|    Farmers & Commercial
              Bank
 
 
 April
              16, 2004
 Mr. Robert E.
              Feldman, Executive SecretaryFederal Deposit Insurance Corporation
 550 17th Street, NW
 Washington, DC 20429
 Attention: EGRPRA
              Burden Reduction Comments Dear Sir: We appreciate
              the opportunity to comment on the issue of consumer regulatory
              burden. As community bankers, we are proud of our ability to meet
              the credit needs of our community, however, the burden of consumer
              protection rules frequently interferes with our ability to serve
              our customers. While each individual regulation may not seem too
              overly burdensome, the cumulative affect of these regulations is
              onerous. We urge Congress and the regulatory agencies to recognize
              that the community banking industry is slowly being crushed under
              this cumulative weight. While we can understand the theory behind
              the consumer protection rules, they continually impede our ability
              to serve our customers and work to ultimately drive up the costs
              to the consumer. The following
              regulations are just a few examples of how consumer regulations
              have become not only a burden to banks, but the consumers they
              were enacted to protect: 1) Right of rescission:
              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 resent having to wait three additional
              days to receive loan proceeds after the loan is closed, and they
              often blame the bank for “withholding” their funds. 2)	Spousal signatures – The
              requirements make it difficult and almost require all parties – and
              their spouses – come into the bank personally to complete
              documents. This makes little sense as the world moves toward new
              technologies that do not require physical presence to apply for
              a loan. 3) Regulation
              B’s requirements complicate other instances of customer relations.
              For example, reconciling the regulation’s requirements not
              to maintain information on the gender or race of a borrower and
              the need to maintain sufficient information to identify a customer
              under section 326 of the USA PATRIOT ACT is difficult and needs
              better regulatory guidance. 4) HMDA is an
              extremely cumbersome act that does nothing for consumer protection.
              It is primarily a data-collection and reporting requirement and
              therefore lends itself much more 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.
              The volume of data that must be collected and reported is clearly
              burdensome. Ironically, at a time when regulators are reviewing
              burden, the burden associated with HMDA data collection was only
              recently increased substantially. In addition, with the changes
              in definition of a “refinance,” several agricultural
              and commercial loan refinances must now be included, in effect, “watering
              down” the relevance of the data collected. 5)	Flood insurance – The
              current flood insurance regulations create difficulties with customers
              who do not understand why flood insurance is required and that
              the federal government, not the bank, imposes the requirement.
              Flood insurance requirements should be streamlined and simplified
              to be understandable. It would be much
              easier for banks, especially community banks that have limited
              resources, to comply with regulatory requirements if requirements
              were based on PRODUCTS and all rules that apply to a specific product
              were consolidated in one place. Second, regulators require banks
              to provide customers with understandable disclosures and yet do
              not hold themselves to the same standard in drafting regulations
              that can be easily understood by bankers. Finally, examiner training
              needs to be improved to ensure that regulatory requirements are
              properly and uniformly applied. The volume of
              regulatory requirements facing the banking industry today presents
              a daunting task for any institution, but severely saps the resources
              of community banks. We need help immediately with this burden before
              it is too late. Community bankers are in close proximity to their
              customers, understand the special circumstances of the local community
              and provide a more responsive level of service than megabanks.
              However, community banks cannot continue to compete effectively
              and serve their customers and communities without some relief from
              the crushing burden of regulation. Thank you for the opportunity
              to comment on this critical issue. Respectfully,
 Robert E. MickeyPresident
 124 W. 2nd St.
 Holden, MO 64040
  
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