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 INDEPENDENT BANKERS OF COLORADO
 
 1580 Logan Street, Suite 510
 Denver, Colorado 80203
 Phone 303.832.2000
 Fax 303.832.2040
 www.ibcbanks.org
 April 9, 2004
  Public Information Room
 Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
 250 E Street, SW
 Mailstop 1-5
 Washington, DC 20219
 Attention: Docket No. 04-05
 Via e-mail: regs.comments@occ.treas.gov
 Robert E. Feldman, Executive SecretaryFederal Deposit Insurance Corporation
 550 17th Street, NW
 Washington, DC 20429
 Attention: EGRPRA Burden Reduction Comments
 Via-mail: comments@fdic.gov
 
 Ms. Jennifer J. Johnson, Secretary
 Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
 20th Street and Constitution Avenue, NW
 Washington, DC 20551
 Attention: Docket No. R-1180
 Via e-mail: regs.comments@federalreserve.gov
 
 Re: EGRPRA Review of Consumer Protection Lending Related Rules
 Dear Sir or Madam: The Independent
              Bankers of Colorado (IBC) is the largest banker trade association
              in Colorado,
              exclusively representing community
            banks. On behalf of the IBC’s Board of Directors and over 115
            member banks, please accept the following comments regarding the
            EGRPRA review of consumer protection lending-related rules. Regulatory burden is suffocating community banks and impairing their
            ability to serve their customers and their communities. Of equal
            concern is the fact that their customers and communities are receiving
            little, if any, ascertainable benefit from the ever-increasing laws
            and regulations imposed on community banks. Worse yet, consumers
            are paying higher costs for basic banking services as a result.  Proposed amendments to Regulations Z, B, E, M and DD and respective
            Official Staff Commentaries, and the proposal to Regulation Z that
            includes several technical revisions to the Staff CommentaryThe proposal intends to make the form of disclosures consistent among
            various consumer protection regulations. Specifically, it adopts
            the “clear and conspicuous” standard, along with examples
            currently contained in the Commentary to Reg P (GLBA). These proposals
            are unworkable and implementation will impose huge costs on the community
            banking industry. The subjectivity of the proposals will make compliance
            uncertain and will open the door for expensive lawsuits without improving
            the disclosures in any meaningful way.
 
 Burden on all institutions
 
 The proposals will impose significant costs to every financial institution.
            If the proposals are adopted, financial institutions will have to
            review every single consumer financial product document and advertisement
            containing required disclosures. For every bank, this means reviewing
            hundreds of agreements, forms, statements, web pages, telephone scripts
            and radio advertisements. Once identified, the required disclosures
            will have to be segregated from non-required disclosures, analyzed
            and revised. This revision effort will be enormously time-consuming
            and expensive, as bank staff and lawyers debate everyday word. As
            the new terminology is determined, financial institutions must then
            attempt to format the new disclosures and address software demands.
            Software programs will have to be modified and in many places replaced;
            they will not be usable as the new disclosures will no longer fit
            in the original data fields. Staff training will be necessary, as
            well as modifications made to all training and audit materials.
 
 For small institutions the challenges will be overwhelming. Compliance
            staff in a small institution wear many hats. They will be less able
            to manage those other bank functions while working on new compliance
            programs or, perhaps worse, not be able to work on the required changes.
            Ultimately, the costs of compliance, no matter what size the institution,
            add to the cost to consumers—which results in fewer choices
            for consumers, especially low- to moderate-income consumers. The
            ultimate result is to drive these consumers into the hands of fly-by-night
            predatory lenders. Recalling how many months it took to determine
            how to comply with GLBA and Regulation P (GLBA) and the changes to
            Regulation Z several years ago (which changed the format on credit
            card solicitation disclosures), the proposed changes too will takes
            institutions months of unnecessary busywork.
 Lastly, the proposed changes will likely provoke the ever-popular
            class action litigation.
 
