The people's voice of reason

Close the Crypto Loophole Before It Hurts Rural Alabama

As the State Representative for a largely rural district in Alabama, I've had the privilege of working alongside farmers, small business owners, and families who represent the backbone of our state. These are folks who rise before the sun, work long hours to provide for their communities, and who rely on trusted local institutions, especially community banks and credit

unions, to keep their operations running.

Today, these rural communities face a growing threat that most have never heard of: a loophole in the federal GENIUS Act that could quietly undermine the financial foundation of small towns across Alabama. It's time for Washington to act. As a member of the Senate Banking Committee, I'm encouraging Senator Katie Britt to take the lead in closing this dangerous gap

before it does real harm to our rural economy.

At its core, the GENIUS Act is well-intentioned. It establishes needed regulations around the use of stablecoins. The law rightly prohibits stablecoin issuers from offering interest or yield, a

move that protects consumers from unregulated crypto products pretending to be traditional bank accounts.

But there's a glaring exception. Crypto trading platforms like PayPal and Coinbase aren't held to the same standard. These platforms are still allowed to offer interest-like rewards to users who hold stablecoins on their platforms, which could encourage people to move their money out of local banks and into digital wallets that exist outside traditional oversight. Consumers would be motivated to invest in these platforms, despite the fact that they are not regulated in the same way bank accounts are, with no FDIC insurance, leaving them at risk of losing it all. 

To some, this might sound like a minor policy quirk. But here in rural Alabama, the implications are massive. If this loophole remains open, community banks will be directly impacted. The loophole will affect their ability to make loans because people will be more likely to deposit funds into crypto platforms given the high incentives. Without those deposits, community banks will have limited ability to make loans to our community members.

Our community banks aren't just financial institutions. They are pillars of our towns. They help a young family get a mortgage, provide operating loans to a soybean farmer during planting season, and offer credit to the local feed store or mechanic shop. These banks rely on local deposits to function. If those deposits vanish, redirected into crypto platforms promising higher "rewards", our banks lose the ability to lend, and our communities lose their lifeline.

In rural counties like mine, where agriculture remains a primary economic driver, this shift could be devastating. Farming is a capital-intensive, seasonal business. Without stable access to financing, many of our farmers simply won't be able to operate. This would hit our entire local economy, from equipment dealers and seed suppliers to the grocery stores and diners that

serve our agricultural workforce.

And this isn't just theory. The Treasury Department under President Trump has warned that as much as $6.6 trillion in U.S. bank deposits could be vulnerable if this loophole remains open.

Foreign crypto interests are already exploiting this legal gap. If Washington doesn't act, rural America will bear the brunt of the consequences.

We're not asking for new regulations. We're asking for fairness and a level playing field. Without this fix, rural financial institutions will be forced to compete with unregulated, online giants offering enticing yet unsustainable yields with little accountability.

Senator Katie Britt has consistently stood up for Alabama's rural families. She understands the importance of protecting our agriculture industry and supporting community-led economic

growth. Now, we need her leadership once again.

As Congress prepares to consider market structure legislation this fall, I urge Senator Britt to champion language that closes this loophole once and for all. 

Ed Oliver serves in the Alabama Legislature representing Lee and Tallapoosa Counties.

Opinions expressed are of the author alone and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Alabama Gazette staff or publishers

 
 

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