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 Enterprise Bank & Trust
 
 
 
 April
              20, 2004
 RE: EGRPRA Comments I wish to thank the agencies for the opportunity to comment on the consumer
      protection regulations as a result of the Economic Growth and Regulatory
      Paperwork Reduction Act.
 I would like
              to comment on the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA) and Flood
              Regulations.  HMDA To begin, I believe
              the need to maintain a public file on site is outdated since this
              information is now available online. I think a statement at each
              location, including the main office, with an address of where a
              request for a copy can be sent should suffice. This would also
              eliminate the need to add the current year data on a quarterly
              basis. Most financial institutions have never received a request
              to view or obtain a copy of the public file.  Secondly, I would
              like to comment on the reportability of loans. It has been stated
              by the regulators that HMDA is one of the most violated regulations
              during examinations. I therefore don’t feel that increasing
              the number of reportable fields from 19 to 34 is the answer to
              addressing this concern. I feel the types of loans reportable should
              be readdressed and that some reportable loans should be eliminated,
              which would hopefully increase the validity of the HMDA data overall.
              To explain, the definition of “refinance” was recently
              changed beginning with the 2004 reportable data. To be deemed a
              refinance, the new loan, and the loan it is paying off, must be
              dwelling secured. I feel the intent of the regulators was to make
              this easier, however it has made HMDA more burdensome. Loans that
              have multiple pieces of collateral, including a dwelling, when
              the intent of the loan is unrelated to the dwelling, or any dwelling,
              are now reportable. A bank that is primarily a commercial lender
              who may have loans to small business owners who have additionally
              secured the loan with their home, may now find they are reporting
              numerous loans that were not deemed HMDA reportable in the past.
              In addition, if the home was taken as abundance of caution, the
              loan could be reportable under the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA),
              but now that it is HMDA reportable, it cannot be reported on CRA.
              The refinancing definition has completely eliminated the “purpose” or “intent” of
              the loan. I feel this change will dramatically skew the HMDA data,
              and possibly the CRA data.  I think the true
              intent of HMDA is to protect consumers and therefore feel that
              any loan for a business purpose should not be reportable. This
              would eliminate the reporting of multifamily properties and homes
              purchased for rental property. In addition, I believe the reporting
              of withdrawn loans is unnecessary. The request was withdrawn by
              the applicant prior to the financing being approved or denied by
              the financial institution, therefore this data is serving no significance
              in determining a discriminatory practice or whether we are meeting
              the credit needs of our community.  Flood  There are many
              areas of the regulation that need clarification or interpretation,
              perhaps by an additional Q & A. Although I realize that it
              is impossible to address every scenario, I do feel there are some
              items that should be addressed.  To begin, in
              the past year our bank was informed by external auditors that we
              needed to compare the flood zone listed on the insurance to the
              zone listed on the determination to ensure they are the same, if
              they are not, we are to request that the flood zone on the insurance
              be changed. This requirement is not part of the regulation, but
              a new interpretation, although it is not written anywhere. Although
              I understand the importance for the zones to match, it is out of
              the financial institution’s control to force the agent to
              make this change. There are some agents who, like financial institutions,
              use a third party vendor to perform the flood determination. If
              the agent has obtained such a determination and it indicates a
              different zone than the bank’s determination, they are not
              willing to change the zone on the insurance. Likewise, the bank
              is not willing to accept their determination because they do not
              have a relationship with this vendor and there is no recourse for
              the bank should the determination be incorrect. Furthermore, there
              is no life of loan tracking for the bank. As a result, the only
              thing the bank can do is document the file accordingly.  When a loan is
              new and secured by property in a flood zone, or property in a flood
              zone is being added to an existing loan, there is no thirty-day
              waiting period for flood insurance. However, we have found this
              is not the case when the flood insurance is up for renewal and
              the premium is paid thirty days late. In cases such as this, the
              customer does have a thirty-day waiting period regardless of whether
              they have a loan. This is outlined in the insurance agent’s
              manual available on the FEMA website, and we have confirmed this
              is true with our regional office of the NFIP. I believe the thirty-day
              waiting period should be eliminated on delinquent policy renewals.
              Often times, we have found that the policy was renewed prior to
              the 45-day time limit outlined in our notice to the borrower that
