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FDIC Federal Register Citations


Country Club Bank

October 5, 2004

Mr. Robert E. Feldman
Executive Secretary
Attention: Comments/Legal ESS
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
550 17th Street, NW
Washington, DC 20429

Dear Mr. Feldman:

I am writing to you on behalf of Country Club Bank, n.a., located in Prairie Village, Kansas, a suburb of the Greater Kansas City Metropolitan Area. The size of our bank is $425 million and therefore will be subject to the large bank CRA examination requirements. Our growth over the last 5 years caused us to be considered a ‘large’ bank.

We pride ourselves on being a hometown, locally owned bank, and are somewhat taken aback to be considered large, just for having exceeded the $250 million threshold. To be sure, we are as small now as we were previously and are proud of being able to serve our community with a personal and immediate response. We are ever mindful of the various regulatory requirements by which one has to abide. I wish we had the personnel available to perform a cost study as to how much time and effort is being expended on regulatory issues. Efforts that could easily be redirected to endeavors that would benefit our community. It is, nonetheless, frustrating to think that an entity of even $1 billion should be subject to the identical CRA requirements as the multi-billion dollar banks which control the vast majority of the nations deposits.

Therefore, we support the FDIC threshold for streamlined CRA examination to all banking entities of under $1 billion. It would not be meaningful to add a community development caveat to this formula as currently suggested, however. One should allow the covered bank to meet its community development criterion by engaging in any one type or combination of community development activity, i.e. lending, investments, or services – as opposed to separate tests for all three.

The recent New York Times editorial suggesting that a change from the status quo would be a “drastic change that would allow more than a thousand banks to back away from their community development obligations”, is an opinion void of a reality check. A community bank is called that because they are attuned to, and responsive to the needs of the people. They do this without subjecting members of their community to 800 numbers. Their involvement in their communities goes well beyond any lending criteria.

To be sure, this letter is strongly in support of the increased asset level for CRA examination as proposed by the OTS and now the FDIC.

Sincerely,

William M. Teiwes
Executive Vice President – COO
Country Club Bank, n.a.


Cc: The Honorable John D. Hawke, Jr.
Comptroller of the Currency
Independence Square, 250 E Street, S.W.
Washington, DC 20551

 

Last Updated 10/05/2004 regs@fdic.gov

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