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In New York State, we now have the opportunity to begin to reshape the
government's role relative to the Community Reinvestment Act. During Gov. George Pataki's campaign, he was quoted as saying that part of his economic message to New York City was that a commercial bank should be established in Harlem in order to recycle local deposits into local loans and opportunity. Although this promise is based primarily upon economic considerations, the nexus between CRA and a locally owned bank is that such a bank offers the best form of community reinvestment. A bank that draws its deposits locally and has a CRA-mandated local service area must grant local loans. The process ensures the bank's and the community's success. The opportunity that the new governor has is to leverage the state's power to create well-run, profitable community banks in economically challenged areas. Although large metropolitan banks and thrifts must be part of the solution, trying to force branches of these institutions to have the local feel and character of a neighbor just not working as the original CRA intended. Let's look - at what needs to be done. Local Responsibilities A two-pronged strategy must be employed. Nationally, the CRA must be rewritten to address the responsibilities of financial institutions or branches in non-urban, non-distressed areas. In these areas, CRA should concern itself primarily with total reinvestment into a service area. That is to say, a bank's reinvestment responsibilities should be to recycle its local deposits into local loans, at an acceptable level, with sensitivity to special or flexible underwriting standards. In addition, the bank should demonstrate social and philanthropic leadership. In distressed areas, CRA should recognize the important role of a hybrid commercial bank and encourage a partnership between existing financial institutions, the new bank and the regulators. Bankers are frustrated by how best to serve distressed areas and should welcome the opportunity to support an institution that can establish a better nexus with the neighborhood. Some features of this new bank would be: * A fast-track regulatory approval process to charter the bank. * A reduced initial capital contribution to get it started. * A special stock offering priced - to allow local ownership - for example, 50 cents a share. * Once the bank is chartered and FDIC insurance is granted, the state would deposit $25 million to $50 million, at market CD rates, to give the bank the cash flow to break even. * CRA credit would be granted for any financial institution that either invested in stock or deposited money in the bank for a specified period of time. * The bank's management would reflect the ethnic diversity of the service area, and there would be mandatory mentoring programs by other banks to help establish and build its operations. * A tax plan that would include a local exemption and a state income tax exemption until the bank is profitable and well-capitalized. * A regulatory plan that would exempt the bank from more onerous state-controlled regulations for the first few years. This exemption would not include safety and soundness regulations, however * Certain limitations, such as geography, would be established so that taxpaying institutions would not be adversely affected by this special purpose bank. These are just some of the possible features. The most important one is the local owner/depositor relationship, which will help ensure the bank's success. This new institution would be established with little state fiscal impact and no additional regulatory burden. Minority ownership of a local bank will not solve all of today's reinvestment problems, but it will provide the best delivery system with the greatest chance of economic vibrancy and opportunity for distressed communities. In 1993, I wrote that "to recast the banking industry as the industry to cure social and economic inconsistencies alone would be a misplaced reliance on only a small percentage of the population able to effect change." We need to help to reinvest in our communities. We need different thinking. Perhaps New York can lead the way. by John I. Pritchard US Banker Apr, 1995 This post transferred from the cdb-l mailing list |