95-10503. Community Reinvestment Act Regulations  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 86 (Thursday, May 4, 1995)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 22156-22223]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 95-10503]
    
    
    
    
    [[Page 22155]]
    
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    Part III
    
    Department of the Treasury
    
    
    
    Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
    
    
    
    12 CFR Part 25
    
    
    
    Federal Reserve System
    
    
    
    12 CFR Part 228
    
    
    
    Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
    
    
    
    12 CFR Part 345
    
    
    
    Department of the Treasury
    
    
    
    Office of Thrift Supervision
    
    
    
    12 CFR Part 563e
    
    
    
    Federal Reserve System
    
    
    
    12 CFR Part 203
    
    
    
    _______________________________________________________________________
    
    
    
    Community Reinvestment Act Regulations and Home Mortgage Disclosure; 
    Final Rules
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 60, No. 86 / Thursday, May 4, 1995 / Rules 
    and Regulations 
    [[Page 22156]] 
    
    DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
    
    Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
    
    12 CFR Part 25
    
    [Docket No. 95-07]
    RIN 1557-AB32
    
    FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
    
    12 CFR Part 228
    
    [Regulation BB; Docket No. R-0822]
    
    FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
    
    12 CFR Part 345
    
    RIN 3064-AB27
    
    DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
    
    Office of Thrift Supervision
    
    12 CFR Part 563e
    
    [Docket No. 95-72]
    RIN 1550-AA69
    
    FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
    
    12 CFR Part 203
    
    
    Community Reinvestment Act Regulations
    
    AGENCIES: Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Treasury (OCC); 
    Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Board); Federal 
    Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC); Office of Thrift Supervision, 
    Treasury (OTS).
    
    ACTION: Joint final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: The OCC, Board, FDIC, and OTS, (collectively, the Federal 
    financial supervisory agencies or agencies) are amending their 
    regulations concerning the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA). The 
    agencies published a joint notice of proposed rulemaking on this issue 
    on December 21, 1993 (1993 proposal) and again on October 7, 1994 (1994 
    proposal). This final rule reflects comments received on both proposals 
    and the agencies' further internal considerations.
        The purpose of the CRA regulations is to establish the framework 
    and criteria by which the agencies assess an institution's record of 
    helping to meet the credit needs of its community, including low- and 
    moderate-income neighborhoods, consistent with safe and sound 
    operations, and to provide that the agencies' assessment shall be taken 
    into account in reviewing certain applications.
        The final rule seeks to emphasize performance rather than process, 
    to promote consistency in evaluations, and to eliminate unnecessary 
    burden. As compared to the 1993 and 1994 proposals, the final rule 
    reduces recordkeeping and reporting requirements and makes other 
    modifications and clarifications.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATES: This joint rule is effective July 1, 1995, except 12 
    CFR 25.3 through 25.7 and 25.51, 12 CFR 228.3 through 228.7 and 228.51, 
    12 CFR 345.3 through 345.7 and 345.51, and 12 CFR 563e.3 through 563e.7 
    and 563e.51 are removed effective July 1, 1997.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
        OCC: Stephen M. Cross, Deputy Comptroller for Compliance, (202) 
    874-5216; or Matthew Roberts, Director, Community and Consumer Law 
    Division, (202) 874-5750, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, 
    250 E Street, SW., Washington, DC 20219.
        Board: Glenn E. Loney, Associate Director, Division of Consumer and 
    Community Affairs, (202) 452-3585; Robert deV. Frierson, Assistant 
    General Counsel, Legal Division, (202) 452-3711; or Leonard N. Chanin, 
    Managing Counsel, Division of Consumer and Community Affairs, (202) 
    452-3667, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 20th Street 
    and Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20551.
        FDIC: Bobbie Jean Norris, Chief, Fair Lending Section, Division of 
    Compliance and Consumer Affairs, (202) 942-3090; Robert W. Mooney, Fair 
    Lending Specialist, Division of Compliance and Consumer Affairs, (202) 
    942-3092; or Ann Hume Loikow, Counsel, Regulation and Legislation 
    Section, Legal Division, (202) 898-3796, Federal Deposit Insurance 
    Corporation, 550 17th Street, NW., Washington, DC 20429.
        OTS: Timothy R. Burniston, Assistant Director for Compliance 
    Policy, (202) 906-5629; Theresa A. Stark, Program Analyst, Compliance 
    Policy, (202) 906-7054; or Lewis A. Segall, Senior Attorney, 
    Regulations and Legislation Division, Chief Counsel's Office, (202) 
    906-6648, Office of Thrift Supervision, 1700 G Street, NW., Washington, 
    DC 20552.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Introduction
    
        The Federal financial supervisory agencies jointly are amending 
    their regulations implementing the CRA (12 U.S.C. 2901 et seq.). The 
    amended regulations will, when fully effective, replace the existing 
    regulations in their entirety.
        The CRA is designed to encourage regulated financial institutions 
    to help meet the credit needs of their entire communities, including 
    low- and moderate-income neighborhoods, consistent with safe and sound 
    operations. Despite the CRA's notable successes in improving access to 
    credit, banks and savings and loan institutions, as well as community 
    and consumer groups, maintain that its full potential has not been 
    realized, in large part because regulatory compliance efforts have 
    focused on process rather than performance.
        In accordance with a request from the President, the Federal 
    financial supervisory agencies have undertaken a comprehensive effort 
    to reform their standards for evaluating compliance with CRA 
    requirements. The final rule implements this reform effort by 
    substituting a new system that evaluates institutions based on their 
    actual performance in helping to meet their communities' credit needs.
    
