To Whom It May Concern:
Thank you for the opportunity to your request for regulatory burden
relief, as published at 70 FR 5571. I am Vice-President for Magnolia Bank, Hodgenville, Kentucky. In
October 2003 I was appointed Compliance Officer for the Bank. I also serve
as the Loan Review Officer. I have been with the
bank in various capacities since January 1981.
Our bank is a community bank. We strive to do the very best job possible
to serve the community and its members. Often that attempt to serve is
hampered by undue and unnecessary regulatory burden. Although that has been
the case, increasingly, since the 1970’s, it has become unmanageable since
the September 11 terrorist attacks. While we understand the need to secure
our country and its financial infrastructure, I question whether the
regulations, as implemented and enforced are accomplishing that goal.
Specifically, I am concerned about the following:
·
Bank Secrecy Act. Compliance with this Act and its regulations is,
without doubt one of the most expensive and time consuming in the bank.
That is compounded by complex regulations the lack of clear and consistent
guidance for bankers or examiners; the apparent ineffectiveness of the data
collected (we hear from enforcement agencies that the information is useless
in the form presented); and, severe penalties for unintentional or
misunderstood noncompliance. The regulations need to be streamlined and
clarified. Examiners should look to advise and assist institutions with
compliance rather than punish. But, before any amendments will be
successful, the data compilation must also be re-designed in such a way, and
tested, to ensure that law enforcement will and can utilize it. Otherwise,
the regulatory burden cannot be justified for the bank or the consumer.
·
Money Service Business. While this crosses over to other areas of
comment made in this letter, it is worthy of separate comment. Banks should
not be expected to monitor the individual activities of each of its
customers, absent suspicious activity or statutory/regulatory mandates. The
recent examination efforts with regard to MSBs has proven that the response
will be that financial institutions will no longer be willing to shoulder
the potential risks associated with customers who are potentially MSBs. The
burden of reporting should be placed on actual MSBs, not the bank.
·
USA Patriot Act. Many of the comments for BSA, above, are equally
applicable to these requirements. There needs to be more clarification as
to acceptable and appropriate identification standards. In addition, those
standards must be consistent with the documentation and information
available and verifiable in the various states.
·
Regulation D. The restrictions on transfers and the paying of
interest on certain deposit accounts are archaic. These restrictions should
be removed.
·
Community Reinvestment Act. In today’s world of mobility, existing
CRA requirements are no longer evaluative of a bank’s investment in and
participation with its actual community. Transaction and customer/community
support is becoming more creative as people’s needs are changing. The
problems of CRA compliance are compounded by the fact that so many other
providers of financial services, such as brokerages and credit unions are
not required to comply. If a CRA “type” of requirement is retained, it
should be modernized to address the changing needs of our industry’s
communities.
Again, thank you for
this opportunity to comment.
Sincerely,
Debbie Cruse
Magnolia Bank
Hodgenville, KY 42748