| From:
              David Knopick
 Sent: Thursday, March 18, 2004 5:01 PM
 To: Comments
 Subject: Community Reinvestment Act Regulation
 David KnopickPO Box 3109
 Mankato, Mn 56001
 March 18, 2004
 Dear FDIC: As a community banker, I strongly endorse the federal bank regulators' proposal to increase the asset size of banks eligible for the small
              bank
 streamlined Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) examination from $250
            million
 to $500 million and elimination of the holding company size limit
 (currently $1 billion). This proposal will greatly reduce regulatory
 burden.
 The small bank CRA examination process was an excellent innovation.
            As a community banker, I applaud the agencies for recognizing that it
            is time
 to expand this critical burden reduction benefit to larger community
 banks. At this critical time for the economy, this will allow more
 community banks to focus on what they do best-fueling America's local
 economies. When a bank must comply with the requirements of the large
 bank CRA evaluation process, the costs and burdens increase dramatically.
 And the resources devoted to CRA compliance are resources not available
 for meeting the credit demands of the community.
 Adjusting the asset size limit also more accurately reflects significant changes and consolidation within the banking industry in the last
              10
 years. To be fair, banks should be evaluated against their peers,
            not
 banks hundreds of time their size. The proposed change recognizes
            that
 it's not right to assess the CRA performance of a $500 million bank
            or a
 $1 billion bank with the same exam procedures used for a $500 billion
 bank. Large banks now stretch from coast-to-coast with assets in
            the
 hundreds of billions of dollars. It is not fair to rate a community
            bank
 using the same CRA examination. And, while the proposed increase
            is a
 good first step, the size of banks eligible for the small-bank streamlined
 CRA examination should be increased to $2 billion, or at a minimum,
            $1
 billion.
 Ironically, community activists seem oblivious to the costs and
            burdens. And yet, they object to bank mergers that remove the local bank from
            the
 community. This is contradictory. If community groups want to keep
            the
 local banks in the community where they have better access to
 decision-makers, they must recognize that regulatory burdens are
 strangling smaller institutions and forcing them to consider selling
            to
 larger institutions that can better manage the burdens.
 Increasing the size of banks eligible for the small-bank streamlined
            CRA examination does not relieve banks from CRA responsibilities. Since
            the
 survival of many community banks is closely intertwined with the
            success
 and viability of their communities, the increase will merely eliminate
 some of the most burdensome requirements.
 In summary, I believe that increasing the asset-size of banks eligible
            for the small bank streamlined CRA examination process is an important
            first
 step to reducing regulatory burden. I also support eliminating the
 separate holding company qualification for the streamlined examination,
 since it places small community banks that are part of a larger holding
 company at a disadvantage to their peers. While community banks still
 must comply with the general requirements of CRA, this change will
 eliminate some of the most problematic and burdensome elements of
            the
 current CRA regulation from community banks that are drowning in
 regulatory red-tape. I also urge the agencies to seriously consider
 raising the size of banks eligible for the streamlined examination
            to $2
 billion or, at least, $1 billion in assets to better reflect the
            current
 demographics of the banking industry.
 Sincerely,
             David T Knopick
 
 
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