| FDIC Federal Register Citations
 
 	  From: Kathleen Beaulieu [mailto:kbeaulieu@tsbawake24.com] Sent: Friday, October 08, 2004 4:59 PM
 To: Comments
 Subject: Support for the proposed revisions to the Community Reinvestment
	  Act Regulations.
 Kathleen Beaulieu10 Davey Lane
 Wakefield, MA 01880-5126
 October 8, 2004
 Robert E. Feldman Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation550 17th Street, NW
 Washington, DC 20429
 	    Dear Robert Feldman: I am a community banker and I wish to express my strong support of the FDIC’s proposal to increase the asset size limit of banks eligible
	    for the
 streamlined small-bank CRA examination to $1 billion. I also strongly
 support the elimination of the separate holding company qualification.
 The proposal will greatly reduce regulatory burden for community banks eligible for the smaller institution examination without weakening our
 commitment to reinvest in our communities. Reinvesting in our communities
 makes good business sense. Making these regulatory exams more streamlined
 will not change the way community banks do business or reduce the volume
 of loans. Rather, it will free up human and financial resources that
	    can
 be redirected to the community and used to originate loans and provide
 other services.
 Under the more streamlined CRA exam, community banks would still be required to lend to all segments of their communities, including low-and
 moderate-income individuals and neighborhoods and would continue to be
 evaluated by their regulator for compliance. The regulation, if
 implemented will decrease regulatory burden in terms of both cost of
 compliance and the man-hours needed to comply with the current large
	    bank
 procedures. It is unfair to evaluate a $500 million or $1 billion bank
 using the same exam procedures as those used for a $100 billion or $500
 billion bank.
 The addition of a community development criterion to the small bank examination for those banks over $500 million in assets is a significant
 improvement over the present investment test. It is often extremely
 difficult for small banks to find investments which meet the qualified
 investment test and which are located in their own communities. As a
 result, many community banks (especially those in rural areas) have to
 invest in statewide or regional projects to meet CRA requirements. These
 investments actually take resources away from the bank’s local community.
 Also, the community development criterion should not be a new stand alone
 test but part of the evaluation of a bank’s overall lending to the
 community.
 The FDIC’s proposed
	      changes to CRA are a vitally important step in revising and improving the CRA regulations and in reducing regulatory
 burden. While community banks will still be examined under CRA for their
 record of helping to meet the credit needs of their communities, the
 expanded small bank test will eliminate some of the most problematic
	    and
 burdensome elements of the current CRA regulation for community banks
	    that
 have been subject to a myriad of new regulations in recent years.
 Thank you for considering my views. Sincerely, 	    Kathleen Beaulieu 
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