    Background
    
        In 1977, the Congress enacted the CRA to encourage banks and 
    thrifts to help meet the credit needs of their entire communities, 
    including low- and moderate-income neighborhoods, consistent with safe 
    and sound lending practices. In the CRA, the Congress found that:
        ``(1) regulated financial institutions are required by law to 
    demonstrate that their deposit facilities serve the convenience and 
    needs of the communities in which they are chartered to do business;
        (2) the convenience and needs of communities include the need for 
    credit as well as deposit services; and
        (3) regulated financial institutions have continuing and 
    affirmative obligation[s] to help meet the credit needs of the local 
    communities in which they are chartered.''
    
    (12 U.S.C. 2901(a))
    
        The CRA has come to play an increasingly important role in 
    improving access to credit in communities--both rural and urban--across 
    the country. Under the impetus of the CRA, many banks and thrifts 
    opened new branches, provided expanded services, and made substantial 
    commitments to increase lending to all segments of society.
        Despite these successes, the CRA examination system has been 
    criticized. Financial institutions have indicated that policy guidance 
    from the agencies on the CRA is unclear and that examination standards 
    are applied inconsistently. Financial institutions [[Page 22157]] have 
    also stated that the CRA examination process encourages them to 
    generate excessive paperwork at the expense of providing loans, 
    services, and investments to their communities.
        Community, consumer, and other groups have agreed with the industry 
    that there are inconsistencies in CRA evaluations and that current 
    examinations overemphasize process and underemphasize performance. 
    Community and consumer groups also have criticized the agencies for 
    failing aggressively to penalize banks and thrifts for poor 
    performance.
        Noting that the CRA examination process could be improved, 
    President Clinton requested in July 1993 that the Federal financial 
    supervisory agencies reform the CRA regulatory system. The President 
    asked the agencies to consult with the banking and thrift industries, 
    Congressional leaders, and leaders of community-based organizations 
    across the country to develop new CRA regulations and examination 
    procedures that ``replace paperwork and uncertainty with greater 
    performance, clarity, and objectivity.''
        Specifically, the President asked the agencies to refocus the CRA 
    examination system on more objective, performance-based assessment 
    standards that minimize compliance burden while stimulating improved 
    performance. He also asked the agencies to develop a well-trained corps 
    of examiners who would specialize in CRA examinations. The President 
    requested that the agencies promote consistency and even-handedness, 
    improve CRA performance evaluations, and institute more effective 
    sanctions against institutions with consistently poor performance.
        To implement the President's initiative, the four agencies held a 
    series of seven public hearings across the country in 1993. At those 
    hearings, the agencies heard from over 250 witnesses. Nearly 50 others 
    submitted written statements. The preamble to the 1993 proposal 
    reviewed the results of those hearings.
    
    The 1993 Proposal
    
        The agencies published proposed revisions to their CRA regulations 
    on December 21, 1993. The 1993 proposal (58 FR 67466) would have 
    eliminated the twelve assessment factors in the present CRA regulations 
    and substituted a more performance-based evaluation system. Under the 
    1993 proposal, the agencies would have evaluated institutions based on 
    their actual lending, service, and investment performance rather than 
    on how well they conducted their needs assessments, documented their 
    community outreach, and implemented other procedural requirements of 
    the existing regulations.
        Generally, large retail institutions would have been evaluated 
    based on some combination of lending, service, and investment tests. 
    Institutions would have been required to report data on the basis of 
    the geographic distribution of applications, denials, originations, and 
    purchases of loans. Small banks and thrifts could have elected to be 
    evaluated under a streamlined method that would not have required them 
    to report this data. Every institution also could have elected to have 
    its performance evaluated on the basis of a pre-approved strategic 
    plan.
        All banks and thrifts would have been assigned one of four 
    statutorily mandated CRA ratings (12 U.S.C. 2906(b)(2)). However, five 
    ratings would have been used for the lending, service, and investment 
    tests, with the satisfactory category split into low satisfactory and 
    high satisfactory.
        Collectively, the agencies received over 6,700 comment letters on 
    the 1993 proposal. As a general matter, the vast majority of commenters 
    expressed support for the agencies' goal of developing more objective, 
    performance-based assessment standards that minimize burden while 
    stimulating improved performance. However, many expressed concern over 
    aspects of the 1993 proposal that they viewed as allocating credit to 
    particular kinds of borrowers. After considering the comments, the 
    agencies published a second proposal on October 7, 1994, which 
    responded to many of the suggestions in the comments on the 1993 
    proposal, including concerns about credit allocation, while preserving 
    the 1993 proposal's goal of emphasizing performance over process.
    
