|     From: Grant Dean              Sent: Thursday, March 25, 2004 10:29 AM
 To: Comments
 Subject: EGRPRA Comments
 Grant DeanBox 431
 Glenwood, IA 51534
 March 25, 2004
 Dear FDIC: I am writing on behalf of Glenwood State Bank, a state-chartered
            bank located in Glenwood, Iowa. Our customer base is primarily agricultural,
 but is trending consumer as we are becoming a bedroom community to
            Omaha,
 Nebraska. Our current asset size is $90,000,000 with a total consumer
            and
 residential real estate loan portfolio of $15,000,000. We appreciate
            the
 efforts of the Office of Comptroller of the Currency, Federal Reserve
 Board, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and Office of Thrift
 Supervision, “the Agencies”, in reviewing the current
            consumer regulations
 to identify outdated, unnecessary, or unduly burdensome regulatory
 requirements pursuant to the Economic Growth and Regulatory Paperwork
 Reduction Act of 1996 (EGRPRA). We also appreciate the Agencies’
 recognition and understanding of the challenges faced by community
            banks
 in meeting the requirements of the ever-growing number of compliance
 regulations.
 I would like to offer the following comments regarding the current regulatory rules and environment:
 The recent revisions to Reg. B which prohibit lenders from assuming
            the submission of a joint financial statement constitutes a request for
            joint
 credit and now requires whenever more than one individual applies
            for
 credit, those applicants sign a separate statement of intent to apply
            for
 joint credit creates additional documentation for creditors and is
            often
 very difficult to manage, particularly in commercial and agricultural
 transactions involving two or more borrower who are operating the
            business
 jointly but have not legally organized; for example a husband and
            wife or
 father and son operating a farm together. Many of these borrowers
 consider themselves a “partnership” although they are
            not legally
 organized as such. Rather than evidencing intent for each application,
 creditors should be given the latitude to evidence intent for a specific
 purpose, such as 2004 agricultural operating expenses. Many times
 business borrowers have unanticipated credit needs and time is of
            the
 essence in filling those needs. If a creditor determines the borrowers
 are creditworthy and the purpose of the loan meets the intent statement
 previously affirmed, it seems redundant and burdensome for both the
 applicant and creditor to obtain an additional statement of intent
            for
 each application/loan for that intended purpose.
 The collection of monitoring information continues to be problematic. Lenders are often confused as to when to collect the data and when
              it is a
 violation to collect it. With the growing use of home equity loans
            and
 lines of credit in the market place, does it not make more sense
            to either
 collect monitoring data for all loans secured by a borrower’s
            principal
 dwelling or eliminate collection all together for non-HMDA and small
            bank
 CRA reporting entities? It certainly would lead to less Reg. B violations
 during exam procedures. The Agencies can be assured if a bank were
            guilty
 of discriminatory practices, local consumer groups, state’s
            attorney
 generals and individual consumers would alert them.
 The new definition
              of “refinance” which
              removes the purpose test will undoubtedly result in the added reporting of many loans whose purpose
            has
 nothing to do with home purchase or home improvement. Commercial
            and
 agricultural loans will now be reportable at that time they are refinanced
 and retain a security interest in a dwelling. Another example would
            be a
 farm loan, which is exempt from HMDA reporting when the farm is being
 purchased, becomes reportable if the farmland (which contains a dwelling)
 is refinanced. Obviously, business purpose loans are priced very
 differently from residential real estate loans. In all likelihood,
            the
 data collected on these loans will not be useful to the Agencies
            during a
 fair lending review, thus all of the banks efforts to collect and
            report
 the data are wasted – a true burden! This is also burdensome
            for
 regulators, as they will have to “sort” through the data
            submitted on the
 LAR and loan files to determine loan purpose and explain LAR variances.
 Once again, thank you for the opportunity to comment on these very important issues. I appreciate your serious consideration of my concerns
 over the above-mentioned regulatory burdens currently facing America's
 community banks.
 Sincerely,             Grant C. Dean
 
 
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