WASHINGTON (AP) — The new $100 bill, with an array of high-tech
features designed to thwart counterfeiters, will get its coming out
party Today, partial government shutdown or not.
The Federal
Reserve, which has not been affected by the shutdown, will have armored
trucks rolling from its regional banks around the country headed to
banks, savings and loans and other financial institutions with the new
C-notes.
The bills took more than a decade to develop and the
introduction was plagued by production problems that set back the
rollout by 2½ years. But officials say the problems have now been fixed.
Some
bank customers could start seeing the new bills by Tuesday afternoon
depending on how close their bank is to a regional Fed facility.
"We
have 3.5 billion of these notes which we think will be more than ample
to meet domestic and international demands," said Sonja Danburg, program
manager for U.S. currency education at the Fed.
The
bill redesign, the first for the $100 bill since March 1996, will still
have Benjamin Franklin on the front and Philadelphia's Independence
Hall on the back. It will also have a number of new features that will
definitely turn heads.
There is a disappearing Liberty Bell in an
ink well and a bright blue three-dimensional security ribbon with images
that move in the opposite direction from the way the bill is being
tilted.
"The 3-D security ribbon is magic. It is made up of
hundreds of thousands of micro-lenses in each note," said Larry Felix,
the director of the Bureau of Engraving and Printing. "This is the most
complex note the United States has ever produced."
The $100 bill
is the last bill to get a make-over in a process that began in 2003 with
the $20 bill. The government redesigned the greenbacks with subtle
colors and other security features to make it harder for counterfeiters.
The $100 bill, which is the most commonly counterfeited note outside of
the United States, was redesigned with even more complex security
features.
But the government ran into troubles when 1 billion of
the first bills were found in 2010 to have unwanted creases. There was
later a problem with ink smearing that further delayed introduction of
the new notes, which were initially scheduled to be introduced in
February 2011. Felix said the bureau is now confident it has resolved
the various production issues.
Officials stressed that the $900
billion worth of $100 bills currently in circulation will remain good
and will only be gradually phased out as worn-out bills are returned to
Fed facilities. The $100 bill is the largest U.S. denomination in
circulation and has the longest life at 15 years. The $1 bill lasts 5.9
years.
The new $100 bills will have one old feature. The signature
on the bills will be that of former Treasury Secretary Timothy
Geithner. The signature of current Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew, who has
been teased by President Barack Obama for his loopy handwriting, will
start appearing once the current supply of new bills has been put into
circulation.
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