    The 1994 Proposal
    
        The 1994 proposal (59 FR 51232) retained the principles and 
    structure underlying the 1993 proposal but made significant changes to 
    the details in order to respond to many of the specific concerns raised 
    in the comment letters. As in the 1993 proposal, the 1994 proposal 
    would have replaced the existing regulations' twelve assessment factors 
    with a performance-based evaluation system. The 1994 proposal retained, 
    but modified, the lending, investment, and service tests for large 
    retail institutions; the streamlined evaluation for small institutions; 
    an alternative evaluation for limited purpose and wholesale 
    institutions; and the pre-approved strategic plan option available to 
    all institutions.
        The 1993 proposal had been criticized because of certain objective 
    criteria in the proposal (including market share, a presumptively 
    reasonable loan to deposit ratio, loan mix, investment to capital 
    ratios, and the number of branches readily accessible to low- and 
    moderate-income geographies) which were intended to respond to concerns 
    about the need for more objective standards for evaluating compliance 
    with CRA requirements. Many commenters viewed these criteria as calling 
    for credit allocation, although the agencies did not intend this 
    result. The 1994 proposal removed these criteria from the regulatory 
    language and substituted a broader range of qualitative and 
    quantitative criteria. A system for evaluating compliance with CRA 
    should not eliminate examiner judgment, even if completely objective 
    criteria consistently applied were achievable. Preservation of examiner 
    judgment to take into account the unique characteristics and needs of 
    an institution's community and the institution's own capacity and 
    relevant constraints are essential for a workable rule.
        At the same time, consistency in evaluations, reduction in the 
    burden of compliance, and emphasis on performance are fully consistent 
    with assuring a measure of examiner judgment. The 1994 proposal would 
    have provided a balance between objective analysis and subjective 
    judgment through a series of examiner decisions relying on detailed 
    data measuring an institution's actual lending, service and investment 
    performance. In order to minimize unnecessary subjectivity, the 
    agencies provided guidance as to the standards that examiners would 
    have applied in making the required judgments.
        Compared to the 1993 proposal, the 1994 proposal would have reduced 
    data reporting burdens by streamlining reporting requirements. The one 
    significant new reporting requirement was the collection and reporting 
    of information on the race and gender of small business and farm 
    borrowers. The agencies proposed this provision to respond to concerns 
    that the 1993 proposal did not give enough weight to the fair lending 
    aspect of an institution's CRA performance.
        In order to take into account community characteristics and needs, 
    the 1994 proposal would have made explicit the context in which the 
    tests and standards would have been applied to individual institutions. 
    In a specific effort to reduce burden, the preamble indicated that the 
    agencies, rather than institutions, would have collected and 
    [[Page 22158]] developed the information needed to provide this 
    ``assessment context.''
        The 1994 proposal also modified the rating process from the 1993 
    proposal. For large retail institutions, in calculating the assigned 
    rating, the revised proposal would have given primacy to lending 
    performance, but an institution's performance on the service and 
    investment tests also would have been reflected in the assigned rating. 
    The rating process for small institutions similarly would have given 
    primacy to lending performance, and would have provided guidance on how 
    the agencies would have considered service and investment performance. 
    For all institutions, evidence of discriminatory or other illegal 
    credit practices would have adversely affected the evaluation of an 
    institution's performance. In addition, an appendix to the 1994 
    proposal included rating profiles to guide the assessments.
        The 1994 proposal revised and clarified other important features of 
    the 1993 proposal. It provided more detail as to how the proposed 
    strategic plan option would operate in practice. Wholesale and limited 
    purpose institutions were made subject to a community development test, 
    which would have incorporated both community development lending and 
    community development services in addition to qualified investments. 
    Also, the agencies revised the definition of service area to include 
    the local areas around an institution's deposit facilities in which it 
    has significant lending activity and all other areas equally distant 
    from such facilities.
    
    Overview of Comments on the 1994 Proposal
    
        Collectively, the agencies received over 7,200 comment letters on 
    the 1994 proposal. The agencies received comment letters from 
    individuals, representatives of bank and thrift institutions, consumer 
    and community groups, members of Congress, state, local, and tribal 
    governments, and others, as shown in the following table.
    
                                               Table of Comments Received                                           
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                       Letters from                                                                 
                                      banks, thrifts   Letters from    Letters from                                 
                 Agency                  and their     consumer and     government     Letters from        Total    
                                           trade         community       entities         others                    
                                       associations       groups                                                    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    OCC.............................             669             839              39             672           2,219
    Board...........................             607             832              12             482           1,933
    FDIC............................           1,007             788              32             237           2,064
    OTS.............................             261             623              24             173           1,081
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The agencies reviewed and considered all of these comments in 
    writing the final rule. The section-by-section analysis of the final 
    rule discusses these comments in greater detail. As a general matter, 
    the vast majority of commenters expressed support for the agencies' 
    goal of developing more objective, performance-based assessment 
    standards that minimize burden while stimulating improved performance. 
    Many commenters believed that, under the existing CRA regulations, the 
    agencies focus too closely on documentation of CRA performance and too 
    little on actual performance. Some commenters felt the present 
    documentation requirements are overly burdensome. Many commenters also 
    supported the agencies' goal of ensuring consistency and evenhandedness 
    among the agencies in CRA evaluations, without including specific 
    criteria that might be viewed as allocating credit to specific 
    borrowers. Commenters supported enhanced CRA examiner training to 
    increase consistency. Although most commenters generally supported the 
    agencies' goals in amending their CRA regulations, many expressed 
    concern over certain aspects of the 1994 proposal.
    
    The Final Rule
    
    Review of Comments on the 1994 Proposal and Responses
    
        The final rule retains, to a significant extent, the principles and 
    structure underlying the 1993 and 1994 proposals, but makes important 
    changes to some details in order to respond to concerns raised in the 
    comment letters and further agency consideration. The following 
    discussion describes by topic the ways in which the agencies addressed 
    commenters' concerns. The discussion also describes important technical 
    modifications included in the final rule.
    
    Enforcement Authority
    
        The agencies have removed two provisions found in both the 1993 and 
    1994 proposals that engendered considerable comment. These provisions 
    were the community reinvestment obligation, which stated that banks and 
    thrifts have a specific affirmative obligation to help meet the credit 
    needs of their communities, and the enforcement provision, which 
    provided for penalties against banks and thrifts with ``substantial 
    noncompliance'' ratings using the agencies' general enforcement powers 
    under 12 U.S.C. 1818. Substantial comment was received both in favor 
    of, and in opposition to, these provisions. Based on further analysis 
    of their statutory authority, the agencies have removed these 
    provisions.
        Consistent with the statute, the final rule provides that an 
    institution's CRA rating reflects its record of helping to meet the 
    credit needs of its entire community. The agencies will take into 
    account an institution's record when evaluating various types of 
    applications, such as applications for branches, office relocations, 
    mergers, consolidations, and purchase and assumption transactions, and 
    may deny or condition an application on the basis of the institution's 
    record.
    
