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.

100th Anniversary Stories
Strong Communities Are Built Through Strong Partnerships

For 100 years, Surety Bank has believed that community banking means more than serving customers inside the walls of a branch. It means investing in the people, organizations, and partnerships that help our communities thrive.

That commitment is something Carla Quann, Director of Community Relations for the Volusia Sheriff's Office, has experienced firsthand.

"Our goal is to support everyone in our community," Carla explains. "Ryan [James] wanted to be a part of what we're doing because he cares about the community."

The partnership between Surety Bank and the Volusia Sheriff's Office began when Surety Bank President & CEO Ryan James joined the Volusia Sheriff's Foundation Board. Since then, the relationship has grown into a collaborative effort focused on addressing some of the community's greatest needs.

One example came during the holiday season, when thousands of local families faced uncertainty after SNAP benefits were unexpectedly interrupted. Through the combined efforts of businesses, volunteers, and community organizations, more than 3,500 grocery bags were distributed to families throughout Volusia County.

According to Carla, Surety Bank was an important part of making that effort possible.

Beyond community events and charitable initiatives, the partnership has also helped strengthen public safety.

As financial scams targeting older adults became increasingly common, Surety Bank worked alongside the Sheriff's Office to provide education, share industry expertise, and help detectives better recognize the warning signs of fraud.

That collaboration ultimately helped lead to the creation of the Volusia Sheriff's Office Financial Crimes Unit—a dedicated team focused on protecting residents from fraud and financial exploitation.

Working together, those efforts have helped recover more than $2 million for local victims of financial crimes.

For Carla, those results reflect what makes Surety Bank different.

"They're not just another hometown bank," she says. "They care about their community."

She believes that commitment starts with customer service but extends far beyond banking. Whether supporting nonprofit organizations, helping law enforcement address emerging scams, or simply answering the phone when someone needs help, Surety Bank has built relationships rooted in trust.

"People trust them," Carla says. "They've built that trust with their customers, and that's why people stay."

As Surety Bank celebrates a century of serving Central Florida, partnerships like this demonstrate that community banking isn't defined only by financial services—it's measured by the impact a bank has on the people and communities it serves.

For 100 years, Surety Bank has believed that when communities succeed, everyone succeeds. Through partnerships built on trust, service, and shared purpose, that commitment continues today—and will continue for generations to come.

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100th Anniversary Stories
A Bank That Looks Beyond the Transaction

As Surety Bank celebrates 100 years of community banking, one thing has remained constant throughout every decade: our commitment to people.

For Alexandra Wells, VP BSA Officer, that commitment is what makes community banking different.

After spending more than 20 years in the legal field, Alexandra joined Surety Bank in 2019, bringing together her legal experience and newly earned accounting degree to help protect customers from fraud, financial crimes, and suspicious activity. Since then, she has advanced through the Bank Secrecy Act department while helping strengthen Surety's commitment to customer protection. But for Alexandra, the work is about far more than regulations and risk management.

"It's about people," she says.

That philosophy became especially clear when an elderly customer began exhibiting unusual banking activity.

The customer, who had recently lost her husband and hired a caretaker, suddenly began cashing checks and making transactions that were completely out of character. Surety Bank's frontline staff noticed the changes immediately. Because they knew the customer and understood her normal banking habits, they recognized that something wasn't right.

The situation was escalated to Alexandra for further review.

After analyzing the account activity, Alexandra and another Surety employee visited the customer at her home. During the visit, several warning signs became apparent. The caretaker repeatedly answered questions on the customer's behalf, and purchases were being made that didn't align with the customer's typical behavior.

Further investigation revealed that the caretaker had gained access to the customer's debit card and was using it for personal purchases, including online shopping and vehicle rentals.

By acting quickly, Surety Bank was able to contact the customer's family, stop the unauthorized activity, and help prevent additional financial loss.

"It's one of the advantages of being a community bank," Alexandra explains. "Because we know our customers, we can recognize when something doesn't seem right and take action."

Stories like this highlight what has set Surety Bank apart for the past century. While technology and banking services continue to evolve, the foundation of community banking remains the same: relationships.

For Alexandra, those relationships extend beyond customers and into the workplace as well.

"At Surety Bank, you're not just a number," she says. "You're a person. We know each other by name, and we genuinely care about one another."

That culture of caring is reflected throughout the organization, from employees supporting one another through life's challenges to teams working together to serve customers with a personal touch.

As Surety Bank enters its second century, Alexandra believes the values that have guided the Bank for the last 100 years will continue to shape its future.

"We've always cared about our customers and our employees," she says. "That's the culture of Surety Bank, and I believe that's something that will continue for another century to come."

After 100 years, it's still how we've always done it: putting people first.

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MSB
Why Corporate Due Diligence Files Matter More Than You Think

For many Money Services Businesses (MSBs), corporate due diligence files are completed during onboarding and are not reviewed on a regular basis. Over time, documents expire, registrations lapse, and required updates are overlooked.

The problem is that these files are not simply internal paperwork or a bank requirement. In many states, maintaining accurate and current corporate due diligence documentation is part of an MSB’s broader compliance responsibilities.

When documentation is incomplete or outdated, it can create operational disruptions that directly affect your business.

Why This Matters

One of the most common issues we continue seeing involves outdated or incomplete documentation for businesses whose checks are being cashed.

In many cases, the MSB believes everything is in order until a transaction is reviewed and a problem is identified. By that point, funds may have already been provided to the customer.

When documentation is missing or expired, it can result in:

  • Delayed or blocked transactions
  • Compliance concerns
  • Increased operational risk
  • Preventable financial losses

These situations are often avoidable with consistent file maintenance and regular internal reviews.

Corporate Due Diligence Is More Than a One-Time Process

Corporate due diligence should be treated as an ongoing operational responsibility, not a one-time onboarding task.

Business information changes regularly. Companies may:

  • Allow registrations to expire
  • Change ownership or signers
  • Update corporate structures
  • Lose active status with the state
  • Allow supporting documentation to lapse

Without ongoing reviews, these changes can easily go unnoticed until they create a problem during transaction processing or compliance review.

What Should Be Included in Corporate Due Diligence Files?

Requirements vary depending on the state and type of business, but corporate due diligence files commonly include:

  • Corporate resolutions
  • EIN verification from the IRS
  • Articles of Incorporation or formation documents
  • Government-issued identification for authorized individuals
  • Fictitious name registrations, if applicable
  • Workers’ compensation documentation or exemption records
  • Business tax receipts or similar local registrations

Many of these documents require periodic renewal or updates.

One of the Biggest Issues We See: Expired Business Registrations

One recurring issue involves businesses failing to maintain active registration status with the Secretary of State.

In states like Florida, corporations are required to file annual reports to remain active. If those filings are missed, the business can become inactive or suspended.

During the due diligence process, Surety Bank reviews business registration status as part of transaction and compliance reviews. If a business is no longer active with the state, transactions may be delayed or unable to proceed until the issue is resolved.

Unfortunately, many MSBs do not discover the problem until after they have already provided funds to the customer.

The Importance of Regular Reviews

One of the best ways to avoid these situations is by implementing consistent internal reviews of your corporate due diligence files.

It is recommended that MSBs review files at least twice a year to ensure documentation remains current and complete.

Even simple tracking methods can make a significant difference. Many businesses successfully use spreadsheets or internal checklists to monitor:

  • Expiration dates
  • Annual registration renewals
  • Tax receipt updates
  • Insurance documentation
  • Corporate resolution changes

A small amount of organization upfront can help prevent larger operational and compliance issues later.

Strong Documentation Protects Your Business

Corporate due diligence reviews are not simply administrative tasks. They are part of maintaining a strong compliance program and protecting your business from avoidable risk.

Strong documentation practices help businesses:

  • Reduce operational disruptions
  • Improve organization and consistency
  • Support licensing and compliance obligations
  • Strengthen internal controls
  • Prevent unnecessary losses and delays

Most importantly, they help identify problems before they affect day-to-day operations.

Looking Ahead

Maintaining corporate due diligence files may not feel urgent until a transaction is delayed, a registration is found inactive, or documentation cannot be produced when needed.

Consistent reviews, updated records, and proactive tracking procedures help keep operations running smoothly and reduce preventable risk.

In many cases, the businesses with the fewest operational disruptions are simply the ones that stay organized and review their files consistently throughout the year.

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100th Anniversary Stories
A Bank That Knows Your Name: Why John Hamlin Has Trusted Surety Bank for Nearly 20 Years | Customer Profile

For John Hamlin, business has always been about relationships.

As the owner of Hamlin & Associates and several affiliated companies, John has spent decades helping businesses succeed. Throughout his career, he's learned that the strongest partnerships aren't built on transactions alone. They're built on trust, responsiveness, and a genuine commitment to helping people when they need it most.

That's one of the reasons he's been banking with Surety Bank for nearly 20 years.

When John first moved to the Daytona Beach area, Surety Bank was recommended to him by a trusted contact. From his very first interactions with the team, he noticed something different.

"It reminded me more of an old-school bank that cared," John recalls. "I wasn't just an account number. They took the time to learn my name, understand my business, and get to know me."

Over the years, John has worked with other financial institutions, but those experiences only reinforced what makes Surety unique. While larger banks often offered similar products and technology, they couldn't provide the same level of personal attention.

"You can go anywhere and get online banking," he says. "Surety offers that too. The difference is they also offer the personal relationship."

For John, that relationship has meant having direct conversations when questions arise, receiving honest guidance, and knowing that decisions are made by people who understand both his business and his goals.

After nearly two decades as a customer, John says he's never felt the need to call and complain about an employee or a banking experience.

"Everybody in this bank is of service," he explains. "They're accommodating, they're friendly, and they're always willing to help. That's rare."

As Surety Bank celebrates its 100th anniversary, John believes the bank's longevity comes down to something simple: maintaining the personal touch while continuing to evolve.

"You guys can do everything the big banks do," he says. "They can't do everything you do."

For John, that's what community banking should be. Modern conveniences matter, but relationships matter more.

