| GREATER ROME BANK 
        -----Original Message-----From: Grey Winstead [mailto:Grey.Winstead@greaterromebank.com]
 Sent: Wednesday, August 04, 2004 2:15 PM
 To: Comments
 Cc: Tom Caldwell; Jason Pruitt; steve@cbaofga.com
 Subject: FFIEC proposed guidance on overdraft protection programs
 I commend the regulators for attempting to bring a level of standards 
        or best practices to overdraft protection programs. The best practices 
        section of the proposed guidance should prove beneficial to our industry 
        and consumers. I have some serious reservations however, about two of 
        the provisions under the safety and soundness considerations. I have 
        great difficulty with regulations that move to a very detailed level of 
        accounting requirements to be applied equally to all banks, when the 
        degree of risk and the methods of delivering this service may vary 
        greatly from bank to bank.  Specifically, I disagree with the broad application of the following 
        proposals to all banks:  1) the general requirement to charge off overdrawn accounts “within 
        30 days from the date first overdrawn”; and  2) income and loss recognition requiring the use of a loss reserve, 
        similar to GAAP on loan loss reserves.  I express my opposition primarily based on our experience with the 
        implementation of our automated overdraft protection program in the 
        fourth quarter of 2001. Before the service was implemented we spent 
        several months developing policies and procedures, under the guidance of 
        Strunk and Associates, which addressed operational issues as well as 
        customer disclosures and service promotion. Prior to implementing the 
        program we were already manually processing 1,500 to 2,000 NSF items a 
        month. We currently process approximately 3,000 NSF items a month, with 
        approximately 600 of these handled automatically through the overdraft 
        privilege program; the rest of the items are still handled manually. 
        When we started the automated program, we began with about 1,300 
        accounts using the service. We now have 1,540 accounts using the 
        automated overdraft privilege service. Our Bank has $145 million in 
        assets. Over the first two years of the program we charged off $6,874 in 
        unpaid overdrafts, excluding NSF fee reversals. This low level of charge 
        offs is less than 0.003% of assets on an annualized basis. Our monthly 
        fee income from processing NSF items, the great majority of which are 
        paid and not returned, has grown from around $22,000 a month in 2001 to 
        approximately $45,000 a month in 2004. Roughly one third of this income 
        is from the automated overdraft privilege service.  When we began our program, we braced for high fee reversals and 
        principal charge-offs and established a loss reserve account, as was 
        recommended by the consultants. The losses never materialized. We 
        ultimately eliminated the loss reserve accounting on overdrafts, because 
        it was not cost effective or even necessary.  We feel our management policies and procedures are more than adequate 
        to manage this program without additional accounting and control 
        mandates from the regulators. We are diligent with our customer 
        disclosures and look to constantly improve customer communications. We 
        monitor all NSF activity, including the privilege service, daily. We 
        remove customers from the service at the first sign that they may have 
        difficulty using it responsibly. If a customer in the program is 
        overdraft for 35 days, our DP system automatically removes them from the 
        program and puts them in a manual handling mode. We charge off and close 
        accounts when collection efforts have been exhausted, but no later than 
        90 days. Overdrafts under both manual and automated systems are aged and 
        reported at director loan committee meetings.  While some banks may need more supervisory guidance on these safety 
        and soundness issues, our Bank will simply experience added processing 
        cost and regulatory overburden, without any benefit. I imagine that our 
        Bank will not be the only one that will be adversely affected by these 
        two provisions, if they become mandatory requirements. I strongly urge 
        the regulators to give consideration to making these two safety and 
        soundness provisions simply suggestions or guidance for those banks 
        whose management and processing environments may need stronger 
        accounting controls, or at least provide an exception for banks that can 
        demonstrate alternative, prudent risk management practices.  I would be happy to discuss this further if it might help. I can be 
        reached at the number below.  Grey  Grey Winstead Greater Rome Bank
 1600 Martha Berry Blvd.
 Rome, GA 30165
 706-295-3207, ext: 312
 fax: 706-235-7763
 grey.winstead@greaterromebank.com
 http://www.greaterromebank.com/
 
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