    Scope
    
        The scope of the final rule does not differ appreciably from the 
    scope of the current CRA regulations or the 1993 and 1994 proposals. 
    The agencies historically have excluded from CRA coverage certain 
    special purpose institutions, such as banker's banks, that are not 
    organized to grant credit to the public in the ordinary course of 
    business. These institutions continue to be treated as special purpose 
    banks in the final rule and are excluded from coverage. Several 
    commenters were concerned that the definition of banker's bank in the 
    1994 proposal may not have conformed with that found in 12 U.S.C. 24 
    (Seventh), as modified by the Interstate Banking Efficiency Act of 1994 
    (IBEA). Therefore, the final rule references the definition of 
    ``banker's [[Page 22159]] bank'' found in 12 U.S.C. 24 (Seventh). The 
    rule also specifies that institutions that provide only cash management 
    controlled disbursement services are excluded from CRA coverage. In 
    addition, the final rule provides for the CRA's applicability to 
    foreign institutions consistent with the IBEA and prior agency 
    interpretations.
    
    Definitions
        Many of the definitions in the 1994 proposal remain the same in the 
    final rule or have been adjusted only for purposes of clarity, with no 
    change in substance. The agencies did, however, change some definitions 
    substantively.
        Assessment area. The agencies replaced the term ``service area'' in 
    the 1994 proposal with ``assessment area'' in the final rule for the 
    reasons explained in the discussion of assessment area.
        ATM and branch. The agencies changed the definitions of ATM and 
    branch to eliminate the requirement that an ATM or a branch be at a 
    fixed site. This change means that staffed mobile offices that are 
    licensed as branches will be considered ``branches'' under the final 
    rule and that mobile ATMs will be considered ``ATMs.'' This change may 
    affect the delineation of an institution's assessment area(s) because 
    the assessment area(s) must include the geographies in which the 
    institution has its main office, branches and deposit-taking ATMs. 
    Including mobile branches and ATMs in defining an assessment area 
    ensures that an institution that uses these means in an area not 
    otherwise served by the institution will be evaluated on its success in 
    helping to meet the credit needs of the area. Including mobile branches 
    in the definition of ``branch'' will also affect evaluation of an 
    institution's service to its community because the ``service test'' 
    evaluates the distribution of an institution's branches and the 
    institution's history of opening and closing branches. In the revised 
    Part 345, the FDIC uses the term ``remote service facility'' instead of 
    ``ATM'' to conform with the terminology used in its regulations.
        Community development. The 1994 proposal did not provide a separate 
    definition of ``community development,'' although the term was used in 
    defining community development loans and services and qualified 
    investments. Several commenters requested further guidance on the scope 
    of activities that would qualify. Some commenters were concerned that, 
    without further specification, the regulation might permit an overly 
    broad range of activities to be considered favorably as supporting 
    community development. Others were concerned that the definition might 
    be too narrow.
        The final rule separately defines community development to mean: 
    (1) Affordable housing (including multifamily rental housing) for low- 
    or moderate-income individuals; (2) community services targeted to low- 
    or moderate-income individuals; (3) activities that promote economic 
    development by financing businesses or farms that meet the size 
    eligibility standards of 13 CFR 121.802(a)(2) or have gross annual 
    revenues of $1 million or less; or (4) activities that revitalize or 
    stabilize low- or moderate-income geographies.
        The definition of community development restricts qualifying 
    activities to those that promote community welfare, while recognizing 
    that community welfare can be promoted in diverse ways. For example, a 
    number of commenters, representing both the industry and community and 
    consumer groups, stated that the requirement in the 1994 proposal that 
    community development loans and services and qualified investments meet 
    ``community economic development needs'' inappropriately limited 
    community development to efforts that meet ``economic'' needs. The 
    final rule does not contain this limitation, and community development 
    includes community- or tribal-based child care, educational, health, or 
    social services targeted to low- or moderate-income persons or services 
    that revitalize or stabilize low- or moderate-income geographies.
        In response to comments, the definition clarifies the small 
    businesses and farms that the agencies intend to cover. The section of 
    the definition that discusses activities that promote economic 
    development by financing small businesses and farms refers to 13 CFR 
    121.802(a)(2), the size limitations for the Small Business 
    Administration's Small Business Investment Company and Development 
    Company programs, as well as the $1 million gross annual revenues 
    threshold used for lending test analysis.
        Several commenters stated that community development should require 
    benefit to low- and moderate-income areas. However, narrowing the focus 
    to only these areas would ignore some of the beneficial purposes of 
    community development lending for low- and moderate-income individuals. 
    Under the rule, community development includes activities outside of 
    low- and moderate-income areas if the activities provide affordable 
    housing for, or community services targeted to, low- or moderate-income 
    individuals or if they promote economic development by financing small 
    businesses and farms. Activities that create, retain, or improve jobs 
    for low- or moderate-income persons to stabilize or revitalize low- or 
    moderate-income areas also qualify as community development, even if 
    the activities are not located in low- or moderate-income areas.
        The final rule also requires that, in order to be community 
    development loans or services or qualified investments, activities must 
    have community development as their primary purpose. Activities not 
    designed for the express purpose of revitalizing or stabilizing low- or 
    moderate-income areas, providing affordable housing for, or community 
    services targeted to, low- or moderate-income persons, or promoting 
    economic development by financing small businesses and farms are not 
    eligible. The fact that an activity provides indirect or short-term 
    benefits to low- or moderate-income persons does not make the activity 
    community development. Thus, a loan for upper-income housing in a 
    distressed area would not qualify simply on the basis of the indirect 
    benefit to low- or moderate-income persons from construction jobs or 
    the increase in the local tax base that supports enhanced services to 
    low- and moderate-income area residents.
        The final rule removes the requirement in the 1994 proposal that 
    community development loans and services and qualified investments 
    primarily benefit low- or moderate-income persons or small businesses 
    or farms. This requirement is unnecessary because the definitions of 
    community development loan and service and qualified investment in the 
    final rule require that community development be the primary purpose of 
    the activities.
        Community development loan. The agencies have amended the 
    definition of ``community development loan'' as described in the 
    discussion of ``community development'' and in several other ways to 
    respond to commenters' concerns.
        First, many commenters objected to the requirement in the 1994 
    proposal that community development loans meet needs ``not being met by 
    the private market.'' Some commenters pointed out that financial 
    institutions are part of the private market so, if financial 
    institutions make the loans, the needs addressed by the loans will, as 
    a matter of course, be met by the private market. To respond to these 
    comments, the agencies removed this [[Page 22160]] qualifier from the 
    definition of a community development loan.
        Second, some commenters expressed confusion about the extent to 
    which the definition of ``community development loan'' in the 1994 
    proposal would have differed for wholesale and limited purpose 
    institutions. The agencies amended the definition of ``community 
    development loan'' in the final rule to clarify the two ways in which a 
    ``community development loan'' differs for wholesale and limited 
    purpose institutions. First, wholesale and limited purpose institutions 
    may consider loans as community development loans wherever they are 
    located, if the institutions have otherwise adequately addressed the 
    credit needs in their assessment area(s). This different treatment 
    accounts for the fact that wholesale and limited purpose institutions 
    typically draw their resources from, and serve areas well beyond, their 
    immediate communities. Second, a wholesale or limited purpose 
    institution may consider loans reported as home mortgage, small 
    business, small farm or consumer loans to be community development 
    loans. Institutions subject to the lending test may not consider loans 
    reported in those categories to be community development loans, unless 
    the loans are multifamily dwelling loans. This different treatment 
    recognizes that the rule does not separately assess wholesale and 
    limited purpose institutions on these reported loans.
        Some commenters also urged that the agencies permit wholesale and 
    limited purpose institutions to include as a community development loan 
    any loan that primarily benefits low- or moderate-income individuals 
    regardless of the loan's effect on community development. The lending 
    test evaluates an institution's performance in making home mortgage, 
    small business, small farm, and consumer loans based on the geographic 
    distribution of loans to borrowers of different incomes, not on the 
    basis of the total number and dollar amount of loans to low- and 
    moderate-income borrowers. Because the community development test does 
    not consider borrower distribution, but only loan amount and volume, 
    crediting any loan that benefits low- and moderate-income individuals 
    could significantly inflate performance under this test. Therefore, the 
    final rule does not incorporate the suggested change.
        Other commenters urged that institutions that are not wholesale or 
    limited purpose institutions have the option of treating a home 
    mortgage, small business, or small farm loan as a community development 
    loan if it would otherwise qualify. The agencies have not done so. For 
    retail institutions, the community development loan category permits 
    consideration of loans that do not meet the definitions of home 
    mortgage, small business or small farm loans but deserve favorable 
    consideration in a CRA assessment. Loans that do meet the definitions 
    of home mortgage, small business and small farm loans are more 
    appropriately evaluated based on the criteria provided for these loans 
    in the lending test.
        Some commenters requested that retail institutions receive 
    favorable consideration for community development loans outside their 
    assessment areas. Under the final rule, an institution that is not a 
    wholesale or limited purpose institution may receive favorable 
    consideration for a community development loan that benefits a broader 
    statewide or regional area that includes the institution's assessment 
    area(s). This approach maintains a balance between the broader purposes 
    of community development lending and the focus of CRA on meeting the 
    credit needs of an institution's local community. As previously noted, 
    because of their different operational focus, wholesale and limited 
    purpose institutions receive consideration for community development 
    loans made outside this broader area if they have adequately addressed 
    credit needs within the area.1
    