 General approach/flexibility
 
 Financial institutions can never be certain of whether they are adequately
            complying with ever-changing requirements and comparisons to one
            or more of the so-called “examples”. In many cases, the “examples” themselves
            do not improve consumer understanding, leaving the financial institution
            facing an untenable dilemma.
 Regulation P and the consumer protection regulations
 The privacy policy disclosures of Regulation P and those of the typical
            consumer protection regulations are inconsistent. Reg P requires
            a financial institution to convey an institution’s general
            policy that applies to all its products. In contrast, the disclosures
            of the consumer protection regulations require complex, sometimes
            abstract and often detailed terms unique to a specific product. In
            many cases, legal and technical terms are necessary to ensure the
            agreement is enforceable and in compliance with the regulation. “Everyday” terms
            will change their meaning.
 
 Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA) (Federal Reserve Regulation C)
 
 HMDA is essentially sets forth data-collection and reporting requirements
            and, therefore, lends itself to a tiered regulatory requirement.
            The current exemption for banks with less than $33 million in assets
            is far too low and should be increased to at least $250 million in
            assets. At a time when regulators are reviewing the reporting burden,
            the burden associated with HMDA data collection was recently substantially
            increased (not to mention the dramatically increasing burden of Patriot
            Act data matching, child support enforcement data matching, and more).
            Data collection requirements are often difficult to apply and, as
            a result, add to regulatory burden and the potential for error: for
            example, assessing loans against the Home Owners Equity Protection
            Act and reporting rate spreads; determining the date the interest
            rate on a loan was set; and determining physical property address
            or census tract information in rural areas. Consumers ultimately
            pay for the data collection and reporting in higher costs.
 Regulation ZIt has been proposesd to add an interpretative rule of construction
              stating that where the word “amount” is used to describe
              a disclosure requirement, it refers to a numerical amount throughout
              Regulation Z. It appears the proposed interpretation is intended
              to address a court decision regarding the disclosure of payments
              scheduled to repay a closed-end transaction. This should not have
              a negative impact on financial institutions.
 
 One of the most burdensome requirements is the three-day right
              of rescission under Regulation Z. Rarely, if ever, does a consumer
              exercise
            the right. Consumers often resent having to wait three additional
            days to receive loan proceeds after the loan is closed and blame
            the bank for "withholding" their funds. Even though this
            is a statutory requirement, the unnecessary inflexibility in the
            regulation makes it difficult to waive the right of rescission—which
            further aggravates the problem. If not outright repealed, institutions
            should at least be given much greater latitude to allow customers
            to waive the right.
 Another problem under Regulation Z is the definition of finance
            charge. Assessing what must be included in or excluded from the finance
            charge is difficult to determine, especially fees and charges levied
            by third parties. The calculation of the finance charge is critical
            in properly calculating the annual percentage rate. This process
            desperately needs simplification so that all consumers can understand
            the annual percentage rate and bankers can easily calculate it. The resolution of billing-errors within the limited timeframes allowed
            for credit card disputes is not practical. The rules for resolving
            billing-errors are heavily weighted in favor of the consumer, making
            banks increasingly subject to fraud as individuals learn how to game
            the system, even giving these individuals the ability to avoid legitimate
            bills at the expense of the institution. There should be increased
            penalties for frivolous claims and more responsibility expected of
            consumers.  Summary
 While making disclosures more understandable for consumers is an
              important goal, the proposals have not identified a problem with
              the existing disclosure requirements. The proposal states that
              the goal is to facilitate compliance and ensure consumer understanding
              of the regulations. This might be achieved through standardization
              of disclosure requirements. Unfortunately, while the regulators
              require banks to provide customers with understandable disclosures,
              the regulators do not hold themselves to the same standard in drafting
              regulations that can be easily understood by anyone. Examiner training
              needs to be improved to ensure that regulatory requirements are
              properly and uniformly applied.
 While banks will appreciate consistency among the regulations, any
            additional regulatory burden should be justified by a real need.
            Unfortunately, merely making disclosures more uniform between the
            six regulations will not necessarily translate into improved understanding
            by consumers. Finally, it would be much easier for banks, especially community
            banks that have limited resources, to comply with regulatory requirements
            if they were based on products and all rules that apply to a specific
            product were consolidated in one place.
 Thank you for this opportunity to comment.             Sincerely, Barbara M. A WalkerExecutive Director
 
 
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