Each Resource Post

Stay informed with out regularly updated resources. Each post convers a unique aspect of banking or finance to enhance your understanding and enable better financial decisions.

MSB
Independent Reviews Are Not Just a Check-the-Box Requirement

For many Money Services Businesses (MSBs), the independent review is viewed as another annual compliance requirement to complete, submit to the bank, and move on from until next year.

In reality, the independent review is one of the most important tools available to help identify weaknesses in your compliance program before they become larger problems. 

A completed review alone is not enough. 

What matters is what happens after the review is finished.

Independent testing is one of the pillars of an effective BSA/AML compliance program. Its purpose is not simply to satisfy a requirement. A quality review evaluates the strength of your compliance program, identifies weaknesses or gaps, reviews transaction monitoring procedures, and provides recommendations to improve controls and reduce risk.

A strong independent review gives MSB owners visibility into areas that may need attention before regulators or financial institutions identify them first.

The Most Common Mistake MSBs Make

One of the biggest issues we see is MSBs treating the independent review as a one-time document instead of an operational tool.

In many cases, findings are not addressed, recommendations are delayed, or the same deficiencies continue appearing year after year. This creates a pattern that signals a lack of improvement and a lack of attention to compliance responsibilities.

When the same issues continue repeating, risk increases significantly.

Why Repeated Findings Matter

Repeated deficiencies can eventually lead to increased monitoring requirements, additional compliance costs, regulatory scrutiny, or even fines and penalties. In more serious situations, it can also create risk for the MSB’s banking relationship or licensing status.

In some cases, businesses may be required to undergo additional compliance monitoring by an outside third party until improvements are made.

The goal is not to create an additional burden, but instead to identify and correct issues before they become larger operational or regulatory problems.

Common Areas Where Issues Are Found

Independent reviews frequently identify issues involving:

  • Late or incomplete CTR filings
  • Weak transaction monitoring practices
  • Missing or outdated documentation
  • Gaps in Customer Due Diligence (CDD) procedures
  • Inconsistent internal processes or controls

While some of these may seem minor individually, repeated deficiencies over time can create significant compliance concerns if they are not corrected.

Improvement Matters More Than Perfection

No compliance program is perfect. What matters most is identifying issues, addressing them promptly, and demonstrating improvement over time.

An independent review should show progress year after year. If the same findings continue appearing without corrective action, regulators and financial institutions may view that as a lack of commitment to compliance obligations.

Although the independent review report is a bank-required document, MSBs are required to undergo independent testing because the Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) requires every MSB to maintain an effective Anti-Money Laundering (AML) program, and independent testing is one of the core required elements of that program.

Timing and Consistency Matter

While FinCEN requires independent testing to be conducted periodically, Surety Bank’s policy requires independent testing to be completed every 12 months for MSB customers.

Completing reviews consistently and addressing findings in a timely manner helps maintain a stronger and more effective compliance program throughout the year.

Why This Matters

Compliance is not built once a year during an independent testing. It is built through consistent attention to processes, documentation, monitoring, and corrective action throughout the year.

The independent testing is designed to help identify weaknesses before they create larger operational or regulatory problems. Using it properly can help protect your business, your banking relationship, and your long-term success.

LEARN MORE

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100th Anniversary Stories
When Banking Feels Personal Again: John Simmons & St. Barnabas’ Experience with Surety Bank | Community Profile

For John Simmons, banking with Surety has always been about relationships.

A longtime customer of Surety Bank, John has seen firsthand what it looks like when a financial institution truly shows up for its community. As a husband of 38 years, a father of four daughters, and a Director at St. Barnabas Episcopal School, his perspective is grounded in both family and service.

When the school began to grow, a new challenge emerged. They had run out of space to fit all of the students. Expansion wasn’t just a nice-to-have, it was necessary to continue serving students and families well. Like many organizations in that position, they explored their options carefully.

Then came a call that changed everything.

The president of Surety Bank reached out directly, bringing together key stakeholders in a conversation focused on one thing: how to help. What followed was more than a transaction, it was a collaborative effort. The bank stepped in not just with financial guidance, but with a clear commitment to walk alongside the school’s leadership every step of the way.

That experience left a lasting impression on John.

In his words, Surety Bank was “there 120%,” offering direction, support, and reassurance during a critical moment. But what stood out most was how they got there.

“They treat people as people,” John explains. “They actually answer the phone. They communicate.”

In an era where many businesses prioritize efficiency over connection, that kind of responsiveness feels increasingly rare. Yet for Surety Bank, it’s part of their DNA.

John’s story is a reminder that the best banking relationships aren’t built on numbers alone. They’re built on trust, accessibility, and a genuine investment in the people they serve.

This is how Surety Bank has always done it and it’s how we will always do it!

LEARN MORE

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MSB
What MSB Owners Need to Know About Oversight and Accountability

Not all risks come from outside your business.

In many cases, the most significant issues we see develop internally through gaps in oversight, compliance, and day-to-day controls.

As we move further into the year, we want to focus on a key principle that helps prevent these issues:

Trust your team, but verify your operations.

A Real-Life Scenario

Consider the following scenario:

An MSB owner invested in the business but was not involved in day-to-day operations. Instead, they trusted a close family member to manage the store and handle compliance responsibilities.

At first, everything appeared to be running smoothly.

Over time, however, several issues developed:

  • Internal controls were not consistently followed
  • Compliance requirements were not being properly maintained
  • Financial activity was not being reviewed regularly by the owner

Eventually, the situation escalated.

The individual managing the business began making unauthorized financial decisions. There were compliance gaps that had gone unnoticed. Required oversight was missing. By the time the issues surfaced, the impact included:

  • Significant financial loss
  • Compliance violations
  • Regulatory action and fines
  • Operational disruption to the business

The most important takeaway is this:

The responsibility did not fall on the person running the store. It fell on the owner.

Owner Responsibility Does Not Transfer

Even if you assign:

  • A compliance officer
  • A store manager
  • A trusted employee or family member

The responsibility for compliance, licensing, and operations remains with the owner.

Regulators evaluate the licensed entity and the owner behind it, not just the individual performing the work.

A “hands-off” approach can create risk if there is no system in place to verify what is happening inside the business.

Why Internal Issues Are Often Missed

Internal issues are not always obvious.

Unlike external fraud, which is often a single event, internal breakdowns can develop gradually:

  • Processes are skipped
  • Reviews are not completed
  • Reports are not analyzed
  • Controls become informal instead of structured

Because the business appears to be operating normally, these issues can go unnoticed until they become serious.

The Role of Oversight

Oversight does not mean mistrust. It means protection.

Strong MSB operations include:

  • Clear internal controls
  • Active AML and BSA program enforcement
  • Regular review of financial activity
  • Independent verification of processes

Owners do not need to manage every transaction, but they do need visibility into how the business is operating.

Practical Ways to Protect Your Business

To reduce risk and strengthen your operation, consider:

  • Reviewing account activity and reports on a regular basis
  • Performing periodic spot checks of transactions and documentation
  • Confirming that compliance procedures are being followed consistently
  • Ensuring licenses and required documents are current
  • Evaluating the quality of your independent reviews
  • Asking questions when something does not look right

Even small, consistent actions can help identify issues early.

Do Not Rely on One Layer of Protection

Independent reviews, compliance officers, and internal staff all play important roles.

However, none of these replace owner oversight.

If any one layer fails, there should be another layer in place to identify and correct the issue.

Final Thought

Trust is important in any business. But in an MSB environment, trust must be supported by structure, process, and verification.

A strong system protects:

  • Your business
  • Your customers
  • Your license
  • Your long-term success

We’re Here to Help

If you have questions about internal controls, compliance expectations, or how to strengthen oversight in your business, our team is available to support you.

LEARN MORE

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Community
Surety Bank Supports DeLand’s Night to Shine

For nearly 100 years, Surety Bank has believed a strong community is built through more than financial services. It's built through people showing up for one another. Since the bank’s early days, Surety has been committed to investing time, support and resources into the places where its customers live and work. That community-first mindset is why Surety was proud to support DeLand’s annual Night to Shine, hosted by Stetson Baptist Church.

History of Night to Shine

Night to Shine is a prom for people with special needs that was created to give honored guests, known as VIPs, a night filled with joy, dignity and belonging. Organizers said this year’s event welcomed about 150 VIPs and was made possible by roughly 400 volunteers who served, cheered and helped make the night unforgettable.

Night to Shine began in 2015 through the Tim Tebow Foundation and has grown into a global initiative hosted by local churches. The foundation says Night to Shine now takes place in all 50 states and in 76 countries, with 979 host churches participating during the 2026 season. In DeLand, the event brought families, volunteers and community partners together around a simple idea: everyone deserves to be celebrated.

A Night Designed to Celebrate VIPs

From the first greeting to the final song, Night to Shine is built around creating a prom experience that feels personal and uplifting. In DeLand, VIPs enjoyed a full evening of fun, including:

  • Dance floor: Music, lights and plenty of space to celebrate with friends and volunteers.
  • Karaoke: A chance to grab the mic and hear the room erupt with encouragement.
  • Caricatures: Artists creating keepsakes that captured the spirit of the night.
  • Corvette rides: A special highlight for VIPs who wanted a memorable ride and a big moment.
  • Paparazzi moments: Photos and red-carpet energy that helped VIPs feel like the stars they are.

Each part of the evening reinforced the same message: VIPs are seen, valued and welcomed.

Why Night to Shine Matters in DeLand

People with special needs and their families can too often feel overlooked, simply because many social spaces are not designed with accessibility and inclusion in mind. Night to Shine helps change that by creating an environment where belonging is intentional and celebration is the point. It’s also meaningful for caregivers, who get to watch their loved one experience a community that shows up with kindness and care.

Surety Bank is grateful to support events like Night to Shine because strong communities are built through relationships, service and shared responsibility. The turnout in DeLand reflected that spirit, with volunteers giving their time and local partners helping to make every detail count.

Thank You to the VIPs, Families and Volunteers

To the VIPs who brought the joy, the families who trusted the community with this special night, and the volunteers who made it happen, thank you. Night to Shine is one evening on the calendar, but the impact reaches much further, reminding DeLand what it looks like to celebrate every person with dignity and love.

LEARN MORE

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MSB, Business Banking, Online Banking
How to Avoid Check Fraud and Detect Altered Checks

Tax season often brings an increase in check fraud activity, and we are currently seeing specific patterns in several markets. Based on recent site visits and bankwide data, fraud trends include altered checks, fraudulent IDs, and tax refund schemes that can put MSBs at risk.

Fraud Trends We Are Seeing Now

Fraud is not evenly distributed across the country. Recent analysis shows:

  • South Florida, Georgia, Pennsylvania, New Jersey: Higher occurrences of altered checks and double presentment
  • Georgia: More fraudulent IDs
  • Northeast Area: Spike in large tax refund checks for young individuals
  • East Coast overall: Higher volume of fraud compared to other regions

Understanding these localized trends can help MSBs tailor their detection and prevention efforts based on where their business operates.

Why Fraud Is Often Missed

In busy MSB settings, tellers and staff are under pressure to process customers quickly. Fast service is important, but it should not come at the expense of proper verification. Common reasons fraud is missed include:

  • Rushing to clear lines during peak hours
  • Focusing only on the ID and not the instrument
  • Not using available tools like UV lights or thorough inspection methods

Slowing down when suspicious signals appear can prevent significant losses later.

Detecting Chemical Alterations with Simple Tools

One of the most common fraud methods involves chemical alteration (sometimes called “check washing”), where fraudsters remove original payee information and rewrite it.

How to detect it:

  • Use a UV light, which costs less than $30 and is easy to use
  • Hold the check under UV light before acceptance
  • Look for:
    • Security features glowing consistently
    • Areas where ink or paper looks inconsistent
    • Borders or payee lines that glow differently from the rest of the check

Areas that glow differently often indicate tampering.

Even if the check has no embedded security feature, an altered area will reflect under UV light in a way that the original paper will not.

Behavioral Red Flags to Watch

Fraud prevention is not only about tools. People exhibit behavior that often signals something is wrong:

Watch for customers who:

  • Avoid eye contact
  • Provide unsolicited, overly friendly explanations
  • Insist on hurrying rushing you
  • Offer reasons that don’t make sense for the transaction

These behaviors, when combined with instrument anomalies, are stronger indicators of fraud.

Money Mule and Tax Refund Schemes

In some cases, the check is real, but the transaction context is not. A common example seen in Michigan:

  • Younger individuals cashing unusually large tax refunds
  • Refund amounts not aligned with typical income for that age group
  • Refunds linked to questionable tax preparers

These patterns suggest the check itself may be authentic, but the process that generated it was fraudulent. The bank will eventually identify the issue, but MSBs may face loss if the check is returned.

Why Slowing Down Protects Your Business

Slowing down and asking questions helps you protect your business from future exposure.

It’s natural to want to avoid losing a small fee by turning away a suspicious check. However, a rushed decision can expose your business to a much higher loss when a check is returned or fails later verification.

Protecting your business means:

  • Slowing down when something doesn’t feel right
  • Asking more questions
  • Using tools like UV light to confirm legitimacy
  • Prioritizing compliance over short-term fee income

When fraud is prevented at the front line, the long-term financial health of your business is protected.

LEARN MORE

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Community
Skydive DeLand: A Legacy of Innovation, Community, and Global Impact

For many residents of DeLand, the airport on the north side of town feels like a world of its own. Planes climb into the sky daily. Parachutes bloom overhead. Visitors arrive from across the globe. What many may not realize is that Skydive DeLand is not only a local attraction. It is one of the most influential skydiving centers in the world.

A History That Shaped the Sport

Skydive DeLand began operations in 1982, taking over a location that had already seen continuous skydiving activity since 1958. From its earliest days, the company was led by competitors at the highest level of the sport. Both founders were National Champions, and one went on to achieve the title of World Champion in four-person team competition.

That competitive ambition changed the sport.

To pursue world-class performance, the founders enhanced the way teams trained. They invested in aircraft, facilities, personnel, and infrastructure that allowed for intensive, structured team training. At the time, very few drop zones operated seven days a week. Skydive DeLand quickly became a full-time operation, open year-round.

As teams discovered the level of support and consistency available in DeLand, they began traveling here from all over the world. What started as a training philosophy became a global destination.

For many years, Skydive DeLand was recognized as the most active skydiving center in the world.

Building the Skydiving Capital of the World

As training programs expanded, so did the industry surrounding them. Equipment manufacturers began relocating to DeLand in order to test new parachute designs and innovations in real-world conditions.

Today, more than 20 skydiving-related companies operate in the DeLand area. Together, they form the largest parachute equipment manufacturing cluster in the world. Skydive DeLand serves as the anchor for that ecosystem.

Manufacturers rely on the consistent jump activity to test new canopies and equipment designs. Similar to how automotive companies rely on test tracks, skydiving manufacturers rely on active drop zones.

The result is that DeLand became known internationally as the Skydiving Capital of the World. Travelers from Europe, South America, and across the United States continue to visit year after year, particularly during the late winter and spring seasons when weather conditions are ideal.

A Community Within a Community

Beyond competitions and equipment development, Skydive DeLand has fostered a global community.

Teams train here for weeks or months at a time. Large events have attracted hundreds of participants. National championships have been hosted here. At any given time, visitors may be staying in local hotels, RVs, or short-term rentals.

That international presence supports tourism, local hospitality, and small businesses throughout DeLand. A past industry census estimated more than 600 jobs connected directly or indirectly to the skydiving and equipment manufacturing sector.

During economic downturns, when other industries struggled, Skydive DeLand remained strong. Tandem jumps and recreational experiences continued to attract visitors. Equipment manufacturing remained active. That stability helped support the broader local economy during difficult periods.

The people who make up the skydiving community are also deeply engaged locally. Many longtime jumpers and industry professionals participate in other civic and community activities throughout DeLand. For those who retire from jumping, many continue to invest their energy in the town they have come to call home.

The Loss of a Founder

In 2025, the Skydive DeLand community experienced a devastating loss.

Bob Hallett, one of the two original founders and the majority shareholder of the company, passed away unexpectedly following a traffic accident on his way to work. He had been with the company since its early days and remained actively involved in daily operations.

Bob was not only a business leader but a central figure in the skydiving community. His vision and commitment helped shape Skydive DeLand into the global leader it became. His passing deeply affected employees, jumpers, manufacturers, and longtime friends across the industry.

For a company that has operated as both a workplace and a close-knit community, the loss was profound. Yet the legacy he helped build continues in the culture, the operations, and the global impact of the organization.

A Global Reputation With Local Roots

One story reflects just how far Skydive DeLand’s reach extends. A local Stetson professor once attended a conference in Taiwan and turned on the television in his hotel room. There was a feature about Skydive DeLand. He returned home surprised to discover that an internationally recognized skydiving center operated just minutes from where he lived.

That story captures something unique about Skydive DeLand. It has put DeLand on the world map, even if some residents are not fully aware of what happens at the airport each day.

Visitors are welcome to observe jumps from the viewing areas or enjoy the adjacent restaurant deck. Others choose to experience a tandem jump. Some begin lifelong careers in the sport. Whether someone comes to watch or to participate, Skydive DeLand remains open and active every day.

For more information, visit SkyDiveDeLand.com to learn about tandem experiences, training programs, and upcoming events.

Skydive DeLand is more than a drop zone. It is a global training center, an innovation hub, and a long-standing contributor to the DeLand community. Its history reflects ambition, resilience, and a deep commitment to both sport and town.

LEARN MORE

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MSB
Independent Reviews Are Not Just a Check-the-Box Requirement

For many Money Services Businesses (MSBs), the independent review is viewed as another annual compliance requirement to complete, submit to the bank, and move on from until next year.

In reality, the independent review is one of the most important tools available to help identify weaknesses in your compliance program before they become larger problems. 

A completed review alone is not enough. 

What matters is what happens after the review is finished.

Independent testing is one of the pillars of an effective BSA/AML compliance program. Its purpose is not simply to satisfy a requirement. A quality review evaluates the strength of your compliance program, identifies weaknesses or gaps, reviews transaction monitoring procedures, and provides recommendations to improve controls and reduce risk.