And after nearly 20 years, that's why Surety Bank continues to be his bank of choice.

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

Watch on YouTube.

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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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Business Expansion, Business Banking
“Building Through the Turbulence” — Insights from CEO Ryan James

In the Summer 2025 issue of Building Central Florida Magazine, Surety Bank’s CEO Ryan James maps out a playbook for contractors battling the tariff-driven spikes in steel, aluminum, and other construction staples. James urges firms to replace one-job-at-a-time budgeting with rolling, company-wide cash-flow forecasts; to negotiate for delivery and payment flexibility; to lock in contingency capital before trouble hits; and to embed escalation clauses that keep margins intact—all while maintaining proactive, transparent communication with clients.

Read the full article on page 17:
Building Through the Turbulence – Building Central Florida Magazine

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Business Banking, Online Banking
Check Fraud Isn’t Slowing Down—Here’s How Surety Bank Protects Your Business

It’s easy to assume that in a digital world, check fraud is a thing of the past. But the reality is quite the opposite. In 2023 alone, check fraud losses in the Americas totaled a staggering $21 billion—representing 80% of all global check fraud cases. Despite a steady decline in the use of checks, fraudsters are doubling down on a still-vulnerable payment channel.

So what happens when a check your business issued ends up in the wrong hands?

Let’s say you wrote a vendor check back in February. Today, that check suddenly clears—but it’s been altered or stolen. What’s your next move? Do you catch it in time? Will your bank reimburse the loss? If you’re like many business owners, you’d expect your bank to take care of it. But depending on the terms in your bank’s Deposit Agreement, you may only have 30 days from the date of your statement to report the fraud and recover those funds. And once that window closes, so may your chances of getting that money back.

At Surety Bank, we want our business clients to know that help exists—and it's called Positive Pay.

What Is Positive Pay?

Positive Pay is a fraud prevention tool that verifies checks presented for payment against a list of checks you’ve actually issued. If the details don’t match, the bank flags the check and reaches out before funds are released.

It’s like having a security checkpoint for every check your business issues.

Why Positive Pay Matters Now More Than Ever

Here’s what fraud can really cost your business:

  • $200+ in hard costs just to close a compromised account and reissue checks
  • Lost productivity from dealing with account closures, reissued checks, vendor calls, and legal claims
  • Reputational risk if your vendors or clients are affected by stolen checks
  • Lost funds if you miss the reporting window in your Deposit Agreement

Surety Bank’s Positive Pay solution is designed to reduce those risks before they become losses. Instead of waiting for fraud to strike, it gives business owners a chance to act first.

Real Talk: You Don’t Have Time for Fraud

Most business owners don’t have the luxury of watching every check line item on their bank statement. Positive Pay works in the background—quietly checking, flagging, and helping you intercept fraud before it’s too late.

By offering this service, we’re not just protecting your account—we’re protecting your time, your reputation, and your peace of mind.

Let’s Talk

Check fraud isn’t going away. But your exposure to it can.

If you’re still issuing paper checks, it’s time to ask yourself: How am I protecting my business from check fraud? At Surety Bank, we’re ready to help you find the answer.

Reach out to our Treasury Management team to learn how Positive Pay can fit into your fraud prevention strategy.

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Business Banking, Online Banking
Check Fraud Isn’t Yesterday’s Problem—It’s a 2025 Headache

Paper checks may feel old-school, yet they remain the easiest gateway for thieves. The U.S. Treasury reports that check-fraud suspicious-activity filings have climbed 385 percent since the pandemic, while 63 percent of companies faced attempted or actual check fraud in 2024, according to the Association for Financial Professionals’ 2025 survey.occ.govafponline.org Those numbers tell a blunt story: even as businesses adopt ACH and virtual cards, the humble check still opens a back door to five- and six-figure losses.

A Florida Business Learns the Hard Way (Fictitious Scenario)

The phone lit up in the back office of Sunshine Custom Cabinets on a Thursday afternoon.

Co-owner Angela Moreno glanced at the caller ID from her bank and expected a routine wire inquiry. Instead she heard:

“Ms. Moreno, six checks just cleared your account for almost ten thousand dollars each. Can you confirm them?”

Angela had mailed only three checks that week, none over $4,500. Somewhere between the post-office drop box and her suppliers’ lockboxes, thieves had “washed” the envelopes, bleached the ink, and rewritten the checks for a cool $59,821.32—wiping out two payroll cycles in minutes.

The next 48 hours blurred into police reports, fraud affidavits, and tense conversations with employees wondering if Friday’s pay would arrive. The bank eventually credited most of the money, but cash flow froze for nearly a month, and the team sank forty billable hours into cleaning up—a cost no insurance policy reimbursed.

Four Habit Shifts That Shut the Door on Washed Checks

  1. Treat outgoing mail like cash. Hand checks over the post-office counter or schedule a courier; avoid curbside blue boxes after hours, the favored hunting ground for “mailbox-fishing” crews.
  2. Upgrade the check itself. Print on security stock with chemical-wash indicators and write in permanent gel ink; solvents can’t lift that ink cleanly, and visible fibers split when erased.
  3. Reconcile daily, not weekly. Set same-day alerts and review every cleared item before funds settle; many recovery windows close within 24 hours.
  4. Add an automated backstop. A tool such as Positive Pay compares each presented check to the file you issue and flags mismatches for approval—catching duplicates, altered amounts, or fake payees that busy humans miss. It isn’t a silver bullet, but paired with disciplined habits it turns most forged checks into worthless paper.

Takeaway

Check fraud has morphed from fax-era nuisance to organized, AI-enhanced side hustle. The good news: consistent, unglamorous discipline—secure mailing, rapid reconciliation, and an automated pre-clearance layer—sends fraudsters looking for softer targets. Angela calls that Thursday “the most expensive lesson I never budgeted for.” Tighten your routine today, and you won’t need the same wake-up call.

Need a practical walkthrough of daily controls—minus the jargon? Talk with our Treasury Management team about fitting these layers to your workflow before your next envelope hits the mail.

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Business Banking, Personal Banking, Online Banking
Online Banking: How to Stay Secure

As more banking moves online, security has become just as important as convenience. Whether you’re checking a personal account or managing company finances, your computer habits play a critical role in keeping your information safe. A few consistent practices can greatly reduce your risk of fraud and protect sensitive data.

Keep Your Computer Free from Malware

Malware can capture keystrokes, steal login credentials, and access personal files without you realizing it. To stay protected:

  • Install reputable antivirus and anti-malware software
  • Enable real-time protection
  • Run regular scans
  • Keep security tools updated (paid versions often provide stronger protection and support)

Use Strong Security Features

Make full use of the security tools your devices and bank provide:

  • Enable Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA) for extra protection beyond a password
  • Keep your firewall active to block unauthorized access
  • Update your operating system and browser regularly (set updates to run automatically if possible)

Always Log Out After Banking

Closing your browser window isn’t enough to end your session.

  • Always log out completely
  • This is especially important on public or shared computers, which may store session data if you don’t log out

Clear Your Browser Data Regularly

Browsers can store sensitive information like login pages or cached credentials. To protect yourself:

  • Clear your cache and cookies regularly
  • Avoid saving banking passwords in your browser—use a secure password manager instead
  • Do not share your credentials with anyone
  • On shared devices, use Private or Incognito Mode

Avoid Clicking on Suspicious Links

Phishing emails and fraudulent pop-ups can trick you into giving away banking information. Watch for:

  • Emails urging “urgent action” with links
  • Unexpected attachments from unknown senders
  • Pop-ups asking for banking credentials

Best practice: Always access your bank by typing the official web address directly into your browser, never through email or ad links.

For Business Clients

Businesses face higher risks, so proactive steps are essential:

  • Secure all employee devices
  • Set role-based access controls and permissions
  • Conduct regular cybersecurity training
  • If you suspect suspicious activity, contact your bank immediately

Staying Proactive

Online banking can be safe and reliable when paired with good cybersecurity habits. By:

  • Keeping your systems clean
  • Using strong security features
  • Staying alert to suspicious activity

…you can protect both your finances and your peace of mind.

The key is consistency. Security isn’t a one-time task—it’s a set of habits built into your everyday banking routine. Taking these steps ensures your accounts remain secure, your sensitive information stays private, and you can manage your finances confidently, whether personally or for your business.

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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.

LEARN MORE

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100th Anniversary Stories
Strong Communities Are Built Through Strong Partnerships

For 100 years, Surety Bank has believed that community banking means more than serving customers inside the walls of a branch. It means investing in the people, organizations, and partnerships that help our communities thrive.

That commitment is something Carla Quann, Director of Community Relations for the Volusia Sheriff's Office, has experienced firsthand.

"Our goal is to support everyone in our community," Carla explains. "Ryan [James] wanted to be a part of what we're doing because he cares about the community."

The partnership between Surety Bank and the Volusia Sheriff's Office began when Surety Bank President & CEO Ryan James joined the Volusia Sheriff's Foundation Board. Since then, the relationship has grown into a collaborative effort focused on addressing some of the community's greatest needs.

One example came during the holiday season, when thousands of local families faced uncertainty after SNAP benefits were unexpectedly interrupted. Through the combined efforts of businesses, volunteers, and community organizations, more than 3,500 grocery bags were distributed to families throughout Volusia County.

According to Carla, Surety Bank was an important part of making that effort possible.

Beyond community events and charitable initiatives, the partnership has also helped strengthen public safety.

As financial scams targeting older adults became increasingly common, Surety Bank worked alongside the Sheriff's Office to provide education, share industry expertise, and help detectives better recognize the warning signs of fraud.

That collaboration ultimately helped lead to the creation of the Volusia Sheriff's Office Financial Crimes Unit—a dedicated team focused on protecting residents from fraud and financial exploitation.

Working together, those efforts have helped recover more than $2 million for local victims of financial crimes.

For Carla, those results reflect what makes Surety Bank different.

"They're not just another hometown bank," she says. "They care about their community."

