions that do not qualify as minority-owned, rural, or small — and thus are ineligible for the program's benefits — may face a competitive disadvantage if protégé institutions gain preferential access to federal financial agent contracts.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that minority-owned and rural financial institutions have historically been excluded from federal financial agent roles due to capacity gaps — not lack of competence — and that structured mentorship directly addresses this barrier. They contend that expanding the pool of Treasury financial agents increases competition, reduces federal dependence on a small number of large banks, and strengthens financial services in underserved communities where large institutions have limited presence.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the program creates a preferential pathway to federal financial agent status based on institutional characteristics rather than demonstrated capability, potentially directing federal business to less-experienced institutions at the expense of reliability and taxpayer value. They contend that existing small business and minority enterprise programs already provide similar support, and that a new Treasury-specific program adds administrative overhead without clear evidence that the current financial agent selection process is the primary barrier facing these institutions.