NCUA Regional Director Dupcak
Announces Retirement
December 6, 2006, Alexandria, Va. -- Edward P. Dupcak, director of the National Credit Union Administration (NCUA) Region II office in Alexandria is retiring at year-end 2006 after nearly 33 years of service to the agency.
“I salute Ed Dupcak for the wonderful job he has done at NCUA,” Chairman JoAnn Johnson said. “As a regional director, Ed has been a stabilizing and cohesive force, garnering the respect of staff and credit unions alike. His management skills and expertise, particularly in the areas of ALM and investments, have been invaluable. I wish Ed the very best in retirement.”
“It’s been fun and a privilege to work at NCUA,” Regional Director Dupcak said. “I have had the good fortune to work in numerous NCUA offices which brought variety and challenges that I thoroughly enjoyed. The different posts also provided the opportunity to work with many talented people from the credit union community and here at NCUA that I’m honored to know. I’ve enjoyed it all.”
Dupcak joined NCUA in 1974 as an examiner in New York and later Washington, D.C. In 1979, he joined the staff of the newly formed Central Liquidity Facility. Dupcak held the positions of investment officer and director of risk management in the Office of Examination and Insurance and was director of the Office of Strategic Program Support and Planning prior to becoming the Region II director in 2003 responsible for the examination and supervision program for federally insured credit unions in Delaware, District of Columbia, Maryland, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Virginia and West Virginia.
A 1968 graduate of Syracuse University with a degree in economics, Dupcak received an MBA in finance and accounting from Long Island University in 1971.
NCUA charters and supervises the nation’s federal credit unions, and with the backing of the full faith and credit of the U.S. government NCUA also operates and manages the National Credit Union Share Insurance Fund, insuring the accounts of over 85 million account holders in all federal credit unions and the majority of state-chartered credit unions. NCUA is funded by credit unions, not tax dollars.
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