        \1\Examples of community development loans include, but are not 
    limited to, loans to: borrowers for affordable housing 
    rehabilitation and construction, including construction and 
    permanent financing of multifamily rental property serving low- and 
    moderate-income persons; not-for-profit organizations serving 
    primarily low- and moderate-income housing or other community 
    development needs; borrowers in support of community facilities in 
    low- and moderate-income areas or that are targeted to low- and 
    moderate-income individuals; and financial intermediaries including, 
    but not limited to, Community Development Financial Institutions 
    (CDFIs), Community Development Corporations (CDCs), minority- and 
    women-owned financial institutions, and low-income or community 
    development credit unions that primarily lend or facilitate lending 
    in low- and moderate-income areas or to low- and moderate-income 
    individuals in order to promote community development. Other 
    examples include loans to: local, state, and tribal governments for 
    community development activities; and loans to finance environmental 
    clean-up or redevelopment of an industrial site as part of an effort 
    to revitalize the low- or moderate-income community in which the 
    property is located.
        Community development service. The definition of ``community 
    development service'' has been moved to the definition section of the 
    rule for clarity. The definition has been conformed to the definitions 
    of ``community development loan'' and ``qualified investment'' by 
    removing the reference to ``needs not being met by the private market'' 
    for the reasons described in the discussion of ``community development 
    loan.'' In addition, community development services are required to be 
    related to the provision of financial services. For example, service on 
    the board of directors of an organization that promotes credit 
    availability or affordable housing meets this requirement. Providing 
    technical assistance in the financial services field to community-based 
    groups, local, or tribal government agencies, or intermediaries that 
    help to meet the credit needs of low- and moderate-income individuals 
    or small businesses and farms is also related to the provision of 
    financial services. By contrast, general participation by bank or 
    thrift employees in community activities that do not take advantage of 
    the employee's technical or financial expertise would not qualify. 
    Although an admirable civic contribution, such employee participation 
    is not sufficiently related to the provision of financial services to 
    meet the purposes of CRA. As mentioned in the preamble to the 1994 
    proposal, electronic benefits transfer and point-of-sale terminal 
    systems that are designed to improve access, such as by decreasing 
    costs, for low- or moderate-income individuals would receive favorable 
    consideration.2
    
