Advocates: Key bank law softened in Trump plan
WASHINGTON — The Trump administration is proposing changes to a decades-old law designed to keep banks from discriminating against the poor and disadvantaged, but critics argue the changes could make it easier for banks to potentially ignore the under-served, particularly communities of color.
The Community Reinvestment Act has, over the past four decades, spurred hundreds of billions of dollars in lending to low- and middle-income communities. But it’s out of date and in need of an overhaul.
Some community advocates say the changes the administration is proposing will allow banks to meet the law’s criteria without making the types of loans most beneficial to the communities they serve. Worse, critics argue that discrimination against poor and communities of color by the banking industry could increase under the proposal.
The Community Reinvestment
Act was passed in 1977, when bank branches were one of the few ways to measure a bank’s presence in a community. It was last revised in the mid-1990s, when online banking barely existed.
There are now banks that have zero physical branches, making it more difficult to measure what constitutes a community under the law. It’s become somewhat of an inside joke in the industry of how many banks have chosen Salt Lake City — a place with a lot of banking operations but is not representative of the country — as their CRA assessment areas.
The Trump proposal aims to broaden the definition of what constitutes a bank’s community — taking into account that online banking now exists — while broadening the types of loans and services that would qualify under CRA. Under the new proposal, banks could get credit for other types of lending to low-income customers like credit cards and personal loans — a move that would greatly benefit the largest of the country’s banks because they already dominate those lines of business.
The regulations would also give banks credit, under certain circumstances, for loans they make to build or improve facilities such as sports stadiums and hospitals.
It’s the broadening of what would qualify under CRA that has community groups upset.
“We all agree there needed to be a list. The problem is what the (Office of the Comptroller of the Currency) has put on that list,” said Jesse Van Tol, CEO of the National Community Reinvestment Coalition, an umbrella group for dozens of community groups trying to get banks to do more work in lowincome neighborhoods.
The overhaul of the CRA is led by Joseph Otting, the Comptroller of the Currency and one of the primary regulators of the national banking industry. Otting had experience dealing with CRA due to his long career in banking before taking the comptroller job.
“I know, and care about, these communities. My intent is to strengthen CRA, not weaken it,” Otting said Wednesday.