She believes that commitment starts with customer service but extends far beyond banking. Whether supporting nonprofit organizations, helping law enforcement address emerging scams, or simply answering the phone when someone needs help, Surety Bank has built relationships rooted in trust.

"People trust them," Carla says. "They've built that trust with their customers, and that's why people stay."

As Surety Bank celebrates a century of serving Central Florida, partnerships like this demonstrate that community banking isn't defined only by financial services—it's measured by the impact a bank has on the people and communities it serves.

For 100 years, Surety Bank has believed that when communities succeed, everyone succeeds. Through partnerships built on trust, service, and shared purpose, that commitment continues today—and will continue for generations to come.

LEARN MORE

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100th Anniversary Stories
A Bank That Looks Beyond the Transaction

As Surety Bank celebrates 100 years of community banking, one thing has remained constant throughout every decade: our commitment to people.

For Alexandra Wells, VP BSA Officer, that commitment is what makes community banking different.

After spending more than 20 years in the legal field, Alexandra joined Surety Bank in 2019, bringing together her legal experience and newly earned accounting degree to help protect customers from fraud, financial crimes, and suspicious activity. Since then, she has advanced through the Bank Secrecy Act department while helping strengthen Surety's commitment to customer protection. But for Alexandra, the work is about far more than regulations and risk management.

"It's about people," she says.

That philosophy became especially clear when an elderly customer began exhibiting unusual banking activity.

The customer, who had recently lost her husband and hired a caretaker, suddenly began cashing checks and making transactions that were completely out of character. Surety Bank's frontline staff noticed the changes immediately. Because they knew the customer and understood her normal banking habits, they recognized that something wasn't right.

The situation was escalated to Alexandra for further review.

After analyzing the account activity, Alexandra and another Surety employee visited the customer at her home. During the visit, several warning signs became apparent. The caretaker repeatedly answered questions on the customer's behalf, and purchases were being made that didn't align with the customer's typical behavior.

Further investigation revealed that the caretaker had gained access to the customer's debit card and was using it for personal purchases, including online shopping and vehicle rentals.

By acting quickly, Surety Bank was able to contact the customer's family, stop the unauthorized activity, and help prevent additional financial loss.

"It's one of the advantages of being a community bank," Alexandra explains. "Because we know our customers, we can recognize when something doesn't seem right and take action."

Stories like this highlight what has set Surety Bank apart for the past century. While technology and banking services continue to evolve, the foundation of community banking remains the same: relationships.

For Alexandra, those relationships extend beyond customers and into the workplace as well.

"At Surety Bank, you're not just a number," she says. "You're a person. We know each other by name, and we genuinely care about one another."

That culture of caring is reflected throughout the organization, from employees supporting one another through life's challenges to teams working together to serve customers with a personal touch.

As Surety Bank enters its second century, Alexandra believes the values that have guided the Bank for the last 100 years will continue to shape its future.

"We've always cared about our customers and our employees," she says. "That's the culture of Surety Bank, and I believe that's something that will continue for another century to come."

After 100 years, it's still how we've always done it: putting people first.

LEARN MORE

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MSB
Why Corporate Due Diligence Files Matter More Than You Think

For many Money Services Businesses (MSBs), corporate due diligence files are completed during onboarding and are not reviewed on a regular basis. Over time, documents expire, registrations lapse, and required updates are overlooked.

The problem is that these files are not simply internal paperwork or a bank requirement. In many states, maintaining accurate and current corporate due diligence documentation is part of an MSB’s broader compliance responsibilities.

When documentation is incomplete or outdated, it can create operational disruptions that directly affect your business.

Why This Matters

One of the most common issues we continue seeing involves outdated or incomplete documentation for businesses whose checks are being cashed.

In many cases, the MSB believes everything is in order until a transaction is reviewed and a problem is identified. By that point, funds may have already been provided to the customer.

When documentation is missing or expired, it can result in:

  • Delayed or blocked transactions
  • Compliance concerns
  • Increased operational risk
  • Preventable financial losses

These situations are often avoidable with consistent file maintenance and regular internal reviews.

Corporate Due Diligence Is More Than a One-Time Process

Corporate due diligence should be treated as an ongoing operational responsibility, not a one-time onboarding task.

Business information changes regularly. Companies may:

  • Allow registrations to expire
  • Change ownership or signers
  • Update corporate structures
  • Lose active status with the state
  • Allow supporting documentation to lapse

Without ongoing reviews, these changes can easily go unnoticed until they create a problem during transaction processing or compliance review.

What Should Be Included in Corporate Due Diligence Files?

Requirements vary depending on the state and type of business, but corporate due diligence files commonly include:

  • Corporate resolutions
  • EIN verification from the IRS
  • Articles of Incorporation or formation documents
  • Government-issued identification for authorized individuals
  • Fictitious name registrations, if applicable
  • Workers’ compensation documentation or exemption records
  • Business tax receipts or similar local registrations

Many of these documents require periodic renewal or updates.

One of the Biggest Issues We See: Expired Business Registrations

One recurring issue involves businesses failing to maintain active registration status with the Secretary of State.

In states like Florida, corporations are required to file annual reports to remain active. If those filings are missed, the business can become inactive or suspended.

During the due diligence process, Surety Bank reviews business registration status as part of transaction and compliance reviews. If a business is no longer active with the state, transactions may be delayed or unable to proceed until the issue is resolved.

Unfortunately, many MSBs do not discover the problem until after they have already provided funds to the customer.

The Importance of Regular Reviews

One of the best ways to avoid these situations is by implementing consistent internal reviews of your corporate due diligence files.

It is recommended that MSBs review files at least twice a year to ensure documentation remains current and complete.

Even simple tracking methods can make a significant difference. Many businesses successfully use spreadsheets or internal checklists to monitor:

  • Expiration dates
  • Annual registration renewals
  • Tax receipt updates
  • Insurance documentation
  • Corporate resolution changes

A small amount of organization upfront can help prevent larger operational and compliance issues later.

Strong Documentation Protects Your Business

Corporate due diligence reviews are not simply administrative tasks. They are part of maintaining a strong compliance program and protecting your business from avoidable risk.

Strong documentation practices help businesses:

  • Reduce operational disruptions
  • Improve organization and consistency
  • Support licensing and compliance obligations
  • Strengthen internal controls
  • Prevent unnecessary losses and delays

Most importantly, they help identify problems before they affect day-to-day operations.

Looking Ahead

Maintaining corporate due diligence files may not feel urgent until a transaction is delayed, a registration is found inactive, or documentation cannot be produced when needed.

Consistent reviews, updated records, and proactive tracking procedures help keep operations running smoothly and reduce preventable risk.

In many cases, the businesses with the fewest operational disruptions are simply the ones that stay organized and review their files consistently throughout the year.

LEARN MORE

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100th Anniversary Stories
A Bank That Knows Your Name: Why John Hamlin Has Trusted Surety Bank for Nearly 20 Years | Customer Profile

For John Hamlin, business has always been about relationships.

As the owner of Hamlin & Associates and several affiliated companies, John has spent decades helping businesses succeed. Throughout his career, he's learned that the strongest partnerships aren't built on transactions alone. They're built on trust, responsiveness, and a genuine commitment to helping people when they need it most.

That's one of the reasons he's been banking with Surety Bank for nearly 20 years.

When John first moved to the Daytona Beach area, Surety Bank was recommended to him by a trusted contact. From his very first interactions with the team, he noticed something different.

"It reminded me more of an old-school bank that cared," John recalls. "I wasn't just an account number. They took the time to learn my name, understand my business, and get to know me."

Over the years, John has worked with other financial institutions, but those experiences only reinforced what makes Surety unique. While larger banks often offered similar products and technology, they couldn't provide the same level of personal attention.

"You can go anywhere and get online banking," he says. "Surety offers that too. The difference is they also offer the personal relationship."

For John, that relationship has meant having direct conversations when questions arise, receiving honest guidance, and knowing that decisions are made by people who understand both his business and his goals.

After nearly two decades as a customer, John says he's never felt the need to call and complain about an employee or a banking experience.

"Everybody in this bank is of service," he explains. "They're accommodating, they're friendly, and they're always willing to help. That's rare."

As Surety Bank celebrates its 100th anniversary, John believes the bank's longevity comes down to something simple: maintaining the personal touch while continuing to evolve.

"You guys can do everything the big banks do," he says. "They can't do everything you do."

For John, that's what community banking should be. Modern conveniences matter, but relationships matter more.

And after nearly 20 years, that's why Surety Bank continues to be his bank of choice.

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

Watch on YouTube.

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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100th Anniversary Stories
Strong Communities Are Built Through Strong Partnerships

For 100 years, Surety Bank has believed that community banking means more than serving customers inside the walls of a branch. It means investing in the people, organizations, and partnerships that help our communities thrive.

That commitment is something Carla Quann, Director of Community Relations for the Volusia Sheriff's Office, has experienced firsthand.

"Our goal is to support everyone in our community," Carla explains. "Ryan [James] wanted to be a part of what we're doing because he cares about the community."

The partnership between Surety Bank and the Volusia Sheriff's Office began when Surety Bank President & CEO Ryan James joined the Volusia Sheriff's Foundation Board. Since then, the relationship has grown into a collaborative effort focused on addressing some of the community's greatest needs.

One example came during the holiday season, when thousands of local families faced uncertainty after SNAP benefits were unexpectedly interrupted. Through the combined efforts of businesses, volunteers, and community organizations, more than 3,500 grocery bags were distributed to families throughout Volusia County.

According to Carla, Surety Bank was an important part of making that effort possible.

Beyond community events and charitable initiatives, the partnership has also helped strengthen public safety.

As financial scams targeting older adults became increasingly common, Surety Bank worked alongside the Sheriff's Office to provide education, share industry expertise, and help detectives better recognize the warning signs of fraud.

That collaboration ultimately helped lead to the creation of the Volusia Sheriff's Office Financial Crimes Unit—a dedicated team focused on protecting residents from fraud and financial exploitation.

Working together, those efforts have helped recover more than $2 million for local victims of financial crimes.