        \2\Examples of community development services include, among 
    other things: providing technical expertise for not-for-profit, 
    tribal or government organizations serving low- and moderate-income 
    housing needs or economic revitalization and development; lending 
    executives to organizations facilitating affordable housing 
    construction and rehabilitation or development of affordable 
    housing; providing credit counseling, home buyers counseling, home 
    maintenance counseling, and/or financial planning to promote 
    community development and affordable housing; school savings 
    programs; and other financial services the primary purpose of which 
    is community development, such as low-cost or free government check 
    cashing.
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        Consumer loan. The definition of ``consumer loan'' remains 
    substantially the same as in the 1994 proposal. As in the 1994 
    proposal, a consumer loan must be extended to one or more individuals 
    for household, family, or other personal expenditures. However, as 
    proposed in 1994, the definition would have mirrored the definition of 
    consumer loan in the Consolidated Report of Condition and Income (Call 
    Report) or Thrift Financial Report (TFR) in an effort to reduce 
    potential regulatory burden. The Call Report and TFR definitions 
    exclude loans secured by real estate and loans used to purchase or 
    carry securities. Many industry commenters objected to these 
    exclusions. Commenters were particularly concerned that home equity 
    loans that do not fall within the [[Page 22161]] definition of home 
    improvement loans reportable under HMDA would not have been considered 
    consumer loans under the proposed rule. The definition of consumer loan 
    in the final rule no longer uses the definition in the Call Report or 
    TFR. As a result, home equity loans that are not reportable under HMDA 
    are consumer loans if they otherwise meet the definition. However, the 
    agencies have clarified in the final rule that consumer loans do not 
    include home mortgage, small business, or small farm loans. These loans 
    are considered separately under the lending test so treating them also 
    as consumer loans would result in double-counting.
        The final rule contains definitions for five categories of consumer 
    loans: motor vehicle loans, credit card loans, home equity loans, other 
    secured consumer loans, and other unsecured consumer loans. These 
    definitions reflect the fact that the final rule permits an institution 
    to elect evaluation of its consumer lending on a product-by-product 
    basis.
        Home mortgage loan. In the 1994 proposal's definition of ``home 
    mortgage loan,'' the agencies referred to the HMDA and its implementing 
    regulations. Some commenters pointed out that the Board has refined the 
    definition of home mortgage loan in its HMDA regulations (12 CFR Part 
    203). These commenters indicated it would be preferable and, perhaps, 
    less confusing if the agencies referred only to the Board's HMDA 
    regulations, rather than to both the HMDA and the regulations. The 
    agencies have amended the definition of ``home mortgage loan'' in the 
    final rule accordingly. Under the final rule, a home mortgage loan 
    means a ``home improvement loan'' or a ``home purchase loan'' as these 
    terms are defined in 12 CFR Part 203. This definition includes 
    multifamily dwelling loans and refinancings of home improvement and 
    home purchase loans.
        Income level. The income level definitions under the 1994 proposal 
    would have included adjustments to reflect high-cost areas and family 
    size. A number of commenters suggested that, although these adjustments 
    would make the income definitions more accurate, the value of the 
    increased accuracy would be outweighed by the complication and burden 
    associated with the use of adjusted figures. Other commenters pointed 
    out that HMDA disclosure statements, which are used, in part, to 
    evaluate CRA performance, do not employ the adjustments. Some 
    commenters strongly supported the use of adjusted area median income, 
    especially in high-cost communities. However, the flexibility of the 
    performance standards allows examiners to account in their evaluations 
    under the tests for conditions in high-cost communities, such as a 
    shortage of credit for moderate-income persons or areas. In addition, 
    the flexibility in the requirement that community development loans, 
    community development services, and qualified investments have as their 
    ``primary'' purpose community development allows examiners to account 
    for conditions in high-cost areas. Therefore, the definitions of income 
    level in the final rule are based upon area median income without 
    adjustments. In addition, the definition of ``area median income'' for 
    rural areas has been simplified and uses only the statewide non-
    metropolitan median rather than the higher of county median or the 
    statewide figure.
        Limited purpose institution and wholesale institution. A number of 
    industry commenters suggested that ``nonbank banks'' permitted under 
    the Competitive Equality Banking Act (12 U.S.C. 1843(f)) (CEBA banks) 
    should automatically be considered limited purpose institutions. These 
    institutions operate under a variety of different business plans and 
    legal constraints and include retail and wholesale banks, credit card 
    banks, and industrial loan companies. CEBA banks may legally engage in 
    different activities, depending on which activities a particular bank 
    engaged in as of March 1, 1987. A uniform treatment of these 
    institutions is therefore not practicable. The final rule provides the 
    necessary flexibility to assess the CRA performance of these 
    institutions and does not require any institution to engage in 
    proscribed activities. Some of these institutions could be designated 
    as wholesale or limited purpose institutions on a case-by-case basis. 
    Further, the final rule permits the agencies to take into account any 
    legal constraints placed on an institution in assessing performance. As 
    in the case of thrifts, adjustments can be made in the ratings profiles 
    to reflect the legal constraints imposed on the activities of CEBA 
    banks.
        Other commenters requested more guidance on incidental lending 
    activities that wholesale and limited purpose institutions could engage 
    in without losing their special designation. Wholesale institutions may 
    engage in some retail lending without losing their designation if this 
    activity is incidental and done on an accommodation basis. Similarly, a 
    limited purpose institution continues to meet the narrow product line 
    requirement if it provides other types of loans on an infrequent basis.
        Qualified investment. The definition of ``qualified investment'' 
    has been moved to the definition section for clarity and changed to 
    reflect the new definition of ``community development'' and to respond 
    to comments. The agencies have removed the requirement that a qualified 
    investment must address community development needs ``not being met by 
    the private market.'' Instead, in evaluating performance, the agencies 
    will give greater weight to qualified investments that are not 
    routinely provided by private investors.
        The 1994 proposal clearly permitted consideration of investments in 
    organizations that make qualified investments, and the final rule is 
    unmodified in this respect. Some commenters asked that qualified 
    investments be required to benefit low- or moderate-income areas or 
    required to benefit either low- or moderate-income people or areas. The 
    agencies rejected these suggestions for the reasons noted in the 
    discussion of ``community development.''
        The final rule clarifies specific aspects of qualified investments 
    proposed in the 1994 proposal that raised issues in the comments. For 
    example, the explicit reference to investments in credit unions has 
    been removed to clarify that no special treatment for these 
    institutions was intended under the investment test. Deposits and 
    membership shares in any financial institution that otherwise meet the 
    criteria discussed earlier for treatment as a qualified investment 
    qualify under the investment test. In addition, although some comments 
    suggested otherwise, Federal Home Loan Bank stock does not have a 
    sufficient connection to community development to be considered a 
    qualified investment.
        The use of the term ``standard'' mortgage backed securities in the 
    preamble to the 1994 proposal was ambiguous and should be clarified to 
    mean ``untargeted'' mortgage backed securities. Untargeted mortgage 
    backed securities and untargeted municipal bonds are not qualified 
    investments because their primary purpose is not community development. 
    Investments in municipal bonds designed primarily to finance community 
    development generally are qualified investments and need not be 
    housing-related. Housing-related municipal bonds must primarily address 
    affordable housing (including multifamily rental housing) needs in 
    order to qualify.
        The term ``grants'' in the final rule includes in-kind 
    contributions of property to community development organizations. 
    Grants do not automatically have less weight than 
    [[Page 22162]] investments, but the weight accorded a grant is 
    determined under the performance criteria in the investment test.\3\
    
