| 
 
 From: Randal Morley [mailto:dpriore@sbcglobal.net]
 Sent: Thursday, April 15, 2004 5:46 PM
 To: Comments
 Subject: EGRPRA Review of Consumer Protection Lending Related Rules
 Randal Morley1141 East 37th Street
 Tulsa, Oklahoma 74105
 April 15, 2004
 Dear FDIC:  With regard to the Regulatory Burden of federal laws and regulations
            on our Banks, we would respectfully submit the following comments based
            on
 our knowledge and experience.
  The Home Mortgage Disclosure Act and the accompanying Federal Reserve Regulation C are among the most burdensome and costly regulations
              to
 community banks. Its usefulness to the general public and to the
 government is highly questionable.
  The new revisions to Regulation C have made compliance with this regulation even more time-consuming and burdensome to community banks.
 Instead of requiring banks to report the APR on each loan which would
            be a
 simple task, banks must now report the APR rate spread only if the
            rate
 exceeds the comparable term Treasury rate by 3% or more on first
            lien
 loans, or 5% or more on junior lien loans. This requires bank employees
 to have to go and find the official table of “Treasury Securities
            of
 Comparable Maturity” under Regulation C and then use the FFIEC
            Rate Spread
 calculator. There remain unanswered questions of date issues for
            the
 calculation of the rate spread. Hours of bank employee time, which
 translates to hundreds of dollars in costs to the bank, could have
            been
 saved by simply requiring the bank to report the APR on each loan.
            This
 is among the most burdensome regulation ever dreamed up by a federal
 bureaucrat.
  At a minimum, the size of the current HMDA exemption should be
            increased from banks with $33 million in assets to a more meaningful level;
            for
 example, banks with $300 million or more. This would at least allow
            banks
 with more assets and the ability to hire additional employees to
            comply
 with this onerous and unnecessary regulatory burden.
  An example of the regulatory burden can be seen in that, due to
            federal regulations, a husband and wife may have to sign their names seven
            times
 just to obtain an unsecured consumer $5,000 loan. First, at time
            of
 application, the customers must be given oral “Miranda rights” insurance
 disclosures stating that they do not have to buy credit insurance
            offered
 by the bank and then subsequently sign the consumer credit disclosure
 which states that they do not have to buy credit insurance offered
            by the
 bank. Next, the customers have to sign the loan application, and
            because
 they are applying for joint credit due to the revisions in Regulation
            B,
 must sign again their intention to seek joint credit. If the customers
 want credit insurance, then the customers (again) must be orally
            advised
 of their insurance “Miranda rights” and have to sign
            the federal sale of
 insurance disclosure. Since the customers wanted credit insurance,
            they
 have to sign again verifying that they want credit insurance. The
 customers also must initial the three pages of the loan contract,
            which is
 so lengthy because it must contain all the federally mandated disclosures.
 Finally, the customers sign the note. The customers are also given two
 privacy notices at the time of the transaction; the bank’s privacy notice,
 and the insurance company’s privacy notice.
  The Gramm-Leach
              Bliley Act’s so-called “consumer protection
            for sales and offers of sales of insurance products” is also one of the
            most onerous
 bank regulations. The four banking agencies have adopted substantially
 identical regulations. A customer must be given an oral and written
 disclosure stating that at the time of application they do not have
            to buy
 insurance products offered by the bank, and the customers signature
            must
 be obtained verifying that they have received the disclosures.
  If the customer wants to buy credit insurance he again must be
            advised orally and in writing that the insurance is not a deposit or guaranteed
            by
 the bank, is not insured by the FDIC, and there may be investment
            risk
 before the completion of the sale of the insurance product. Again,
            the
 customer must sign verifying that he has been given these disclosures.
  It is interesting to note that the famous Miranda warnings given
            to persons in police custody are only required to be given orally and
            are not
 required to be given in writing or signed by the person in custody.
            But
 Congress has required banks to do more than is required of the Miranda
 warning in that customers must be given two sets of warnings, orally
            and
 in writing, and that the customer acknowledge the same in writing.
  Space does not permit me to comment on all the vexatious and burdensome federal regulations that govern the banking industry. There are too
              many
 regulations and most serve no useful purpose. A bank’s trash
            can is often
 full of the privacy notices and other mandated written disclosures
            that
 customers throw away before they even leave the bank.
 
 Sincerely,             Randal D. Morley
 
 
               |