For Carla, those results reflect what makes Surety Bank different.

"They're not just another hometown bank," she says. "They care about their community."

She believes that commitment starts with customer service but extends far beyond banking. Whether supporting nonprofit organizations, helping law enforcement address emerging scams, or simply answering the phone when someone needs help, Surety Bank has built relationships rooted in trust.

"People trust them," Carla says. "They've built that trust with their customers, and that's why people stay."

As Surety Bank celebrates a century of serving Central Florida, partnerships like this demonstrate that community banking isn't defined only by financial services—it's measured by the impact a bank has on the people and communities it serves.

For 100 years, Surety Bank has believed that when communities succeed, everyone succeeds. Through partnerships built on trust, service, and shared purpose, that commitment continues today—and will continue for generations to come.

LEARN MORE

a line icona right arrow icon
100th Anniversary Stories
A Bank That Looks Beyond the Transaction

As Surety Bank celebrates 100 years of community banking, one thing has remained constant throughout every decade: our commitment to people.

For Alexandra Wells, VP BSA Officer, that commitment is what makes community banking different.

After spending more than 20 years in the legal field, Alexandra joined Surety Bank in 2019, bringing together her legal experience and newly earned accounting degree to help protect customers from fraud, financial crimes, and suspicious activity. Since then, she has advanced through the Bank Secrecy Act department while helping strengthen Surety's commitment to customer protection. But for Alexandra, the work is about far more than regulations and risk management.

"It's about people," she says.

That philosophy became especially clear when an elderly customer began exhibiting unusual banking activity.

The customer, who had recently lost her husband and hired a caretaker, suddenly began cashing checks and making transactions that were completely out of character. Surety Bank's frontline staff noticed the changes immediately. Because they knew the customer and understood her normal banking habits, they recognized that something wasn't right.

The situation was escalated to Alexandra for further review.

After analyzing the account activity, Alexandra and another Surety employee visited the customer at her home. During the visit, several warning signs became apparent. The caretaker repeatedly answered questions on the customer's behalf, and purchases were being made that didn't align with the customer's typical behavior.

Further investigation revealed that the caretaker had gained access to the customer's debit card and was using it for personal purchases, including online shopping and vehicle rentals.

By acting quickly, Surety Bank was able to contact the customer's family, stop the unauthorized activity, and help prevent additional financial loss.

"It's one of the advantages of being a community bank," Alexandra explains. "Because we know our customers, we can recognize when something doesn't seem right and take action."

Stories like this highlight what has set Surety Bank apart for the past century. While technology and banking services continue to evolve, the foundation of community banking remains the same: relationships.

For Alexandra, those relationships extend beyond customers and into the workplace as well.

"At Surety Bank, you're not just a number," she says. "You're a person. We know each other by name, and we genuinely care about one another."

That culture of caring is reflected throughout the organization, from employees supporting one another through life's challenges to teams working together to serve customers with a personal touch.

As Surety Bank enters its second century, Alexandra believes the values that have guided the Bank for the last 100 years will continue to shape its future.

"We've always cared about our customers and our employees," she says. "That's the culture of Surety Bank, and I believe that's something that will continue for another century to come."

After 100 years, it's still how we've always done it: putting people first.

LEARN MORE

a line icona right arrow icon
MSB
Why Corporate Due Diligence Files Matter More Than You Think

For many Money Services Businesses (MSBs), corporate due diligence files are completed during onboarding and are not reviewed on a regular basis. Over time, documents expire, registrations lapse, and required updates are overlooked.

The problem is that these files are not simply internal paperwork or a bank requirement. In many states, maintaining accurate and current corporate due diligence documentation is part of an MSB’s broader compliance responsibilities.

When documentation is incomplete or outdated, it can create operational disruptions that directly affect your business.

Why This Matters

One of the most common issues we continue seeing involves outdated or incomplete documentation for businesses whose checks are being cashed.

In many cases, the MSB believes everything is in order until a transaction is reviewed and a problem is identified. By that point, funds may have already been provided to the customer.

When documentation is missing or expired, it can result in:

  • Delayed or blocked transactions
  • Compliance concerns
  • Increased operational risk
  • Preventable financial losses

These situations are often avoidable with consistent file maintenance and regular internal reviews.

Corporate Due Diligence Is More Than a One-Time Process

Corporate due diligence should be treated as an ongoing operational responsibility, not a one-time onboarding task.

Business information changes regularly. Companies may:

  • Allow registrations to expire
  • Change ownership or signers
  • Update corporate structures
  • Lose active status with the state
  • Allow supporting documentation to lapse

Without ongoing reviews, these changes can easily go unnoticed until they create a problem during transaction processing or compliance review.

What Should Be Included in Corporate Due Diligence Files?

Requirements vary depending on the state and type of business, but corporate due diligence files commonly include:

  • Corporate resolutions
  • EIN verification from the IRS
  • Articles of Incorporation or formation documents
  • Government-issued identification for authorized individuals
  • Fictitious name registrations, if applicable
  • Workers’ compensation documentation or exemption records
  • Business tax receipts or similar local registrations

Many of these documents require periodic renewal or updates.

One of the Biggest Issues We See: Expired Business Registrations

One recurring issue involves businesses failing to maintain active registration status with the Secretary of State.

In states like Florida, corporations are required to file annual reports to remain active. If those filings are missed, the business can become inactive or suspended.

During the due diligence process, Surety Bank reviews business registration status as part of transaction and compliance reviews. If a business is no longer active with the state, transactions may be delayed or unable to proceed until the issue is resolved.

Unfortunately, many MSBs do not discover the problem until after they have already provided funds to the customer.

The Importance of Regular Reviews

One of the best ways to avoid these situations is by implementing consistent internal reviews of your corporate due diligence files.

It is recommended that MSBs review files at least twice a year to ensure documentation remains current and complete.

Even simple tracking methods can make a significant difference. Many businesses successfully use spreadsheets or internal checklists to monitor:

  • Expiration dates
  • Annual registration renewals
  • Tax receipt updates
  • Insurance documentation
  • Corporate resolution changes

A small amount of organization upfront can help prevent larger operational and compliance issues later.

Strong Documentation Protects Your Business

Corporate due diligence reviews are not simply administrative tasks. They are part of maintaining a strong compliance program and protecting your business from avoidable risk.

Strong documentation practices help businesses:

  • Reduce operational disruptions
  • Improve organization and consistency
  • Support licensing and compliance obligations
  • Strengthen internal controls
  • Prevent unnecessary losses and delays

Most importantly, they help identify problems before they affect day-to-day operations.

Looking Ahead

Maintaining corporate due diligence files may not feel urgent until a transaction is delayed, a registration is found inactive, or documentation cannot be produced when needed.

Consistent reviews, updated records, and proactive tracking procedures help keep operations running smoothly and reduce preventable risk.

In many cases, the businesses with the fewest operational disruptions are simply the ones that stay organized and review their files consistently throughout the year.

LEARN MORE

a line icona right arrow icon
100th Anniversary Stories
A Bank That Knows Your Name: Why John Hamlin Has Trusted Surety Bank for Nearly 20 Years | Customer Profile

For John Hamlin, business has always been about relationships.

As the owner of Hamlin & Associates and several affiliated companies, John has spent decades helping businesses succeed. Throughout his career, he's learned that the strongest partnerships aren't built on transactions alone. They're built on trust, responsiveness, and a genuine commitment to helping people when they need it most.

That's one of the reasons he's been banking with Surety Bank for nearly 20 years.

When John first moved to the Daytona Beach area, Surety Bank was recommended to him by a trusted contact. From his very first interactions with the team, he noticed something different.

"It reminded me more of an old-school bank that cared," John recalls. "I wasn't just an account number. They took the time to learn my name, understand my business, and get to know me."

Over the years, John has worked with other financial institutions, but those experiences only reinforced what makes Surety unique. While larger banks often offered similar products and technology, they couldn't provide the same level of personal attention.

"You can go anywhere and get online banking," he says. "Surety offers that too. The difference is they also offer the personal relationship."

For John, that relationship has meant having direct conversations when questions arise, receiving honest guidance, and knowing that decisions are made by people who understand both his business and his goals.

After nearly two decades as a customer, John says he's never felt the need to call and complain about an employee or a banking experience.

"Everybody in this bank is of service," he explains. "They're accommodating, they're friendly, and they're always willing to help. That's rare."

As Surety Bank celebrates its 100th anniversary, John believes the bank's longevity comes down to something simple: maintaining the personal touch while continuing to evolve.

"You guys can do everything the big banks do," he says. "They can't do everything you do."

For John, that's what community banking should be. Modern conveniences matter, but relationships matter more.

And after nearly 20 years, that's why Surety Bank continues to be his bank of choice.

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

Watch on YouTube.

LEARN MORE

a line icona right arrow icon
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

a line icona right arrow icon
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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100th Anniversary Stories
Strong Communities Are Built Through Strong Partnerships

For 100 years, Surety Bank has believed that community banking means more than serving customers inside the walls of a branch. It means investing in the people, organizations, and partnerships that help our communities thrive.

That commitment is something Carla Quann, Director of Community Relations for the Volusia Sheriff's Office, has experienced firsthand.

"Our goal is to support everyone in our community," Carla explains. "Ryan [James] wanted to be a part of what we're doing because he cares about the community."

The partnership between Surety Bank and the Volusia Sheriff's Office began when Surety Bank President & CEO Ryan James joined the Volusia Sheriff's Foundation Board. Since then, the relationship has grown into a collaborative effort focused on addressing some of the community's greatest needs.

One example came during the holiday season, when thousands of local families faced uncertainty after SNAP benefits were unexpectedly interrupted. Through the combined efforts of businesses, volunteers, and community organizations, more than 3,500 grocery bags were distributed to families throughout Volusia County.

According to Carla, Surety Bank was an important part of making that effort possible.

Beyond community events and charitable initiatives, the partnership has also helped strengthen public safety.