        \3\Examples of qualified investments include, but are not 
    limited to, investments, grants, deposits or shares: in or to 
    financial intermediaries (including, but not limited to CDFIs, CDCs, 
    minority- and women-owned financial institutions, and low-income or 
    community development credit unions) that primarily lend or 
    facilitate lending in low- and moderate-income areas or to low- and 
    moderate-income individuals in order to promote community 
    development, such as a CDFI that promotes economic development on an 
    Indian reservation; in support of organizations engaged in 
    affordable housing rehabilitation and construction, including 
    multifamily rental housing; in support of organizations promoting 
    economic development by financing small businesses, including Small 
    Business Investment Companies (SBICs) and specialized SBICs; to 
    support or develop facilities that promote community development in 
    low- and moderate-income areas for low- and moderate-income 
    individuals, such as day care facilities; in projects eligible for 
    low-income housing tax credits; in state and municipal obligations 
    that specifically support affordable housing or other community 
    development; to not-for-profit organizations serving low- and 
    moderate-income housing or other community development needs, such 
    as home-ownership counseling, home maintenance counseling, credit 
    counseling, and other financial services education; and in or to 
    organizations supporting activities essential to the capacity of 
    low- and moderate-income individuals or geographies to utilize 
    credit or to sustain economic development.
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        Small institution. Under the 1994 proposal, institutions would have 
    been considered small institutions if they had total assets of less 
    than $250 million and were either independent institutions or 
    affiliates of holding companies with less than $250 million in total 
    assets. This definition of ``small institution'' received numerous 
    comments. Industry commenters generally believed that the asset level 
    for holding companies should be raised or eliminated entirely, although 
    some indicated that the $250 million asset level for small institutions 
    would be satisfactory. Some commenters representing institutions with 
    assets below $250 million affiliated with a larger holding company 
    indicated that their institutions typically operated independently from 
    the holding company in complying with CRA obligations. They stated that 
    it would be unfair for them to be evaluated under the assessment tests 
    for a larger institution merely because of their ownership structure. 
    On the other hand, community and consumer groups often commented that 
    small institutions should not be treated differently, or that only 
    institutions with fewer than $50 million in assets should be considered 
    small institutions for purposes of the CRA rule.
        The final rule modifies the definition of ``small institution'' in 
    light of these comments. In the final rule, for any independent 
    institution to be considered a small institution, it must have total 
    assets of less than $250 million. Moreover, an institution with total 
    assets of less than $250 million that is owned by a holding company 
    would be considered a small institution if the total bank and thrift 
    assets of its holding company are less than $1 billion. The agencies 
    were persuaded that some smaller holding companies may be unable to 
    provide support to their subsidiary banks and thrifts for CRA 
    compliance. Larger holding companies have the ability to provide 
    support to their subsidiary banks and thrifts, so small institutions 
    owned by these holding companies will not be unfairly burdened by 
    evaluation under the lending, investment, and service tests used in the 
    assessments of larger institutions. The choice of the $1 billion level 
    reflects the weight of the comments that suggested raising the asset 
    level and the agencies' judgment regarding the size at which a holding 
    company should be expected to support the compliance activities of its 
    bank and thrift subsidiaries. The agencies estimate that this change 
    will add only a limited number of institutions, with average assets of 
    about $100 million, to those eligible under the small bank performance 
    standards.
        Many commenters also asked the agencies to clarify the date on 
    which the determination will be made whether an institution is a small 
    institution. The agencies have amended the definition of ``small 
    institution'' to clarify that an institution will be considered a small 
    institution throughout any calendar year if, as of December 31 of 
    either of the prior two calendar years, the total assets of the 
    institution (and, if applicable, its holding company) fell below the 
    asset limits set out earlier for a small institution. This definition 
    ensures some stability in whether an institution is classified as a 
    small institution and minimizes the chance that an institution's status 
    will change repeatedly from year to year. The definition also ensures 
    that institutions that exceed the asset limits have adequate time to 
    prepare to meet the requirements applicable to larger institutions.
        Small business loan and small farm loan. The agencies made no 
    substantive changes to the definitions of ``small business loan'' and 
    ``small farm loan.'' The final rule cross-references the Call Reports 
    and TFR definitions rather than restating the substance of the 
    definitions as the 1994 proposal would have done. The definitions are 
    based on the size of the loans. Some commenters urged that the 
    definitions be based on the asset size of the business or the farm, as 
    was originally proposed in 1993. The agencies have concluded that, 
    although defining small business and small farm loans by the size of 
    the loan may not be as precise as definitions based on business or farm 
    asset size, following the approach used in the Call Report and TFR will 
    appreciably reduce the burden of compliance for institutions and their 
    borrowers. Also, the Call Report and TFR definitions minimize the need 
    for institutions to collect additional information. The danger of 
    inaccuracy is limited, because loan size roughly correlates with the 
    size of a business or farm borrower. Furthermore, the agencies have 
    retained the proposed requirement that institutions indicate whether a 
    small business or small farm loan is to a business or farm with gross 
    annual revenues of $1 million or less. This requirement will provide 
    additional information to identify loans to small entities.
        Several commenters requested that the agencies clarify whether the 
    definitions of small business and small farm loans include loans made 
    to nonprofit organizations as described in the Internal Revenue Code at 
    26 U.S.C. 501(c)(3). Loans made to nonprofit organizations are included 
    to the same extent they are included under the Call Report and TFR 
    definitions of small business and small farm loans. Loans to nonprofits 
    that are reported as small business or small farm loans cannot also be 
    reported as community development loans, except by wholesale and 
    limited purpose institutions.
    
