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Laura Pizzarelli, CO-OP’s senior vice president of corporate relations,
withdraws US$30 from Hudson Valley Federal Credit Union, Poughkeepsie,
N.Y., in the second international transaction using COONECTA.
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QUITO, Ecuador—“Éxito!” exclaimed
Carroll Beach as he made a US$20 deposit to his
account at Westerra Credit Union, Denver, Colo.,
through a teller at Cooprogreso Credit Union in
Quito, Ecuador. “Success!”
The first cooperative transactions between two
separate shared branching networks in two
different countries were completed successfully
thanks to the efforts of World Council of Credit
Unions (WOCCU), technology from CO-OP Shared
Branching powered by Credit Union Service
Corporation’s (CUSC’s) Next Generation Network
(NGN) and support from the Colorado Credit Union
Association and affiliate Credit Union Service
Network in the U.S., along with Red Transaccional
Cooperativa (RTC) and Multisoft in Ecuador.
COONECTA, the new network, connects credit union
members via direct transaction capabilities in the
United States and Ecuador.
In addition to the deposit made by Beach,
president/CEO of CO-OP Shared Branching, Laura
Pizzarelli, CO-OP Shared Branching’s senior vice
president of corporate relations made a US$30
withdrawal at the same Cooprogreso teller window
from her account at Hudson Valley Federal Credit
Union in Poughkeepsie, N.Y. The transactions open
the door to Ecuadorians living and working in the
United States to conduct business with credit
unions in their home country, as well countless
U.S. visitors to Ecuador who now have the same
opportunity in reverse.
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Carroll Beach, president/CEO of the
CO-OP Shared Branching Network, deposits US$20 into his account at
Westerra Credit Union, Denver, Colo., through a teller at Cooprogreso
Credit Union in Quito, Ecuador, thanks to the newly established
COONECTA international shared branch network.
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“We are extremely honored to have been able to
work with RTC and WOCCU on such a monumental
event,” Beach said. “Our vision to connect credit
unions around the world to their members has truly
come alive today.”
Affordable account access is extremely important
to immigrants living in the United States who want
to send money home, said Steve Schaefer, program
manager for WOCCU who spent four years driving
this project along with Oswaldo Oliva and Oscar
Guzman, directors of the WOCCU program in Ecuador.
The transactions by Beach and Pizzarelli flowed
effortlessly, clearing the way for what those
involved say will be a groundswell of opportunity
to better serve members.
“Every year, billions of dollars are sent out of
the country, and huge amounts of money are spent
on traditional remittance services to do it,” said
Schaefer. “International shared branching gives
members a means to access their accounts directly
and better the lives of their families at home
while maintaining their relationships with their
credit union.”
Currently, 13 Ecuadorian credit unions with 154
service contact points connect with nearly 3,000
contact points supported by credit unions in the
United States, said Manuel Rabines, WOCCU second
vice chairman and head of FENACREP, Peru’s
national credit union association, at a public
unveiling following the historic event. By sharing
facilities, credit unions can offer greater
convenience for members in both countries.
“The network will enable Ecuadorians, both in
their own country and the U.S., to better manage
their financial services,” Rabines told attendees.
“In addition, tens of thousands of Ecuadorians
working in the U.S., primarily in metropolitan New
York and New Jersey, will be better able to easily
and economically send funds to their loved ones
back home.”
In addition to dignitaries from WOCCU, CO-OP
Shared Branching and SwissContact, another
organization critical to spearheading the effort,
participants also included Alexandria Panehal, a
director from the U.S. Agency for International
Development (USAID), which provided funding for
the WOCCU credit union development program in
Ecuador that led to COONECTA’s launch. Credit
union officials from throughout Ecuador, as well
as neighboring Bolivia, Colombia and Peru, also
attended the event with the idea of eventually
expanding the international network to their
countries.
“More than two million Ecuadorians live outside of
their country,” Panehal said. “This is a very
rich environment with which the U.S. movement can
link and the new technology will help drive credit
union growth in Ecuador.”
Shared branching has been active within Ecuador’s
borders through RTC since mid-2005, when the NGN
switch messaging format and other technical
aspects were implemented to help reach underserved
communities. NGN’s dynamic open-architecture
framework gives members the ability to safely
transfer funds into their local credit unions. The
credit union-owned and designed technology has the
flexibility to adapt to any credit union
environment and allows CO-OP Shared Branching to
lend the software to help further the worldwide
movement.
About CO-OP Shared Branching
Credit Union Service Corporation and CO-OP Shared
Branching recently combined operations to form the
largest shared branching network representing 80
percent of national credit union participants.
Made up of credit unions, leagues, CUSOs, CUNA and
CUNA Mutual, the CO-OP Shared Branching network is
designed to offer credit union members convenient
access to their accounts at multiple locations
with extended hours. CO-OP Shared Branching’s
proprietary ground-breaking technology, The Next
Generation Network, offers credit unions lower
cost, enhanced transaction functionality, and
greater information capacity, making it possible
for more credit unions to offer shared branching
to their members.
About USAID
The U.S. Agency for International Development
administers the U.S. foreign assistance program
providing economic and humanitarian assistance in
more than 80 countries worldwide.