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FDIC Federal Register Citations







Mid-Missouri Bank


To: Robert E. Feldman
Executive Secretary, FDIC

From: David E. Wright, CRA Officer
Mid-Missouri Bank, Springfield, Missouri

Date: March 29, 2004

Subject: Joint Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
Community Reinvestment Act Regulations


Thank you for the opportunity to comment on the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking for the Community Reinvestment Act implementing regulations. I serve as the CRA Officer for a $330 million bank in Springfield, Missouri. Though larger than many banks in the U.S., we are a relatively small player in terms of the overall financial institution landscape, especially compared to some of our “peers” who are also evaluated under the Large Bank Test for CRA purposes – peers like Bank of America and Citigroup.

While the current $250 million asset threshold may have been a good proxy for what constitutes a “large” institution in 1995, the industry has outgrown this threshold through record growth and through mergers and acquisitions. We are fast approaching having three U.S. banks with in excess of $1 trillion in assets, according to recent American Banker articles. Our bank would not be considered “similarly situated” for CRA purposes when compared with these three banks, but our CRA performance is, in fact, currently judged using the exact same rules.

Regulators quoted in the recent American Banker articles have pointed out that the largest U.S. financial institutions have small “footprints” compared to WalMart and Starbucks. It seems inconsistent for the same regulators who claim Bank of America is a “small” U.S. business when compared to Starbucks to then place our $330 million bank in the same category as Bank of America, with $970 billion in assets, when sending their examiners out to evaluate our CRA performance.

Another way of looking at this issue is to determine whether there is available to our bank the ability to be judged fairly under the existing rules, regardless of whether we are compared to Citigroup and Bank of America. Springfield, Missouri is a stable community in southwest Missouri with a city limit population of 140,000 and a metropolitan area population of approximately 250,000. Lending, service, and investment opportunities are readily available in Springfield and we are very involved in these opportunities.

However, although our bank is headquartered in Springfield, most of our deposit base and five of our six offices are located in rural communities outside of Springfield. The community development lending, service, and investment opportunities in these communities are much less apparent.

Our bank, like many community banks our size, was formed by the merger of smaller banks into one larger institution. However, we still function as a collection of small rural banks, not as a large metropolitan bank. Our branches are all located in towns of fewer than 10,000 people, including one in a town of 507 people. Most of the communities we serve are too small for our CRA Large Bank “peers” to even consider doing business in.

We are serving these communities in ways the largest banks don’t want to or can’t. We bolster their economies, we make the loans that support their small businesses, and we lead their community service and development projects. But the opportunities for qualified investments just aren’t there. To meet the litmus test for Investments, we have to search for all available investments in Springfield and create new ones where we can. But in doing so, we aren’t addressing the real needs of the communities we actually serve. Rather, we are often funneling money into investments where they are available to comply with the CRA regulation.

The regulatory response to this scenario has often been that banks should be creating investment opportunities in these smaller communities. My reaction to this is twofold. First, a bank alone cannot create these opportunities – there has to be an identified need and there has to be a willingness in the community to address that need. The community affairs staffs of each of the regulatory agencies have, at times, tried to create partnerships between banks and community groups to address supposed community development needs and met with failure because there wasn’t enough community backing. What is true for the regulators is true for banks - you can’t create something that isn’t needed or wanted.

Second, the regulation discourages many of the types of investments, loans, and services that are wanted and needed in small communities because they don’t meet the definitions of community development, small business, or small farm established by the regulatory agencies. One example would be investments in the local YMCA because the organization supposedly places too much emphasis on exercise and too little on financial literacy or some other qualifying activity. In fact, most rural YMCA’s have valuable and necessary community programs such as after school programs that should meet the qualification test but usually don’t with examiners.

Additionally, volunteering for the local Habitat for Humanity typically doesn’t receive credit from examiners unless the work is done on bank time. Even then, the focus is on whether bank officers (not merely employees) are conducting financial literacy training for Habitat, not on whether they pound nails and paint walls. In short, the current regulation has made it too hard for community banks who meet the CRA Large Bank definition to meet the true needs of their communities and be judged as having done so for CRA purposes.


Most organizations and individuals who care to have an opinion on CRA could come to a compromise agreement that the CRA performance of larger financial institutions should be judged on a broader scale than that of smaller community banks. Moreover, most would agree that the streamlined Small Bank CRA evaluation accurately reflects the fact that smaller community banks are meeting the needs of their communities in the most basic way by simply making loans. The main point of discussion and disagreement is at what level the asset threshold should be set in creating pools of institutions that are deemed to be Large Banks and Small Banks for CRA purposes.

I support the current proposed threshold of $500 million and the elimination of the holding company rule for the reasons outlined above. Raising the threshold to this level will more accurately outline the differences between larger financial institutions and those smaller banks that have grown significantly over the past few years in asset size but which are still essentially small community banks.


Last Updated 03/31/2004 regs@fdic.gov

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