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FDIC Federal Register Citations


 

HAVANA NATIONAL BANK


July 20, 2004

Robert E. Feldman, Executive Secretary
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
550 17th Street NW
Washington, DC. 20429

The officers of the Havana National Bank have reviewed the Interagency Guidance on Overdraft Protection Programs, published in Volume 69, Number 109 of the Federal Register on June 7, 2004. While the majority of the proposed requirements and best practices are already in place at our bank, we believe that there are a few areas of this proposal that are worthy of comment.

First, the proposed guidelines call for overdrafts and their related repayment plans to be charged off thirty days after the initial overdraft. We have had a great deal of success in putting repayment plans in place after thirty days and collecting the full amount of the overdraft. If the customer is willing to agree to a repayment plan, we do not believe that the overdraft should be charged off until the customer has defaulted on the repayment plan. In the event that the customer is not willing to agree to a repayment plan, we do not believe that banks should be forced into charging off the overdraft any sooner than the forty five days that credit unions are allowed.

Second, the proposed guidelines call for reporting unused preauthorized overdraft limits as unused commitments on the Quarterly Report of Condition. We believe that this would artificially inflate the amount of risk reported by most institutions. Banks have always had the option of paying overdrafts for their customers. Prior to putting a preauthorized overdraft program in place it was impossible to quantify the amount of overdrafts that management would have approved the payment of. Additionally, for accounts that are not in the preauthorized program such as small business and farm accounts, how can we quantify what the "unused commitment" amount would be for each of those customers. By carefully monitoring which customers are extended the preauthorized overdraft privilege we can effectively manage the risk of the program. Implementing the proposed change in reporting would only serve to make the Quarterly Reports of Condition a less accurate measure of risk and would eliminate the ability to compare risk after the change to the risk prior to the change.

Third, the existence of an authorized overdraft program should not preclude advertising free checking accounts. As long as fees for authorized overdrafts are properly disclosed in the deposit account agreement, there should be no additional restrictions on advertising. By choosing to use their overdraft privilege, the customer chooses to pay the associated fee. If the customer chooses not to use their overdraft privilege, the account can indeed be a free account. The overdraft privilege is an additional service that most customers do not object to paying for.


Thank you for your time and consideration.

Jeffery A. Bonnett
President

Kennth H. Emme
Chairman of the Board

Donald J. Roch
Compliance Officer

Last Updated 08/10/2004 regs@fdic.gov

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