NATIONAL COMMUNITY REINVESTMENT COALITION
From: Maryellen Lewis
[mailto:lewisma9@msu.edu]
Sent: Thursday, April 01, 2004 5:42 PM
To: Office of the Comptroller of the Currency; Federal Reserve Board;
Comments; Office of Thrift Supervision
Cc: National Community Reinvestment Coalition
Subject: re: Proposed changes to Community Reinvestment Act (CRA)
regulations
April 2, 2004
OFFICE OF THE COMPTROLLER OF THE CURRENCY
Communications Division, Mailstop 1-5
Docket No. 04-06
BOARD OF GOVERNORS OF THE FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
Jennifer J. Johnson, Secretary
Docket No. R-1181
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
Robert E. Feldman, Executive Secretary
OFICE OF THRIFT SUPERVISION
Chief Counsel's Office
Regulation Comments, Attention: No. 2004-04
Dear Officials of Federal Bank and Thrift Agencies:
I serve as an elected board member of the National Community
Reinvestment Coalition. In that capacity, and as a concerned citizen and
active community developer, I write to urge you to WITHDRAW the
proposed changes to the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) regulations.
For more than 25 years, the CRA has encouraged banks to better serve
U.S. communities, resulting in increased access to homeownership,
strengthened economic development in stagnant local economies, and
expansion of small businesses in the nation's minority, immigrant, and
low- and moderate-income communities. Your proposed changes promise only
to halt and even reverse that economic progress.
By empowering citizens with the tools for close oversight of their
local banks, the CRA has "completed the market" - it has added millions
of community residents to the "eyes and ears" that the regulatory
agencies need for responsible oversight; it has added stakeholders to
stockholders and regulators in the ongoing work of fine-tuning
"financial intermediation" to best serve the convenience, needs and
advancement of the country's local, regional and national economies.
Yet now, you propose to block that citizen oversight of 1,111 banks
that account for more than $387 billion in assets! Those not-so-small
banks may seem small in comparison with the megabanks, but they are HUGE
to the communities they serve, and those communities deserve the right
to watchdog and, if necessary, to discipline their banks to fulfill
every bank's public obligation to serve ALL of their community, without
unfair exclusion and without predatory practices.
You already have many letters detailing the serious drawbacks of the
proposed Interagency Regulations - drawbacks that promise to undermine
and even cripple efforts to expand fair access to high-quality financial
products and services. I won't reiterate them here, but instead I will
urge you to keep your eye on the goal, a goal that CRA has served with
increasing effectiveness over the past two-and-a-half decades: To make
fair access to capital, credit and banking services available to
everyone, in order to help individuals, families and communities build
assets toward a more prosperous and resilient economic future.
CRA is a law that makes capitalism work for all Americans. It is far
too vital to be gutted by harmful regulatory changes and neglect.
Thank you for your attention to this critical matter.
Sincerely,
Maryellen J. Lewis
Michigan State University, Community & Economic Development Program
4729 Bristol St.
Lansing, Michigan 48910
Cc: National Community Reinvestment Coalition
President George W. Bush
Treasury Secretary John W. Snow
|