As financial scams targeting older adults became increasingly common, Surety Bank worked alongside the Sheriff's Office to provide education, share industry expertise, and help detectives better recognize the warning signs of fraud.

That collaboration ultimately helped lead to the creation of the Volusia Sheriff's Office Financial Crimes Unit—a dedicated team focused on protecting residents from fraud and financial exploitation.

Working together, those efforts have helped recover more than $2 million for local victims of financial crimes.

For Carla, those results reflect what makes Surety Bank different.

"They're not just another hometown bank," she says. "They care about their community."

She believes that commitment starts with customer service but extends far beyond banking. Whether supporting nonprofit organizations, helping law enforcement address emerging scams, or simply answering the phone when someone needs help, Surety Bank has built relationships rooted in trust.

"People trust them," Carla says. "They've built that trust with their customers, and that's why people stay."

As Surety Bank celebrates a century of serving Central Florida, partnerships like this demonstrate that community banking isn't defined only by financial services—it's measured by the impact a bank has on the people and communities it serves.

For 100 years, Surety Bank has believed that when communities succeed, everyone succeeds. Through partnerships built on trust, service, and shared purpose, that commitment continues today—and will continue for generations to come.

LEARN MORE

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100th Anniversary Stories
A Bank That Looks Beyond the Transaction

As Surety Bank celebrates 100 years of community banking, one thing has remained constant throughout every decade: our commitment to people.

For Alexandra Wells, VP BSA Officer, that commitment is what makes community banking different.

After spending more than 20 years in the legal field, Alexandra joined Surety Bank in 2019, bringing together her legal experience and newly earned accounting degree to help protect customers from fraud, financial crimes, and suspicious activity. Since then, she has advanced through the Bank Secrecy Act department while helping strengthen Surety's commitment to customer protection. But for Alexandra, the work is about far more than regulations and risk management.

"It's about people," she says.

That philosophy became especially clear when an elderly customer began exhibiting unusual banking activity.

The customer, who had recently lost her husband and hired a caretaker, suddenly began cashing checks and making transactions that were completely out of character. Surety Bank's frontline staff noticed the changes immediately. Because they knew the customer and understood her normal banking habits, they recognized that something wasn't right.

The situation was escalated to Alexandra for further review.

After analyzing the account activity, Alexandra and another Surety employee visited the customer at her home. During the visit, several warning signs became apparent. The caretaker repeatedly answered questions on the customer's behalf, and purchases were being made that didn't align with the customer's typical behavior.

Further investigation revealed that the caretaker had gained access to the customer's debit card and was using it for personal purchases, including online shopping and vehicle rentals.

By acting quickly, Surety Bank was able to contact the customer's family, stop the unauthorized activity, and help prevent additional financial loss.

"It's one of the advantages of being a community bank," Alexandra explains. "Because we know our customers, we can recognize when something doesn't seem right and take action."

Stories like this highlight what has set Surety Bank apart for the past century. While technology and banking services continue to evolve, the foundation of community banking remains the same: relationships.

For Alexandra, those relationships extend beyond customers and into the workplace as well.

"At Surety Bank, you're not just a number," she says. "You're a person. We know each other by name, and we genuinely care about one another."

That culture of caring is reflected throughout the organization, from employees supporting one another through life's challenges to teams working together to serve customers with a personal touch.

As Surety Bank enters its second century, Alexandra believes the values that have guided the Bank for the last 100 years will continue to shape its future.

"We've always cared about our customers and our employees," she says. "That's the culture of Surety Bank, and I believe that's something that will continue for another century to come."

After 100 years, it's still how we've always done it: putting people first.

LEARN MORE

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MSB
Why Corporate Due Diligence Files Matter More Than You Think

For many Money Services Businesses (MSBs), corporate due diligence files are completed during onboarding and are not reviewed on a regular basis. Over time, documents expire, registrations lapse, and required updates are overlooked.

The problem is that these files are not simply internal paperwork or a bank requirement. In many states, maintaining accurate and current corporate due diligence documentation is part of an MSB’s broader compliance responsibilities.

When documentation is incomplete or outdated, it can create operational disruptions that directly affect your business.

Why This Matters

One of the most common issues we continue seeing involves outdated or incomplete documentation for businesses whose checks are being cashed.

In many cases, the MSB believes everything is in order until a transaction is reviewed and a problem is identified. By that point, funds may have already been provided to the customer.

When documentation is missing or expired, it can result in:

  • Delayed or blocked transactions
  • Compliance concerns
  • Increased operational risk
  • Preventable financial losses

These situations are often avoidable with consistent file maintenance and regular internal reviews.

Corporate Due Diligence Is More Than a One-Time Process

Corporate due diligence should be treated as an ongoing operational responsibility, not a one-time onboarding task.

Business information changes regularly. Companies may:

  • Allow registrations to expire
  • Change ownership or signers
  • Update corporate structures
  • Lose active status with the state
  • Allow supporting documentation to lapse

Without ongoing reviews, these changes can easily go unnoticed until they create a problem during transaction processing or compliance review.

What Should Be Included in Corporate Due Diligence Files?

Requirements vary depending on the state and type of business, but corporate due diligence files commonly include:

  • Corporate resolutions
  • EIN verification from the IRS
  • Articles of Incorporation or formation documents
  • Government-issued identification for authorized individuals
  • Fictitious name registrations, if applicable
  • Workers’ compensation documentation or exemption records
  • Business tax receipts or similar local registrations

Many of these documents require periodic renewal or updates.

One of the Biggest Issues We See: Expired Business Registrations

One recurring issue involves businesses failing to maintain active registration status with the Secretary of State.

In states like Florida, corporations are required to file annual reports to remain active. If those filings are missed, the business can become inactive or suspended.

During the due diligence process, Surety Bank reviews business registration status as part of transaction and compliance reviews. If a business is no longer active with the state, transactions may be delayed or unable to proceed until the issue is resolved.

Unfortunately, many MSBs do not discover the problem until after they have already provided funds to the customer.

The Importance of Regular Reviews

One of the best ways to avoid these situations is by implementing consistent internal reviews of your corporate due diligence files.

It is recommended that MSBs review files at least twice a year to ensure documentation remains current and complete.

Even simple tracking methods can make a significant difference. Many businesses successfully use spreadsheets or internal checklists to monitor:

  • Expiration dates
  • Annual registration renewals
  • Tax receipt updates
  • Insurance documentation
  • Corporate resolution changes

A small amount of organization upfront can help prevent larger operational and compliance issues later.

Strong Documentation Protects Your Business

Corporate due diligence reviews are not simply administrative tasks. They are part of maintaining a strong compliance program and protecting your business from avoidable risk.

Strong documentation practices help businesses:

  • Reduce operational disruptions
  • Improve organization and consistency
  • Support licensing and compliance obligations
  • Strengthen internal controls
  • Prevent unnecessary losses and delays

Most importantly, they help identify problems before they affect day-to-day operations.

Looking Ahead

Maintaining corporate due diligence files may not feel urgent until a transaction is delayed, a registration is found inactive, or documentation cannot be produced when needed.

Consistent reviews, updated records, and proactive tracking procedures help keep operations running smoothly and reduce preventable risk.

In many cases, the businesses with the fewest operational disruptions are simply the ones that stay organized and review their files consistently throughout the year.

LEARN MORE

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100th Anniversary Stories
A Bank That Knows Your Name: Why John Hamlin Has Trusted Surety Bank for Nearly 20 Years | Customer Profile

For John Hamlin, business has always been about relationships.

As the owner of Hamlin & Associates and several affiliated companies, John has spent decades helping businesses succeed. Throughout his career, he's learned that the strongest partnerships aren't built on transactions alone. They're built on trust, responsiveness, and a genuine commitment to helping people when they need it most.

That's one of the reasons he's been banking with Surety Bank for nearly 20 years.

When John first moved to the Daytona Beach area, Surety Bank was recommended to him by a trusted contact. From his very first interactions with the team, he noticed something different.

"It reminded me more of an old-school bank that cared," John recalls. "I wasn't just an account number. They took the time to learn my name, understand my business, and get to know me."

Over the years, John has worked with other financial institutions, but those experiences only reinforced what makes Surety unique. While larger banks often offered similar products and technology, they couldn't provide the same level of personal attention.

"You can go anywhere and get online banking," he says. "Surety offers that too. The difference is they also offer the personal relationship."

For John, that relationship has meant having direct conversations when questions arise, receiving honest guidance, and knowing that decisions are made by people who understand both his business and his goals.

After nearly two decades as a customer, John says he's never felt the need to call and complain about an employee or a banking experience.

"Everybody in this bank is of service," he explains. "They're accommodating, they're friendly, and they're always willing to help. That's rare."

As Surety Bank celebrates its 100th anniversary, John believes the bank's longevity comes down to something simple: maintaining the personal touch while continuing to evolve.

"You guys can do everything the big banks do," he says. "They can't do everything you do."

For John, that's what community banking should be. Modern conveniences matter, but relationships matter more.

And after nearly 20 years, that's why Surety Bank continues to be his bank of choice.

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

Watch on YouTube.

LEARN MORE

a line icona right arrow icon
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

a line icona right arrow icon
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

a line icona right arrow icon
100th Anniversary Stories
Strong Communities Are Built Through Strong Partnerships

For 100 years, Surety Bank has believed that community banking means more than serving customers inside the walls of a branch. It means investing in the people, organizations, and partnerships that help our communities thrive.

That commitment is something Carla Quann, Director of Community Relations for the Volusia Sheriff's Office, has experienced firsthand.

"Our goal is to support everyone in our community," Carla explains. "Ryan [James] wanted to be a part of what we're doing because he cares about the community."

The partnership between Surety Bank and the Volusia Sheriff's Office began when Surety Bank President & CEO Ryan James joined the Volusia Sheriff's Foundation Board. Since then, the relationship has grown into a collaborative effort focused on addressing some of the community's greatest needs.

One example came during the holiday season, when thousands of local families faced uncertainty after SNAP benefits were unexpectedly interrupted. Through the combined efforts of businesses, volunteers, and community organizations, more than 3,500 grocery bags were distributed to families throughout Volusia County.