A strong independent review gives MSB owners visibility into areas that may need attention before regulators or financial institutions identify them first.

The Most Common Mistake MSBs Make

One of the biggest issues we see is MSBs treating the independent review as a one-time document instead of an operational tool.

In many cases, findings are not addressed, recommendations are delayed, or the same deficiencies continue appearing year after year. This creates a pattern that signals a lack of improvement and a lack of attention to compliance responsibilities.

When the same issues continue repeating, risk increases significantly.

Why Repeated Findings Matter

Repeated deficiencies can eventually lead to increased monitoring requirements, additional compliance costs, regulatory scrutiny, or even fines and penalties. In more serious situations, it can also create risk for the MSB’s banking relationship or licensing status.

In some cases, businesses may be required to undergo additional compliance monitoring by an outside third party until improvements are made.

The goal is not to create an additional burden, but instead to identify and correct issues before they become larger operational or regulatory problems.

Common Areas Where Issues Are Found

Independent reviews frequently identify issues involving:

  • Late or incomplete CTR filings
  • Weak transaction monitoring practices
  • Missing or outdated documentation
  • Gaps in Customer Due Diligence (CDD) procedures
  • Inconsistent internal processes or controls

While some of these may seem minor individually, repeated deficiencies over time can create significant compliance concerns if they are not corrected.

Improvement Matters More Than Perfection

No compliance program is perfect. What matters most is identifying issues, addressing them promptly, and demonstrating improvement over time.

An independent review should show progress year after year. If the same findings continue appearing without corrective action, regulators and financial institutions may view that as a lack of commitment to compliance obligations.

Although the independent review report is a bank-required document, MSBs are required to undergo independent testing because the Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) requires every MSB to maintain an effective Anti-Money Laundering (AML) program, and independent testing is one of the core required elements of that program.

Timing and Consistency Matter

While FinCEN requires independent testing to be conducted periodically, Surety Bank’s policy requires independent testing to be completed every 12 months for MSB customers.

Completing reviews consistently and addressing findings in a timely manner helps maintain a stronger and more effective compliance program throughout the year.

Why This Matters

Compliance is not built once a year during an independent testing. It is built through consistent attention to processes, documentation, monitoring, and corrective action throughout the year.

The independent testing is designed to help identify weaknesses before they create larger operational or regulatory problems. Using it properly can help protect your business, your banking relationship, and your long-term success.

LEARN MORE

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100th Anniversary Stories
When Banking Feels Personal Again: John Simmons & St. Barnabas’ Experience with Surety Bank | Community Profile

For John Simmons, banking with Surety has always been about relationships.

A longtime customer of Surety Bank, John has seen firsthand what it looks like when a financial institution truly shows up for its community. As a husband of 38 years, a father of four daughters, and a Director at St. Barnabas Episcopal School, his perspective is grounded in both family and service.

When the school began to grow, a new challenge emerged. They had run out of space to fit all of the students. Expansion wasn’t just a nice-to-have, it was necessary to continue serving students and families well. Like many organizations in that position, they explored their options carefully.

Then came a call that changed everything.

The president of Surety Bank reached out directly, bringing together key stakeholders in a conversation focused on one thing: how to help. What followed was more than a transaction, it was a collaborative effort. The bank stepped in not just with financial guidance, but with a clear commitment to walk alongside the school’s leadership every step of the way.

That experience left a lasting impression on John.

In his words, Surety Bank was “there 120%,” offering direction, support, and reassurance during a critical moment. But what stood out most was how they got there.

“They treat people as people,” John explains. “They actually answer the phone. They communicate.”

In an era where many businesses prioritize efficiency over connection, that kind of responsiveness feels increasingly rare. Yet for Surety Bank, it’s part of their DNA.

John’s story is a reminder that the best banking relationships aren’t built on numbers alone. They’re built on trust, accessibility, and a genuine investment in the people they serve.

This is how Surety Bank has always done it and it’s how we will always do it!

LEARN MORE

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MSB
What MSB Owners Need to Know About Oversight and Accountability

Not all risks come from outside your business.

In many cases, the most significant issues we see develop internally through gaps in oversight, compliance, and day-to-day controls.

As we move further into the year, we want to focus on a key principle that helps prevent these issues:

Trust your team, but verify your operations.

A Real-Life Scenario

Consider the following scenario:

An MSB owner invested in the business but was not involved in day-to-day operations. Instead, they trusted a close family member to manage the store and handle compliance responsibilities.

At first, everything appeared to be running smoothly.

Over time, however, several issues developed:

  • Internal controls were not consistently followed
  • Compliance requirements were not being properly maintained
  • Financial activity was not being reviewed regularly by the owner

Eventually, the situation escalated.

The individual managing the business began making unauthorized financial decisions. There were compliance gaps that had gone unnoticed. Required oversight was missing. By the time the issues surfaced, the impact included:

  • Significant financial loss
  • Compliance violations
  • Regulatory action and fines
  • Operational disruption to the business

The most important takeaway is this:

The responsibility did not fall on the person running the store. It fell on the owner.

Owner Responsibility Does Not Transfer

Even if you assign:

  • A compliance officer
  • A store manager
  • A trusted employee or family member

The responsibility for compliance, licensing, and operations remains with the owner.

Regulators evaluate the licensed entity and the owner behind it, not just the individual performing the work.

A “hands-off” approach can create risk if there is no system in place to verify what is happening inside the business.

Why Internal Issues Are Often Missed

Internal issues are not always obvious.

Unlike external fraud, which is often a single event, internal breakdowns can develop gradually:

  • Processes are skipped
  • Reviews are not completed
  • Reports are not analyzed
  • Controls become informal instead of structured

Because the business appears to be operating normally, these issues can go unnoticed until they become serious.

The Role of Oversight

Oversight does not mean mistrust. It means protection.

Strong MSB operations include:

  • Clear internal controls
  • Active AML and BSA program enforcement
  • Regular review of financial activity
  • Independent verification of processes

Owners do not need to manage every transaction, but they do need visibility into how the business is operating.

Practical Ways to Protect Your Business

To reduce risk and strengthen your operation, consider:

  • Reviewing account activity and reports on a regular basis
  • Performing periodic spot checks of transactions and documentation
  • Confirming that compliance procedures are being followed consistently
  • Ensuring licenses and required documents are current
  • Evaluating the quality of your independent reviews
  • Asking questions when something does not look right

Even small, consistent actions can help identify issues early.

Do Not Rely on One Layer of Protection

Independent reviews, compliance officers, and internal staff all play important roles.

However, none of these replace owner oversight.

If any one layer fails, there should be another layer in place to identify and correct the issue.

Final Thought

Trust is important in any business. But in an MSB environment, trust must be supported by structure, process, and verification.

A strong system protects:

  • Your business
  • Your customers
  • Your license
  • Your long-term success

We’re Here to Help

If you have questions about internal controls, compliance expectations, or how to strengthen oversight in your business, our team is available to support you.

LEARN MORE

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Community
Surety Bank Supports DeLand’s Night to Shine

For nearly 100 years, Surety Bank has believed a strong community is built through more than financial services. It's built through people showing up for one another. Since the bank’s early days, Surety has been committed to investing time, support and resources into the places where its customers live and work. That community-first mindset is why Surety was proud to support DeLand’s annual Night to Shine, hosted by Stetson Baptist Church.

History of Night to Shine

Night to Shine is a prom for people with special needs that was created to give honored guests, known as VIPs, a night filled with joy, dignity and belonging. Organizers said this year’s event welcomed about 150 VIPs and was made possible by roughly 400 volunteers who served, cheered and helped make the night unforgettable.

Night to Shine began in 2015 through the Tim Tebow Foundation and has grown into a global initiative hosted by local churches. The foundation says Night to Shine now takes place in all 50 states and in 76 countries, with 979 host churches participating during the 2026 season. In DeLand, the event brought families, volunteers and community partners together around a simple idea: everyone deserves to be celebrated.

A Night Designed to Celebrate VIPs

From the first greeting to the final song, Night to Shine is built around creating a prom experience that feels personal and uplifting. In DeLand, VIPs enjoyed a full evening of fun, including:

  • Dance floor: Music, lights and plenty of space to celebrate with friends and volunteers.
  • Karaoke: A chance to grab the mic and hear the room erupt with encouragement.
  • Caricatures: Artists creating keepsakes that captured the spirit of the night.
  • Corvette rides: A special highlight for VIPs who wanted a memorable ride and a big moment.
  • Paparazzi moments: Photos and red-carpet energy that helped VIPs feel like the stars they are.

Each part of the evening reinforced the same message: VIPs are seen, valued and welcomed.

Why Night to Shine Matters in DeLand

People with special needs and their families can too often feel overlooked, simply because many social spaces are not designed with accessibility and inclusion in mind. Night to Shine helps change that by creating an environment where belonging is intentional and celebration is the point. It’s also meaningful for caregivers, who get to watch their loved one experience a community that shows up with kindness and care.

Surety Bank is grateful to support events like Night to Shine because strong communities are built through relationships, service and shared responsibility. The turnout in DeLand reflected that spirit, with volunteers giving their time and local partners helping to make every detail count.

Thank You to the VIPs, Families and Volunteers

To the VIPs who brought the joy, the families who trusted the community with this special night, and the volunteers who made it happen, thank you. Night to Shine is one evening on the calendar, but the impact reaches much further, reminding DeLand what it looks like to celebrate every person with dignity and love.

LEARN MORE

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MSB, Business Banking, Online Banking
How to Avoid Check Fraud and Detect Altered Checks

Tax season often brings an increase in check fraud activity, and we are currently seeing specific patterns in several markets. Based on recent site visits and bankwide data, fraud trends include altered checks, fraudulent IDs, and tax refund schemes that can put MSBs at risk.

Fraud Trends We Are Seeing Now

Fraud is not evenly distributed across the country. Recent analysis shows:

  • South Florida, Georgia, Pennsylvania, New Jersey: Higher occurrences of altered checks and double presentment
  • Georgia: More fraudulent IDs
  • Northeast Area: Spike in large tax refund checks for young individuals
  • East Coast overall: Higher volume of fraud compared to other regions

Understanding these localized trends can help MSBs tailor their detection and prevention efforts based on where their business operates.

Why Fraud Is Often Missed

In busy MSB settings, tellers and staff are under pressure to process customers quickly. Fast service is important, but it should not come at the expense of proper verification. Common reasons fraud is missed include:

  • Rushing to clear lines during peak hours
  • Focusing only on the ID and not the instrument
  • Not using available tools like UV lights or thorough inspection methods

Slowing down when suspicious signals appear can prevent significant losses later.

Detecting Chemical Alterations with Simple Tools

One of the most common fraud methods involves chemical alteration (sometimes called “check washing”), where fraudsters remove original payee information and rewrite it.

How to detect it:

  • Use a UV light, which costs less than $30 and is easy to use
  • Hold the check under UV light before acceptance
  • Look for:
    • Security features glowing consistently
    • Areas where ink or paper looks inconsistent
    • Borders or payee lines that glow differently from the rest of the check

Areas that glow differently often indicate tampering.

Even if the check has no embedded security feature, an altered area will reflect under UV light in a way that the original paper will not.

Behavioral Red Flags to Watch

Fraud prevention is not only about tools. People exhibit behavior that often signals something is wrong:

Watch for customers who:

  • Avoid eye contact
  • Provide unsolicited, overly friendly explanations
  • Insist on hurrying rushing you
  • Offer reasons that don’t make sense for the transaction

These behaviors, when combined with instrument anomalies, are stronger indicators of fraud.

Money Mule and Tax Refund Schemes

In some cases, the check is real, but the transaction context is not. A common example seen in Michigan:

  • Younger individuals cashing unusually large tax refunds
  • Refund amounts not aligned with typical income for that age group
  • Refunds linked to questionable tax preparers

These patterns suggest the check itself may be authentic, but the process that generated it was fraudulent. The bank will eventually identify the issue, but MSBs may face loss if the check is returned.

Why Slowing Down Protects Your Business

Slowing down and asking questions helps you protect your business from future exposure.

It’s natural to want to avoid losing a small fee by turning away a suspicious check. However, a rushed decision can expose your business to a much higher loss when a check is returned or fails later verification.

Protecting your business means:

  • Slowing down when something doesn’t feel right
  • Asking more questions
  • Using tools like UV light to confirm legitimacy
  • Prioritizing compliance over short-term fee income

When fraud is prevented at the front line, the long-term financial health of your business is protected.

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Community
Skydive DeLand: A Legacy of Innovation, Community, and Global Impact

For many residents of DeLand, the airport on the north side of town feels like a world of its own. Planes climb into the sky daily. Parachutes bloom overhead. Visitors arrive from across the globe. What many may not realize is that Skydive DeLand is not only a local attraction. It is one of the most influential skydiving centers in the world.

A History That Shaped the Sport

Skydive DeLand began operations in 1982, taking over a location that had already seen continuous skydiving activity since 1958. From its earliest days, the company was led by competitors at the highest level of the sport. Both founders were National Champions, and one went on to achieve the title of World Champion in four-person team competition.

That competitive ambition changed the sport.

To pursue world-class performance, the founders enhanced the way teams trained. They invested in aircraft, facilities, personnel, and infrastructure that allowed for intensive, structured team training. At the time, very few drop zones operated seven days a week. Skydive DeLand quickly became a full-time operation, open year-round.

As teams discovered the level of support and consistency available in DeLand, they began traveling here from all over the world. What started as a training philosophy became a global destination.

For many years, Skydive DeLand was recognized as the most active skydiving center in the world.

Building the Skydiving Capital of the World

As training programs expanded, so did the industry surrounding them. Equipment manufacturers began relocating to DeLand in order to test new parachute designs and innovations in real-world conditions.

Today, more than 20 skydiving-related companies operate in the DeLand area. Together, they form the largest parachute equipment manufacturing cluster in the world. Skydive DeLand serves as the anchor for that ecosystem.

Manufacturers rely on the consistent jump activity to test new canopies and equipment designs. Similar to how automotive companies rely on test tracks, skydiving manufacturers rely on active drop zones.

The result is that DeLand became known internationally as the Skydiving Capital of the World. Travelers from Europe, South America, and across the United States continue to visit year after year, particularly during the late winter and spring seasons when weather conditions are ideal.

A Community Within a Community

Beyond competitions and equipment development, Skydive DeLand has fostered a global community.

Teams train here for weeks or months at a time. Large events have attracted hundreds of participants. National championships have been hosted here. At any given time, visitors may be staying in local hotels, RVs, or short-term rentals.

That international presence supports tourism, local hospitality, and small businesses throughout DeLand. A past industry census estimated more than 600 jobs connected directly or indirectly to the skydiving and equipment manufacturing sector.

During economic downturns, when other industries struggled, Skydive DeLand remained strong. Tandem jumps and recreational experiences continued to attract visitors. Equipment manufacturing remained active. That stability helped support the broader local economy during difficult periods.

The people who make up the skydiving community are also deeply engaged locally. Many longtime jumpers and industry professionals participate in other civic and community activities throughout DeLand. For those who retire from jumping, many continue to invest their energy in the town they have come to call home.

The Loss of a Founder

In 2025, the Skydive DeLand community experienced a devastating loss.

Bob Hallett, one of the two original founders and the majority shareholder of the company, passed away unexpectedly following a traffic accident on his way to work. He had been with the company since its early days and remained actively involved in daily operations.

Bob was not only a business leader but a central figure in the skydiving community. His vision and commitment helped shape Skydive DeLand into the global leader it became. His passing deeply affected employees, jumpers, manufacturers, and longtime friends across the industry.

For a company that has operated as both a workplace and a close-knit community, the loss was profound. Yet the legacy he helped build continues in the culture, the operations, and the global impact of the organization.

A Global Reputation With Local Roots

One story reflects just how far Skydive DeLand’s reach extends. A local Stetson professor once attended a conference in Taiwan and turned on the television in his hotel room. There was a feature about Skydive DeLand. He returned home surprised to discover that an internationally recognized skydiving center operated just minutes from where he lived.

That story captures something unique about Skydive DeLand. It has put DeLand on the world map, even if some residents are not fully aware of what happens at the airport each day.

Visitors are welcome to observe jumps from the viewing areas or enjoy the adjacent restaurant deck. Others choose to experience a tandem jump. Some begin lifelong careers in the sport. Whether someone comes to watch or to participate, Skydive DeLand remains open and active every day.

For more information, visit SkyDiveDeLand.com to learn about tandem experiences, training programs, and upcoming events.

Skydive DeLand is more than a drop zone. It is a global training center, an innovation hub, and a long-standing contributor to the DeLand community. Its history reflects ambition, resilience, and a deep commitment to both sport and town.

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MSB
Independent Reviews Are Not Just a Check-the-Box Requirement

For many Money Services Businesses (MSBs), the independent review is viewed as another annual compliance requirement to complete, submit to the bank, and move on from until next year.

In reality, the independent review is one of the most important tools available to help identify weaknesses in your compliance program before they become larger problems. 

A completed review alone is not enough. 

What matters is what happens after the review is finished.

Independent testing is one of the pillars of an effective BSA/AML compliance program. Its purpose is not simply to satisfy a requirement. A quality review evaluates the strength of your compliance program, identifies weaknesses or gaps, reviews transaction monitoring procedures, and provides recommendations to improve controls and reduce risk.

A strong independent review gives MSB owners visibility into areas that may need attention before regulators or financial institutions identify them first.

The Most Common Mistake MSBs Make

One of the biggest issues we see is MSBs treating the independent review as a one-time document instead of an operational tool.

In many cases, findings are not addressed, recommendations are delayed, or the same deficiencies continue appearing year after year. This creates a pattern that signals a lack of improvement and a lack of attention to compliance responsibilities.

When the same issues continue repeating, risk increases significantly.

Why Repeated Findings Matter

Repeated deficiencies can eventually lead to increased monitoring requirements, additional compliance costs, regulatory scrutiny, or even fines and penalties. In more serious situations, it can also create risk for the MSB’s banking relationship or licensing status.

