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Financial Services Law Insights and Observations

States stress importance of CRA modernization

State Issues Agency Rule-Making & Guidance Bank Regulatory State Attorney General CRA FDIC OCC Federal Reserve

State Issues

On August 5, a coalition of 15 state attorneys general submitted a comment letter in support of the joint notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) issued by the FDIC, OCC, and Federal Reserve Board (collectively, “agencies”) regarding modernizing the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA). As previously covered by InfoBytes, the NPRM, among other things, would update how CRA activities qualify for consideration, where CRA activities are considered, and how CRA activities are evaluated. According to the letter, the NPRM is “a marked improvement over prior proposals that some of the agencies set out in the last several years.” The AGs noted that the final rule “must ensure that all members of our communities are fully served by financial institutions” and urged the agencies to continue to strengthen it. The AGs further encouraged the agencies to focus on: (i) ensuring the NPRM “vindicates CRA’s core purpose to address racial inequalities”; (ii) increasing the regulatory bar so “that banks are taking meaningful action to meet low- and moderate income (LMI) community needs; and (iii) “[l]everaging incentives to encourage affordable housing development for LMI communities without displacement.” Additionally, the AGs suggested that the NPRM “should be modified to ensure that this once-in-a-generation modernization effort gives the regulators the tools they need to carry out CRA’s imperative—that financial institutions be required to address the needs of our most vulnerable communities—in our States and across the Nation.” The AGs also noted that some states “expressed concern that the widening racial wealth gap stemming from historical redlining would be exacerbated by an uneven pandemic recovery.” Specifically, the letter stated that “two-and-a-half years into the COVID-19 crisis, the States face an affordable and accessible housing crisis, increased homelessness and housing insecurity, and historic levels of inflation that disproportionally threaten low-income communities and communities of color.” The AGs stated that CRA regulatory reform “can be a key element of addressing these problems.”