| Paducah Bank
          and Trust Company 
 
 From: Rusty
          Smith
 Sent: Thursday, August 05, 2004 2:24 PM
 To: Comments
 Subject: Joint Agency Notice - Overdraft Protection Programs
 August 5, 2004
 Mr. Robert E. Feldman, Executive Secretary ATTN: Comments
 FDIC
 550 17th Street NW
 Washington, DC 20429
 
 Re: Comments on Interagency Guidance on ODP Programs
 
 The Paducah Bank and Trust Company is a $370 million bank with
              five offices located in Paducah, Kentucky. We currently offer the
              Pinnacle
              Financial Strategies’ Bounce ProtectionSM to our checking
              account customers and feel that the charges associated with this
              service
              should not be considered to be finance charges as defined by Regulation
              Z.
 
 We provide this service to all customers once the account has been
              open for 30 days as long as that account is in good standing at
              that time. No credit check is performed to determine eligibility
              for this
              service, and there is no contractual obligation between the customer
              and the Bank. We provide customers with a brochure describing this
              service at account opening and explain the criteria for eligibility
              at that time, as well as inform them of the overdraft limit for
              their account type. There is no annual fee for this service; the
              customer
              is never charged interest or daily fees in conjunction with this
              program. In the event the customer’s account becomes overdrawn,
              he/she is charged our standard overdraft fee (which is charged
              regardless of whether or not the account has this service) but
              the item is paid.
              This allows the customer to avoid any embarrassment that could
              arise due to overdrafts, guards against any damage a dishonored
              item could
              cause to their credit rating, and prevents the customer from having
              to pay additional fees for the overdraft to the affected merchant.
              In order for a customer to maintain this service, he/she must only
              make regular deposits and bring the account to a positive balance
              at least once every 30 days. These deposits allow us to recover
              any overdrafts and associated charges on a regular basis.
               We do feel that full disclosure of this service and clear communication
                with our customers is vitally important. However, since we feel
                      that this service does not constitute a loan, we feel that
                      regulatory
                measures regarding programs of this type would be better addressed
                through Regulation DD.
 The suggested 30-day charge-off period would be a disaster for
                both the Bank and the consumer. Customers often need more than
                30 days
                to bring an account back to a positive balance. If it were mandatory
                to charge off overdrawn accounts at 30 days, this would cause
                great harm to the credit records of many hard-working and well-intentioned
                deposit customers. It would also cause the Bank’s charge offs
                to greatly increase. Also, it would create unnecessary administrative
                burden with closing accounts and reopening accounts when the customer
                really only needed a few more days to bring the balance to a positive
                status. We would also expect the Bank’s recoveries to increase
                as well, but only with additional collection expenses incurred,
                thus harming the profitability of the Bank.
 
 Reporting the "unused" commitment of overdraft protection
                is unneeded and not reflective of what the protection is all about—which
                is a courtesy that can be removed at the Bank’s discretion.
                Given the discretionary nature of this service, there is no true
                commitment.
 
 The additional reporting of monthly and cumulative overdraft
                fees on customer statements, separated between fees incurred
                under overdraft
                protection versus returned items, is excessive and burdensome—the
                fees are already clearly stated on each monthly statement and our
                customers receive a daily notice of fees as overdraft items are
                honored or returned.
 
 The requirement of any sort of "notice" for non-check
                transactions before the overdraft is incurred is unworkable in
                the majority of
                situations since it would require us to be online-real time for
                point of sale and to monitor all ACH transactions. This would not
                only
                be expensive, it would also be burdensome. Both of those factors
                would be harmful to customers as fees would increase to cover the
                increased maintenance costs.
 
 A cap or other limit on the number and/or amount of overdraft
                fees does not seem fair as well. A cap would create an uneven
                playing
                field with the merchant who is not limited in fee assessment
                and would lead to more returned items, which would be to the
                detriment
                of our customers.
 
 The suggestion for a formal "opt out" process would
                be burdensome and, without some very specific disclosures on
                the impact
                of the opt-out (no discretion to honor a check, impact on credit,
                additional merchant fees, etc.), would create reputation risk
                to the Bank.
 
 Thank you for consideration of our concerns.
 
 Sincerely,
 Joseph H. Framptom, Chairman and CEO
 
 Wallace
            B. Bateman
 President
 
 John H. Durbin
 Chief
            Financial Officer
 
 Victor G. Bopp
 Chief Risk Officer
 
 Russell
            G. Smith
 Compliance
            Officer
 
 
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