In some cases, businesses may be required to undergo additional compliance monitoring by an outside third party until improvements are made.

The goal is not to create an additional burden, but instead to identify and correct issues before they become larger operational or regulatory problems.

Common Areas Where Issues Are Found

Independent reviews frequently identify issues involving:

  • Late or incomplete CTR filings
  • Weak transaction monitoring practices
  • Missing or outdated documentation
  • Gaps in Customer Due Diligence (CDD) procedures
  • Inconsistent internal processes or controls

While some of these may seem minor individually, repeated deficiencies over time can create significant compliance concerns if they are not corrected.

Improvement Matters More Than Perfection

No compliance program is perfect. What matters most is identifying issues, addressing them promptly, and demonstrating improvement over time.

An independent review should show progress year after year. If the same findings continue appearing without corrective action, regulators and financial institutions may view that as a lack of commitment to compliance obligations.

Although the independent review report is a bank-required document, MSBs are required to undergo independent testing because the Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) requires every MSB to maintain an effective Anti-Money Laundering (AML) program, and independent testing is one of the core required elements of that program.

Timing and Consistency Matter

While FinCEN requires independent testing to be conducted periodically, Surety Bank’s policy requires independent testing to be completed every 12 months for MSB customers.

Completing reviews consistently and addressing findings in a timely manner helps maintain a stronger and more effective compliance program throughout the year.

Why This Matters

Compliance is not built once a year during an independent testing. It is built through consistent attention to processes, documentation, monitoring, and corrective action throughout the year.

The independent testing is designed to help identify weaknesses before they create larger operational or regulatory problems. Using it properly can help protect your business, your banking relationship, and your long-term success.

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100th Anniversary Stories
When Banking Feels Personal Again: John Simmons & St. Barnabas’ Experience with Surety Bank | Community Profile

For John Simmons, banking with Surety has always been about relationships.

A longtime customer of Surety Bank, John has seen firsthand what it looks like when a financial institution truly shows up for its community. As a husband of 38 years, a father of four daughters, and a Director at St. Barnabas Episcopal School, his perspective is grounded in both family and service.

When the school began to grow, a new challenge emerged. They had run out of space to fit all of the students. Expansion wasn’t just a nice-to-have, it was necessary to continue serving students and families well. Like many organizations in that position, they explored their options carefully.

Then came a call that changed everything.

The president of Surety Bank reached out directly, bringing together key stakeholders in a conversation focused on one thing: how to help. What followed was more than a transaction, it was a collaborative effort. The bank stepped in not just with financial guidance, but with a clear commitment to walk alongside the school’s leadership every step of the way.

That experience left a lasting impression on John.

In his words, Surety Bank was “there 120%,” offering direction, support, and reassurance during a critical moment. But what stood out most was how they got there.

“They treat people as people,” John explains. “They actually answer the phone. They communicate.”

In an era where many businesses prioritize efficiency over connection, that kind of responsiveness feels increasingly rare. Yet for Surety Bank, it’s part of their DNA.

John’s story is a reminder that the best banking relationships aren’t built on numbers alone. They’re built on trust, accessibility, and a genuine investment in the people they serve.

This is how Surety Bank has always done it and it’s how we will always do it!

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MSB
What MSB Owners Need to Know About Oversight and Accountability

Not all risks come from outside your business.

In many cases, the most significant issues we see develop internally through gaps in oversight, compliance, and day-to-day controls.

As we move further into the year, we want to focus on a key principle that helps prevent these issues:

Trust your team, but verify your operations.

A Real-Life Scenario

Consider the following scenario:

An MSB owner invested in the business but was not involved in day-to-day operations. Instead, they trusted a close family member to manage the store and handle compliance responsibilities.

At first, everything appeared to be running smoothly.

Over time, however, several issues developed:

  • Internal controls were not consistently followed
  • Compliance requirements were not being properly maintained
  • Financial activity was not being reviewed regularly by the owner

Eventually, the situation escalated.

The individual managing the business began making unauthorized financial decisions. There were compliance gaps that had gone unnoticed. Required oversight was missing. By the time the issues surfaced, the impact included:

  • Significant financial loss
  • Compliance violations
  • Regulatory action and fines
  • Operational disruption to the business

The most important takeaway is this:

The responsibility did not fall on the person running the store. It fell on the owner.

Owner Responsibility Does Not Transfer

Even if you assign:

  • A compliance officer
  • A store manager
  • A trusted employee or family member

The responsibility for compliance, licensing, and operations remains with the owner.

Regulators evaluate the licensed entity and the owner behind it, not just the individual performing the work.

A “hands-off” approach can create risk if there is no system in place to verify what is happening inside the business.

Why Internal Issues Are Often Missed

Internal issues are not always obvious.

Unlike external fraud, which is often a single event, internal breakdowns can develop gradually:

  • Processes are skipped
  • Reviews are not completed
  • Reports are not analyzed
  • Controls become informal instead of structured

Because the business appears to be operating normally, these issues can go unnoticed until they become serious.

The Role of Oversight

Oversight does not mean mistrust. It means protection.

Strong MSB operations include:

  • Clear internal controls
  • Active AML and BSA program enforcement
  • Regular review of financial activity
  • Independent verification of processes

Owners do not need to manage every transaction, but they do need visibility into how the business is operating.

Practical Ways to Protect Your Business

To reduce risk and strengthen your operation, consider:

  • Reviewing account activity and reports on a regular basis
  • Performing periodic spot checks of transactions and documentation
  • Confirming that compliance procedures are being followed consistently
  • Ensuring licenses and required documents are current
  • Evaluating the quality of your independent reviews
  • Asking questions when something does not look right

Even small, consistent actions can help identify issues early.

Do Not Rely on One Layer of Protection

Independent reviews, compliance officers, and internal staff all play important roles.

However, none of these replace owner oversight.

If any one layer fails, there should be another layer in place to identify and correct the issue.

Final Thought

Trust is important in any business. But in an MSB environment, trust must be supported by structure, process, and verification.

A strong system protects:

  • Your business
  • Your customers
  • Your license
  • Your long-term success

We’re Here to Help

If you have questions about internal controls, compliance expectations, or how to strengthen oversight in your business, our team is available to support you.

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Community
Surety Bank Supports DeLand’s Night to Shine

For nearly 100 years, Surety Bank has believed a strong community is built through more than financial services. It's built through people showing up for one another. Since the bank’s early days, Surety has been committed to investing time, support and resources into the places where its customers live and work. That community-first mindset is why Surety was proud to support DeLand’s annual Night to Shine, hosted by Stetson Baptist Church.

History of Night to Shine

Night to Shine is a prom for people with special needs that was created to give honored guests, known as VIPs, a night filled with joy, dignity and belonging. Organizers said this year’s event welcomed about 150 VIPs and was made possible by roughly 400 volunteers who served, cheered and helped make the night unforgettable.

Night to Shine began in 2015 through the Tim Tebow Foundation and has grown into a global initiative hosted by local churches. The foundation says Night to Shine now takes place in all 50 states and in 76 countries, with 979 host churches participating during the 2026 season. In DeLand, the event brought families, volunteers and community partners together around a simple idea: everyone deserves to be celebrated.

A Night Designed to Celebrate VIPs

From the first greeting to the final song, Night to Shine is built around creating a prom experience that feels personal and uplifting. In DeLand, VIPs enjoyed a full evening of fun, including:

  • Dance floor: Music, lights and plenty of space to celebrate with friends and volunteers.
  • Karaoke: A chance to grab the mic and hear the room erupt with encouragement.
  • Caricatures: Artists creating keepsakes that captured the spirit of the night.
  • Corvette rides: A special highlight for VIPs who wanted a memorable ride and a big moment.
  • Paparazzi moments: Photos and red-carpet energy that helped VIPs feel like the stars they are.

Each part of the evening reinforced the same message: VIPs are seen, valued and welcomed.

Why Night to Shine Matters in DeLand

People with special needs and their families can too often feel overlooked, simply because many social spaces are not designed with accessibility and inclusion in mind. Night to Shine helps change that by creating an environment where belonging is intentional and celebration is the point. It’s also meaningful for caregivers, who get to watch their loved one experience a community that shows up with kindness and care.

Surety Bank is grateful to support events like Night to Shine because strong communities are built through relationships, service and shared responsibility. The turnout in DeLand reflected that spirit, with volunteers giving their time and local partners helping to make every detail count.

Thank You to the VIPs, Families and Volunteers

To the VIPs who brought the joy, the families who trusted the community with this special night, and the volunteers who made it happen, thank you. Night to Shine is one evening on the calendar, but the impact reaches much further, reminding DeLand what it looks like to celebrate every person with dignity and love.

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MSB, Business Banking, Online Banking
How to Avoid Check Fraud and Detect Altered Checks

Tax season often brings an increase in check fraud activity, and we are currently seeing specific patterns in several markets. Based on recent site visits and bankwide data, fraud trends include altered checks, fraudulent IDs, and tax refund schemes that can put MSBs at risk.

Fraud Trends We Are Seeing Now

Fraud is not evenly distributed across the country. Recent analysis shows:

  • South Florida, Georgia, Pennsylvania, New Jersey: Higher occurrences of altered checks and double presentment
  • Georgia: More fraudulent IDs
  • Northeast Area: Spike in large tax refund checks for young individuals
  • East Coast overall: Higher volume of fraud compared to other regions

Understanding these localized trends can help MSBs tailor their detection and prevention efforts based on where their business operates.

Why Fraud Is Often Missed

In busy MSB settings, tellers and staff are under pressure to process customers quickly. Fast service is important, but it should not come at the expense of proper verification. Common reasons fraud is missed include:

  • Rushing to clear lines during peak hours
  • Focusing only on the ID and not the instrument
  • Not using available tools like UV lights or thorough inspection methods

Slowing down when suspicious signals appear can prevent significant losses later.

Detecting Chemical Alterations with Simple Tools

One of the most common fraud methods involves chemical alteration (sometimes called “check washing”), where fraudsters remove original payee information and rewrite it.

How to detect it:

  • Use a UV light, which costs less than $30 and is easy to use
  • Hold the check under UV light before acceptance
  • Look for:
    • Security features glowing consistently
    • Areas where ink or paper looks inconsistent
    • Borders or payee lines that glow differently from the rest of the check

Areas that glow differently often indicate tampering.

Even if the check has no embedded security feature, an altered area will reflect under UV light in a way that the original paper will not.

Behavioral Red Flags to Watch

Fraud prevention is not only about tools. People exhibit behavior that often signals something is wrong:

Watch for customers who:

  • Avoid eye contact
  • Provide unsolicited, overly friendly explanations
  • Insist on hurrying rushing you
  • Offer reasons that don’t make sense for the transaction

These behaviors, when combined with instrument anomalies, are stronger indicators of fraud.

Money Mule and Tax Refund Schemes

In some cases, the check is real, but the transaction context is not. A common example seen in Michigan:

  • Younger individuals cashing unusually large tax refunds
  • Refund amounts not aligned with typical income for that age group
  • Refunds linked to questionable tax preparers

These patterns suggest the check itself may be authentic, but the process that generated it was fraudulent. The bank will eventually identify the issue, but MSBs may face loss if the check is returned.

Why Slowing Down Protects Your Business

Slowing down and asking questions helps you protect your business from future exposure.

It’s natural to want to avoid losing a small fee by turning away a suspicious check. However, a rushed decision can expose your business to a much higher loss when a check is returned or fails later verification.

Protecting your business means:

  • Slowing down when something doesn’t feel right
  • Asking more questions
  • Using tools like UV light to confirm legitimacy
  • Prioritizing compliance over short-term fee income

When fraud is prevented at the front line, the long-term financial health of your business is protected.

LEARN MORE

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Community
Skydive DeLand: A Legacy of Innovation, Community, and Global Impact

For many residents of DeLand, the airport on the north side of town feels like a world of its own. Planes climb into the sky daily. Parachutes bloom overhead. Visitors arrive from across the globe. What many may not realize is that Skydive DeLand is not only a local attraction. It is one of the most influential skydiving centers in the world.

A History That Shaped the Sport

Skydive DeLand began operations in 1982, taking over a location that had already seen continuous skydiving activity since 1958. From its earliest days, the company was led by competitors at the highest level of the sport. Both founders were National Champions, and one went on to achieve the title of World Champion in four-person team competition.

That competitive ambition changed the sport.

To pursue world-class performance, the founders enhanced the way teams trained. They invested in aircraft, facilities, personnel, and infrastructure that allowed for intensive, structured team training. At the time, very few drop zones operated seven days a week. Skydive DeLand quickly became a full-time operation, open year-round.

As teams discovered the level of support and consistency available in DeLand, they began traveling here from all over the world. What started as a training philosophy became a global destination.

For many years, Skydive DeLand was recognized as the most active skydiving center in the world.

Building the Skydiving Capital of the World

As training programs expanded, so did the industry surrounding them. Equipment manufacturers began relocating to DeLand in order to test new parachute designs and innovations in real-world conditions.

Today, more than 20 skydiving-related companies operate in the DeLand area. Together, they form the largest parachute equipment manufacturing cluster in the world. Skydive DeLand serves as the anchor for that ecosystem.

Manufacturers rely on the consistent jump activity to test new canopies and equipment designs. Similar to how automotive companies rely on test tracks, skydiving manufacturers rely on active drop zones.

The result is that DeLand became known internationally as the Skydiving Capital of the World. Travelers from Europe, South America, and across the United States continue to visit year after year, particularly during the late winter and spring seasons when weather conditions are ideal.

A Community Within a Community

Beyond competitions and equipment development, Skydive DeLand has fostered a global community.

Teams train here for weeks or months at a time. Large events have attracted hundreds of participants. National championships have been hosted here. At any given time, visitors may be staying in local hotels, RVs, or short-term rentals.

That international presence supports tourism, local hospitality, and small businesses throughout DeLand. A past industry census estimated more than 600 jobs connected directly or indirectly to the skydiving and equipment manufacturing sector.

During economic downturns, when other industries struggled, Skydive DeLand remained strong. Tandem jumps and recreational experiences continued to attract visitors. Equipment manufacturing remained active. That stability helped support the broader local economy during difficult periods.

The people who make up the skydiving community are also deeply engaged locally. Many longtime jumpers and industry professionals participate in other civic and community activities throughout DeLand. For those who retire from jumping, many continue to invest their energy in the town they have come to call home.

The Loss of a Founder

In 2025, the Skydive DeLand community experienced a devastating loss.

Bob Hallett, one of the two original founders and the majority shareholder of the company, passed away unexpectedly following a traffic accident on his way to work. He had been with the company since its early days and remained actively involved in daily operations.

Bob was not only a business leader but a central figure in the skydiving community. His vision and commitment helped shape Skydive DeLand into the global leader it became. His passing deeply affected employees, jumpers, manufacturers, and longtime friends across the industry.

For a company that has operated as both a workplace and a close-knit community, the loss was profound. Yet the legacy he helped build continues in the culture, the operations, and the global impact of the organization.

A Global Reputation With Local Roots

One story reflects just how far Skydive DeLand’s reach extends. A local Stetson professor once attended a conference in Taiwan and turned on the television in his hotel room. There was a feature about Skydive DeLand. He returned home surprised to discover that an internationally recognized skydiving center operated just minutes from where he lived.

That story captures something unique about Skydive DeLand. It has put DeLand on the world map, even if some residents are not fully aware of what happens at the airport each day.

Visitors are welcome to observe jumps from the viewing areas or enjoy the adjacent restaurant deck. Others choose to experience a tandem jump. Some begin lifelong careers in the sport. Whether someone comes to watch or to participate, Skydive DeLand remains open and active every day.

For more information, visit SkyDiveDeLand.com to learn about tandem experiences, training programs, and upcoming events.

Skydive DeLand is more than a drop zone. It is a global training center, an innovation hub, and a long-standing contributor to the DeLand community. Its history reflects ambition, resilience, and a deep commitment to both sport and town.

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Community
From Family Dream to Community Staple: The Story of Chef Nora and Golden Meals

In the heart of downtown, amidst the vibrant pulse of local eateries and community events, there’s a name that keeps coming up: Chef Nora. If you’ve dined at De La Vega, you’ve likely experienced her artistry on a plate. But beyond the signature flavors and culinary finesse, there's a deeper, richer story — one of family, perseverance, and community love. And now, with her latest venture, Golden Meals, Chef Nora is cooking up something even more personal.

From New Mexico to New Beginnings

Chef Nora’s journey into the restaurant world began two decades ago when she and her family — her parents, brother, and sister — moved from New Mexico to Florida. They left behind everything familiar on the word of a family friend who saw promise in a vacant restaurant spot downtown.

With only a bit of restaurant experience between them, they leapt into entrepreneurship. “It wasn’t just a job,” Nora recalls. “I had already worked in restaurants. I realized what I really wanted was to have my own.” The family rallied around her dream — a move that not only shaped their livelihoods but also laid the groundwork for something bigger than any one of them could have imagined.

The Birth and Evolution of De La Vega

Their first venture was De La Vega — a name that not only carried their family heritage but symbolized their growing identity in the community. “We started with Tex-Mex,” Nora explained, “but quickly realized there were too many of those already. So we pivoted to something unique: Latin fusion with a tapas concept.”

It was a family effort from the start. Nora spearheaded the menu, crafting recipes with creativity and care, while her brother took on the general manager role. “It was our school,” she says. “Everything we’ve learned in the past 20 years, we learned by doing.”

Today, De La Vega is more than a restaurant — it’s a beloved local fixture. With loyal customers, an ever-evolving menu, and a consistent focus on flavor, it’s the kind of place that gets recommended again and again.

Honoring Her Father: The Spark Behind Golden Meals

The concept for Golden Meals was born not in a commercial kitchen, but in Nora’s own home. “My dad was living in the senior apartments, and I used to make meals for him — healthy, ready to eat, so he didn’t have to cook.” After he passed away three years ago, Nora found herself talking to his neighbors — many of whom had similar needs. The idea began to take shape: a meal service designed to support seniors, promote wellness, and most importantly, taste amazing.

