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 MICHIGAN COMMUNITY
            REINVESTMENT CORPORATION
 
 
 
 April 13, 2004
             RE: Comment regarding the Economic Growth and Regulatory Paperwork
            Reduction Act of 1996. As a board member
              of the National Community Reinvestment Coalition, MICHIGAN COMMUNITY
              REINVESTMENT
              CORPORATION is sending this comment
            in response to the notice of Regulatory Review as required by the
            Economic Growth and Regulatory Paperwork Reduction Act (EGRPRA) of
            1996. In response to the second series, “consumer Protection:
            Lending-Related Rules” we respectively request that the federal
            banking agencies retain their regulations concerning Fair Housing,
            Equal Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA), Home Mortgage Disclosure Act
            (HMDA), Truth in Lending Act (TILA) and Unfair or Deceptive Acts
            or Practices. MICHIGAN COMMUNITY
              REINVESTMENT CORPORATION favors expanding data reporting requirements
              that will
              assist in achieving the goals of
            these fair lending statues and substantially benefit consumers with
            little regulatory burden. Under EGRPRA, the federal agencies must
            identify “outdated” regulations. The incomplete data
            collection under HMDA and ECOA is outdated and frustrates the purpose
            of this statute to prevent discrimination. While increasing data
            reporting requirements, the federal agencies must not limit the consumer
            protections currently available under these regulations. Any streamlining
            of these protections would interfere with the agencies ability to
            fulfill their statutory obligations. A series of federal statutes including the Fair Housing Act, the
            Home Mortgage Disclosure Act, the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, and
            the Truth-in-Lending Act have established a solemn congressional
            intent and purpose of eliminating abusive and discriminatory lending.
            In light of the recent decision by the Office of the Comptroller
            of the Currency to preempt all state anti-predatory lending legislation,
            these protections have become even more important to consumers. The
            MICHIGAN COMMUNITY REINVESTMENT CORPORATION does not believe these
            statutes provide enough protection; therefore any regulatory streamlining
            would further put consumers at risk.Page 2 EGRPRA
 IN CONCLUSION Finally, in 2001,
              the Federal Reserve Board made valuable improvements to their regulation
              implementing the Home Ownership and Equity Protection
            Act (HOEPA), which amended TILA. Among other benefits, the changes
            applied HOEPA’s protections to more subprime loans, including
            most loans with single premium credit insurance. Since abusive lending
            continues to increase, the federal agencies must preserve the changes
            to HOEPA. The regulatory agencies must also preserve the critical
            right of rescission under TILA. This right empowers borrowers at
            the closing table, enabling them to bargain with lenders and eliminate
            onerous terms and conditions in their loans. The right of rescission
            provides vital protection in the event that a borrower desires to
            cancel an abusive loan up to three days after closing.  Likewise, the agencies must not weaken HMDA, ECOA, TILA or protections
            in regulations implementing the Fair Housing and Unfair Deceptive
            Practices Acts. Data disclosure under these laws must become more
            comprehensive in order to identify and uproot discrimination. Sincerely, Veronica L. WilliamsPresident
 
 
              
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