According to Carla, Surety Bank was an important part of making that effort possible.

Beyond community events and charitable initiatives, the partnership has also helped strengthen public safety.

As financial scams targeting older adults became increasingly common, Surety Bank worked alongside the Sheriff's Office to provide education, share industry expertise, and help detectives better recognize the warning signs of fraud.

That collaboration ultimately helped lead to the creation of the Volusia Sheriff's Office Financial Crimes Unit—a dedicated team focused on protecting residents from fraud and financial exploitation.

Working together, those efforts have helped recover more than $2 million for local victims of financial crimes.

For Carla, those results reflect what makes Surety Bank different.

"They're not just another hometown bank," she says. "They care about their community."

She believes that commitment starts with customer service but extends far beyond banking. Whether supporting nonprofit organizations, helping law enforcement address emerging scams, or simply answering the phone when someone needs help, Surety Bank has built relationships rooted in trust.

"People trust them," Carla says. "They've built that trust with their customers, and that's why people stay."

As Surety Bank celebrates a century of serving Central Florida, partnerships like this demonstrate that community banking isn't defined only by financial services—it's measured by the impact a bank has on the people and communities it serves.

For 100 years, Surety Bank has believed that when communities succeed, everyone succeeds. Through partnerships built on trust, service, and shared purpose, that commitment continues today—and will continue for generations to come.

LEARN MORE

a line icona right arrow icon
100th Anniversary Stories
A Bank That Looks Beyond the Transaction

As Surety Bank celebrates 100 years of community banking, one thing has remained constant throughout every decade: our commitment to people.

For Alexandra Wells, VP BSA Officer, that commitment is what makes community banking different.

After spending more than 20 years in the legal field, Alexandra joined Surety Bank in 2019, bringing together her legal experience and newly earned accounting degree to help protect customers from fraud, financial crimes, and suspicious activity. Since then, she has advanced through the Bank Secrecy Act department while helping strengthen Surety's commitment to customer protection. But for Alexandra, the work is about far more than regulations and risk management.

"It's about people," she says.

That philosophy became especially clear when an elderly customer began exhibiting unusual banking activity.

The customer, who had recently lost her husband and hired a caretaker, suddenly began cashing checks and making transactions that were completely out of character. Surety Bank's frontline staff noticed the changes immediately. Because they knew the customer and understood her normal banking habits, they recognized that something wasn't right.

The situation was escalated to Alexandra for further review.

After analyzing the account activity, Alexandra and another Surety employee visited the customer at her home. During the visit, several warning signs became apparent. The caretaker repeatedly answered questions on the customer's behalf, and purchases were being made that didn't align with the customer's typical behavior.

Further investigation revealed that the caretaker had gained access to the customer's debit card and was using it for personal purchases, including online shopping and vehicle rentals.

By acting quickly, Surety Bank was able to contact the customer's family, stop the unauthorized activity, and help prevent additional financial loss.

"It's one of the advantages of being a community bank," Alexandra explains. "Because we know our customers, we can recognize when something doesn't seem right and take action."

Stories like this highlight what has set Surety Bank apart for the past century. While technology and banking services continue to evolve, the foundation of community banking remains the same: relationships.

For Alexandra, those relationships extend beyond customers and into the workplace as well.

"At Surety Bank, you're not just a number," she says. "You're a person. We know each other by name, and we genuinely care about one another."

That culture of caring is reflected throughout the organization, from employees supporting one another through life's challenges to teams working together to serve customers with a personal touch.

As Surety Bank enters its second century, Alexandra believes the values that have guided the Bank for the last 100 years will continue to shape its future.

"We've always cared about our customers and our employees," she says. "That's the culture of Surety Bank, and I believe that's something that will continue for another century to come."

After 100 years, it's still how we've always done it: putting people first.

LEARN MORE

a line icona right arrow icon
MSB
Why Corporate Due Diligence Files Matter More Than You Think

For many Money Services Businesses (MSBs), corporate due diligence files are completed during onboarding and are not reviewed on a regular basis. Over time, documents expire, registrations lapse, and required updates are overlooked.

The problem is that these files are not simply internal paperwork or a bank requirement. In many states, maintaining accurate and current corporate due diligence documentation is part of an MSB’s broader compliance responsibilities.

When documentation is incomplete or outdated, it can create operational disruptions that directly affect your business.

Why This Matters

One of the most common issues we continue seeing involves outdated or incomplete documentation for businesses whose checks are being cashed.

In many cases, the MSB believes everything is in order until a transaction is reviewed and a problem is identified. By that point, funds may have already been provided to the customer.

When documentation is missing or expired, it can result in:

  • Delayed or blocked transactions
  • Compliance concerns
  • Increased operational risk
  • Preventable financial losses

These situations are often avoidable with consistent file maintenance and regular internal reviews.

Corporate Due Diligence Is More Than a One-Time Process

Corporate due diligence should be treated as an ongoing operational responsibility, not a one-time onboarding task.

Business information changes regularly. Companies may:

  • Allow registrations to expire
  • Change ownership or signers
  • Update corporate structures
  • Lose active status with the state
  • Allow supporting documentation to lapse

Without ongoing reviews, these changes can easily go unnoticed until they create a problem during transaction processing or compliance review.

What Should Be Included in Corporate Due Diligence Files?

Requirements vary depending on the state and type of business, but corporate due diligence files commonly include:

  • Corporate resolutions
  • EIN verification from the IRS
  • Articles of Incorporation or formation documents
  • Government-issued identification for authorized individuals
  • Fictitious name registrations, if applicable
  • Workers’ compensation documentation or exemption records
  • Business tax receipts or similar local registrations

Many of these documents require periodic renewal or updates.

One of the Biggest Issues We See: Expired Business Registrations

One recurring issue involves businesses failing to maintain active registration status with the Secretary of State.

In states like Florida, corporations are required to file annual reports to remain active. If those filings are missed, the business can become inactive or suspended.

During the due diligence process, Surety Bank reviews business registration status as part of transaction and compliance reviews. If a business is no longer active with the state, transactions may be delayed or unable to proceed until the issue is resolved.

Unfortunately, many MSBs do not discover the problem until after they have already provided funds to the customer.

The Importance of Regular Reviews

One of the best ways to avoid these situations is by implementing consistent internal reviews of your corporate due diligence files.

It is recommended that MSBs review files at least twice a year to ensure documentation remains current and complete.

Even simple tracking methods can make a significant difference. Many businesses successfully use spreadsheets or internal checklists to monitor:

  • Expiration dates
  • Annual registration renewals
  • Tax receipt updates
  • Insurance documentation
  • Corporate resolution changes

A small amount of organization upfront can help prevent larger operational and compliance issues later.

Strong Documentation Protects Your Business

Corporate due diligence reviews are not simply administrative tasks. They are part of maintaining a strong compliance program and protecting your business from avoidable risk.

Strong documentation practices help businesses:

  • Reduce operational disruptions
  • Improve organization and consistency
  • Support licensing and compliance obligations
  • Strengthen internal controls
  • Prevent unnecessary losses and delays

Most importantly, they help identify problems before they affect day-to-day operations.

Looking Ahead

Maintaining corporate due diligence files may not feel urgent until a transaction is delayed, a registration is found inactive, or documentation cannot be produced when needed.

Consistent reviews, updated records, and proactive tracking procedures help keep operations running smoothly and reduce preventable risk.

In many cases, the businesses with the fewest operational disruptions are simply the ones that stay organized and review their files consistently throughout the year.

LEARN MORE

a line icona right arrow icon
100th Anniversary Stories
A Bank That Knows Your Name: Why John Hamlin Has Trusted Surety Bank for Nearly 20 Years | Customer Profile

For John Hamlin, business has always been about relationships.

As the owner of Hamlin & Associates and several affiliated companies, John has spent decades helping businesses succeed. Throughout his career, he's learned that the strongest partnerships aren't built on transactions alone. They're built on trust, responsiveness, and a genuine commitment to helping people when they need it most.

That's one of the reasons he's been banking with Surety Bank for nearly 20 years.

When John first moved to the Daytona Beach area, Surety Bank was recommended to him by a trusted contact. From his very first interactions with the team, he noticed something different.

"It reminded me more of an old-school bank that cared," John recalls. "I wasn't just an account number. They took the time to learn my name, understand my business, and get to know me."

Over the years, John has worked with other financial institutions, but those experiences only reinforced what makes Surety unique. While larger banks often offered similar products and technology, they couldn't provide the same level of personal attention.

"You can go anywhere and get online banking," he says. "Surety offers that too. The difference is they also offer the personal relationship."

For John, that relationship has meant having direct conversations when questions arise, receiving honest guidance, and knowing that decisions are made by people who understand both his business and his goals.

After nearly two decades as a customer, John says he's never felt the need to call and complain about an employee or a banking experience.

"Everybody in this bank is of service," he explains. "They're accommodating, they're friendly, and they're always willing to help. That's rare."

As Surety Bank celebrates its 100th anniversary, John believes the bank's longevity comes down to something simple: maintaining the personal touch while continuing to evolve.

"You guys can do everything the big banks do," he says. "They can't do everything you do."

For John, that's what community banking should be. Modern conveniences matter, but relationships matter more.

And after nearly 20 years, that's why Surety Bank continues to be his bank of choice.

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

Watch on YouTube.

LEARN MORE

a line icona right arrow icon
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

a line icona right arrow icon
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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100th Anniversary Stories
Strong Communities Are Built Through Strong Partnerships

For 100 years, Surety Bank has believed that community banking means more than serving customers inside the walls of a branch. It means investing in the people, organizations, and partnerships that help our communities thrive.

That commitment is something Carla Quann, Director of Community Relations for the Volusia Sheriff's Office, has experienced firsthand.

"Our goal is to support everyone in our community," Carla explains. "Ryan [James] wanted to be a part of what we're doing because he cares about the community."

