| STATEWIDE HOUSING ACTION COALITION August 12, 2004  Robert E. Feldman Executive Secretary
 Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
 550 17th Street NW
 Washington, DC 20429
 Re: FDIC's Consideration of Changing the Definition of "Small Bank" 
        for Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) Purposes  Dear Mr. Feldman:  We are writing to ask that you contact the Federal Deposit Insurance 
        Corporation (FDIC) to request that they withdraw proposed changes to the 
        Community Reinvestment Act (CRA). If the FDIC adopts this proposal, 
        community development activity in low and moderate-income (LMI) 
        neighborhoods and rural areas throughout Illinois and the nation will be 
        threatened.  In February 2004, federal bank regulators jointly released proposed 
        changes to the regulation of the CRA. Key among the changes was a 
        proposal that would change the definition of a "small bank" from any 
        institution with less that $250 million in assets and not part of a 
        holding company with over $1 billion in assets to include all 
        institutions with less than $500 million in assets regardless of holding 
        company size.  In July 2004, the Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS), disregarding 
        the February proposal, unilaterally announced that they were quadrupling 
        the asset threshold for small institutions to $1 billion regardless of 
        holding company size for the thrifts that it regulates. The Federal 
        Reserve and Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) subsequently 
        announced they were withdrawing the proposed changes to the CRA 
        regulation and retaining the existing small bank definition. The FDIC 
        delayed a vote on its decision until September 2004, but there are 
        indications that the agency will side with the OTS.  The FDIC's decision is critical for a number of reasons. First, the 
        FDIC is the primary regulator of many state chartered banks that 
        frequently fall between $250 million and $1 billion in assets. For 
        institutions active in Illinois in 2003, nearly 40 percent of assets 
        controlled by FDIC-regulated institutions were held by banks with assets 
        between $250 million and $1 billion. For other regulators, this number 
        ranges from 6 percent for the Federal Reserve to 1.4 percent for the OCC.
         If institutions that control a significant number of branches and 
        deposits in LMI and rural communities are subject to streamlined CRA 
        examinations, they will no longer be examined and given credit for their 
        investments in affordable housing developments, developing innovative 
        financial services products that reach the unbanked, or expanding their 
        branch networks into underserved communities. Additionally, these banks, 
        which are significant small business lenders, will no longer publicly 
        report essential small business lending data.  The Statewide Housing Action Coalition (SHAC) works to increase and 
        preserve the supply of decent, affordable, accessible housing in the 
        state of Illinois for low and moderate-income households. The direct 
        results of SHAC's work are community-based organizations with the 
        capacity to develop and preserve affordable housing, a growing 
        constituency with the knowledge and commitment to make affordable 
        housing a public policy priority in Illinois, and increased public and 
        private resources to develop and preserve affordable housing. We have 98 
        member organizations across the state.  We urge you to contact Chairman Powell of the FDIC and ask the agency 
        to follow the Federal Reserve and OCC and withdraw the proposed changes 
        to the CRA regulation. Executive Director  Tammie GrossmanExecutive Director
 Statewide Housing Action Coalition
 11 East Adams, Suite 1501
 Chicago, IL 60603
 
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