ACB REPORTS ‘MISGIVINGS’ TO GRAMM ON IMPLEMENTATION OF COMMUNITY REINVESTMENT ACT
WASHINGTON, D.C. — America’s Community Bankers has told Senate
Banking Committee Chairman Phil Gramm (R-Texas) that it has
"misgivings" about the manner in which the Community Reinvestment Act
is implemented, including the treatment of "investments."
Responding to a request by Gramm for information, ACB said that
while it supports the intent of the CRA, "we are on record with the federal
banking agencies about our misgivings regarding its implementation, the
examination procedures, the resulting and extensive regulatory interpretation of
what is a very simple statute, and the inherent regulatory burden it continues
to impose on our members."
ACB said the existing CRA regulation "disadvantages
community banks" and expressed concern that community banks will face
continued problems complying with the existing CRA regulations. To place
community banks in a regulatory scheme that evaluates them like very large,
multi-branch, multi-state banks is "grossly unfair," ACB said.
ACB provided the following insights from interviews with its
members:
– Community banks with assets of more than $250 million —
the cutoff for using the small bank streamlined CRA examination procedure — are
not large enough to compete with the very large institutions for CRA
investments. These smaller "big" institutions face increasing
difficulty in achieving even low "satisfactory" ratings under the
large bank investment test, ACB said.
"Our members have told us repeatedly that documenting
efforts to find and make these investments does not count at all with the CRA
examiners; the investment must actually be made," ACB said.
– Small institutions, which are eligible for the
streamlined examination based mostly on lending, may have a better chance at
achieving an "outstanding" rating if they choose to be examined under
large institution guidelines — but with additional regulatory burden. Some
examiners have informally told members that it is almost impossible to achieve
an "outstanding" rating under the streamlined procedure.
– ACB members have reported inconsistencies among the
agencies and among examiners in the same agency in granting CRA credit for
investments. Some examiners will allow credit for a wide variety of investments,
others for only more traditional community investments, such as school and
municipal bonds. ACB said the industry would benefit from a clearer definition,
including examples of qualifying investments, and greater consistency in
applying the definition.
– Institutions may seek smaller investments which can be
made annually for maximum CRA credit because one-time larger investments with
continuing benefit to communities are only counted once. ACB urged amending the
rules to allow multi-year CRA credit for such investments.
– The impact of investments on low- and moderate-income
persons may not be readily apparent to examiners, requiring banks to maintain
more documentation to earn CRA credit.
– The quality of investments should be as important as the
number and amount of investments. A specific target amount or percentage for
measuring the extent of an institution’s investments should be established.
– Institutions with savings association charters are at a
disadvantage to commercial banks because these thrifts are not authorized to
invest directly in community development investments, making it impossible to
incorporate community development activity into the investment test.
A copy of the comment letter is linked.
America’s Community Bankers is the national trade association committed to shaping the future of
banking by being the innovative industry leader strengthening the competitive position of
community banks. To learn more about ACB, visit
www.AmericasCommunityBankers.com.
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