But what started as a personal project in memory of her father has grown into something with far wider impact.

Golden Meals: Nourishment for All

While initially conceived as a service for seniors, Golden Meals quickly found a broader audience. “Everyone needs healthy food — busy moms, students, professionals,” Nora notes. “We realized this wasn’t just about one group. It’s for anyone who wants quick, affordable, and nutritious meals.”

When a deli inside a local natural market became available, the opportunity felt serendipitous. “Everything was ready — the kitchen, the space. We just had to bring the concept and the heart.”

Golden Meals officially opened its doors four months ago, operating weekdays from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. It functions as both a grab-and-go cafe and a meal delivery service, offering flexible access for people with packed schedules or limited mobility. And yes — delivery is currently free.

A Menu Without Borders

Unlike De La Vega’s Latin fusion focus, Golden Meals is all about clean, fresh ingredients and variety. “We’re not tied to any one cuisine here. We can offer pasta, Asian dishes, vegan options — whatever inspires us and serves our community.”

Everything is made in-house, from scratch. Think: vibrant green beans sautéed with garlic and olive oil, sweet potatoes roasted to perfection, and macaroni salad that’s light but packed with flavor. Sodium and sugar are kept low; flavor is boosted with herbs and spices, not additives.

“We don’t want ‘healthy’ to mean boring,” Nora laughs. “You can eat well and still love every bite.”

The Name That Says It All

Why the name Golden Meals? It’s a tribute to Nora’s father and the community he was part of. “It started with the idea of serving those in their golden years,” she says. “But now it means meals that are golden in quality, golden in purpose. Meals that make you feel good.”

The Challenges That Forged Her Path

Nora doesn’t shy away from talking about the hurdles. “The recession in 2008 hit us hard,” she remembers. “We had to get creative - package deals, specials, anything to bring people in.” Then came the hurricanes, five in their first year in Florida. And of course, COVID lockdown.

“That was one of the toughest. We had no staff. It was just me, my brother, my nephew, my niece. We were cooking, cleaning, delivering — everything. But we made it. That’s what matters.”

For other small business owners, she offers a simple but powerful reminder: “You just keep going. You pivot, you adapt, you lean on your family and your community. And you never lose sight of why you started.”

Where to Find Golden Meals

📍 Located inside the Natural Market
🕚 Open Monday–Friday, 11 AM to 3 PM
📱 Order online or through the Golden Meals app
🚚 Free delivery available for local orders

Whether you're a parent looking for healthier alternatives, a student in need of quick fuel, or a senior seeking convenient meals that actually taste good — Golden Meals has something on the menu for you.

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Business Expansion, Business Banking
How Your Company Culture Should Drive Employee Benefits: A Lesson from Manufacturing

A Manufacturing Story: The Right Benefits for the Right Team

At East Coast Precision, a mid-sized manufacturing company in Florida, business was booming. Their team of 75 employees worked hard producing high-quality aerospace components, and their reputation for precision and reliability was unmatched. But as the company grew, its leadership team—Mark, the founder, and Sarah, the operations manager—realized their employee benefits needed a rethink.

The question wasn’t just about what benefits to offer, but why.

East Coast Precision had a unique culture. Their employees valued stability, but they also needed flexibility. Many had families, some were nearing retirement, and a few had been with the company since its early days. Their competitor across town shut down for two weeks every December, giving employees a built-in break. But Mark and Sarah knew that wouldn’t work for them—their production schedule relied on steady output, and some employees preferred to spread their vacation days throughout the year.

Then came the tougher decisions: PTO policies, sick days, and financial benefits. Some employees wanted a 401(k), but others, like newer hires fresh out of trade school, were more concerned about weekly take-home pay than long-term savings. The leadership team had to balance what was best for employees with what kept the business strong.

In the end, they set clear, fair policies:

  • A standard PTO structure that gave employees predictability while allowing some flexibility for emergencies.
  • A 401(k) plan with a company match—valuable for those who wanted it, but not the only benefit available.
  • A hard rule on consistency, but with room for exceptions. When a longtime employee, Miguel, was diagnosed with cancer, they made it clear that his extended time off was an exception, communicated transparently to the rest of the team.

The result? Employees felt valued, turnover dropped, and the company’s production remained steady.

Your Culture, Your Benefits

This lesson applies beyond manufacturing. Whether you run a law firm, a retail store, or a tech startup, the benefits you offer should reflect your company’s values and mission.

  • Set a Clear Standard: Employees need to know what to expect. Whether it’s vacation time, sick leave, or parental leave, consistency creates trust.
  • Make Room for Exceptions When It Matters: While consistency is key, life doesn’t always follow a rulebook. If an employee is battling cancer or facing another major life challenge, it’s okay to make exceptions—just be clear about why.
  • Choose Benefits That Fit Your Team: A 401(k) might be a great fit for a company focused on long-term stability, but maybe a student loan assistance program makes more sense for a younger workforce. There’s no one-size-fits-all approach.
  • Keep Employees Connected to the Mission: Benefits shouldn’t be just another HR checkbox. They should reinforce what your company stands for. If you value work-life balance, your time-off policy should reflect that. If teamwork is a core value, benefits that encourage collaboration—like company-wide retreats or group health programs—might be a better fit.

Further Insight: Lessons from Expandable Video Series

For a deeper dive into how company culture and leadership impact employee benefits, check out this episode of The Expandable video series:
▶️ watch here

This video highlights the importance of strong leadership in shaping workplace culture, ensuring that employees are supported while keeping the organization’s mission at the forefront. The same principles apply when designing benefits—leaders must make choices that align with their company’s values while balancing business needs.

Finding the Right Balance

Ultimately, employee benefits should be a reflection of your company’s identity. They should serve your employees while keeping the business strong and able to serve its customers. Whether that means closing for two weeks each year or offering flexible PTO, the key is to make intentional choices—ones that align with your mission and show employees that they matter.

At Surety Bank, we understand that businesses thrive when they build strong relationships—both with their customers and their teams. When you design benefits that truly fit your company culture, you create a workplace where employees feel valued, engaged, and ready to do their best work.

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Business Expansion, Business Banking
Forget Growth for Growth’s Sake: Scale Your Company with Purpose

Forget Growth for Growth’s Sake. Scale Your Company With Purpose! 

Every business owner dreams of growth—the big contracts, the expanding team, the larger facility. Growth is exciting, but what happens when it outpaces your ability to sustain it? For small to mid-sized business owners, the challenge isn’t just getting bigger—it’s growing profitably. Scale too quickly, and you could find yourself losing control of your business. Scale too cautiously, and you risk stagnation. So, how do you strike the right balance?

The Growth Trap: A Cautionary Tale

Imagine you own a manufacturing company, and a massive order comes in. It’s a dream deal—10,000 units instead of the usual 1,000. You scramble to increase production, hiring new employees, ordering more materials, even taking on debt to finance the expansion. But a few months later, you realize you’re barely breaking even. The new employees aren’t fully trained yet, production costs have skyrocketed, and cash flow is tight. Your profit margins, which seemed healthy before, are now razor-thin. Worse, your suppliers have increased their prices due to the larger volume, but you didn’t adjust your pricing in time. You’re now operating at a loss, despite the influx of new business.

This scenario is all too common. Growth, if not managed wisely, can erode profits instead of increasing them. The key? Strategic scaling.

Profitability First, Expansion Second

In the early days, you might not be profitable, and that’s okay. Many businesses start in the red, investing in marketing, product development, and hiring. However, you must ensure you’re not losing money per product. If each unit costs $12 to make and you sell it for $10, no amount of scaling will save you—you’re just multiplying losses.

Similarly, new employees take time to become profitable. Hiring is an investment in growth, but it often takes months before an employee generates more revenue than they cost. Business owners must anticipate this ramp-up period and avoid over-hiring too soon.

Where to Focus Your Growth

Not all growth is created equal. The most efficient areas of expansion are those where costs scale more slowly than revenue. Prioritize these strategies:

  • Leverage existing customers – It’s often cheaper and easier to expand business with current clients than to acquire new ones. Upselling, cross-selling, and building long-term relationships can provide more reliable revenue.

  • Double down on profitable products – Identify which products or services have the best margins and focus your growth efforts there. If one product is highly profitable and in demand, scaling its production efficiently can drive sustainable revenue.
  • Use data-driven decisions – Let financial and operational metrics guide your expansion strategy. Growth decisions should be based on performance indicators, not just ambition.

  • Improve operational efficiency – Streamlining processes and cutting waste can make it easier to scale profitably. Investing in automation, refining supply chains, and optimizing production workflows can enhance margins even as volume increases.

Controlled Growth vs. Losing Control

Growth is exhilarating, but it must be controlled. Many business owners get so caught up in expansion that they give up too much equity, bringing in investors who eventually take control. Others overextend, running out of cash when things don’t go as planned.

Instead, keep growth sustainable:

  • Fund expansion wisely – Reinvest profits when possible, rather than relying too heavily on debt or outside investors.

  • Pace yourself – Don’t rush to fulfill a huge order if it means straining resources beyond capacity. Scaling too quickly without the right infrastructure can lead to operational failures and reputational damage.

  • Protect your ownership stake – Too much outside investment can leave you as a minority shareholder in your own company. Consider alternative funding strategies, such as strategic partnerships or revenue-based financing, to maintain control.

Avoid Growth for Growth’s Sake

It’s easy to get caught up in vanity metrics—chasing higher sales, expanding into new markets, or acquiring more customers—without asking whether that growth actually benefits the business. But growth is not a goal in itself; it should be a means to an end. Every expansion initiative should answer a fundamental question: Will this make my business stronger in the long run? If the answer isn’t clear, it may be a sign to reassess.

Strategic growth means planning ahead. Before you leap, have a roadmap. Set clear, measurable goals, such as: “We aim to increase production by 50% over the next 18 months, which should yield a 20% revenue increase while maintaining a 15% profit margin.” This approach ensures that growth aligns with financial health, rather than just inflating top-line revenue while squeezing profits.

Smart business owners don’t just chase expansion; they balance growth with profitability. They scale strategically, ensuring each step forward is sustainable, and never lose sight of their core business strengths. With a steady hand, you can grow your company without losing control of it—and that’s the real measure of success.

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Business Expansion, Business Banking
Case Study – The Cost of a Bad Leader: Why Hiring the Right Leadership Is Crucial for Your Business

This is the first of a new series of fictional case study articles. The business principles are applicable to all industries, not just the industry mentioned below. 

Mike had spent years building his commercial construction company from the ground up. He took pride in his work, bidding on high-profile projects and assembling what he thought was a solid team. But as his company grew, so did his hiring challenges—especially when it came to leadership positions.

One project in particular—a multi-million dollar office complex—pushed his business to the edge. Under pressure to meet deadlines, Mike rushed to hire a new project manager, Tom, who came with an impressive résumé and glowing recommendations. But within weeks, cracks began to show.

Tom cut corners, ordered cheaper materials to save costs (without approval), and ignored safety protocols. Worse, he treated crew members poorly, causing skilled workers to quit mid-project. By the time Mike caught on, the damage was done. The project was behind schedule, client trust had eroded, and fixing Tom’s mistakes cost the company thousands.

Determined not to repeat the mistake, Mike changed his hiring approach. He thoroughly vetted new hires, conducted trial periods for leadership roles, and built a workplace culture that rewarded integrity and reliability. Within a year, his company had a team of dedicated leaders who took pride in their work—and it showed in their projects.

For businesses like Mike’s, hiring the right leadership isn’t just about filling roles—it’s about protecting the company's reputation, profitability, and long-term success.

The Importance of Hiring Strong Leaders

A business can only succeed if its leadership is competent, ethical, and aligned with company values. A poor leadership hire can derail entire teams, weaken morale, and ultimately cost the company in lost productivity and damaged relationships.

The problem isn’t just finding someone with the right credentials. Many executives, managers, and directors look great on paper but fail to lead effectively. Worse, some take advantage of their positions, making decisions that benefit themselves at the expense of the company.

Avoiding these pitfalls requires a thoughtful hiring strategy that goes beyond skills and experience to assess character, leadership style, and long-term commitment.

How to Hire the Right Leaders

When hiring for leadership roles, businesses should focus on finding ethical, capable, and accountable individuals. Here’s how:

  1. Refine Your Hiring Process
    • Conduct in-depth interviews that go beyond technical skills—ask situational and ethical questions.
    • Use work simulations, leadership assessments, or trial periods to see candidates in action.
    • Verify references carefully and speak to past employers about leadership style and integrity.
  2. Prioritize Cultural and Ethical Fit
    • A great leader must align with company values. Someone who lacks integrity, respect, or teamwork skills can cause more harm than good.
    • Clearly communicate your company’s mission and culture during the hiring process to attract leaders who share your vision.
  3. Set Clear Expectations for Leadership Roles
    • Define what success looks like for the position, including decision-making authority, accountability, and ethical standards.
    • Be upfront about company policies, workplace expectations, and leadership responsibilities.

How to Retain Great Leaders

Even the best leadership hire won’t stick around if they feel undervalued or unsupported. To keep strong leaders, businesses should:

  1. Foster a Leadership-Friendly Culture
    • Create an environment where leaders feel empowered to make informed decisions while staying accountable.
    • Provide opportunities for collaboration and mentorship to help leaders grow.
  2. Offer Competitive Compensation and Growth Opportunities
    • Leadership talent is in high demand. Ensure your pay, benefits, and perks are competitive within your industry.
    • Provide ongoing professional development, including leadership training and career advancement opportunities.
  3. Maintain High Ethical and Performance Standards
    • Hold all leaders accountable to the same standards. If employees see favoritism or unethical behavior in management, morale will suffer.
    • Encourage transparent communication and decision-making to build trust within the company.
  4. Recognize and Reward Strong Leadership
    • Leadership can be a difficult and often thankless role. Recognizing and rewarding great leadership fosters loyalty and encourages long-term commitment.

Final Thoughts

Hiring and retaining the right leaders is just as critical—if not more so—than hiring the right employees. Leaders set the tone for company culture, influence productivity, and ultimately determine business success.

If your company has struggled with hiring leadership roles, it’s time to refine your hiring process, emphasize integrity, and invest in leadership development. By learning from mistakes—like Mike did—and implementing better hiring and retention practices, businesses can build a team of strong, ethical leaders who drive long-term success.

For more pratical information on hiring for a leadership position, check out this recent episode of the Expandable Show. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NtRezs5v4oA

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Business Banking
How Smart Commercial Construction Businesses Master Cash Flow

Cash flow is the lifeblood of any business. Whether you're managing a commercial construction firm or running a retail operation, understanding how money moves in and out of your business is key to long-term success. Poor cash flow management can leave businesses scrambling to cover expenses, even when profits look good on paper.

A recent episode of the Expandable Series discussed this in detail, but here are some fundamental cash flow principles, using commercial construction as an example, that apply to businesses across all industries.

1. Understand Your Cash Outflows

In commercial construction, significant cash outlays are required upfront for raw materials, permits, and labor. These costs must be covered well before payments from clients arrive. Similarly, in retail, manufacturers need to purchase inventory long before customers make a purchase.

A business must have enough cash on hand to cover these expenses. Without it, operations may stall, delaying projects and impacting profitability. Understanding your cash needs ahead of time ensures smoother financial management.

Example: Imagine a mid-sized construction firm, Apex Builders, takes on a new commercial office project. Before the first payment arrives, they must pay for steel beams, concrete, and skilled labor. Without proper cash reserves or a well-structured payment schedule, Apex Builders could struggle to cover these costs, potentially halting the project and damaging their reputation.

2. Time Your Cash Inflows Strategically

Revenue in commercial construction typically comes from milestone payments throughout a project or upon completion. However, these payments can be delayed due to contract terms, client approvals, or unexpected issues.

For any business, it’s essential to analyze how long it takes to convert expenses into revenue. Are you waiting 30, 60, or even 90 days to get paid? If so, your business must be structured to withstand these gaps. Ensuring that your contract terms align with your cash flow needs can prevent unnecessary financial strain.

Example: Apex Builders structures their contracts to ensure payments are received at key milestones—such as after the foundation is laid, after framing is completed, and upon final inspection. By planning these payment intervals, they reduce financial stress and ensure they always have working capital.

3. Build a Cash Buffer

One of the best strategies for managing cash flow is to build a buffer that accounts for timing discrepancies. In construction, this means having enough reserves to cover payroll and material costs while waiting for payments. The same principle applies to any business with delayed payments.

This buffer should be built into your pricing. Instead of operating on razor-thin margins, factor in potential delays and unexpected costs when setting your rates. This ensures financial stability even during slower payment periods.

Example: Apex Builders includes a 10% contingency in their project bids, ensuring that if a client delays payment or unexpected costs arise, they have the liquidity to keep operations running smoothly.

4. Plan for Payroll and Fixed Expenses

Payroll is a non-negotiable expense in any business. Employees expect timely paychecks, and failure to meet payroll obligations can lead to operational disruptions and even legal consequences.

Since payroll and other fixed expenses (like rent, utilities, and insurance) don’t change based on revenue fluctuations, they must be accounted for in advance. Forecasting these expenses over the next quarter will help ensure you always have the necessary funds available.

Example: Apex Builders schedules payments from previous projects to help cover payroll during slow months, ensuring that employees are always paid on time.

5. Look Ahead to the Next Quarter

Successful businesses don’t just think about today’s cash flow—they plan for the next quarter and beyond. What projects are in the pipeline? When will revenue from those projects be realized? What expenses need to be covered in the meantime?

By forecasting cash flow and preparing for potential shortfalls, businesses can make informed decisions about when to invest, when to hold back, and when to seek additional financing options to bridge any gaps.

Example: Apex Builders maintain a rolling cash flow projection, helping them anticipate slow periods and ensuring they never take on more projects than they can financially support at one time.

The Bottom Line

Cash flow management isn’t just about tracking numbers—it’s about planning ahead, building flexibility into your pricing, and ensuring your business can withstand the natural ebbs and flows of financial cycles. Whether you’re in commercial construction, retail, or any other industry, mastering cash flow is essential for long-term success. Surety Bank is here to help businesses navigate these challenges with financial solutions designed to keep operations running smoothly.

