Dear editor,
As an unpaid volunteer board member of PenFed Credit Union for more than 30 years, I took great offense to Aaron D. Klein’s recent op-ed, “
My fellow board members and I are fully committed to representing the interests of the members who save and borrow at our credit union. The credit union movement’s member-owned business model is entirely different from banks that are in business to enrich shareholders and board members at the expense of their depositors and borrowers.
Despite Klein’s claims, anyone familiar with credit union fields of membership knows that PenFed cannot take advantage of the
Klein alleges that if a credit union is growing, it must be abandoning its core membership. This is certainly not happening at PenFed, nor at other growing credit unions with strong board oversight. The PenFed board of directors includes distinguished former military personnel and current federal government employees who have served our national defense community for decades. Each year, the PenFed board reaffirms our commitment to focus on our core: members of the national defense community and those who support them.
In fact, the credit union’s growth empowers us to do more to serve our core membership. PenFed donates at least 2 percent of earnings every year to charitable organizations. Most of our charitable donations support veterans, active-duty military members and their families.
In addition, the PenFed Foundation—a charity created and fully funded by PenFed Credit Union since 2001—has donated more than $30 million to veterans, military members and their families. Most recently, the PenFed Foundation raised $1.4 million to launch the Veteran Entrepreneur Investment Program, providing veteran-owned start-ups with seed capital to grow their businesses.
PenFed has stayed true to our military mission since our credit union’s founding in 1935. If your opinion writers feel the need to question our mission, it would serve you well to ensure that you are accurately representing the facts.