The rollover of TCF Bank customers to Huntington Bank left some people without access to their debit cards and online banking this week.
The change began last Friday and was signaled well in advance by Huntington. But in the days since, customers have jammed the bank's help center and website with complaints about lost access to key banking services.
"I'm sure they tried hard to do this well, but they've simply failed," Jeremy Bond, a TCF customer in Mount Pleasant, Mich., said Wednesday. He was repeatedly denied access while trying to set up online accounts with Huntington.
Ohio-based Huntington closed on its merger with TCF Financial, one of Minnesota's largest banks, earlier this summer. A rebranding is being completed this month, most visible in sign changes at branches and at the University of Minnesota's football stadium, where TCF had naming rights.
For weeks, Huntington told customers to expect their accounts and online services to migrate in early October.
Consumer customers received welcome kits that walk through how to access their accounts step-by-step, said Randi Berris, Huntington's director of external communications, in an e-mail response to questions from the Star Tribune.
"We understand that this can be difficult for some to navigate and that's why we're seeing the increased call volume," she said. "We are working through those calls as quickly and efficiently as we can."
Bond said he was told by Huntington customer service representatives that high transaction volume was the reason he couldn't access his accounts. The bank advised him to try again at odd hours when online traffic volume would decrease, he said. But he still wasn't able to access his accounts after repeated attempts Tuesday night and early Wednesday.