The partnership between Surety Bank and the Volusia Sheriff's Office began when Surety Bank President & CEO Ryan James joined the Volusia Sheriff's Foundation Board. Since then, the relationship has grown into a collaborative effort focused on addressing some of the community's greatest needs.

One example came during the holiday season, when thousands of local families faced uncertainty after SNAP benefits were unexpectedly interrupted. Through the combined efforts of businesses, volunteers, and community organizations, more than 3,500 grocery bags were distributed to families throughout Volusia County.

According to Carla, Surety Bank was an important part of making that effort possible.

Beyond community events and charitable initiatives, the partnership has also helped strengthen public safety.

As financial scams targeting older adults became increasingly common, Surety Bank worked alongside the Sheriff's Office to provide education, share industry expertise, and help detectives better recognize the warning signs of fraud.

That collaboration ultimately helped lead to the creation of the Volusia Sheriff's Office Financial Crimes Unit—a dedicated team focused on protecting residents from fraud and financial exploitation.

Working together, those efforts have helped recover more than $2 million for local victims of financial crimes.

For Carla, those results reflect what makes Surety Bank different.

"They're not just another hometown bank," she says. "They care about their community."

She believes that commitment starts with customer service but extends far beyond banking. Whether supporting nonprofit organizations, helping law enforcement address emerging scams, or simply answering the phone when someone needs help, Surety Bank has built relationships rooted in trust.

"People trust them," Carla says. "They've built that trust with their customers, and that's why people stay."

As Surety Bank celebrates a century of serving Central Florida, partnerships like this demonstrate that community banking isn't defined only by financial services—it's measured by the impact a bank has on the people and communities it serves.

For 100 years, Surety Bank has believed that when communities succeed, everyone succeeds. Through partnerships built on trust, service, and shared purpose, that commitment continues today—and will continue for generations to come.

LEARN MORE

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100th Anniversary Stories
A Bank That Looks Beyond the Transaction

As Surety Bank celebrates 100 years of community banking, one thing has remained constant throughout every decade: our commitment to people.

For Alexandra Wells, VP BSA Officer, that commitment is what makes community banking different.

After spending more than 20 years in the legal field, Alexandra joined Surety Bank in 2019, bringing together her legal experience and newly earned accounting degree to help protect customers from fraud, financial crimes, and suspicious activity. Since then, she has advanced through the Bank Secrecy Act department while helping strengthen Surety's commitment to customer protection. But for Alexandra, the work is about far more than regulations and risk management.

"It's about people," she says.

That philosophy became especially clear when an elderly customer began exhibiting unusual banking activity.

The customer, who had recently lost her husband and hired a caretaker, suddenly began cashing checks and making transactions that were completely out of character. Surety Bank's frontline staff noticed the changes immediately. Because they knew the customer and understood her normal banking habits, they recognized that something wasn't right.

The situation was escalated to Alexandra for further review.

After analyzing the account activity, Alexandra and another Surety employee visited the customer at her home. During the visit, several warning signs became apparent. The caretaker repeatedly answered questions on the customer's behalf, and purchases were being made that didn't align with the customer's typical behavior.

Further investigation revealed that the caretaker had gained access to the customer's debit card and was using it for personal purchases, including online shopping and vehicle rentals.

By acting quickly, Surety Bank was able to contact the customer's family, stop the unauthorized activity, and help prevent additional financial loss.

"It's one of the advantages of being a community bank," Alexandra explains. "Because we know our customers, we can recognize when something doesn't seem right and take action."

Stories like this highlight what has set Surety Bank apart for the past century. While technology and banking services continue to evolve, the foundation of community banking remains the same: relationships.

For Alexandra, those relationships extend beyond customers and into the workplace as well.

"At Surety Bank, you're not just a number," she says. "You're a person. We know each other by name, and we genuinely care about one another."

That culture of caring is reflected throughout the organization, from employees supporting one another through life's challenges to teams working together to serve customers with a personal touch.

As Surety Bank enters its second century, Alexandra believes the values that have guided the Bank for the last 100 years will continue to shape its future.

"We've always cared about our customers and our employees," she says. "That's the culture of Surety Bank, and I believe that's something that will continue for another century to come."

After 100 years, it's still how we've always done it: putting people first.

LEARN MORE

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MSB
Why Corporate Due Diligence Files Matter More Than You Think

For many Money Services Businesses (MSBs), corporate due diligence files are completed during onboarding and are not reviewed on a regular basis. Over time, documents expire, registrations lapse, and required updates are overlooked.

The problem is that these files are not simply internal paperwork or a bank requirement. In many states, maintaining accurate and current corporate due diligence documentation is part of an MSB’s broader compliance responsibilities.

When documentation is incomplete or outdated, it can create operational disruptions that directly affect your business.

Why This Matters

One of the most common issues we continue seeing involves outdated or incomplete documentation for businesses whose checks are being cashed.

In many cases, the MSB believes everything is in order until a transaction is reviewed and a problem is identified. By that point, funds may have already been provided to the customer.

When documentation is missing or expired, it can result in:

  • Delayed or blocked transactions
  • Compliance concerns
  • Increased operational risk
  • Preventable financial losses

These situations are often avoidable with consistent file maintenance and regular internal reviews.

Corporate Due Diligence Is More Than a One-Time Process

Corporate due diligence should be treated as an ongoing operational responsibility, not a one-time onboarding task.

Business information changes regularly. Companies may:

  • Allow registrations to expire
  • Change ownership or signers
  • Update corporate structures
  • Lose active status with the state
  • Allow supporting documentation to lapse

Without ongoing reviews, these changes can easily go unnoticed until they create a problem during transaction processing or compliance review.

What Should Be Included in Corporate Due Diligence Files?

Requirements vary depending on the state and type of business, but corporate due diligence files commonly include:

  • Corporate resolutions
  • EIN verification from the IRS
  • Articles of Incorporation or formation documents
  • Government-issued identification for authorized individuals
  • Fictitious name registrations, if applicable
  • Workers’ compensation documentation or exemption records
  • Business tax receipts or similar local registrations

Many of these documents require periodic renewal or updates.

One of the Biggest Issues We See: Expired Business Registrations

One recurring issue involves businesses failing to maintain active registration status with the Secretary of State.

In states like Florida, corporations are required to file annual reports to remain active. If those filings are missed, the business can become inactive or suspended.

During the due diligence process, Surety Bank reviews business registration status as part of transaction and compliance reviews. If a business is no longer active with the state, transactions may be delayed or unable to proceed until the issue is resolved.

Unfortunately, many MSBs do not discover the problem until after they have already provided funds to the customer.

The Importance of Regular Reviews

One of the best ways to avoid these situations is by implementing consistent internal reviews of your corporate due diligence files.

It is recommended that MSBs review files at least twice a year to ensure documentation remains current and complete.

Even simple tracking methods can make a significant difference. Many businesses successfully use spreadsheets or internal checklists to monitor:

  • Expiration dates
  • Annual registration renewals
  • Tax receipt updates
  • Insurance documentation
  • Corporate resolution changes

A small amount of organization upfront can help prevent larger operational and compliance issues later.

Strong Documentation Protects Your Business

Corporate due diligence reviews are not simply administrative tasks. They are part of maintaining a strong compliance program and protecting your business from avoidable risk.

Strong documentation practices help businesses:

  • Reduce operational disruptions
  • Improve organization and consistency
  • Support licensing and compliance obligations
  • Strengthen internal controls
  • Prevent unnecessary losses and delays

Most importantly, they help identify problems before they affect day-to-day operations.

Looking Ahead

Maintaining corporate due diligence files may not feel urgent until a transaction is delayed, a registration is found inactive, or documentation cannot be produced when needed.

Consistent reviews, updated records, and proactive tracking procedures help keep operations running smoothly and reduce preventable risk.

In many cases, the businesses with the fewest operational disruptions are simply the ones that stay organized and review their files consistently throughout the year.

LEARN MORE

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100th Anniversary Stories
A Bank That Knows Your Name: Why John Hamlin Has Trusted Surety Bank for Nearly 20 Years | Customer Profile

For John Hamlin, business has always been about relationships.

As the owner of Hamlin & Associates and several affiliated companies, John has spent decades helping businesses succeed. Throughout his career, he's learned that the strongest partnerships aren't built on transactions alone. They're built on trust, responsiveness, and a genuine commitment to helping people when they need it most.

That's one of the reasons he's been banking with Surety Bank for nearly 20 years.

When John first moved to the Daytona Beach area, Surety Bank was recommended to him by a trusted contact. From his very first interactions with the team, he noticed something different.

"It reminded me more of an old-school bank that cared," John recalls. "I wasn't just an account number. They took the time to learn my name, understand my business, and get to know me."

Over the years, John has worked with other financial institutions, but those experiences only reinforced what makes Surety unique. While larger banks often offered similar products and technology, they couldn't provide the same level of personal attention.

"You can go anywhere and get online banking," he says. "Surety offers that too. The difference is they also offer the personal relationship."

For John, that relationship has meant having direct conversations when questions arise, receiving honest guidance, and knowing that decisions are made by people who understand both his business and his goals.

After nearly two decades as a customer, John says he's never felt the need to call and complain about an employee or a banking experience.

"Everybody in this bank is of service," he explains. "They're accommodating, they're friendly, and they're always willing to help. That's rare."

As Surety Bank celebrates its 100th anniversary, John believes the bank's longevity comes down to something simple: maintaining the personal touch while continuing to evolve.

"You guys can do everything the big banks do," he says. "They can't do everything you do."

For John, that's what community banking should be. Modern conveniences matter, but relationships matter more.

And after nearly 20 years, that's why Surety Bank continues to be his bank of choice.

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

Watch on YouTube.

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

a line icona right arrow icon
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

a line icona right arrow icon
100th Anniversary Stories
Strong Communities Are Built Through Strong Partnerships

For 100 years, Surety Bank has believed that community banking means more than serving customers inside the walls of a branch. It means investing in the people, organizations, and partnerships that help our communities thrive.

That commitment is something Carla Quann, Director of Community Relations for the Volusia Sheriff's Office, has experienced firsthand.

