Regional office of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York
The East Rutherford Operations Center (EROC) at 100 Orchard Street,
East Rutherford,
New Jersey, is the regional office for cash handling and
banknote processing of the
Federal Reserve Bank of New York.[1] The facility, which was constructed by
Torcon in the early 1990s, features a 400,000-square-foot (37,000 m2) three-story structure which sits on 13 acres.[2] The structure is designed to house fail-safe operations in a secure environment.[2] The facility also has a state-of-the art automated vault measuring one million cubic feet, used for storing
United States currency.[2][3][4] The vault is based on an
automated storage and retrieval system (AS/RS) and can hold at least USD 60 billion.[5] Internally, the cash is transferred by
automated guided vehicles (AGV).
The center is one of three Federal Reserve Automation Services (FRAS) facilities in the
Federal Reserve Banks system. They provide support for mission-critical payment systems. They are the survivors of the FedNet 5-year initiative started in 1990 to reengineer the Federal Reserve's fund transfer system, and consolidate twelve data centers into 3.[6][7]
In 2000, the facility processed 1.39 billion checks, and USD$320 billion.[11] The center's bank check processing unit was shut down in 2006 as part of the Federal Reserve’s check restructuring process due to more checks being processed digitally.[4][12] Check processing operations were moved to the
Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia.[13][14]
FedWire
The Fedwire is
real-time gross settlement (RTGS) system that operates from 8:30 a.m. Eastern Time (ET) to 6:30 p.m and allows its subscribing 11,000 institutions to transfer funds.[15][16] The Fedwire service is operated by the Federal Reserve Information Technology (FRIT) facility at EROC.[15] Fedwire also houses the primary (XRF) backup facility with the secondary backup facility in Cleveland.[15]
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abcJohn C. Knight; Matthew C. Elder; James Flinn; Patrick Marx (December 10, 1997). "Summaries of Three Critical Infrastructure Applications". University of Virginia.
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