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New $20 Bills Will Get Color
(AP) ^

Posted on 06/20/2002 12:24:08 PM PDT by Dallas

WASHINGTON --

Andrew Jackson is first in line for a makeover, and we're not talking wrinkle removal.

The $20 bill -- which carries Jackson's image -- will get color and possibly other new features as part of an effort to foil high-tech counterfeiters. The new twenty could be put into circulation as early as the fall of 2003, the Bureau of Engraving and Printing said Thursday.

The $20 bill is the most counterfeited note in the United States and the second-most commonly used bill behind the $1. Jackson's last makeover was in 1998.

"Redesigning notes is going to become a way of life for modern currencies around the world to stay ahead of technology, which is just exploding and providing increased threats to security," bureau Director Thomas Ferguson said in an interview.

After the new twenty debuts, redesigned $100 bills -- which are the most knocked off outside the country -- and $50 bills will follow in 12 to 18 months, the bureau said. But the bureau hasn't decided which of those notes will roll out first.

In the last redesign of the nation's paper currency, Benjamin Franklin, whose face is on the $100 bill, got the first makeover in 1996. He was followed by Ulysses S. Grant on the $50 bill in 1997.

The nation's money makers are still mulling whether $5s and $10s -- which were last redesigned in 2000 -- will get facelifts this time around.

As with the last redesign, there are no plans to alter George Washington, whose visage is on the dollar, because counterfeiters don't bother with such small stuff. The same goes for the obscure $2 bill.

The new notes will include "subtle background colors," the bureau said. Green and black ink is now used on neutral-colored paper. Color would be added in the neutral areas. Ferguson wouldn't say which colors will be used, but said they will vary by denomination.

"The primary images, the traditional look and feel will remain with the addition of subtle background colors," Ferguson said. "We think people will be pleased."

The United States has had colorful money before. Some bills of the late 1860s were so colorful they were called Rainbow Notes, experts say.

The bureau said color will help people identify the different denominations. By itself, the addition of color isn't a security feature, but its use provides the opportunity to add more features that could deter bogus bill makers, the bureau said.

Ferguson wouldn't identify those new features. The addition of technology that looks like 3-D holograms is on the table, but no decisions have been made, he said.

Another change may include using more distinct color-shifting ink. In the last redesign, color-shifting ink that looks green when viewed straight on but black at an angle was used in a spot on some notes.

Some anti-counterfeiting features included in the last redesign will be retained, the bureau said. They include watermarks that are visible when held up to a light; embedded security threads that glow a color when exposed to an ultraviolet light; and very tiny images, visible with a magnifying glass, known as microprinting.

The size of the notes will not change and the same faces will appear on the same bills. But the portraits and buildings may be presented differently, Ferguson said. He declined to provide details.

Final designs must be approved by Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill. The new $20 won't be publicly unveiled until early next year.

In the last redesign, the most noticeable change was that portraits were made bigger and moved slightly off center. That led to a number of nicknames for the notes, including Monopoly Money.

Over the years, counterfeiters have graduated from offset printing to increasingly sophisticated color copiers, computer scanners, color ink jet printers and publishing-grade software -- all readily available.

In the 2001 fiscal year, $47.5 million in counterfeit bills got into circulation in the United States, the Secret Service says. Of that amount, $18.4 million -- or 39 percent -- were phony computer-generated notes.

When new bills are issued, the old bills remain in circulation until they wear out. The government is working with industry to make sure new bills can be read by ATMs and vending machines.

* __

On the Net:

Bureau of Engraving and Printing: http://www.bep.treas.gov/

Copyright © 2002, The Associated Press


TOPICS: Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events
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1 posted on 06/20/2002 12:24:08 PM PDT by Dallas
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To: Dallas
$2 bills are neat. Jefferson is the featured dead president, in case you're wondering.
2 posted on 06/20/2002 12:29:48 PM PDT by Eric in the Ozarks
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To: Dallas
Colored bills or bills of color?
3 posted on 06/20/2002 12:30:34 PM PDT by Semper Paratus
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To: Dallas
These Treasury guys are getting really obsessed with changing the money around, aren't they? Smacks of desperation - like they continually need to invent some project to work on to justify their salaries.
4 posted on 06/20/2002 12:32:41 PM PDT by Dr. Frank fan
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To: Eric in the Ozarks
$2 bills are neat.