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Community
A Legacy of Dedication: Cindy’s 31 Years at Surety Bank

In the spring of 1994, Cindy walked into Surety Bank—not to apply for a job, but to apply for a mortgage. She and her family had recently moved from Michigan, and Surety was simply the place she trusted to help them settle into their new home. What she didn’t expect was that the bank would also offer her something even more life-changing—a career that would span more than three decades.

“I didn’t have to look very hard for a job,” Cindy recalls with a laugh. “They saw that I had banking experience and called me up because they needed a teller.”

It was the start of a journey that would see Cindy grow from a front-line teller to a key part of the bank’s payroll and HR team. Over the years, she became a steady presence in the bank’s evolving landscape, witnessing firsthand how technology transformed the industry. When she first started, many processes were still manual—checks were physically run through proof machines, reconciliations were done by hand, and not everyone even had a computer at their desk.

“I remember when we had to share computers,” she says. “That didn’t last too long, but things were a lot different back then.”

Cindy’s career path took her from teller to bookkeeping, then into accounting, and eventually into payroll and HR, where she found her niche. She describes her work as being part of a team that always pulled together to solve challenges—a culture of collaboration and adaptability that made Surety Bank feel like home.

“We always worked together to find solutions,” Cindy reflects. “Even though my role became more specialized over the years, it was always about teamwork.”

A Career That Supported What Mattered Most

For Cindy, working at Surety Bank wasn’t just about the job—it was about the life it allowed her to build. Living just three miles from the bank, she was able to balance her career while staying closely involved in raising her children, supporting her husband, and nurturing her faith.

“I’ve been able to have my life at home and my life here at work,” she says. “It’s been a blessing to have a career that allowed me to be present for the things that mattered most—my family, my husband, and my faith.”

As much as she dedicated herself to her work, Cindy never lost sight of what was most important. She is deeply grateful that her time at Surety allowed her to grow professionally while still prioritizing the people she loved.

A Lasting Legacy

Looking back, Cindy remembers the many friendships, the changes that brought new ideas, and the way she adapted alongside the bank. Perhaps most of all, she values the relationships she built—with colleagues who became like family and customers who left a lasting impression.

Now, as she steps into retirement, Cindy is ready for a new chapter—one that revolves around her grandchildren, travel, and time with family in Michigan. It’s a bittersweet transition, but one that feels right.

“I never dreamed I’d be working someplace for 31 years,” she admits. “But as it turns out, it really went by fast.”

For those just starting their careers in banking, Cindy offers a simple but powerful piece of advice: “Be open to learning all aspects of the job. Take your time, think things through, and just go with the flow.”

After 31 years of steady dedication, Cindy leaves behind a legacy of resilience, kindness, and adaptability—a perfect reflection of the values that make Surety Bank so special. While she may be stepping away from her desk, the impact she’s made at Surety Bank will remain for years to come.

Thank you, Cindy, for 31 incredible years. Your Surety Bank family will miss you!

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MSB
Independent Reviews Are Not Just a Check-the-Box Requirement

For many Money Services Businesses (MSBs), the independent review is viewed as another annual compliance requirement to complete, submit to the bank, and move on from until next year.

In reality, the independent review is one of the most important tools available to help identify weaknesses in your compliance program before they become larger problems. 

A completed review alone is not enough. 

What matters is what happens after the review is finished.

Independent testing is one of the pillars of an effective BSA/AML compliance program. Its purpose is not simply to satisfy a requirement. A quality review evaluates the strength of your compliance program, identifies weaknesses or gaps, reviews transaction monitoring procedures, and provides recommendations to improve controls and reduce risk.

A strong independent review gives MSB owners visibility into areas that may need attention before regulators or financial institutions identify them first.

The Most Common Mistake MSBs Make

One of the biggest issues we see is MSBs treating the independent review as a one-time document instead of an operational tool.

In many cases, findings are not addressed, recommendations are delayed, or the same deficiencies continue appearing year after year. This creates a pattern that signals a lack of improvement and a lack of attention to compliance responsibilities.

When the same issues continue repeating, risk increases significantly.

Why Repeated Findings Matter

Repeated deficiencies can eventually lead to increased monitoring requirements, additional compliance costs, regulatory scrutiny, or even fines and penalties. In more serious situations, it can also create risk for the MSB’s banking relationship or licensing status.

In some cases, businesses may be required to undergo additional compliance monitoring by an outside third party until improvements are made.

The goal is not to create an additional burden, but instead to identify and correct issues before they become larger operational or regulatory problems.

Common Areas Where Issues Are Found

Independent reviews frequently identify issues involving:

  • Late or incomplete CTR filings
  • Weak transaction monitoring practices
  • Missing or outdated documentation
  • Gaps in Customer Due Diligence (CDD) procedures
  • Inconsistent internal processes or controls

While some of these may seem minor individually, repeated deficiencies over time can create significant compliance concerns if they are not corrected.

Improvement Matters More Than Perfection

No compliance program is perfect. What matters most is identifying issues, addressing them promptly, and demonstrating improvement over time.

An independent review should show progress year after year. If the same findings continue appearing without corrective action, regulators and financial institutions may view that as a lack of commitment to compliance obligations.

Although the independent review report is a bank-required document, MSBs are required to undergo independent testing because the Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) requires every MSB to maintain an effective Anti-Money Laundering (AML) program, and independent testing is one of the core required elements of that program.

Timing and Consistency Matter

While FinCEN requires independent testing to be conducted periodically, Surety Bank’s policy requires independent testing to be completed every 12 months for MSB customers.

Completing reviews consistently and addressing findings in a timely manner helps maintain a stronger and more effective compliance program throughout the year.

Why This Matters

Compliance is not built once a year during an independent testing. It is built through consistent attention to processes, documentation, monitoring, and corrective action throughout the year.

The independent testing is designed to help identify weaknesses before they create larger operational or regulatory problems. Using it properly can help protect your business, your banking relationship, and your long-term success.

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100th Anniversary Stories
When Banking Feels Personal Again: John Simmons & St. Barnabas’ Experience with Surety Bank | Community Profile

For John Simmons, banking with Surety has always been about relationships.

A longtime customer of Surety Bank, John has seen firsthand what it looks like when a financial institution truly shows up for its community. As a husband of 38 years, a father of four daughters, and a Director at St. Barnabas Episcopal School, his perspective is grounded in both family and service.

When the school began to grow, a new challenge emerged. They had run out of space to fit all of the students. Expansion wasn’t just a nice-to-have, it was necessary to continue serving students and families well. Like many organizations in that position, they explored their options carefully.

Then came a call that changed everything.

The president of Surety Bank reached out directly, bringing together key stakeholders in a conversation focused on one thing: how to help. What followed was more than a transaction, it was a collaborative effort. The bank stepped in not just with financial guidance, but with a clear commitment to walk alongside the school’s leadership every step of the way.

That experience left a lasting impression on John.

In his words, Surety Bank was “there 120%,” offering direction, support, and reassurance during a critical moment. But what stood out most was how they got there.

“They treat people as people,” John explains. “They actually answer the phone. They communicate.”

In an era where many businesses prioritize efficiency over connection, that kind of responsiveness feels increasingly rare. Yet for Surety Bank, it’s part of their DNA.

John’s story is a reminder that the best banking relationships aren’t built on numbers alone. They’re built on trust, accessibility, and a genuine investment in the people they serve.

This is how Surety Bank has always done it and it’s how we will always do it!

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MSB
What MSB Owners Need to Know About Oversight and Accountability

Not all risks come from outside your business.

In many cases, the most significant issues we see develop internally through gaps in oversight, compliance, and day-to-day controls.

As we move further into the year, we want to focus on a key principle that helps prevent these issues:

Trust your team, but verify your operations.

A Real-Life Scenario

Consider the following scenario:

An MSB owner invested in the business but was not involved in day-to-day operations. Instead, they trusted a close family member to manage the store and handle compliance responsibilities.

At first, everything appeared to be running smoothly.

Over time, however, several issues developed:

  • Internal controls were not consistently followed
  • Compliance requirements were not being properly maintained
  • Financial activity was not being reviewed regularly by the owner

Eventually, the situation escalated.

The individual managing the business began making unauthorized financial decisions. There were compliance gaps that had gone unnoticed. Required oversight was missing. By the time the issues surfaced, the impact included:

  • Significant financial loss
  • Compliance violations
  • Regulatory action and fines
  • Operational disruption to the business

The most important takeaway is this:

The responsibility did not fall on the person running the store. It fell on the owner.

Owner Responsibility Does Not Transfer

Even if you assign:

  • A compliance officer
  • A store manager
  • A trusted employee or family member

The responsibility for compliance, licensing, and operations remains with the owner.

Regulators evaluate the licensed entity and the owner behind it, not just the individual performing the work.

A “hands-off” approach can create risk if there is no system in place to verify what is happening inside the business.

Why Internal Issues Are Often Missed

Internal issues are not always obvious.

Unlike external fraud, which is often a single event, internal breakdowns can develop gradually:

  • Processes are skipped
  • Reviews are not completed
  • Reports are not analyzed
  • Controls become informal instead of structured

Because the business appears to be operating normally, these issues can go unnoticed until they become serious.

The Role of Oversight

Oversight does not mean mistrust. It means protection.

Strong MSB operations include:

  • Clear internal controls
  • Active AML and BSA program enforcement
  • Regular review of financial activity
  • Independent verification of processes

Owners do not need to manage every transaction, but they do need visibility into how the business is operating.

Practical Ways to Protect Your Business

To reduce risk and strengthen your operation, consider:

  • Reviewing account activity and reports on a regular basis
  • Performing periodic spot checks of transactions and documentation
  • Confirming that compliance procedures are being followed consistently
  • Ensuring licenses and required documents are current
  • Evaluating the quality of your independent reviews
  • Asking questions when something does not look right

Even small, consistent actions can help identify issues early.

Do Not Rely on One Layer of Protection

Independent reviews, compliance officers, and internal staff all play important roles.

However, none of these replace owner oversight.

If any one layer fails, there should be another layer in place to identify and correct the issue.

Final Thought

Trust is important in any business. But in an MSB environment, trust must be supported by structure, process, and verification.

A strong system protects:

  • Your business
  • Your customers
  • Your license
  • Your long-term success

We’re Here to Help

If you have questions about internal controls, compliance expectations, or how to strengthen oversight in your business, our team is available to support you.

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Community
Surety Bank Supports DeLand’s Night to Shine

For nearly 100 years, Surety Bank has believed a strong community is built through more than financial services. It's built through people showing up for one another. Since the bank’s early days, Surety has been committed to investing time, support and resources into the places where its customers live and work. That community-first mindset is why Surety was proud to support DeLand’s annual Night to Shine, hosted by Stetson Baptist Church.

History of Night to Shine

Night to Shine is a prom for people with special needs that was created to give honored guests, known as VIPs, a night filled with joy, dignity and belonging. Organizers said this year’s event welcomed about 150 VIPs and was made possible by roughly 400 volunteers who served, cheered and helped make the night unforgettable.

Night to Shine began in 2015 through the Tim Tebow Foundation and has grown into a global initiative hosted by local churches. The foundation says Night to Shine now takes place in all 50 states and in 76 countries, with 979 host churches participating during the 2026 season. In DeLand, the event brought families, volunteers and community partners together around a simple idea: everyone deserves to be celebrated.

A Night Designed to Celebrate VIPs

From the first greeting to the final song, Night to Shine is built around creating a prom experience that feels personal and uplifting. In DeLand, VIPs enjoyed a full evening of fun, including:

  • Dance floor: Music, lights and plenty of space to celebrate with friends and volunteers.
  • Karaoke: A chance to grab the mic and hear the room erupt with encouragement.
  • Caricatures: Artists creating keepsakes that captured the spirit of the night.
  • Corvette rides: A special highlight for VIPs who wanted a memorable ride and a big moment.
  • Paparazzi moments: Photos and red-carpet energy that helped VIPs feel like the stars they are.

Each part of the evening reinforced the same message: VIPs are seen, valued and welcomed.

Why Night to Shine Matters in DeLand

People with special needs and their families can too often feel overlooked, simply because many social spaces are not designed with accessibility and inclusion in mind. Night to Shine helps change that by creating an environment where belonging is intentional and celebration is the point. It’s also meaningful for caregivers, who get to watch their loved one experience a community that shows up with kindness and care.

Surety Bank is grateful to support events like Night to Shine because strong communities are built through relationships, service and shared responsibility. The turnout in DeLand reflected that spirit, with volunteers giving their time and local partners helping to make every detail count.

Thank You to the VIPs, Families and Volunteers

To the VIPs who brought the joy, the families who trusted the community with this special night, and the volunteers who made it happen, thank you. Night to Shine is one evening on the calendar, but the impact reaches much further, reminding DeLand what it looks like to celebrate every person with dignity and love.

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MSB, Business Banking, Online Banking
How to Avoid Check Fraud and Detect Altered Checks

Tax season often brings an increase in check fraud activity, and we are currently seeing specific patterns in several markets. Based on recent site visits and bankwide data, fraud trends include altered checks, fraudulent IDs, and tax refund schemes that can put MSBs at risk.

Fraud Trends We Are Seeing Now

Fraud is not evenly distributed across the country. Recent analysis shows:

  • South Florida, Georgia, Pennsylvania, New Jersey: Higher occurrences of altered checks and double presentment
  • Georgia: More fraudulent IDs
  • Northeast Area: Spike in large tax refund checks for young individuals
  • East Coast overall: Higher volume of fraud compared to other regions

Understanding these localized trends can help MSBs tailor their detection and prevention efforts based on where their business operates.

Why Fraud Is Often Missed

In busy MSB settings, tellers and staff are under pressure to process customers quickly. Fast service is important, but it should not come at the expense of proper verification. Common reasons fraud is missed include:

  • Rushing to clear lines during peak hours
  • Focusing only on the ID and not the instrument
  • Not using available tools like UV lights or thorough inspection methods

Slowing down when suspicious signals appear can prevent significant losses later.

Detecting Chemical Alterations with Simple Tools

One of the most common fraud methods involves chemical alteration (sometimes called “check washing”), where fraudsters remove original payee information and rewrite it.

How to detect it:

  • Use a UV light, which costs less than $30 and is easy to use
  • Hold the check under UV light before acceptance
  • Look for:
    • Security features glowing consistently
    • Areas where ink or paper looks inconsistent
    • Borders or payee lines that glow differently from the rest of the check

Areas that glow differently often indicate tampering.

Even if the check has no embedded security feature, an altered area will reflect under UV light in a way that the original paper will not.

Behavioral Red Flags to Watch

Fraud prevention is not only about tools. People exhibit behavior that often signals something is wrong:

Watch for customers who:

  • Avoid eye contact
  • Provide unsolicited, overly friendly explanations
  • Insist on hurrying rushing you
  • Offer reasons that don’t make sense for the transaction

These behaviors, when combined with instrument anomalies, are stronger indicators of fraud.

Money Mule and Tax Refund Schemes

In some cases, the check is real, but the transaction context is not. A common example seen in Michigan:

  • Younger individuals cashing unusually large tax refunds
  • Refund amounts not aligned with typical income for that age group
  • Refunds linked to questionable tax preparers

These patterns suggest the check itself may be authentic, but the process that generated it was fraudulent. The bank will eventually identify the issue, but MSBs may face loss if the check is returned.

Why Slowing Down Protects Your Business

Slowing down and asking questions helps you protect your business from future exposure.

It’s natural to want to avoid losing a small fee by turning away a suspicious check. However, a rushed decision can expose your business to a much higher loss when a check is returned or fails later verification.

Protecting your business means:

  • Slowing down when something doesn’t feel right
  • Asking more questions
  • Using tools like UV light to confirm legitimacy
  • Prioritizing compliance over short-term fee income

When fraud is prevented at the front line, the long-term financial health of your business is protected.

LEARN MORE

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Community
Skydive DeLand: A Legacy of Innovation, Community, and Global Impact

For many residents of DeLand, the airport on the north side of town feels like a world of its own. Planes climb into the sky daily. Parachutes bloom overhead. Visitors arrive from across the globe. What many may not realize is that Skydive DeLand is not only a local attraction. It is one of the most influential skydiving centers in the world.

A History That Shaped the Sport

Skydive DeLand began operations in 1982, taking over a location that had already seen continuous skydiving activity since 1958. From its earliest days, the company was led by competitors at the highest level of the sport. Both founders were National Champions, and one went on to achieve the title of World Champion in four-person team competition.

That competitive ambition changed the sport.

To pursue world-class performance, the founders enhanced the way teams trained. They invested in aircraft, facilities, personnel, and infrastructure that allowed for intensive, structured team training. At the time, very few drop zones operated seven days a week. Skydive DeLand quickly became a full-time operation, open year-round.

As teams discovered the level of support and consistency available in DeLand, they began traveling here from all over the world. What started as a training philosophy became a global destination.

For many years, Skydive DeLand was recognized as the most active skydiving center in the world.

Building the Skydiving Capital of the World

As training programs expanded, so did the industry surrounding them. Equipment manufacturers began relocating to DeLand in order to test new parachute designs and innovations in real-world conditions.

Today, more than 20 skydiving-related companies operate in the DeLand area. Together, they form the largest parachute equipment manufacturing cluster in the world. Skydive DeLand serves as the anchor for that ecosystem.

Manufacturers rely on the consistent jump activity to test new canopies and equipment designs. Similar to how automotive companies rely on test tracks, skydiving manufacturers rely on active drop zones.

The result is that DeLand became known internationally as the Skydiving Capital of the World. Travelers from Europe, South America, and across the United States continue to visit year after year, particularly during the late winter and spring seasons when weather conditions are ideal.

A Community Within a Community

Beyond competitions and equipment development, Skydive DeLand has fostered a global community.

Teams train here for weeks or months at a time. Large events have attracted hundreds of participants. National championships have been hosted here. At any given time, visitors may be staying in local hotels, RVs, or short-term rentals.

