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The California and Nevada Credit Union Leagues are the trade association for credit unions in those states. They serve more than 290 credit unions in California and Nevada with more than 9.6 million members and more than $144 billion in assets. The two Leagues joined in 1996 and became known as the California and Nevada Credit Union Leagues. The Leagues are the largest state-level credit union trade association in the United States. The Leagues are geographically divided into 24 (chapters ) (22 in California, 2 in Nevada). Each League has its own chairman and board of directors elected by member credit unions in the respective states. Within the three-tier Credit Union System, the Leagues maintain a mutual partnership with the Credit Union National Association (CUNA).〔http://www.ccul.org/>〕 ==Brief history of the California Credit Union League== In 1933, less than 10 years after the founding of the first credit union in California, the California Credit Union League was organized by a group of approximately 25 credit unions at a meeting in Fresno. By 1940, League membership had grown to 246 credit unions. ''The San Francisco Credit Union Digest'' (eventually renamed as ''Credit Union Digest'') was adopted as the official flagship publication of the League in 1941. The League shared its first headquarters with East Bay Postal Credit Union on the second floor of the Oakland Post Office. Founded in 1927, East Bay Postal Credit Union merged with and into Pacific Postal Credit Union July 1, 2012, continuing consolidation within the industry. Throughout the years, the League's headquarters moved from the Bay Area to Pomona to Rancho Cucamonga to its current location in Ontario, California. The Leagues also currently operate offices in Sacramento, California and Washington, D.C. The League has launched a number of credit union service organizations, including Western Bridge Corporate Federal Credit Union in 1977 (which was formerly known as the California Central Federal Credit Union and then as Western Corporate Federal Credit Union, and consolidated into Catalyst Corporate FCU in July 2012); CO-OP Financial Services (formerly known as CU-ATM Cooperatives, Inc.) in 1981; CU Direct Corporation in 1994 in partnership with The Golden 1 Credit Union; and CU West Mortgage, Inc. in 2003, in partnership with SchoolsFirst Federal Credit Union (formerly Orange County Teachers FCU).〔''The Splendid Gift: The California Credit Union League in the 20th Century'', Laura Porter, 2001〕 In 1992, the League founded the Shapiro Group to cooperatively pool the resources of the credit union community to help small credit unions operate efficiently and effectively. The first group of its kind, it was named in honor of San Francisco attorney Leo H. Shapiro, remembered as the “father of the credit union movement in California.”〔 California Credit Union League CEOs: * 1933–1939 - John L. Moore * 1939–1941 - Ralph Hagin * 1941–1942 - Charles A. Drenk * 1942–1964 - Clarence Murphy * 1964–1974 - Wil Wyatt * 1974–1989 - W. “Bill” F. Broxterman * 1989 - (Richard “Dick” M. Johnson ) (Interim President) * 1989–1990 - Christopher L. Stewart * 1990 - Richard “Dick” M. Johnson (Interim President) * 1991–2006 - (David L. Chatfield ) * 2006–2010 - (Bill Cheney ) * 2010 - David L. Chatfield (Interim President) * 2010–present - Diana R. Dykstra ;〔〔''http://members.ccul.org/07publications/news_continued.cfm?dailynews__ID=4414''〕〔http://www.cutimes.com/2010/12/08/new-ceo-diana-dykstra-settles-innew-ceo-diana-dykstra-settles-in#〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「California and Nevada Credit Union Leagues」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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