From: Jimmy Stanford [mailto:jstanford@firstbankonline.com] Sent: Monday,
April 04, 2005 4:34 PM To: Comments Subject: EGRPRA Burden Reduction Comment;
OCC Docket 0418; Fed Docket R-1206; OTS 2004-35
Jimmy Stanford 508 North Broad Street Lexington, TN
38351
April 4, 2005
Comments to FDIC ,
Dear Comments to FDIC:
As a community banker, I support the EGRPRA project
and commend the banking agencies for their efforts to
identify outdated, unnecessary, or unduly burdensome
regulatory requirements. I have the following comments
concerning the regulations that are currently being
reviewed and are categorized as Consumer Protection:
Account/Deposit Relationships and Miscellaneous Consumer
Rules.
Privacy of Consumer Financial Information
The annual privacy notice that banks must send to
customers is not only very burdensome and costly but the
language for the notices required by law and regulations
is confusing to customers. An optional short form notice
would be welcome, but it should replace - not supplement
- the existing notice. Since we have already developed
processes and procedures to comply with existing
requirements, use of a short form notice should be at
the bank's option.
Even more important, we should not have to send out
an annual notice if we do not change our privacy
policies and procedures. We give our customers the
notice at account opening. That should be enough,
especially since we are happy to provide information
about our privacy policy upon request. The annual notice
is particularly unnecessary for community banks that
share information only as permitted by one of the
statutory or regulatory exceptions.
Truth in Savings (Regulation DD)
Even though we are used to the many disclosures
required under Truth in Savings, most of our customers
pay little attention to the disclosures. Many of them
end up in the trashcan. There is a cost to developing
the programs and procedures to produce these
disclosures, but if consumers are not paying attention
to them, then this is a perfect example of a needless
regulatory requirement.
The banking agencies should study whether these
disclosures are truly serving their purpose. All
interested parties should be involved in the study,
including banks, consumers and software providers.
Regulation DD would be an ideal regulation for
streamlining and simplification to save banks from
unnecessary costs and burdens and to improve disclosures
to our customers.
Deposit Insurance Coverage
The FDIC has taken steps in recent years to simplify
the rules about deposit insurance coverage, but the
rules still need simplification and streamlining.
Customers know that they can organize accounts to expand
coverage beyond $100,000, but how that works and what
steps are needed are confusing to both consumers and
front-line bank employees. Broader dissemination of the
tools the FDIC offers would help. For example, the EDIE
CD-ROM should be distributed to every branch office of
every bank. We would support simplification of the rules
provided it does not reduce the ability of individual
consumers to expand coverage, especially since the
coverage levels have been steadily eroded by inflation
since they were last raised in 1980.
Consumer Protection in Sales of Insurance
The disclosures required by these regulations do not
fit certain products including credit life and related
products, debt cancellation contracts, and crop and
flood insurance. The focus of the rule should be on
insurance products that are similar to a deposit product
and that a consumer might confuse with a deposit that is
FDIC-insured. Bankers find it burdensome to disclose
each time they sell a customer credit life insurance,
that credit life insurance is not a deposit and not
FDIC-insured nor insured by any federal government
agency. They also find it burdensome to obtain the
consumer's written acknowledgement of the disclosures
each time an insurance product or annuity is sold.
Electronic Fund Transfers (Regulation E)
Consumer liability from unauthorized transactions
resulting from writing the personal identification
number (PIN) on a card or keeping the PIN in the same
location as the card should be increased from $50 to
$500. It is unfair for banks to be presumed liable in
every instance for unauthorized electronic transactions.
Furthermore, the notification requirement under
Regulation E for a change in account terms or conditions
should be extended from 21 days to 30 days. This would
make the notification timeframe consistent with
Regulation DD and would simplify compliance.
Thank you for the opportunity to comment.
Sincerely,
Jimmy R Stanford
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