That international presence supports tourism, local hospitality, and small businesses throughout DeLand. A past industry census estimated more than 600 jobs connected directly or indirectly to the skydiving and equipment manufacturing sector.

During economic downturns, when other industries struggled, Skydive DeLand remained strong. Tandem jumps and recreational experiences continued to attract visitors. Equipment manufacturing remained active. That stability helped support the broader local economy during difficult periods.

The people who make up the skydiving community are also deeply engaged locally. Many longtime jumpers and industry professionals participate in other civic and community activities throughout DeLand. For those who retire from jumping, many continue to invest their energy in the town they have come to call home.

The Loss of a Founder

In 2025, the Skydive DeLand community experienced a devastating loss.

Bob Hallett, one of the two original founders and the majority shareholder of the company, passed away unexpectedly following a traffic accident on his way to work. He had been with the company since its early days and remained actively involved in daily operations.

Bob was not only a business leader but a central figure in the skydiving community. His vision and commitment helped shape Skydive DeLand into the global leader it became. His passing deeply affected employees, jumpers, manufacturers, and longtime friends across the industry.

For a company that has operated as both a workplace and a close-knit community, the loss was profound. Yet the legacy he helped build continues in the culture, the operations, and the global impact of the organization.

A Global Reputation With Local Roots

One story reflects just how far Skydive DeLand’s reach extends. A local Stetson professor once attended a conference in Taiwan and turned on the television in his hotel room. There was a feature about Skydive DeLand. He returned home surprised to discover that an internationally recognized skydiving center operated just minutes from where he lived.

That story captures something unique about Skydive DeLand. It has put DeLand on the world map, even if some residents are not fully aware of what happens at the airport each day.

Visitors are welcome to observe jumps from the viewing areas or enjoy the adjacent restaurant deck. Others choose to experience a tandem jump. Some begin lifelong careers in the sport. Whether someone comes to watch or to participate, Skydive DeLand remains open and active every day.

For more information, visit SkyDiveDeLand.com to learn about tandem experiences, training programs, and upcoming events.

Skydive DeLand is more than a drop zone. It is a global training center, an innovation hub, and a long-standing contributor to the DeLand community. Its history reflects ambition, resilience, and a deep commitment to both sport and town.

LEARN MORE

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MSB
Independent Reviews Are Not Just a Check-the-Box Requirement

For many Money Services Businesses (MSBs), the independent review is viewed as another annual compliance requirement to complete, submit to the bank, and move on from until next year.

In reality, the independent review is one of the most important tools available to help identify weaknesses in your compliance program before they become larger problems. 

A completed review alone is not enough. 

What matters is what happens after the review is finished.

Independent testing is one of the pillars of an effective BSA/AML compliance program. Its purpose is not simply to satisfy a requirement. A quality review evaluates the strength of your compliance program, identifies weaknesses or gaps, reviews transaction monitoring procedures, and provides recommendations to improve controls and reduce risk.

A strong independent review gives MSB owners visibility into areas that may need attention before regulators or financial institutions identify them first.

The Most Common Mistake MSBs Make

One of the biggest issues we see is MSBs treating the independent review as a one-time document instead of an operational tool.

In many cases, findings are not addressed, recommendations are delayed, or the same deficiencies continue appearing year after year. This creates a pattern that signals a lack of improvement and a lack of attention to compliance responsibilities.

When the same issues continue repeating, risk increases significantly.

Why Repeated Findings Matter

Repeated deficiencies can eventually lead to increased monitoring requirements, additional compliance costs, regulatory scrutiny, or even fines and penalties. In more serious situations, it can also create risk for the MSB’s banking relationship or licensing status.

In some cases, businesses may be required to undergo additional compliance monitoring by an outside third party until improvements are made.

The goal is not to create an additional burden, but instead to identify and correct issues before they become larger operational or regulatory problems.

Common Areas Where Issues Are Found

Independent reviews frequently identify issues involving:

  • Late or incomplete CTR filings
  • Weak transaction monitoring practices
  • Missing or outdated documentation
  • Gaps in Customer Due Diligence (CDD) procedures
  • Inconsistent internal processes or controls

While some of these may seem minor individually, repeated deficiencies over time can create significant compliance concerns if they are not corrected.

Improvement Matters More Than Perfection

No compliance program is perfect. What matters most is identifying issues, addressing them promptly, and demonstrating improvement over time.

An independent review should show progress year after year. If the same findings continue appearing without corrective action, regulators and financial institutions may view that as a lack of commitment to compliance obligations.

Although the independent review report is a bank-required document, MSBs are required to undergo independent testing because the Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) requires every MSB to maintain an effective Anti-Money Laundering (AML) program, and independent testing is one of the core required elements of that program.

Timing and Consistency Matter

While FinCEN requires independent testing to be conducted periodically, Surety Bank’s policy requires independent testing to be completed every 12 months for MSB customers.

Completing reviews consistently and addressing findings in a timely manner helps maintain a stronger and more effective compliance program throughout the year.

Why This Matters

Compliance is not built once a year during an independent testing. It is built through consistent attention to processes, documentation, monitoring, and corrective action throughout the year.

The independent testing is designed to help identify weaknesses before they create larger operational or regulatory problems. Using it properly can help protect your business, your banking relationship, and your long-term success.

LEARN MORE

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100th Anniversary Stories
When Banking Feels Personal Again: John Simmons & St. Barnabas’ Experience with Surety Bank | Community Profile

For John Simmons, banking with Surety has always been about relationships.

A longtime customer of Surety Bank, John has seen firsthand what it looks like when a financial institution truly shows up for its community. As a husband of 38 years, a father of four daughters, and a Director at St. Barnabas Episcopal School, his perspective is grounded in both family and service.

When the school began to grow, a new challenge emerged. They had run out of space to fit all of the students. Expansion wasn’t just a nice-to-have, it was necessary to continue serving students and families well. Like many organizations in that position, they explored their options carefully.

Then came a call that changed everything.

The president of Surety Bank reached out directly, bringing together key stakeholders in a conversation focused on one thing: how to help. What followed was more than a transaction, it was a collaborative effort. The bank stepped in not just with financial guidance, but with a clear commitment to walk alongside the school’s leadership every step of the way.

That experience left a lasting impression on John.

In his words, Surety Bank was “there 120%,” offering direction, support, and reassurance during a critical moment. But what stood out most was how they got there.

“They treat people as people,” John explains. “They actually answer the phone. They communicate.”

In an era where many businesses prioritize efficiency over connection, that kind of responsiveness feels increasingly rare. Yet for Surety Bank, it’s part of their DNA.

John’s story is a reminder that the best banking relationships aren’t built on numbers alone. They’re built on trust, accessibility, and a genuine investment in the people they serve.

This is how Surety Bank has always done it and it’s how we will always do it!

LEARN MORE

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MSB
What MSB Owners Need to Know About Oversight and Accountability

Not all risks come from outside your business.

In many cases, the most significant issues we see develop internally through gaps in oversight, compliance, and day-to-day controls.

As we move further into the year, we want to focus on a key principle that helps prevent these issues:

Trust your team, but verify your operations.

A Real-Life Scenario

Consider the following scenario:

An MSB owner invested in the business but was not involved in day-to-day operations. Instead, they trusted a close family member to manage the store and handle compliance responsibilities.

At first, everything appeared to be running smoothly.

Over time, however, several issues developed:

  • Internal controls were not consistently followed
  • Compliance requirements were not being properly maintained
  • Financial activity was not being reviewed regularly by the owner

Eventually, the situation escalated.

The individual managing the business began making unauthorized financial decisions. There were compliance gaps that had gone unnoticed. Required oversight was missing. By the time the issues surfaced, the impact included:

  • Significant financial loss
  • Compliance violations
  • Regulatory action and fines
  • Operational disruption to the business

The most important takeaway is this:

The responsibility did not fall on the person running the store. It fell on the owner.

Owner Responsibility Does Not Transfer

Even if you assign:

  • A compliance officer
  • A store manager
  • A trusted employee or family member

The responsibility for compliance, licensing, and operations remains with the owner.

Regulators evaluate the licensed entity and the owner behind it, not just the individual performing the work.

A “hands-off” approach can create risk if there is no system in place to verify what is happening inside the business.

Why Internal Issues Are Often Missed

Internal issues are not always obvious.

Unlike external fraud, which is often a single event, internal breakdowns can develop gradually:

  • Processes are skipped
  • Reviews are not completed
  • Reports are not analyzed
  • Controls become informal instead of structured

Because the business appears to be operating normally, these issues can go unnoticed until they become serious.

The Role of Oversight

Oversight does not mean mistrust. It means protection.

Strong MSB operations include:

  • Clear internal controls
  • Active AML and BSA program enforcement
  • Regular review of financial activity
  • Independent verification of processes

Owners do not need to manage every transaction, but they do need visibility into how the business is operating.

Practical Ways to Protect Your Business

To reduce risk and strengthen your operation, consider:

  • Reviewing account activity and reports on a regular basis
  • Performing periodic spot checks of transactions and documentation
  • Confirming that compliance procedures are being followed consistently
  • Ensuring licenses and required documents are current
  • Evaluating the quality of your independent reviews
  • Asking questions when something does not look right

Even small, consistent actions can help identify issues early.

Do Not Rely on One Layer of Protection

Independent reviews, compliance officers, and internal staff all play important roles.

However, none of these replace owner oversight.

If any one layer fails, there should be another layer in place to identify and correct the issue.

Final Thought

Trust is important in any business. But in an MSB environment, trust must be supported by structure, process, and verification.

A strong system protects:

  • Your business
  • Your customers
  • Your license
  • Your long-term success

We’re Here to Help

If you have questions about internal controls, compliance expectations, or how to strengthen oversight in your business, our team is available to support you.

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Community
Surety Bank Supports DeLand’s Night to Shine

For nearly 100 years, Surety Bank has believed a strong community is built through more than financial services. It's built through people showing up for one another. Since the bank’s early days, Surety has been committed to investing time, support and resources into the places where its customers live and work. That community-first mindset is why Surety was proud to support DeLand’s annual Night to Shine, hosted by Stetson Baptist Church.

History of Night to Shine

Night to Shine is a prom for people with special needs that was created to give honored guests, known as VIPs, a night filled with joy, dignity and belonging. Organizers said this year’s event welcomed about 150 VIPs and was made possible by roughly 400 volunteers who served, cheered and helped make the night unforgettable.

Night to Shine began in 2015 through the Tim Tebow Foundation and has grown into a global initiative hosted by local churches. The foundation says Night to Shine now takes place in all 50 states and in 76 countries, with 979 host churches participating during the 2026 season. In DeLand, the event brought families, volunteers and community partners together around a simple idea: everyone deserves to be celebrated.

A Night Designed to Celebrate VIPs

From the first greeting to the final song, Night to Shine is built around creating a prom experience that feels personal and uplifting. In DeLand, VIPs enjoyed a full evening of fun, including:

  • Dance floor: Music, lights and plenty of space to celebrate with friends and volunteers.
  • Karaoke: A chance to grab the mic and hear the room erupt with encouragement.
  • Caricatures: Artists creating keepsakes that captured the spirit of the night.
  • Corvette rides: A special highlight for VIPs who wanted a memorable ride and a big moment.
  • Paparazzi moments: Photos and red-carpet energy that helped VIPs feel like the stars they are.

Each part of the evening reinforced the same message: VIPs are seen, valued and welcomed.

Why Night to Shine Matters in DeLand

People with special needs and their families can too often feel overlooked, simply because many social spaces are not designed with accessibility and inclusion in mind. Night to Shine helps change that by creating an environment where belonging is intentional and celebration is the point. It’s also meaningful for caregivers, who get to watch their loved one experience a community that shows up with kindness and care.

Surety Bank is grateful to support events like Night to Shine because strong communities are built through relationships, service and shared responsibility. The turnout in DeLand reflected that spirit, with volunteers giving their time and local partners helping to make every detail count.

Thank You to the VIPs, Families and Volunteers

To the VIPs who brought the joy, the families who trusted the community with this special night, and the volunteers who made it happen, thank you. Night to Shine is one evening on the calendar, but the impact reaches much further, reminding DeLand what it looks like to celebrate every person with dignity and love.

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MSB, Business Banking, Online Banking
How to Avoid Check Fraud and Detect Altered Checks

Tax season often brings an increase in check fraud activity, and we are currently seeing specific patterns in several markets. Based on recent site visits and bankwide data, fraud trends include altered checks, fraudulent IDs, and tax refund schemes that can put MSBs at risk.

Fraud Trends We Are Seeing Now

Fraud is not evenly distributed across the country. Recent analysis shows:

  • South Florida, Georgia, Pennsylvania, New Jersey: Higher occurrences of altered checks and double presentment
  • Georgia: More fraudulent IDs
  • Northeast Area: Spike in large tax refund checks for young individuals
  • East Coast overall: Higher volume of fraud compared to other regions

Understanding these localized trends can help MSBs tailor their detection and prevention efforts based on where their business operates.

Why Fraud Is Often Missed

In busy MSB settings, tellers and staff are under pressure to process customers quickly. Fast service is important, but it should not come at the expense of proper verification. Common reasons fraud is missed include:

  • Rushing to clear lines during peak hours
  • Focusing only on the ID and not the instrument
  • Not using available tools like UV lights or thorough inspection methods

Slowing down when suspicious signals appear can prevent significant losses later.

Detecting Chemical Alterations with Simple Tools

One of the most common fraud methods involves chemical alteration (sometimes called “check washing”), where fraudsters remove original payee information and rewrite it.

How to detect it:

  • Use a UV light, which costs less than $30 and is easy to use
  • Hold the check under UV light before acceptance
  • Look for:
    • Security features glowing consistently
    • Areas where ink or paper looks inconsistent
    • Borders or payee lines that glow differently from the rest of the check

Areas that glow differently often indicate tampering.

Even if the check has no embedded security feature, an altered area will reflect under UV light in a way that the original paper will not.

Behavioral Red Flags to Watch

Fraud prevention is not only about tools. People exhibit behavior that often signals something is wrong:

Watch for customers who:

  • Avoid eye contact
  • Provide unsolicited, overly friendly explanations
  • Insist on hurrying rushing you
  • Offer reasons that don’t make sense for the transaction

These behaviors, when combined with instrument anomalies, are stronger indicators of fraud.

Money Mule and Tax Refund Schemes

In some cases, the check is real, but the transaction context is not. A common example seen in Michigan:

  • Younger individuals cashing unusually large tax refunds
  • Refund amounts not aligned with typical income for that age group
  • Refunds linked to questionable tax preparers

These patterns suggest the check itself may be authentic, but the process that generated it was fraudulent. The bank will eventually identify the issue, but MSBs may face loss if the check is returned.

Why Slowing Down Protects Your Business

Slowing down and asking questions helps you protect your business from future exposure.

It’s natural to want to avoid losing a small fee by turning away a suspicious check. However, a rushed decision can expose your business to a much higher loss when a check is returned or fails later verification.

Protecting your business means:

  • Slowing down when something doesn’t feel right
  • Asking more questions
  • Using tools like UV light to confirm legitimacy
  • Prioritizing compliance over short-term fee income

When fraud is prevented at the front line, the long-term financial health of your business is protected.

LEARN MORE

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Community
Skydive DeLand: A Legacy of Innovation, Community, and Global Impact

For many residents of DeLand, the airport on the north side of town feels like a world of its own. Planes climb into the sky daily. Parachutes bloom overhead. Visitors arrive from across the globe. What many may not realize is that Skydive DeLand is not only a local attraction. It is one of the most influential skydiving centers in the world.

A History That Shaped the Sport

Skydive DeLand began operations in 1982, taking over a location that had already seen continuous skydiving activity since 1958. From its earliest days, the company was led by competitors at the highest level of the sport. Both founders were National Champions, and one went on to achieve the title of World Champion in four-person team competition.

That competitive ambition changed the sport.

To pursue world-class performance, the founders enhanced the way teams trained. They invested in aircraft, facilities, personnel, and infrastructure that allowed for intensive, structured team training. At the time, very few drop zones operated seven days a week. Skydive DeLand quickly became a full-time operation, open year-round.

As teams discovered the level of support and consistency available in DeLand, they began traveling here from all over the world. What started as a training philosophy became a global destination.

For many years, Skydive DeLand was recognized as the most active skydiving center in the world.

Building the Skydiving Capital of the World

As training programs expanded, so did the industry surrounding them. Equipment manufacturers began relocating to DeLand in order to test new parachute designs and innovations in real-world conditions.

Today, more than 20 skydiving-related companies operate in the DeLand area. Together, they form the largest parachute equipment manufacturing cluster in the world. Skydive DeLand serves as the anchor for that ecosystem.

Manufacturers rely on the consistent jump activity to test new canopies and equipment designs. Similar to how automotive companies rely on test tracks, skydiving manufacturers rely on active drop zones.

The result is that DeLand became known internationally as the Skydiving Capital of the World. Travelers from Europe, South America, and across the United States continue to visit year after year, particularly during the late winter and spring seasons when weather conditions are ideal.

A Community Within a Community

Beyond competitions and equipment development, Skydive DeLand has fostered a global community.

Teams train here for weeks or months at a time. Large events have attracted hundreds of participants. National championships have been hosted here. At any given time, visitors may be staying in local hotels, RVs, or short-term rentals.

That international presence supports tourism, local hospitality, and small businesses throughout DeLand. A past industry census estimated more than 600 jobs connected directly or indirectly to the skydiving and equipment manufacturing sector.

During economic downturns, when other industries struggled, Skydive DeLand remained strong. Tandem jumps and recreational experiences continued to attract visitors. Equipment manufacturing remained active. That stability helped support the broader local economy during difficult periods.

The people who make up the skydiving community are also deeply engaged locally. Many longtime jumpers and industry professionals participate in other civic and community activities throughout DeLand. For those who retire from jumping, many continue to invest their energy in the town they have come to call home.

The Loss of a Founder

In 2025, the Skydive DeLand community experienced a devastating loss.

