By Claudia Buck
McClatchy-Tribune News Service

SACRAMENTO -- If you've always had a bank account, it's hard to imagine life without writing a check, hitting the ATM or swiping a debit card at the grocery store.
But for more than a million Californians, life without a bank account is the norm. They're known as the "unbanked'': those who don't own a traditional bank account, either checking or savings.
Instead, they typically stash their cash at home and often rely on high-cost services that provide payday loans or check-cashing.
For the past several years, the state's "Bank on California" program has been working to change that, offering free or low-cost checking accounts at banks and credit unions to those who normally wouldn't qualify. Recently, Golden 1, the state's largest credit union, launched a similar program to aid the unbanked.
"Without a bank account, everything is more difficult: paying rent, your utilities," said Alana Golden, spokeswoman for the state Department of Financial Institutions, which oversees the Bank on California program.
Since December 2008, more than 214,000 free or low-cost "Bank On" accounts have been opened in California. In addition, the program conducted more than 2,000 financial education workshops for low- and moderate-income families.
"The hope is they'll open a checking account to pay their bills, but also to start saving," Golden added. "It's an important step in becoming financially independent."