              was sent when their flood insurance expired. We have been informed
              that the financial institution is not able to force place flood
              insurance on borrowers that have an existing policy.  To expand on
              that last statement regarding force placement of flood insurance,
              we have also been informed that the financial institution is unable
              to force place a small amount of insurance on a customer that is
              not properly covered, again because we can not force place insurance
              if the borrower has an existing policy. Instead, we must work with
              the agent in trying to get the additional coverage placed, which
              we have found cannot always be accomplished in a timely manner.
              I think the rules under the Mortgage Portfolio Protection Program
              should be amended to allow financial institutions to force place
              the additional coverage.  Our regulator
              has stated that if a current appraisal is not available then we
              must rely on the most recent hazard insurance policy to determine
              the value of the dwelling, again this is not written within the
              regulation. I feel that the regulation should provide guidance
              as to how old an appraisal can be before it is deemed outdated,
              our financial institution has chosen to use one year. The regulation
              requires that flood insurance be tracked to ensure that proper
              coverage remains in place, therefore, we are reviewing the flood
              insurance at least once a year at it’s renewal, and sometimes
              more often if the loan is modified or renewed. However when using
              the hazard insurance we have found that we are constantly recalculating
              the required amount of flood insurance because the hazard insurance
              increases every year due to an automatic inflationary increase,
              as a result we are continuously requiring many of our customers
              to increase their flood insurance every year. This is an unanticipated
              expense to our borrower and can cause difficulty in our relationship,
              not to mention the administrative cost the financial institution
              endures. I feel the flood insurance should not have to be increased
              from the original required amount needed, unless the loan amount
              is increased.  It has further
              been communicated by our regulator that on commercial property
              we can combine the building coverage and the contents coverage
              when determining the proper amount of flood insurance for a loan
              that is secured by both, however if the loan is secured by the
              building only, we can refer to the building coverage only. I feel
              this is inconsistent, especially since the regulation provides
              guidance on how to determine building coverage; the building should
              be determined independently of the contents on a loan that contains
              both as collateral.  The regulation
              should provide guidance on how to address buildings that the borrower
              intends to tear down. We have had situations in which the borrower
              purchased property that was in a flood zone, within one week of
              the loan the property was torn down. It is burdensome for the borrower
              to go through the time and expense of obtaining flood insurance
              for temporary situations such as this, however the regulation provides
              no exceptions. The NFIP stated that if the building had no value
              and this is reflected in the appraisal, then insurance would not
              be required, however, our building had value. I recommend that
              an exception be placed for buildings that will be torn down within
              an allotted time frame from the closing date of the loan.  The regulation
              needs to clarify what is acceptable coverage for condominiums when
              a Residential Condominium Building Association Policy (RCBAP) is
              in place. The FEMA handbook “Mandatory Purchase of Flood
              Insurance Guidelines” outlines that a unit owner can acquire
              supplemental building coverage that will apply only to that part
              of a loss that exceeds eighty percent of replacement cost of the
              RCBAP. Is this to be interpreted that it is acceptable that the
              financial institution need only to confirm that the RCBAP is for
              at least eighty percent replacement cost rather than one hundred
              percent replacement cost?  My final comment
              pertains to the Notice to the Borrower. I think the initial notification
              prior to the loan closing is all that is reasonably needed and
              that the notification at time of renewal, extension, or increase
              in the loan amount should be eliminated. The borrower is informed
              prior to closing that the property securing the loan is in a flood
              zone and flood insurance must be obtained. Because the bank is
              required to track this flood insurance, the borrower will be informed
              via a separate notice should their insurance expire, that they
              have forty-five days to obtain coverage or insurance will be forced
              placed. As a commercial lender, most of our loans to a business
              are crossed collateralized and are renewed on an annual basis,
              but do not necessarily have the same maturity date; therefore,
              the borrower is continuously being sent notices that the property
              is in a flood zone. They have indicated this is somewhat of a nuisance,
              and for our financial institution we have found it to be administratively
              burdensome.  Thank you for your consideration.
 Angela C. CowellAVP & Compliance Officer
 Enterprise Bank & Trust
 1281 N. Warson Road
 St. Louis MO 63132
 
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