From: Asha Greer [mailto:ashagreer@earthlink.net]
Sent: Friday, October 01, 2004 5:29 PM
To: Comments
Subject: Withdraw Proposal to Weaken CRA
Asha Greer
p.o.box 25
batesvillea, va 22924
October 1, 2004
Mr. Robert E. Feldman
Executive Secretary
ATTN: Comments/Legal ESS
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
550 E. 17th Street, NW
Washington, DC 20429
RE: RIN 3064-AC50
Dear Mr. Feldman:
As a member of the National Community Capital Association (NCCA), I
urge you to withdraw your proposed changes to the Community Reinvestment
Act (CRA) regulations. If enacted, the FDIC will define small banks as
$1 billion and less with those banks having assets between $250 million
and $1 billion subject to community development criteria.
Under current regulations, banks with assets of at least $250 million
have performance evaluations that review lending, investing, and
services to low- and moderate-income communities. You propose that
state-chartered banks with assets between $250 million and $1 billion
follow a community development criterion that allows banks to offer
community development loans, investments OR services will result in
significantly fewer loans and investments in low-income communities¯the
very communities that the CRA was enacted to serve. Currently, mid-size
banks must show activity in
all three areas of assessment. Under the proposed regulations, the banks
will now be able to pick the services convenient for them, regardless of
community needs.
The proposed regulation is in direct opposition to Congressional
intent of the law. In a letter signed by 30 U.S. Senators to the four
regulatory agencies regarding an earlier proposal (February 2004) to
increase the definition of “small bank” from $250 million to $500
million, the Senators wrote, “This proposal dramatically weakens the
effectiveness of CRA…We are
concerned that the proposed regulation would eliminate the
responsibility of many banks to invest in the communities they serve
through programs such as the Low Income Housing Tax Credit or provide
critically needed services such as low-cost bank accounts for low- and
moderate-income consumers.”
This proposal would remove 879 state-chartered banks with over $392
billion in assets from scrutiny. This will have harmful consequences for
low- and moderate-income communities. Without this examination, mid-size
banks will no longer have to make efforts to provide affordable banking
services or respond to the needs of these emerging domestic markets.
In addition, your proposal eliminates small business lending data
reporting for mid-size banks. Without data on lending to small
businesses, the public cannot hold mid-size banks accountable for
responding to the credit needs of small businesses. Since 95.7 percent
of the banks you regulate have less than $1 billion in assets, there
will be no
accountability for the vast majority of state-chartered banks.
Your proposal is especially harmful in rural communities. The
proposal seeks to have community development activities in rural areas
counted for any group of individuals regardless of income. This could
divert services from low- and moderate-income communities in rural areas
where the needs are particularly great. Wyoming and Idaho would have NO
banks with a CRA impetus to both invest in and provide services to their
communities. Vermont, Alaska, and Montana would only have one bank each.
Commenters advocating for this change state that raising the limit to $1
billion would have only a small effect on the amount of total industry
assets covered under the large bank tests. I think this would be very
hard to
justify to the low-income communities in Idaho left without meaningful
services.
Instead of weakening the CRA, the FDIC should be doing more to
protect our communities. CRA covers only banks and does not
differentiate between stand-alone banks and banks that are part of large
holding companies. All financial services companies that receive direct
or indirect taxpayer support or subsidy should have to comply with the
CRA. Small banks that are part of large holding companies should have to
conform to the CRA’s standards that are more stringent.
CRA exams look at a bank’s performance in geographical areas where a
bank has branches and deposit-taking ATMs. In 1977, taking deposits was
a bank’s primary function. In 2004, banks no longer just accept
deposits: they market investments, sell insurance, issue securities and
are rapidly expanding into more profitable lines of business like
electronic banking. Defining CRA assessment areas based on deposits no
longer makes sense. Customer base should be the focus for CRA
assessment. For instance, if a Philadelphia bank has credit card
customers in Oregon, it should have CRA
obligations there.
The regulators also must protect consumers from abusive lending. The
FDIC’s proposal completely ignores this issue. Predatory lending strips
billions in wealth from low-income consumers and communities in the U.S.
each year. Borrowers lose an estimated $9.1 billion annually due to
predatory mortgages; $3.4 billion from payday loans; and $3.5 billion in
other lending abuses, such as overdraft loans, excessive credit card
debt, and tax refund loans. Without a comprehensive standard, the CRA
becomes nearly meaningless. The regulation should contain a
comprehensive, enforceable provision to consider abusive practices, and
assess CRA compliance accordingly, and it must apply to ALL loans.
The impetus for the creation of the CRA was to encourage federally
insured financial institutions to meet the credit and banking needs of
the communities they serve, especially low- and moderate-income
communities. This proposal undermines the intent of CRA, and threatens
to undo the years of effort to bring unbanked consumers into the
financial mainstream. I urge you to remove this dangerous proposal from
consideration.
Sincerely yours
Asha Greer |