Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco Seattle Branch
The Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco Seattle Branch is one of four branches of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco. The branch opened September 19, 1917.[1] In 1938, it absorbed the operations of the Spokane branch and in 2005 took over cash operations from the Portland branch.[2][3]
The branch is located at 2700 Naches Ave SW in Renton, Washington, a suburb south of Seattle.[4] Until 2008, the branch was headquartered at the Federal Reserve Bank Building in Downtown Seattle, which had been built in 1951 for the branch.[5]
Current board of directors
The following people are on the board of directors as of December 2023:[6]
Appointed by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
Name | Title | Term expires |
---|---|---|
Sheila Edwards Lange (Chair of the Board) | Chancellor, University of Washington Tacoma Tacoma, Washington | 2025 |
Pallavi Mehta Wahi | Seattle Managing Partner, K&L Gates Seattle, Washington | 2024 |
John Wolfe | Chief Executive Officer, Northwest Seaport Alliance Tacoma, Washington | 2023 |
Appointed by the San Francisco Board of Directors
Name | Title | Term expires |
---|---|---|
Bob Donegan | President, Ivar's Restaurants Seattle, Washington | 2025 |
Carol Gore | President and Chief Executive Officer, Cook Inlet Housing Authority Anchorage, Alaska | 2023 |
Michael Senske | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Pearson Packaging Systems Spokane, Washington | 2024 |
Laura Lee Stewart | President and Chief Executive Officer, Sound Community Bank and Sound Financial Bancorp Seattle, Washington | 2023 |
See also
- Federal Reserve Act
- Federal Reserve System
- Federal Reserve Bank
- Federal Reserve Districts
- Federal Reserve Branches
- Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco Los Angeles Branch
- Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco Portland Branch
- Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco Salt Lake City Branch
- Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco Building (San Francisco, California)
- Structure of the Federal Reserve System
References
- ^ Federal Reserve Board (June 1925). Branches and Agencies of Federal Reserve Banks (PDF) (Report). p. 1. Retrieved June 30, 2024.
- ^ Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco (September 13, 2021). "Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco". Federal Reserve History. Retrieved June 30, 2024.
- ^ "FRBSF: Our Branches, Seattle". frbsf.org. Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco. Retrieved June 30, 2024.
The Portland Cash Operation closed in 2005 and was absorbed by the Seattle office.
- ^ "FRBSF Branches". Archived from the original on December 5, 2010. Retrieved December 17, 2010.
- ^ Ott, Jennifer (September 20, 2008). "Federal Reserve Bank (Seattle)". HistoryLink. Retrieved July 24, 2016.
- ^ "Board of Governsors of the Federal Reserve System". The Federal Reserve. June 1, 2021.
- v
- t
- e
(Antecedents)
- Aldrich–Vreeland Act (1908)
- National Monetary Commission (1909–1912)
- Federal Reserve Act (1913)
- Pittman Act (1918)
- Edge Act (1919)
- Phelan Act (1920)
- Regulation D (c. 1930)
- Emergency Banking Act (1933)
- Regulation Q (1933)
- Glass–Steagall Act (1933)
- Gold Reserve Act (1934)
- Banking Act of 1935
- Bretton Woods system (1944–1971)
- Employment Act of 1946
- U.S. Treasury Department Accord (1951)
- Bank Holding Company Act (1956)
- FOMC actions (1961–present)
- Truth in Lending Act (1968)
- Nixon shock (1971)
- Smithsonian Agreement (1971)
- Equal Credit Opportunity Act (1974)
- Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (1975)
- Community Reinvestment Act (1977)
- Federal Reserve Reform Act (1977)
- Electronic Fund Transfer Act (1978)
- Humphrey–Hawkins Full Employment Act (1978)
- International Banking Act (1978)
- DIDMC Act (1980)
- Federal Reserve v. Investment Co. Institute (1981)
- Northeast Bancorp v. Federal Reserve (1985)
- Greenspan put (1987)
- Expedited Funds Availability Act (1987)
- FIRRE Act (1989)
- FDIC Improvement Act (1991)
- Gramm–Leach–Bliley Act (1999)
- Subprime mortgage crisis responses (2007–2010)
- Emergency Economic Stabilization Act (2008)
- Unfair or Deceptive Acts or Practices (2008)
- Commercial Paper Funding Facility (2008–2010)
- Primary Dealer Credit Facility (2008–2010)
- Bloomberg v. Federal Reserve (2009)
- 2009 Supervisory Capital Assessment Program
- Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility (2009–2010)
- Public–Private Investment Program for Legacy Assets (2009–)
- Dodd–Frank Act (2010; Durbin amendment)
- Commercial Paper Funding Facility (2020–2021)
- Corner Post v. Federal Reserve (2024)
- Charles S. Hamlin (1914–1916)
- William P. G. Harding (1916–1922)
- Daniel R. Crissinger (1923–1927)
- Roy A. Young (1927–1930)
- Eugene Meyer (1930–1933)
- Eugene R. Black (1933–1934)
- Marriner S. Eccles (1934–1948)
- Thomas B. McCabe (1948–1951)
- William M. Martin (1951–1970)
- Arthur F. Burns (1970–1978)
- G. William Miller (1978–1979)
- Paul Volcker (1979–1987)
- Alan Greenspan (1987–2006)
- Ben Bernanke (2006–2014)
- Janet Yellen (2014–2018)
- Jerome Powell (2018–present)
governors
(by district)
- Susan Collins (Boston)
- John Williams (New York)
- Patrick T. Harker (Philadelphia)
- Loretta J. Mester (Cleveland)
- Thomas Barkin (Richmond)
- Raphael Bostic (Atlanta)
- Austan Goolsbee (Chicago)
- Alberto Musalem (St. Louis)
- Neel Kashkari (Minneapolis)
- Jeff Schmid (Kansas City)
- Lorie Logan (Dallas)
- Mary C. Daly (San Francisco)
47°27′14″N 122°14′22″W / 47.453818°N 122.239515°W / 47.453818; -122.239515