[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 182 (Wednesday, November 30, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S8056-S8057]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
COMMUNITIES FIRST ACT
Mr. MORAN. Mr. President, I am here to speak on another topic, but it
has been my privilege to hear the discussion between the Senator from
South Carolina, Mr. Graham, and the Senator from Connecticut, Mr.
Lieberman, about what I think is a very serious debate; that is, the
juxtaposition of our constitutional rights as U.S. citizens in light of
our desire to make sure Americans' lives are protected. I have always
struggled with trying to find that right balance, and I found tonight's
conversation on the Senate floor very valuable.
I wish to turn my attention and bring to the attention of my
colleagues in the Senate a pending piece of legislation, a bill I have
introduced dealing with our country's economy and particularly as it
relates to financial institutions and particularly our community banks.
There are, as we know, so many Americans who are looking for work. I
would say our government's first priority is to defend our country, and
we have been having a debate about how we do that, but we also have a
significant responsibility to create an environment where businesses
can grow and put people to work. I want to point out tonight a piece of
legislation I have introduced that I believe is part of the solution.
It is called the Communities First Act, and it is a compilation of what
I would say are commonsense tax and regulatory relief ideas for our
Nation's smallest financial institutions.
We constantly hear about Wall Street. I want to worry tonight about
Main Street. These banks in communities across Kansas and in States
across our country were not the cause of the financial crisis from
which we are still struggling to emerge, but unfortunately they have
become the victims. They have become casualties of the crisis on Wall
Street. Hundreds of community banks have been allowed to fail, and the
survivors are left waiting for the next burdensome regulation to come
from Washington, DC.
Until banks are willing and able to make prudent loans to
creditworthy hometown customers, job creation will remain stifled and
our economic recovery will continue to lag.
The evidence seems clear to me that the current regulatory
requirements impose a disproportionate burden on community banks
because they do not operate on the scale to spread the legal and
compliance costs. When a bank with, say, just 40 employees requires 4
compliance experts, I believe something is terribly wrong.
This expensive overregulation diminishes the ability of a community
bank to attract capital and to support the credit needs of customers.
What that means is that someone who wants to be
[[Page S8057]]
a stockholder or the owner of a community bank, because regulatory
requirements increase the cost of capital, will decide there is a
different way to earn a living, a different place to invest that
capital. So, in short, these burdens prevent a community bank from
serving the community, and they avoid, therefore, the resulting job
creation that comes when a community bank invests at home.
All of the regulations being piled on community banks might be
justified if the failure of a community bank could pose a serious risk
to our Nation's financial system, but that is clearly not the case. It
was not the failure of several hundred community banks that left our
economy in such poor condition; it was the financial condition of a
handful of the largest firms in America that grew so large and so
complex that their failure or bankruptcy could not be tolerated and the
consequences would affect every American. We need a tailored approach
to regulation.
Ross Wilson, one of my constituents in LaCrosse, KS, a banker, wrote
to me. He says his bank will no longer make home loans, real estate
loans. This is his quote:
As a community banker, I really hate this decision, but the
complexity of the new regulations have forced us to make this
decision. It appears that the powers that be in Washington
don't understand the importance of a small community bank.
When your hometown bank won't make a home loan to one of its
customers not because the loan won't be repaid but because the
regulatory costs are far too significant, our regulations have far
exceeded their value.
How does the Communities First Act that I have introduced change this
trend and restore some level of sanity to our financial regulations?
This bill would strip away outdated and unnecessary regulations, such
as the Gramm-Leach-Bliley annual privacy notice requirement. Under
current law, every bank and credit union is required to disclose their
privacy policies on an annual basis even if that bank's policy has
never changed during the year. So you can have a customer of a bank who
has been a customer forever, and the bank has a policy in place that
never changes, but every year the bank has to send out a significant
mailing to every customer explaining their policy in regard to privacy.
While that burden maybe doesn't sound too significant, it is a costly
requirement of questionable benefit.
Blake Heid of the First Option Bank in Paola, KS, tells me:
Very little of what the regulations have us do is
productive or helps us take care of our customers better.
Just the privacy notices alone cost our small bank in excess
of $13,000 annually. We haven't changed it . . . we never
sold our customer information, and we still don't.
The Communities First Act would also address an issue regarding SEC
registration by community banks. The number of shareholders which
triggers a registration has not been updated in a long time and remains
a burden that discourages community bankers from raising capital and
making loans.
The Communities First Act would also reform which banks are required
to comply with the costly burdens of Sarbanes-Oxley. Current law
exempts banks with market capitalizations under $75 million from
compliance under section 404. The benefits of that section do not
appear to be worth the cost, so my legislation raises that threshold.
Another commonsense provision would encourage Americans to save by
reducing the tax on longer term certificates of deposit. It would also
allow for individuals under the age of 26 to invest in Roth IRAs
without regard to their income level. We desperately need Americans to
save money for their long-term retirement benefits.
The Communities First Act would also reform the new Consumer
Financial Protection Bureau so that the National Credit Union
Administration, the FDIC, the Federal Reserve, and the other regulators
would have a meaningful role in the creation of consumer protection
rules. Dodd-Frank provides these regulators insufficient input, and
review of the CFPB and the results of poorly written regulations could
mean less credit and, again, fewer jobs.
There seems to be some disagreement here in Washington, DC, today
about the effects of burdensome regulations on our economic recovery.
But back in Kansas, Jay Kennedy of the First National Bank of Frankfurt
indicates:
Our staff of 7\1/2\ people are busy taking care of our
customers and serving our communities. The extra burden from
things like tracking escrow payments, sending privacy
notices, and filing call reports that take a month to
complete all create undue stress and busy work for us.
Kansans don't know what the words ``busy work'' mean.
The relief of those three things alone would allow us time
to teach financial literacy that our schools can no longer
afford to do and create new products to better serve our
customers.
The provisions of the Communities First Act are just a first step in
unleashing the ability of small banks to do what they do best--provide
capital that results in jobs.
Congress has created a regulatory monster, and I urge my colleagues
to join me in removing unnecessary burdens from our financial system
and cosponsor S. 1600, the Communities First Act. While this
legislation may directly benefit our Nation's community banks--our
small financial institutions--the real beneficiaries are the
entrepreneurs, the Main Street small business men and women, and
farmers and ranchers who, with access to credit, can help put Americans
back to work.
Thank you, Mr. President.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Iowa.
Mr. HARKIN. Mr. President, parliamentary inquiry: Are we in morning
business?
The PRESIDING OFFICER. We are.
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