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SOUTHWEST BANK
 July 30, 2004
 
 Robert E. Feldman, Executive Secretary
 Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
 550 17th Street, NW
 Washington, DC 20429
 
 Public Information Room
 Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
 250 E Street, SW
 Mailstop 1-5
 Washington, DC 20219
 
 Ms. Jennifer J. Johnson, Secretary
 Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
 20th Street and Constitution Avenue, NW
 Washington, DC 20551
 
 Regulation Comments
 Chief Counsel's Office
 Office of Thrift Supervision
 1700 G Street, NW
 Washington, DC 20552
 
        Re: Withdrawal of Proposed Amendments to Community Reinvestment Act 
        Dear
          Sir or Madam: 
          As a community banker, I am extremely concerned that the community 
        banking industry is slowing being crushed under the cumulative weight of 
        regulatory burden. This must be addressed by Congress and the regulatory 
        agencies before it is too late. In recent month there has been much 
        conversation about raising the small bank threshold for CRA purposes to 
        $500 million, and some bankers and agencies had even mentioned raising 
        it to $1 billion. Most community bankers whole heartedly approved of the 
        increase because of the extremely costly burden the reporting 
        requirements place on small community banks. And now, the Federal 
        Reserve Bank is proposing to withdraw the recommendation to amend CRA. 
        This is a grave mistake! 
        In the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas's Notice 04-47 it states in part 
        that ". . . the proposal's cost in the form of a potential reduction in 
        community development capital in a significant number of rural 
        communities is also uncertain, but potentially large in at least some 
        communities." Okay, instead of withdrawing the proposed threshold 
        increase, let's do raise it as proposed, and let's also change the 
        regulation to allow the community development capital to go along with 
        the increase. What is there to say that these rural communities should 
        be further penalized by not allowing them access to the capital just 
        because the reporting threshold is raised! 
        Banks (both large and small) have been examined under the current CRA 
        regulations since July 1995, so by now some seven years later, the 
        regulators should have ample information about the performance of all 
        banks under the current regulations. How possibly could the threshold 
        increase so negatively impact the "potential reduction in community development capital" simply due to 
        the proposed change? So I will ask you, why can't the regulation be 
        changed to cover the increased threshold while not removing the 
        availability of the community development funds? 
        To quote from the May 12, 2004, statement from John M. Reich, Vice 
        Chairman of the FDIC: 
        "Community banks play a vital role in the economic wellbeing of 
        countless individuals, neighborhoods, businesses and organizations 
        throughout our country, often serving as the lifeblood of their 
        communities." 
        "Data from June 2003 show that the overwhelming share of commercial 
        loans at small community banks were made to small businesses. In 
        addition, the data indicate that commercial banks with assets between 
        $100 million and $1 billion account for a large share of the small 
        business and farm loans." 
        So, if small banks don't have to track and report these loans under the 
        current rules, how is this information available? It's available because 
        most small (and large) banks can track these loans internally by some 
        easy coding method, without having to do excessive record keeping, 
        financial information tracking, etc. And if this is the case, why 
        subject the small banks to the excessive reporting and tracking under 
        the large bank definition, when we can provide you with small business 
        and farm loan information at the time you do an exam? It is far easier 
        to code the loans once when they're booked and only have to look up a 
        small amount of additional information for specific loans or customers 
        at the time of an exam, then be subjected to excessive record keeping, 
        tracking and reporting, year after year after year when we are only 
        examined once every 3 or 4 years! 
        Further along in his speech, Mr., Reich discussed that "While banks 
        under $100 million had the highest yield on earning assets, they also 
        had the lowest non-interest income, and the highest non-interest expense 
        to asset ratio. These numbers make it clear that community banks, while 
        healthy in terms of their supervisory ratings, are operating at a lower 
        level of profitability than the largest banks in the country. At least 
        part of this disparity in earnings stems from the disproportionate 
        impact that regulations and other fixed non-interest costs have on 
        community banks." 
        A chart of these findings was present at his speech, which I don't have 
        access to. However, if the vice chairman of the FDIC has access to 
        numbers that show these findings, I find it interesting that the Federal 
        Reserve's Notice states: "While community banks strongly favor raising 
        the threshold, it is uncertain that the cost savings to the average 
        community bank of being "small" rather than "large" under the proposal 
        would be significant." 
        And finally: "In some cases, the cost of complying with that burden (the 
        never ending avalanche of regulations) is pushing some smaller banks out 
        of the market." One bank CEO said that his directors are concerned over 
        their slipping return on assets and are beginning to ask how much longer 
        the bank can afford to remain independent without giving consideration 
        to shareholder value through a merger or sale! 
Conclusion 
        The reporting and tracking requirements of becoming a "large" bank 
        versus a "small" bank are very much out of proportion in relation to the 
        benefit to the "small" banks. The major purpose served by the large bank 
        reporting is to make the examiner's jobs easier when they perform an 
        exam. Even though we are a small bank, at our last exam I was asked to 
        provide the examiners with some income information for the customers 
        they had selected to review. When I questioned the fact that we really 
        didn't have to give them that information (ahead of their physical 
        on-site exam), I was told "it would make their jobs easier and reduce 
        the time spent looking at the files during the exam." It was very 
        apparent to me that I could look up the records on 15 or 20 loans quite 
        easily in relation to the time and cost it will ultimately take to track 
        and report the required financial information on all small business and 
        farm loans, which will be required if we are classified as a "large" 
        bank.
 The decision to increase the threshold for "small" banks should be 
        made by a unanimous decision of all the agencies, and if they cannot 
        reach a decision, then the decision should be taken out of their hands 
        and be done by another means, including legislative action if necessary. 
        Thank you in advance for letting me share my thoughts with you on this 
        topic.  Sincerely yours, Karen A. Schoenbucher Vice President & Compliance Officer
 Southwest Bank
 CC: Rob Rowe, ICBA Karen Neeley, IBAT
 
 
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