Last modified: 2025-02-22 by rick wyatt
Keywords: consumer financial protection bureau | departmental | united states |
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image located by Esteban Rivera, 20 January 2025
See also:
The flag of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (officially the Bureau
of Consumer Financial Protection) is the agency seal on a yellow field:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/cfpbphotos/30102001227
Seal:
https://www.consumerfinance.gov/about-us/blog/introducing-our-new-bureau-seal/
The CFPB is an independent federal agency. Presentation on Wikipedia:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consumer_Financial_Protection_Bureau%e2%80%8b
Dave Fowler,
13 May 2019
image located by Dave Fowler, 13 May 2019
Agency flag was initially yellow, but has changed from a yellow field to a dark blue field.
Dave
Fowler, 16 April 2021
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) was established on July 21,
2011 whose passage in 2010 was a legislative response to the financial crisis of
2007–08 and the subsequent recession and is an independent bureau within the Federal Reserve. The CFPB was created to
provide a single point of accountability for enforcing federal consumer
financial laws and protecting consumers in the financial marketplace. Before,
that responsibility was divided among several agencies.
Dodd–Frank
reorganized the financial regulatory system, eliminating the Office of Thrift
Supervision, assigning new jobs to existing agencies similar to the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation, and creating new agencies like the Consumer
Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB). The CFPB was charged with protecting
consumers against abuses related to credit cards, mortgages, and other
financial products. The act also created the Financial Stability Oversight
Council and the Office of Financial Research to identify threats to the
financial stability of the United States of America, and gave the Federal
Reserve new powers to regulate systemically important institutions. To handle
the liquidation of large companies, the act created the Orderly Liquidation
Authority. One provision, the Volcker Rule, restricts banks from making
certain kinds of speculative investments. The act also repealed the exemption
from regulation for security-based swaps, requiring credit-default swaps and
other transactions to be cleared through either exchanges or clearinghouses.
Other provisions affect issues such as corporate governance, 1256 Contracts,
and credit rating agencies.
Sources:
https://www.consumerfinance.gov/about-us/the-bureau/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consumer_Financial_Protection_Bureau and
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dodd%E2%80%93Frank_Wall_Street_Reform_and_Consumer_Protection_Act
For additional information go to Consumer Finance (official website): https://www.consumerfinance.gov/
Esteban Rivera, 20 January 2025
image located by Esteban Rivera, 20 January 2025
Source:
https://cfpb.github.io/design-system/foundation/seal
The seal was created as a symbol of CFPB to use in uniquely governmental and
ceremonial contexts.
Use of the seal is very limited. It should never
be used on consumer-facing materials, as it is important that the CFPB logo
is consistently used to help consumers recognize and trust the CFPB.
The
CFPB’s logo and the standard characters Consumer Financial Protection Bureau,
CFPB, Know Before You Owe, and Money as You Grow are registered trademarks owned
by the CFPB.
Source:
https://cfpb.github.io/design-system/foundation/seal
The new Seal is
described as follows: "The seal reflects the Bureau’s mission through
American imagery and references to the nation’s founding documents. It also
aligns the Bureau with the seals of other federal financial regulators."
The
Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Financial Protection Act
gives the Bureau the authority to adopt and use a seal. As a new federal
agency, this is the Bureau’s first official seal. The meaning behind our new
seal:
The seal depicts an eagle with its wings raised across a blue field.
Three stars above its head stand for the bureau’s three pillars: to serve,
lead, and innovate. The eagle’s breastplate is a shield symbolizing
protection.
The scale on the seal represents the traditional symbol of
justice.
The key represents consumers’ financial security. And the beacon of
fire symbolizes transparency in the financial marketplace, along with
vigilance and the revelation of knowledge.
In its talons, the eagle grips
a ribbon printed with three dates:
1776, the year the United States
declared their independence
1787, the year the Constitution was signed
2010, the year the Bureau was established under the Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act.
Over the next several months, the Bureau
will publicly incorporate the new seal in various ways, so stay tuned."
(originally published online on March 30, 2018).
Esteban Rivera, 20 January 2025
2011-2013 logo
image located by Esteban Rivera, 20 January 2025
Source: https://www.facebook.com/photo
2013-onwards logo
image located by Esteban Rivera, 20 January 2025
Source:
https://www.facebook.com/CFPB