They're also great entertainment. Try paying for something at a fast food place with them sometime. It's a riot.

5 posted on 06/20/2002 12:36:31 PM PDT by tacticalogic
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To: Dallas
bump
6 posted on 06/20/2002 12:37:07 PM PDT by Centurion2000
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To: Dallas
Color would be added in the neutral areas.

Personally I wish they'd change the ink, too. Speaking for color blind males everywhere, that greyish brown stuff they use now is butt ugly.

7 posted on 06/20/2002 12:39:50 PM PDT by tacticalogic
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To: Dallas
"Redesigning notes is going to become a way of life for modern currencies around the world to stay ahead of technology, which is just exploding and providing increased threats to security," bureau Director Thomas Ferguson said in an interview.

Does this really make it any harder for counterfeiters? Were I engaged in that profession, I'd just keep making the older version of a bill. It's not like you can't still use the old 20s.

8 posted on 06/20/2002 12:40:14 PM PDT by nravoter
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To: Dr. Frank
I enjoy the 50 state quarter program. Looking forward to seeing the designs for Alabama and Florida.
9 posted on 06/20/2002 12:44:52 PM PDT by Diverdogz
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To: Dallas
>>...In the last redesign of the nation's paper currency, Benjamin Franklin, whose face is on the $100 bill, got the first makeover in 1996...<<

So...why didn't they do color back then?

How much is this costing us? Back when they first started redesigning the bills, I contacted the Treasury Dept. and asked how much the design and implementation of the new bills would cost the taxpayers.
I wanted to compare the costs with what they claimed counterfitting cost us.

They told me they didn't give out that information.

10 posted on 06/20/2002 12:46:05 PM PDT by FReepaholic
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To: Dallas
Only the Fed is allowed to conterfeit dollars.
11 posted on 06/20/2002 12:49:25 PM PDT by jasonalvarez
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To: Dr. Frank
Smacks of desperation - like they continually need to invent some project to work on to justify their salaries.

The idea is to discourage the use of cash. If nobody knows what's good, it's all bad (monopoly money).

12 posted on 06/20/2002 12:51:13 PM PDT by balrog666
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To: Dallas
Colorizing money?

I smell Ted Turner.

13 posted on 06/20/2002 12:54:16 PM PDT by Apple_Hills
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To: Apple_Hills
Colorizing money? I smell Ted Turner.

Or smell the PC crowd that says the new colored dollars will discriminate against the color-blind.

14 posted on 06/20/2002 12:59:09 PM PDT by snag_matic
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To: tacticalogic
See what would happen if you gave 'em one of these:

Canadian 'twoie'.

Our neighbors to the north no longer make 1 or 2 dollar bills. They have the "loonie" and the "twoie" coins.

15 posted on 06/20/2002 1:01:23 PM PDT by mc5cents
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To: Diverdogz
I enjoy the 50 state quarter program.

I've got no specific complaint about it other than to idly wonder how much it cost and why it was necessary.

16 posted on 06/20/2002 1:01:49 PM PDT by Dr. Frank fan
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To: Dallas
Final designs must be approved by Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill.

This bozo will seek advice from Bono, but not from "We the People".

17 posted on 06/20/2002 1:04:02 PM PDT by Willie Green
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To: balrog666
The idea is to discourage the use of cash. If nobody knows what's good, it's all bad (monopoly money).

That may be a beneficial by-product (from the point of view of some gov't people), but I really don't think the busybodies at Treasury are that clever or far-thinking.

I just think they're insecure, bored people with repressed artistic and/or power aspirations who want to feel like they're important but deep down know that they're just glorified printing press operators making endless reams of interchangeable rectangles which no one will ever, ever appreciate as much as any given X-Men comic book, VCR instruction manual, or even Jack Chick pamphlet.

(Admittedly, this is an unproven and amateurish psychological theory I've developed... :)

18 posted on 06/20/2002 1:17:38 PM PDT by Dr. Frank fan
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To: Diverdogz
I enjoy the 50 state quarter program.

It is universally hated by people who work cash registers. Something to do with truly stupid people demanding that the cashier check the register for the latest state.
19 posted on 06/20/2002 1:47:16 PM PDT by Dimensio
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To: Eric in the Ozarks
Who's the dead president on the $100?
20 posted on 06/20/2002 2:17:45 PM PDT by weegee
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