Bob Hallett, one of the two original founders and the majority shareholder of the company, passed away unexpectedly following a traffic accident on his way to work. He had been with the company since its early days and remained actively involved in daily operations.

Bob was not only a business leader but a central figure in the skydiving community. His vision and commitment helped shape Skydive DeLand into the global leader it became. His passing deeply affected employees, jumpers, manufacturers, and longtime friends across the industry.

For a company that has operated as both a workplace and a close-knit community, the loss was profound. Yet the legacy he helped build continues in the culture, the operations, and the global impact of the organization.

A Global Reputation With Local Roots

One story reflects just how far Skydive DeLand’s reach extends. A local Stetson professor once attended a conference in Taiwan and turned on the television in his hotel room. There was a feature about Skydive DeLand. He returned home surprised to discover that an internationally recognized skydiving center operated just minutes from where he lived.

That story captures something unique about Skydive DeLand. It has put DeLand on the world map, even if some residents are not fully aware of what happens at the airport each day.

Visitors are welcome to observe jumps from the viewing areas or enjoy the adjacent restaurant deck. Others choose to experience a tandem jump. Some begin lifelong careers in the sport. Whether someone comes to watch or to participate, Skydive DeLand remains open and active every day.

For more information, visit SkyDiveDeLand.com to learn about tandem experiences, training programs, and upcoming events.

Skydive DeLand is more than a drop zone. It is a global training center, an innovation hub, and a long-standing contributor to the DeLand community. Its history reflects ambition, resilience, and a deep commitment to both sport and town.

LEARN MORE

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MSB
Independent Reviews Are Not Just a Check-the-Box Requirement

For many Money Services Businesses (MSBs), the independent review is viewed as another annual compliance requirement to complete, submit to the bank, and move on from until next year.

In reality, the independent review is one of the most important tools available to help identify weaknesses in your compliance program before they become larger problems. 

A completed review alone is not enough. 

What matters is what happens after the review is finished.

Independent testing is one of the pillars of an effective BSA/AML compliance program. Its purpose is not simply to satisfy a requirement. A quality review evaluates the strength of your compliance program, identifies weaknesses or gaps, reviews transaction monitoring procedures, and provides recommendations to improve controls and reduce risk.

A strong independent review gives MSB owners visibility into areas that may need attention before regulators or financial institutions identify them first.

The Most Common Mistake MSBs Make

One of the biggest issues we see is MSBs treating the independent review as a one-time document instead of an operational tool.

In many cases, findings are not addressed, recommendations are delayed, or the same deficiencies continue appearing year after year. This creates a pattern that signals a lack of improvement and a lack of attention to compliance responsibilities.

When the same issues continue repeating, risk increases significantly.

Why Repeated Findings Matter

Repeated deficiencies can eventually lead to increased monitoring requirements, additional compliance costs, regulatory scrutiny, or even fines and penalties. In more serious situations, it can also create risk for the MSB’s banking relationship or licensing status.

In some cases, businesses may be required to undergo additional compliance monitoring by an outside third party until improvements are made.

The goal is not to create an additional burden, but instead to identify and correct issues before they become larger operational or regulatory problems.

Common Areas Where Issues Are Found

Independent reviews frequently identify issues involving:

  • Late or incomplete CTR filings
  • Weak transaction monitoring practices
  • Missing or outdated documentation
  • Gaps in Customer Due Diligence (CDD) procedures
  • Inconsistent internal processes or controls

While some of these may seem minor individually, repeated deficiencies over time can create significant compliance concerns if they are not corrected.

Improvement Matters More Than Perfection

No compliance program is perfect. What matters most is identifying issues, addressing them promptly, and demonstrating improvement over time.

An independent review should show progress year after year. If the same findings continue appearing without corrective action, regulators and financial institutions may view that as a lack of commitment to compliance obligations.

Although the independent review report is a bank-required document, MSBs are required to undergo independent testing because the Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) requires every MSB to maintain an effective Anti-Money Laundering (AML) program, and independent testing is one of the core required elements of that program.

Timing and Consistency Matter

While FinCEN requires independent testing to be conducted periodically, Surety Bank’s policy requires independent testing to be completed every 12 months for MSB customers.

Completing reviews consistently and addressing findings in a timely manner helps maintain a stronger and more effective compliance program throughout the year.

Why This Matters

Compliance is not built once a year during an independent testing. It is built through consistent attention to processes, documentation, monitoring, and corrective action throughout the year.

The independent testing is designed to help identify weaknesses before they create larger operational or regulatory problems. Using it properly can help protect your business, your banking relationship, and your long-term success.

LEARN MORE

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100th Anniversary Stories
When Banking Feels Personal Again: John Simmons & St. Barnabas’ Experience with Surety Bank | Community Profile

For John Simmons, banking with Surety has always been about relationships.

A longtime customer of Surety Bank, John has seen firsthand what it looks like when a financial institution truly shows up for its community. As a husband of 38 years, a father of four daughters, and a Director at St. Barnabas Episcopal School, his perspective is grounded in both family and service.

When the school began to grow, a new challenge emerged. They had run out of space to fit all of the students. Expansion wasn’t just a nice-to-have, it was necessary to continue serving students and families well. Like many organizations in that position, they explored their options carefully.

Then came a call that changed everything.

The president of Surety Bank reached out directly, bringing together key stakeholders in a conversation focused on one thing: how to help. What followed was more than a transaction, it was a collaborative effort. The bank stepped in not just with financial guidance, but with a clear commitment to walk alongside the school’s leadership every step of the way.

That experience left a lasting impression on John.

In his words, Surety Bank was “there 120%,” offering direction, support, and reassurance during a critical moment. But what stood out most was how they got there.

“They treat people as people,” John explains. “They actually answer the phone. They communicate.”

In an era where many businesses prioritize efficiency over connection, that kind of responsiveness feels increasingly rare. Yet for Surety Bank, it’s part of their DNA.

John’s story is a reminder that the best banking relationships aren’t built on numbers alone. They’re built on trust, accessibility, and a genuine investment in the people they serve.

This is how Surety Bank has always done it and it’s how we will always do it!

LEARN MORE

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MSB
What MSB Owners Need to Know About Oversight and Accountability

Not all risks come from outside your business.

In many cases, the most significant issues we see develop internally through gaps in oversight, compliance, and day-to-day controls.

As we move further into the year, we want to focus on a key principle that helps prevent these issues:

Trust your team, but verify your operations.

A Real-Life Scenario

Consider the following scenario:

An MSB owner invested in the business but was not involved in day-to-day operations. Instead, they trusted a close family member to manage the store and handle compliance responsibilities.

At first, everything appeared to be running smoothly.

Over time, however, several issues developed:

  • Internal controls were not consistently followed
  • Compliance requirements were not being properly maintained
  • Financial activity was not being reviewed regularly by the owner

Eventually, the situation escalated.

The individual managing the business began making unauthorized financial decisions. There were compliance gaps that had gone unnoticed. Required oversight was missing. By the time the issues surfaced, the impact included:

  • Significant financial loss
  • Compliance violations
  • Regulatory action and fines
  • Operational disruption to the business

The most important takeaway is this:

The responsibility did not fall on the person running the store. It fell on the owner.

Owner Responsibility Does Not Transfer

Even if you assign:

  • A compliance officer
  • A store manager
  • A trusted employee or family member

The responsibility for compliance, licensing, and operations remains with the owner.

Regulators evaluate the licensed entity and the owner behind it, not just the individual performing the work.

A “hands-off” approach can create risk if there is no system in place to verify what is happening inside the business.

Why Internal Issues Are Often Missed

Internal issues are not always obvious.

Unlike external fraud, which is often a single event, internal breakdowns can develop gradually:

  • Processes are skipped
  • Reviews are not completed
  • Reports are not analyzed
  • Controls become informal instead of structured

Because the business appears to be operating normally, these issues can go unnoticed until they become serious.

The Role of Oversight

Oversight does not mean mistrust. It means protection.

Strong MSB operations include:

  • Clear internal controls
  • Active AML and BSA program enforcement
  • Regular review of financial activity
  • Independent verification of processes

Owners do not need to manage every transaction, but they do need visibility into how the business is operating.

Practical Ways to Protect Your Business

To reduce risk and strengthen your operation, consider:

  • Reviewing account activity and reports on a regular basis
  • Performing periodic spot checks of transactions and documentation
  • Confirming that compliance procedures are being followed consistently
  • Ensuring licenses and required documents are current
  • Evaluating the quality of your independent reviews
  • Asking questions when something does not look right

Even small, consistent actions can help identify issues early.

Do Not Rely on One Layer of Protection

Independent reviews, compliance officers, and internal staff all play important roles.

However, none of these replace owner oversight.

If any one layer fails, there should be another layer in place to identify and correct the issue.

Final Thought

Trust is important in any business. But in an MSB environment, trust must be supported by structure, process, and verification.

A strong system protects:

  • Your business
  • Your customers
  • Your license
  • Your long-term success

We’re Here to Help

If you have questions about internal controls, compliance expectations, or how to strengthen oversight in your business, our team is available to support you.

LEARN MORE

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Community
Surety Bank Supports DeLand’s Night to Shine

For nearly 100 years, Surety Bank has believed a strong community is built through more than financial services. It's built through people showing up for one another. Since the bank’s early days, Surety has been committed to investing time, support and resources into the places where its customers live and work. That community-first mindset is why Surety was proud to support DeLand’s annual Night to Shine, hosted by Stetson Baptist Church.

History of Night to Shine

Night to Shine is a prom for people with special needs that was created to give honored guests, known as VIPs, a night filled with joy, dignity and belonging. Organizers said this year’s event welcomed about 150 VIPs and was made possible by roughly 400 volunteers who served, cheered and helped make the night unforgettable.

Night to Shine began in 2015 through the Tim Tebow Foundation and has grown into a global initiative hosted by local churches. The foundation says Night to Shine now takes place in all 50 states and in 76 countries, with 979 host churches participating during the 2026 season. In DeLand, the event brought families, volunteers and community partners together around a simple idea: everyone deserves to be celebrated.

A Night Designed to Celebrate VIPs

From the first greeting to the final song, Night to Shine is built around creating a prom experience that feels personal and uplifting. In DeLand, VIPs enjoyed a full evening of fun, including:

  • Dance floor: Music, lights and plenty of space to celebrate with friends and volunteers.
  • Karaoke: A chance to grab the mic and hear the room erupt with encouragement.
  • Caricatures: Artists creating keepsakes that captured the spirit of the night.
  • Corvette rides: A special highlight for VIPs who wanted a memorable ride and a big moment.
  • Paparazzi moments: Photos and red-carpet energy that helped VIPs feel like the stars they are.

Each part of the evening reinforced the same message: VIPs are seen, valued and welcomed.

Why Night to Shine Matters in DeLand

People with special needs and their families can too often feel overlooked, simply because many social spaces are not designed with accessibility and inclusion in mind. Night to Shine helps change that by creating an environment where belonging is intentional and celebration is the point. It’s also meaningful for caregivers, who get to watch their loved one experience a community that shows up with kindness and care.

Surety Bank is grateful to support events like Night to Shine because strong communities are built through relationships, service and shared responsibility. The turnout in DeLand reflected that spirit, with volunteers giving their time and local partners helping to make every detail count.

Thank You to the VIPs, Families and Volunteers

To the VIPs who brought the joy, the families who trusted the community with this special night, and the volunteers who made it happen, thank you. Night to Shine is one evening on the calendar, but the impact reaches much further, reminding DeLand what it looks like to celebrate every person with dignity and love.

LEARN MORE

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MSB, Business Banking, Online Banking
How to Avoid Check Fraud and Detect Altered Checks

Tax season often brings an increase in check fraud activity, and we are currently seeing specific patterns in several markets. Based on recent site visits and bankwide data, fraud trends include altered checks, fraudulent IDs, and tax refund schemes that can put MSBs at risk.

Fraud Trends We Are Seeing Now

Fraud is not evenly distributed across the country. Recent analysis shows:

  • South Florida, Georgia, Pennsylvania, New Jersey: Higher occurrences of altered checks and double presentment
  • Georgia: More fraudulent IDs
  • Northeast Area: Spike in large tax refund checks for young individuals
  • East Coast overall: Higher volume of fraud compared to other regions

Understanding these localized trends can help MSBs tailor their detection and prevention efforts based on where their business operates.

Why Fraud Is Often Missed

In busy MSB settings, tellers and staff are under pressure to process customers quickly. Fast service is important, but it should not come at the expense of proper verification. Common reasons fraud is missed include:

  • Rushing to clear lines during peak hours
  • Focusing only on the ID and not the instrument
  • Not using available tools like UV lights or thorough inspection methods

Slowing down when suspicious signals appear can prevent significant losses later.

Detecting Chemical Alterations with Simple Tools

One of the most common fraud methods involves chemical alteration (sometimes called “check washing”), where fraudsters remove original payee information and rewrite it.

How to detect it:

  • Use a UV light, which costs less than $30 and is easy to use
  • Hold the check under UV light before acceptance
  • Look for:
    • Security features glowing consistently
    • Areas where ink or paper looks inconsistent
    • Borders or payee lines that glow differently from the rest of the check

Areas that glow differently often indicate tampering.

Even if the check has no embedded security feature, an altered area will reflect under UV light in a way that the original paper will not.

Behavioral Red Flags to Watch

Fraud prevention is not only about tools. People exhibit behavior that often signals something is wrong:

Watch for customers who:

  • Avoid eye contact
  • Provide unsolicited, overly friendly explanations
  • Insist on hurrying rushing you
  • Offer reasons that don’t make sense for the transaction

These behaviors, when combined with instrument anomalies, are stronger indicators of fraud.

Money Mule and Tax Refund Schemes

In some cases, the check is real, but the transaction context is not. A common example seen in Michigan:

  • Younger individuals cashing unusually large tax refunds
  • Refund amounts not aligned with typical income for that age group
  • Refunds linked to questionable tax preparers

These patterns suggest the check itself may be authentic, but the process that generated it was fraudulent. The bank will eventually identify the issue, but MSBs may face loss if the check is returned.

Why Slowing Down Protects Your Business

Slowing down and asking questions helps you protect your business from future exposure.

It’s natural to want to avoid losing a small fee by turning away a suspicious check. However, a rushed decision can expose your business to a much higher loss when a check is returned or fails later verification.

Protecting your business means:

  • Slowing down when something doesn’t feel right
  • Asking more questions
  • Using tools like UV light to confirm legitimacy
  • Prioritizing compliance over short-term fee income

When fraud is prevented at the front line, the long-term financial health of your business is protected.

LEARN MORE

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Community
Skydive DeLand: A Legacy of Innovation, Community, and Global Impact

For many residents of DeLand, the airport on the north side of town feels like a world of its own. Planes climb into the sky daily. Parachutes bloom overhead. Visitors arrive from across the globe. What many may not realize is that Skydive DeLand is not only a local attraction. It is one of the most influential skydiving centers in the world.

A History That Shaped the Sport

Skydive DeLand began operations in 1982, taking over a location that had already seen continuous skydiving activity since 1958. From its earliest days, the company was led by competitors at the highest level of the sport. Both founders were National Champions, and one went on to achieve the title of World Champion in four-person team competition.

That competitive ambition changed the sport.

To pursue world-class performance, the founders enhanced the way teams trained. They invested in aircraft, facilities, personnel, and infrastructure that allowed for intensive, structured team training. At the time, very few drop zones operated seven days a week. Skydive DeLand quickly became a full-time operation, open year-round.

As teams discovered the level of support and consistency available in DeLand, they began traveling here from all over the world. What started as a training philosophy became a global destination.

For many years, Skydive DeLand was recognized as the most active skydiving center in the world.

Building the Skydiving Capital of the World

As training programs expanded, so did the industry surrounding them. Equipment manufacturers began relocating to DeLand in order to test new parachute designs and innovations in real-world conditions.

Today, more than 20 skydiving-related companies operate in the DeLand area. Together, they form the largest parachute equipment manufacturing cluster in the world. Skydive DeLand serves as the anchor for that ecosystem.

Manufacturers rely on the consistent jump activity to test new canopies and equipment designs. Similar to how automotive companies rely on test tracks, skydiving manufacturers rely on active drop zones.

The result is that DeLand became known internationally as the Skydiving Capital of the World. Travelers from Europe, South America, and across the United States continue to visit year after year, particularly during the late winter and spring seasons when weather conditions are ideal.

A Community Within a Community

Beyond competitions and equipment development, Skydive DeLand has fostered a global community.

Teams train here for weeks or months at a time. Large events have attracted hundreds of participants. National championships have been hosted here. At any given time, visitors may be staying in local hotels, RVs, or short-term rentals.

That international presence supports tourism, local hospitality, and small businesses throughout DeLand. A past industry census estimated more than 600 jobs connected directly or indirectly to the skydiving and equipment manufacturing sector.

During economic downturns, when other industries struggled, Skydive DeLand remained strong. Tandem jumps and recreational experiences continued to attract visitors. Equipment manufacturing remained active. That stability helped support the broader local economy during difficult periods.

The people who make up the skydiving community are also deeply engaged locally. Many longtime jumpers and industry professionals participate in other civic and community activities throughout DeLand. For those who retire from jumping, many continue to invest their energy in the town they have come to call home.

The Loss of a Founder

In 2025, the Skydive DeLand community experienced a devastating loss.

Bob Hallett, one of the two original founders and the majority shareholder of the company, passed away unexpectedly following a traffic accident on his way to work. He had been with the company since its early days and remained actively involved in daily operations.

Bob was not only a business leader but a central figure in the skydiving community. His vision and commitment helped shape Skydive DeLand into the global leader it became. His passing deeply affected employees, jumpers, manufacturers, and longtime friends across the industry.

For a company that has operated as both a workplace and a close-knit community, the loss was profound. Yet the legacy he helped build continues in the culture, the operations, and the global impact of the organization.

A Global Reputation With Local Roots

One story reflects just how far Skydive DeLand’s reach extends. A local Stetson professor once attended a conference in Taiwan and turned on the television in his hotel room. There was a feature about Skydive DeLand. He returned home surprised to discover that an internationally recognized skydiving center operated just minutes from where he lived.

