| LEGACY BANK
 
 Mr. Robert E. Feldman Executive Secretary
 Attention: Comments/Legal ESS
 Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
 550 17th Street, NW
 Washington, DC 20429
 Re: RIN Number 3064-AC50  Dear Mr. Feldman, I have read that the NY Times has labeled the FDIC’s proposed
          change in CRA regulations “a drastic change”. Out of curiosity,
          I checked on www.fdic.gov to see if I could gain a perspective of what
          drastic effect this change might have in their New York City MSA.
           NEW YORK NY, MSA as of June 30, 2003 
| Total Deposits | MSA Deposits
 | % Deposits | Offices in MSA | % Offices | Charters
 | % Charters |  
| over $1 
            billion | $394,729,597,000 | 96.54% | 1,531 | 88.04% | 53 | 41.09% |  
| $250 
            million to $1 billion | $8,800,792,000 | 2.15% | 113 | 6.50% | 28 | 21.71% |  
| under $250 
            million | $5,345,830,000 | 1.31% | 95 | 5.46% | 48 | 37.21% |  
| Grand Total | $408,87,219,000 | 100.00% | 1,739 | 100.00% | 129 | 100.00% |  I found that in the New City MSA there were 1739 
        banking offices representing 129 institutions. On June 30, 2003, those 
        1739 banking offices held $408,876,219,000 in deposits. 1,531 (88.04%) 
        of those banking offices belong to charters whose total assets are each 
        greater than a billion dollars and therefore are unaffected by the 
        proposed change.  Those large banking offices hold 96.54% 
        ($394,729,597,000) of the MSA’s deposits.  The other institutions 
        unaffected by the proposed change have assets less than 250 million 
        dollars and therefore already come under the small bank rules.  They 
        hold $5,345,830,000 (1.31%) in 95 (5.46%) banking offices.  The 
        remaining $8,800,792,000 in deposits representing 2.15% of the total 
        deposits in the MSA are held by 28 charters in 113 offices.  Those 
        offices average total deposits of only $77,883,000 each. Let’s consider 
        for a moment those 113 banking offices and consider them from two 
        perspectives.  First, is it possible, even if they never did anything 
        with those deposits other than put them in a vault, for a mere 2.15% of 
        the market to create a disaster of any magnitude?  I say no.  The total 
        deposits represented by this group are so inconsequential they don’t 
        even make a material adjustment on the combined balance sheet of the 
        MSA’a banks.  How could their even being totally exempted from CRA 
        regulation create anything that could reasonably be considered drastic?  
        They could not create anything drastic because when compared to the 
        whole picture of their market they are insignificant and immaterial to 
        that whole picture.  On the other hand, the more significant question 
        is, how can these insignificant and immaterial organizations survive at 
        all?  I propose to you the only hope they have of surviving is by 
        becoming significant.  Further, the only way they can become significant 
        is by doing an excellent job of meeting the true financial needs of 
        their customer’s, and their customer’s neighborhoods to such a degree 
        that the people of New York tell each other that these institutions are 
        worthy of their business and support.  Further, the only hope they have 
        of prospering is if those neighborhoods in which they reside also 
        proper, and their best hope of that happening is through loans made to 
        residents and small businesses in those neighborhoods.  That is because 
        the survival of these small banks, (yes in today’s world a bank smaller 
        than several billion dollars in assets is small) is not something that 
        is guaranteed but something that is earned, and their CRA examination 
        comes each day when they swing open their doors.  To fail to serve the 
        financial needs of their community means their bank becomes truly 
        irrelevant, and in the real world an irrelevant business soon ceases to 
        exist.  That is marketplace CRA regulation delivered with a vengeance.  
        It is only when a bank becomes so huge that it no longer is dependant on 
        its local marketplace that CRA regulation becomes a legitimate need.  
        Prior to that time, CRA regulation is only a burden to the bank and the 
        community it serves because it uses up the bank’s resources in efforts 
        to measure compliance instead of simply freeing the bank to truly serve 
        its community’s needs.  The combined cost of time and money spent 
        complying with CRA, for these smaller banks, means they actually will do 
        a poorer job of meeting their community’s needs due to the waste of 
        precious resources.  If these banks are freed from CRA regulation, the 
        community will take care of the community CRA test because the community 
        votes with their dollars and their feet every day.  There is no need for 
        a regulatory body to give a moment’s thought to CRA compliance for a 
        bank smaller than $1,000,000,000 in total assets.   This is even more 
        true in those states the NY Times would tend to label as “the fly over 
        states”, that is to say those states that are so insignificant in the 
        eyes of the Times as to only take up space for them to fly over as they 
        jet from coast to coast.  In these distant places, if the bank fails to 
        do its duty with respect to CRA the community and the bank suffer.  Only 
        a very foolish bank led by a very foolish board will ignore the needs of 
        their community, and in this century, with banking charters easily 
        attainable, and branches available where a breath of opportunity exists 
        a bank that ignores its CRA responsibility does so at its own immediate 
        peril. Occasionally an individual or an organization does 
        something that is exactly right and yet highly criticized.  However, it 
        is extremely rare for any government agency to have the courage to do 
        something that is labeled politically dangerous even when it is clearly 
        the right thing to do.  I stand and applaud in honor of the FDIC, its 
        leadership, and its board for having the courage to propose this much 
        needed and appropriate change in CRA regulations.  It clearly 
        demonstrates you are serious about eliminating needless regulation and I 
        urge you to stand fast with your proposal to raise the threshold for the 
        streamlined small bank CRA examination to one billion dollars.  Further 
        I urge you to drop the community development criterion from your 
        consideration.  Let the marketplace take care of this part of banking 
        regulation.  Though brutal, the marketplace will regulate well. Sincerely, R. Stephen CarmackCEO
 Legacy Bank
 PO Box 1038
 Hinton, OK 73047
  
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