"Our goal is to support everyone in our community," Carla explains. "Ryan [James] wanted to be a part of what we're doing because he cares about the community."

The partnership between Surety Bank and the Volusia Sheriff's Office began when Surety Bank President & CEO Ryan James joined the Volusia Sheriff's Foundation Board. Since then, the relationship has grown into a collaborative effort focused on addressing some of the community's greatest needs.

One example came during the holiday season, when thousands of local families faced uncertainty after SNAP benefits were unexpectedly interrupted. Through the combined efforts of businesses, volunteers, and community organizations, more than 3,500 grocery bags were distributed to families throughout Volusia County.

According to Carla, Surety Bank was an important part of making that effort possible.

Beyond community events and charitable initiatives, the partnership has also helped strengthen public safety.

As financial scams targeting older adults became increasingly common, Surety Bank worked alongside the Sheriff's Office to provide education, share industry expertise, and help detectives better recognize the warning signs of fraud.

That collaboration ultimately helped lead to the creation of the Volusia Sheriff's Office Financial Crimes Unit—a dedicated team focused on protecting residents from fraud and financial exploitation.

Working together, those efforts have helped recover more than $2 million for local victims of financial crimes.

For Carla, those results reflect what makes Surety Bank different.

"They're not just another hometown bank," she says. "They care about their community."

She believes that commitment starts with customer service but extends far beyond banking. Whether supporting nonprofit organizations, helping law enforcement address emerging scams, or simply answering the phone when someone needs help, Surety Bank has built relationships rooted in trust.

"People trust them," Carla says. "They've built that trust with their customers, and that's why people stay."

As Surety Bank celebrates a century of serving Central Florida, partnerships like this demonstrate that community banking isn't defined only by financial services—it's measured by the impact a bank has on the people and communities it serves.

For 100 years, Surety Bank has believed that when communities succeed, everyone succeeds. Through partnerships built on trust, service, and shared purpose, that commitment continues today—and will continue for generations to come.

LEARN MORE

a line icona right arrow icon
100th Anniversary Stories
A Bank That Looks Beyond the Transaction

As Surety Bank celebrates 100 years of community banking, one thing has remained constant throughout every decade: our commitment to people.

For Alexandra Wells, VP BSA Officer, that commitment is what makes community banking different.

After spending more than 20 years in the legal field, Alexandra joined Surety Bank in 2019, bringing together her legal experience and newly earned accounting degree to help protect customers from fraud, financial crimes, and suspicious activity. Since then, she has advanced through the Bank Secrecy Act department while helping strengthen Surety's commitment to customer protection. But for Alexandra, the work is about far more than regulations and risk management.

"It's about people," she says.

That philosophy became especially clear when an elderly customer began exhibiting unusual banking activity.

The customer, who had recently lost her husband and hired a caretaker, suddenly began cashing checks and making transactions that were completely out of character. Surety Bank's frontline staff noticed the changes immediately. Because they knew the customer and understood her normal banking habits, they recognized that something wasn't right.

The situation was escalated to Alexandra for further review.

After analyzing the account activity, Alexandra and another Surety employee visited the customer at her home. During the visit, several warning signs became apparent. The caretaker repeatedly answered questions on the customer's behalf, and purchases were being made that didn't align with the customer's typical behavior.

Further investigation revealed that the caretaker had gained access to the customer's debit card and was using it for personal purchases, including online shopping and vehicle rentals.

By acting quickly, Surety Bank was able to contact the customer's family, stop the unauthorized activity, and help prevent additional financial loss.

"It's one of the advantages of being a community bank," Alexandra explains. "Because we know our customers, we can recognize when something doesn't seem right and take action."

Stories like this highlight what has set Surety Bank apart for the past century. While technology and banking services continue to evolve, the foundation of community banking remains the same: relationships.

For Alexandra, those relationships extend beyond customers and into the workplace as well.

"At Surety Bank, you're not just a number," she says. "You're a person. We know each other by name, and we genuinely care about one another."

That culture of caring is reflected throughout the organization, from employees supporting one another through life's challenges to teams working together to serve customers with a personal touch.

As Surety Bank enters its second century, Alexandra believes the values that have guided the Bank for the last 100 years will continue to shape its future.

"We've always cared about our customers and our employees," she says. "That's the culture of Surety Bank, and I believe that's something that will continue for another century to come."

After 100 years, it's still how we've always done it: putting people first.

LEARN MORE

a line icona right arrow icon
MSB
Why Corporate Due Diligence Files Matter More Than You Think

For many Money Services Businesses (MSBs), corporate due diligence files are completed during onboarding and are not reviewed on a regular basis. Over time, documents expire, registrations lapse, and required updates are overlooked.

The problem is that these files are not simply internal paperwork or a bank requirement. In many states, maintaining accurate and current corporate due diligence documentation is part of an MSB’s broader compliance responsibilities.

When documentation is incomplete or outdated, it can create operational disruptions that directly affect your business.

Why This Matters

One of the most common issues we continue seeing involves outdated or incomplete documentation for businesses whose checks are being cashed.

In many cases, the MSB believes everything is in order until a transaction is reviewed and a problem is identified. By that point, funds may have already been provided to the customer.

When documentation is missing or expired, it can result in:

  • Delayed or blocked transactions
  • Compliance concerns
  • Increased operational risk
  • Preventable financial losses

These situations are often avoidable with consistent file maintenance and regular internal reviews.

Corporate Due Diligence Is More Than a One-Time Process

Corporate due diligence should be treated as an ongoing operational responsibility, not a one-time onboarding task.

Business information changes regularly. Companies may:

  • Allow registrations to expire
  • Change ownership or signers
  • Update corporate structures
  • Lose active status with the state
  • Allow supporting documentation to lapse

Without ongoing reviews, these changes can easily go unnoticed until they create a problem during transaction processing or compliance review.

What Should Be Included in Corporate Due Diligence Files?

Requirements vary depending on the state and type of business, but corporate due diligence files commonly include:

  • Corporate resolutions
  • EIN verification from the IRS
  • Articles of Incorporation or formation documents
  • Government-issued identification for authorized individuals
  • Fictitious name registrations, if applicable
  • Workers’ compensation documentation or exemption records
  • Business tax receipts or similar local registrations

Many of these documents require periodic renewal or updates.

One of the Biggest Issues We See: Expired Business Registrations

One recurring issue involves businesses failing to maintain active registration status with the Secretary of State.

In states like Florida, corporations are required to file annual reports to remain active. If those filings are missed, the business can become inactive or suspended.

During the due diligence process, Surety Bank reviews business registration status as part of transaction and compliance reviews. If a business is no longer active with the state, transactions may be delayed or unable to proceed until the issue is resolved.

Unfortunately, many MSBs do not discover the problem until after they have already provided funds to the customer.

The Importance of Regular Reviews

One of the best ways to avoid these situations is by implementing consistent internal reviews of your corporate due diligence files.

It is recommended that MSBs review files at least twice a year to ensure documentation remains current and complete.

Even simple tracking methods can make a significant difference. Many businesses successfully use spreadsheets or internal checklists to monitor:

  • Expiration dates
  • Annual registration renewals
  • Tax receipt updates
  • Insurance documentation
  • Corporate resolution changes

A small amount of organization upfront can help prevent larger operational and compliance issues later.

Strong Documentation Protects Your Business

Corporate due diligence reviews are not simply administrative tasks. They are part of maintaining a strong compliance program and protecting your business from avoidable risk.

Strong documentation practices help businesses:

  • Reduce operational disruptions
  • Improve organization and consistency
  • Support licensing and compliance obligations
  • Strengthen internal controls
  • Prevent unnecessary losses and delays

Most importantly, they help identify problems before they affect day-to-day operations.

Looking Ahead

Maintaining corporate due diligence files may not feel urgent until a transaction is delayed, a registration is found inactive, or documentation cannot be produced when needed.

Consistent reviews, updated records, and proactive tracking procedures help keep operations running smoothly and reduce preventable risk.

In many cases, the businesses with the fewest operational disruptions are simply the ones that stay organized and review their files consistently throughout the year.

LEARN MORE

a line icona right arrow icon
100th Anniversary Stories
A Bank That Knows Your Name: Why John Hamlin Has Trusted Surety Bank for Nearly 20 Years | Customer Profile

For John Hamlin, business has always been about relationships.

As the owner of Hamlin & Associates and several affiliated companies, John has spent decades helping businesses succeed. Throughout his career, he's learned that the strongest partnerships aren't built on transactions alone. They're built on trust, responsiveness, and a genuine commitment to helping people when they need it most.

That's one of the reasons he's been banking with Surety Bank for nearly 20 years.

When John first moved to the Daytona Beach area, Surety Bank was recommended to him by a trusted contact. From his very first interactions with the team, he noticed something different.

"It reminded me more of an old-school bank that cared," John recalls. "I wasn't just an account number. They took the time to learn my name, understand my business, and get to know me."

Over the years, John has worked with other financial institutions, but those experiences only reinforced what makes Surety unique. While larger banks often offered similar products and technology, they couldn't provide the same level of personal attention.

"You can go anywhere and get online banking," he says. "Surety offers that too. The difference is they also offer the personal relationship."

For John, that relationship has meant having direct conversations when questions arise, receiving honest guidance, and knowing that decisions are made by people who understand both his business and his goals.

After nearly two decades as a customer, John says he's never felt the need to call and complain about an employee or a banking experience.

"Everybody in this bank is of service," he explains. "They're accommodating, they're friendly, and they're always willing to help. That's rare."

As Surety Bank celebrates its 100th anniversary, John believes the bank's longevity comes down to something simple: maintaining the personal touch while continuing to evolve.

"You guys can do everything the big banks do," he says. "They can't do everything you do."

For John, that's what community banking should be. Modern conveniences matter, but relationships matter more.

And after nearly 20 years, that's why Surety Bank continues to be his bank of choice.

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

Watch on YouTube.

LEARN MORE

a line icona right arrow icon
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

a line icona right arrow icon
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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