That story captures something unique about Skydive DeLand. It has put DeLand on the world map, even if some residents are not fully aware of what happens at the airport each day.

Visitors are welcome to observe jumps from the viewing areas or enjoy the adjacent restaurant deck. Others choose to experience a tandem jump. Some begin lifelong careers in the sport. Whether someone comes to watch or to participate, Skydive DeLand remains open and active every day.

For more information, visit SkyDiveDeLand.com to learn about tandem experiences, training programs, and upcoming events.

Skydive DeLand is more than a drop zone. It is a global training center, an innovation hub, and a long-standing contributor to the DeLand community. Its history reflects ambition, resilience, and a deep commitment to both sport and town.

LEARN MORE

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MSB
Independent Reviews Are Not Just a Check-the-Box Requirement

For many Money Services Businesses (MSBs), the independent review is viewed as another annual compliance requirement to complete, submit to the bank, and move on from until next year.

In reality, the independent review is one of the most important tools available to help identify weaknesses in your compliance program before they become larger problems. 

A completed review alone is not enough. 

What matters is what happens after the review is finished.

Independent testing is one of the pillars of an effective BSA/AML compliance program. Its purpose is not simply to satisfy a requirement. A quality review evaluates the strength of your compliance program, identifies weaknesses or gaps, reviews transaction monitoring procedures, and provides recommendations to improve controls and reduce risk.

A strong independent review gives MSB owners visibility into areas that may need attention before regulators or financial institutions identify them first.

The Most Common Mistake MSBs Make

One of the biggest issues we see is MSBs treating the independent review as a one-time document instead of an operational tool.

In many cases, findings are not addressed, recommendations are delayed, or the same deficiencies continue appearing year after year. This creates a pattern that signals a lack of improvement and a lack of attention to compliance responsibilities.

When the same issues continue repeating, risk increases significantly.

Why Repeated Findings Matter

Repeated deficiencies can eventually lead to increased monitoring requirements, additional compliance costs, regulatory scrutiny, or even fines and penalties. In more serious situations, it can also create risk for the MSB’s banking relationship or licensing status.

In some cases, businesses may be required to undergo additional compliance monitoring by an outside third party until improvements are made.

The goal is not to create an additional burden, but instead to identify and correct issues before they become larger operational or regulatory problems.

Common Areas Where Issues Are Found

Independent reviews frequently identify issues involving:

  • Late or incomplete CTR filings
  • Weak transaction monitoring practices
  • Missing or outdated documentation
  • Gaps in Customer Due Diligence (CDD) procedures
  • Inconsistent internal processes or controls

While some of these may seem minor individually, repeated deficiencies over time can create significant compliance concerns if they are not corrected.

Improvement Matters More Than Perfection

No compliance program is perfect. What matters most is identifying issues, addressing them promptly, and demonstrating improvement over time.

An independent review should show progress year after year. If the same findings continue appearing without corrective action, regulators and financial institutions may view that as a lack of commitment to compliance obligations.

Although the independent review report is a bank-required document, MSBs are required to undergo independent testing because the Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) requires every MSB to maintain an effective Anti-Money Laundering (AML) program, and independent testing is one of the core required elements of that program.

Timing and Consistency Matter

While FinCEN requires independent testing to be conducted periodically, Surety Bank’s policy requires independent testing to be completed every 12 months for MSB customers.

Completing reviews consistently and addressing findings in a timely manner helps maintain a stronger and more effective compliance program throughout the year.

Why This Matters

Compliance is not built once a year during an independent testing. It is built through consistent attention to processes, documentation, monitoring, and corrective action throughout the year.

The independent testing is designed to help identify weaknesses before they create larger operational or regulatory problems. Using it properly can help protect your business, your banking relationship, and your long-term success.

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100th Anniversary Stories
When Banking Feels Personal Again: John Simmons & St. Barnabas’ Experience with Surety Bank | Community Profile

For John Simmons, banking with Surety has always been about relationships.

A longtime customer of Surety Bank, John has seen firsthand what it looks like when a financial institution truly shows up for its community. As a husband of 38 years, a father of four daughters, and a Director at St. Barnabas Episcopal School, his perspective is grounded in both family and service.

When the school began to grow, a new challenge emerged. They had run out of space to fit all of the students. Expansion wasn’t just a nice-to-have, it was necessary to continue serving students and families well. Like many organizations in that position, they explored their options carefully.

Then came a call that changed everything.

The president of Surety Bank reached out directly, bringing together key stakeholders in a conversation focused on one thing: how to help. What followed was more than a transaction, it was a collaborative effort. The bank stepped in not just with financial guidance, but with a clear commitment to walk alongside the school’s leadership every step of the way.

That experience left a lasting impression on John.

In his words, Surety Bank was “there 120%,” offering direction, support, and reassurance during a critical moment. But what stood out most was how they got there.

“They treat people as people,” John explains. “They actually answer the phone. They communicate.”

In an era where many businesses prioritize efficiency over connection, that kind of responsiveness feels increasingly rare. Yet for Surety Bank, it’s part of their DNA.

John’s story is a reminder that the best banking relationships aren’t built on numbers alone. They’re built on trust, accessibility, and a genuine investment in the people they serve.

This is how Surety Bank has always done it and it’s how we will always do it!

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MSB
What MSB Owners Need to Know About Oversight and Accountability

Not all risks come from outside your business.

In many cases, the most significant issues we see develop internally through gaps in oversight, compliance, and day-to-day controls.

As we move further into the year, we want to focus on a key principle that helps prevent these issues:

Trust your team, but verify your operations.

A Real-Life Scenario

Consider the following scenario:

An MSB owner invested in the business but was not involved in day-to-day operations. Instead, they trusted a close family member to manage the store and handle compliance responsibilities.

At first, everything appeared to be running smoothly.

Over time, however, several issues developed:

  • Internal controls were not consistently followed
  • Compliance requirements were not being properly maintained
  • Financial activity was not being reviewed regularly by the owner

Eventually, the situation escalated.

The individual managing the business began making unauthorized financial decisions. There were compliance gaps that had gone unnoticed. Required oversight was missing. By the time the issues surfaced, the impact included:

  • Significant financial loss
  • Compliance violations
  • Regulatory action and fines
  • Operational disruption to the business

The most important takeaway is this:

The responsibility did not fall on the person running the store. It fell on the owner.

Owner Responsibility Does Not Transfer

Even if you assign:

  • A compliance officer
  • A store manager
  • A trusted employee or family member

The responsibility for compliance, licensing, and operations remains with the owner.

Regulators evaluate the licensed entity and the owner behind it, not just the individual performing the work.

A “hands-off” approach can create risk if there is no system in place to verify what is happening inside the business.

Why Internal Issues Are Often Missed

Internal issues are not always obvious.

Unlike external fraud, which is often a single event, internal breakdowns can develop gradually:

  • Processes are skipped
  • Reviews are not completed
  • Reports are not analyzed
  • Controls become informal instead of structured

Because the business appears to be operating normally, these issues can go unnoticed until they become serious.

The Role of Oversight

Oversight does not mean mistrust. It means protection.

Strong MSB operations include:

  • Clear internal controls
  • Active AML and BSA program enforcement
  • Regular review of financial activity
  • Independent verification of processes

Owners do not need to manage every transaction, but they do need visibility into how the business is operating.

Practical Ways to Protect Your Business

To reduce risk and strengthen your operation, consider:

  • Reviewing account activity and reports on a regular basis
  • Performing periodic spot checks of transactions and documentation
  • Confirming that compliance procedures are being followed consistently
  • Ensuring licenses and required documents are current
  • Evaluating the quality of your independent reviews
  • Asking questions when something does not look right

Even small, consistent actions can help identify issues early.

Do Not Rely on One Layer of Protection

Independent reviews, compliance officers, and internal staff all play important roles.

However, none of these replace owner oversight.

If any one layer fails, there should be another layer in place to identify and correct the issue.

Final Thought

Trust is important in any business. But in an MSB environment, trust must be supported by structure, process, and verification.

A strong system protects:

  • Your business
  • Your customers
  • Your license
  • Your long-term success

We’re Here to Help

If you have questions about internal controls, compliance expectations, or how to strengthen oversight in your business, our team is available to support you.

LEARN MORE

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Community
Surety Bank Supports DeLand’s Night to Shine

For nearly 100 years, Surety Bank has believed a strong community is built through more than financial services. It's built through people showing up for one another. Since the bank’s early days, Surety has been committed to investing time, support and resources into the places where its customers live and work. That community-first mindset is why Surety was proud to support DeLand’s annual Night to Shine, hosted by Stetson Baptist Church.

History of Night to Shine

Night to Shine is a prom for people with special needs that was created to give honored guests, known as VIPs, a night filled with joy, dignity and belonging. Organizers said this year’s event welcomed about 150 VIPs and was made possible by roughly 400 volunteers who served, cheered and helped make the night unforgettable.

Night to Shine began in 2015 through the Tim Tebow Foundation and has grown into a global initiative hosted by local churches. The foundation says Night to Shine now takes place in all 50 states and in 76 countries, with 979 host churches participating during the 2026 season. In DeLand, the event brought families, volunteers and community partners together around a simple idea: everyone deserves to be celebrated.

A Night Designed to Celebrate VIPs

From the first greeting to the final song, Night to Shine is built around creating a prom experience that feels personal and uplifting. In DeLand, VIPs enjoyed a full evening of fun, including:

  • Dance floor: Music, lights and plenty of space to celebrate with friends and volunteers.
  • Karaoke: A chance to grab the mic and hear the room erupt with encouragement.
  • Caricatures: Artists creating keepsakes that captured the spirit of the night.
  • Corvette rides: A special highlight for VIPs who wanted a memorable ride and a big moment.
  • Paparazzi moments: Photos and red-carpet energy that helped VIPs feel like the stars they are.

Each part of the evening reinforced the same message: VIPs are seen, valued and welcomed.

Why Night to Shine Matters in DeLand

People with special needs and their families can too often feel overlooked, simply because many social spaces are not designed with accessibility and inclusion in mind. Night to Shine helps change that by creating an environment where belonging is intentional and celebration is the point. It’s also meaningful for caregivers, who get to watch their loved one experience a community that shows up with kindness and care.

Surety Bank is grateful to support events like Night to Shine because strong communities are built through relationships, service and shared responsibility. The turnout in DeLand reflected that spirit, with volunteers giving their time and local partners helping to make every detail count.

Thank You to the VIPs, Families and Volunteers

To the VIPs who brought the joy, the families who trusted the community with this special night, and the volunteers who made it happen, thank you. Night to Shine is one evening on the calendar, but the impact reaches much further, reminding DeLand what it looks like to celebrate every person with dignity and love.

LEARN MORE

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MSB, Business Banking, Online Banking
How to Avoid Check Fraud and Detect Altered Checks

Tax season often brings an increase in check fraud activity, and we are currently seeing specific patterns in several markets. Based on recent site visits and bankwide data, fraud trends include altered checks, fraudulent IDs, and tax refund schemes that can put MSBs at risk.

Fraud Trends We Are Seeing Now

Fraud is not evenly distributed across the country. Recent analysis shows:

  • South Florida, Georgia, Pennsylvania, New Jersey: Higher occurrences of altered checks and double presentment
  • Georgia: More fraudulent IDs
  • Northeast Area: Spike in large tax refund checks for young individuals
  • East Coast overall: Higher volume of fraud compared to other regions

Understanding these localized trends can help MSBs tailor their detection and prevention efforts based on where their business operates.

Why Fraud Is Often Missed

In busy MSB settings, tellers and staff are under pressure to process customers quickly. Fast service is important, but it should not come at the expense of proper verification. Common reasons fraud is missed include:

  • Rushing to clear lines during peak hours
  • Focusing only on the ID and not the instrument
  • Not using available tools like UV lights or thorough inspection methods

Slowing down when suspicious signals appear can prevent significant losses later.

Detecting Chemical Alterations with Simple Tools

One of the most common fraud methods involves chemical alteration (sometimes called “check washing”), where fraudsters remove original payee information and rewrite it.

How to detect it:

  • Use a UV light, which costs less than $30 and is easy to use
  • Hold the check under UV light before acceptance
  • Look for:
    • Security features glowing consistently
    • Areas where ink or paper looks inconsistent
    • Borders or payee lines that glow differently from the rest of the check

Areas that glow differently often indicate tampering.

Even if the check has no embedded security feature, an altered area will reflect under UV light in a way that the original paper will not.

Behavioral Red Flags to Watch

Fraud prevention is not only about tools. People exhibit behavior that often signals something is wrong:

Watch for customers who:

  • Avoid eye contact
  • Provide unsolicited, overly friendly explanations
  • Insist on hurrying rushing you
  • Offer reasons that don’t make sense for the transaction

These behaviors, when combined with instrument anomalies, are stronger indicators of fraud.

Money Mule and Tax Refund Schemes

In some cases, the check is real, but the transaction context is not. A common example seen in Michigan:

  • Younger individuals cashing unusually large tax refunds
  • Refund amounts not aligned with typical income for that age group
  • Refunds linked to questionable tax preparers

These patterns suggest the check itself may be authentic, but the process that generated it was fraudulent. The bank will eventually identify the issue, but MSBs may face loss if the check is returned.

Why Slowing Down Protects Your Business

Slowing down and asking questions helps you protect your business from future exposure.

It’s natural to want to avoid losing a small fee by turning away a suspicious check. However, a rushed decision can expose your business to a much higher loss when a check is returned or fails later verification.

Protecting your business means:

  • Slowing down when something doesn’t feel right
  • Asking more questions
  • Using tools like UV light to confirm legitimacy
  • Prioritizing compliance over short-term fee income

When fraud is prevented at the front line, the long-term financial health of your business is protected.

LEARN MORE

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Community
Skydive DeLand: A Legacy of Innovation, Community, and Global Impact

For many residents of DeLand, the airport on the north side of town feels like a world of its own. Planes climb into the sky daily. Parachutes bloom overhead. Visitors arrive from across the globe. What many may not realize is that Skydive DeLand is not only a local attraction. It is one of the most influential skydiving centers in the world.

A History That Shaped the Sport

Skydive DeLand began operations in 1982, taking over a location that had already seen continuous skydiving activity since 1958. From its earliest days, the company was led by competitors at the highest level of the sport. Both founders were National Champions, and one went on to achieve the title of World Champion in four-person team competition.

That competitive ambition changed the sport.

To pursue world-class performance, the founders enhanced the way teams trained. They invested in aircraft, facilities, personnel, and infrastructure that allowed for intensive, structured team training. At the time, very few drop zones operated seven days a week. Skydive DeLand quickly became a full-time operation, open year-round.

As teams discovered the level of support and consistency available in DeLand, they began traveling here from all over the world. What started as a training philosophy became a global destination.

For many years, Skydive DeLand was recognized as the most active skydiving center in the world.

Building the Skydiving Capital of the World

As training programs expanded, so did the industry surrounding them. Equipment manufacturers began relocating to DeLand in order to test new parachute designs and innovations in real-world conditions.

Today, more than 20 skydiving-related companies operate in the DeLand area. Together, they form the largest parachute equipment manufacturing cluster in the world. Skydive DeLand serves as the anchor for that ecosystem.

Manufacturers rely on the consistent jump activity to test new canopies and equipment designs. Similar to how automotive companies rely on test tracks, skydiving manufacturers rely on active drop zones.

The result is that DeLand became known internationally as the Skydiving Capital of the World. Travelers from Europe, South America, and across the United States continue to visit year after year, particularly during the late winter and spring seasons when weather conditions are ideal.

A Community Within a Community

Beyond competitions and equipment development, Skydive DeLand has fostered a global community.

Teams train here for weeks or months at a time. Large events have attracted hundreds of participants. National championships have been hosted here. At any given time, visitors may be staying in local hotels, RVs, or short-term rentals.

That international presence supports tourism, local hospitality, and small businesses throughout DeLand. A past industry census estimated more than 600 jobs connected directly or indirectly to the skydiving and equipment manufacturing sector.

During economic downturns, when other industries struggled, Skydive DeLand remained strong. Tandem jumps and recreational experiences continued to attract visitors. Equipment manufacturing remained active. That stability helped support the broader local economy during difficult periods.

The people who make up the skydiving community are also deeply engaged locally. Many longtime jumpers and industry professionals participate in other civic and community activities throughout DeLand. For those who retire from jumping, many continue to invest their energy in the town they have come to call home.

The Loss of a Founder

In 2025, the Skydive DeLand community experienced a devastating loss.

Bob Hallett, one of the two original founders and the majority shareholder of the company, passed away unexpectedly following a traffic accident on his way to work. He had been with the company since its early days and remained actively involved in daily operations.

Bob was not only a business leader but a central figure in the skydiving community. His vision and commitment helped shape Skydive DeLand into the global leader it became. His passing deeply affected employees, jumpers, manufacturers, and longtime friends across the industry.

For a company that has operated as both a workplace and a close-knit community, the loss was profound. Yet the legacy he helped build continues in the culture, the operations, and the global impact of the organization.

A Global Reputation With Local Roots

One story reflects just how far Skydive DeLand’s reach extends. A local Stetson professor once attended a conference in Taiwan and turned on the television in his hotel room. There was a feature about Skydive DeLand. He returned home surprised to discover that an internationally recognized skydiving center operated just minutes from where he lived.

That story captures something unique about Skydive DeLand. It has put DeLand on the world map, even if some residents are not fully aware of what happens at the airport each day.

Visitors are welcome to observe jumps from the viewing areas or enjoy the adjacent restaurant deck. Others choose to experience a tandem jump. Some begin lifelong careers in the sport. Whether someone comes to watch or to participate, Skydive DeLand remains open and active every day.

For more information, visit SkyDiveDeLand.com to learn about tandem experiences, training programs, and upcoming events.

Skydive DeLand is more than a drop zone. It is a global training center, an innovation hub, and a long-standing contributor to the DeLand community. Its history reflects ambition, resilience, and a deep commitment to both sport and town.

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