Politics | Chris Dodd Dodd Unveils Sweeping Financial Overhaul Bill It would create new oversight agencies By Nick McMaster Posted Nov 10, 2009 2:41 PM CST Copied Senate Banking Committee Chairman Sen. Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., announces a financial reform package, Tuesday, Nov. 10, 2009, during a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak) Chris Dodd introduced a sweeping financial regulation bill that creates no fewer than three new agencies to oversee the banking industry. Dodd’s bill creates an Agency for Financial Stability to identify systemic risks to the economy as a whole. It entrusts all bank supervision to the Financial Institutions Regulatory Administration, stripping the Fed of its oversight role and emergency-lending powers, which it used to save firms during the financial crisis. The Fed would instead focus entirely on monetary policy. Dodd’s bill also calls for a Consumer Financial Protection Agency to oversee consumer products. A House version would give the director of the CFPA wide unilateral powers, while Dodd's envisions a five-member panel—a change applauded by the financial industry. But Dodd’s bill also gives states the power to enact tougher consumer protections than the CFPA, which banks complain will lead to an messy patchwork of regulations, the Wall Street Journal reports. Read These Next Montana is breaking out its 'bear dogs.' A country singer has gotten involved in a strange football feud. Jamie Lee Curtis is definitely no fan of this Freakier Friday review. How a Florida university's millions went to a cam girl. Report an error