    Performance Tests, Standards and Ratings in General
    
        Several changes have been made to the section of the 1994 proposal 
    on assessment tests, standards, and ratings. As an initial matter, the 
    terms ``performance tests,'' ``performance standards,'' and 
    ``performance criteria'' have been substituted for the terms 
    ``assessment tests,'' ``assessment standards,'' and ``assessment 
    criteria'' to reflect more accurately the final rule's focus on 
    performance rather than process. The agencies have also changed the 
    term ``assessment context'' to ``performance context'' because the 
    latter term better describes the role of this information in the CRA 
    evaluation process.
        Performance context. An institution's performance under the tests 
    and standards in the rule is judged in the context of information about 
    the institution, its community, its competitors, and its peers. 
    Examiners will consider the following information, as appropriate, in 
    order to assist in [[Page 22163]] understanding the context in which 
    the institution's performance should be evaluated: (1) The economic and 
    demographic characteristics of the assessment area(s); (2) lending, 
    investment, and service opportunities in the assessment area(s); (3) 
    the institution's product offerings and business strategy; (4) the 
    institution's capacity and constraints; (5) the prior performance of 
    the institution and, in appropriate circumstances, the performance of 
    similarly situated institutions; and (6) other relevant information. 
    The final rule clarifies that a proposed strategic plan will also be 
    evaluated in the same context. However, all of the factors described in 
    the performance context would not necessarily apply to each strategic 
    plan. In this regard, the performance of similarly situated lenders 
    would not generally be appropriate for evaluating future goals under a 
    strategic plan.
        Under the 1994 proposal, the assessment context would have included 
    examiner-developed information on the credit needs of an institution's 
    service area. Many commenters interpreted the proposal to mean that the 
    agencies would prepare a detailed needs assessment for each 
    institution's service area(s). Several bank and thrift commenters 
    criticized such a role for the agencies, reasoning that institutions 
    know their communities far better than a regulatory agency, and that 
    agency-prepared assessments would lead to credit allocation. Some 
    community organization commenters, while more supportive of the concept 
    of agency prepared needs assessments, were concerned that the proposal 
    might imply that institutions did not need to make an effort to know 
    their communities' credit needs, but could instead look to the agencies 
    for that determination.
        The agencies did not intend to suggest that an agency-developed 
    needs assessment would prescribe the credit needs an institution must 
    address. Instead, the examiner-developed information on credit needs 
    was intended to help inform the examiner's judgment about the 
    institution's record of performance. Institutions are in the better 
    position to know their communities, and it is neither appropriate nor 
    feasible for the agencies to prepare a detailed assessment of the 
    credit needs of an institution's community. Thus, under the final rule 
    the agencies will analyze the information an institution maintains on 
    the credit needs of its community along with relevant information 
    available from other sources. At the same time, the final rule does not 
    establish a requirement that each institution prepare a ``needs 
    assessment'' to be evaluated by the examiner as urged in some comments 
    provided by financial institutions and community organizations.
        Under the final rule, the agencies will neither prepare a formal 
    assessment of community credit needs nor evaluate an institution on its 
    efforts to ascertain community credit needs. Instead, the agencies will 
    request any information that the institution has developed on lending, 
    investment, and service opportunities in its assessment area(s). The 
    agencies will not expect more information than what the institution 
    normally would develop to prepare a business plan or to identify 
    potential markets and customers, including low- and moderate-income 
    persons and geographies in its assessment area(s). This information 
    from the institution will be considered along with information from 
    community, government, civic and other sources to enable the examiner 
    to gain a working knowledge of the institution's community. In response 
    to comments, the final rule also clarifies that information about 
    lending, investment, and service opportunities in an institution's 
    assessment area will, where appropriate, be obtained from tribal 
    governments, as well as from other sources.
        Statutory limits on investment authority. Several thrift commenters 
    had concerns about the application of the investment test to thrift 
    institutions because of their limited investment authority. Rather than 
    providing a blanket exemption from the investment test, the final rule 
    modifies the ``capacity and constraints'' section of the performance 
    context to clarify that examiners should consider an institution's 
    investment authority in evaluating performance under the investment 
    test. A thrift that has few or no qualified investments may still be 
    considered to be performing adequately under the investment test if, 
    for example, the institution is particularly effective in responding to 
    the community's credit needs through community development lending 
    activities.
        Safety and soundness. The CRA requires the agencies to assess an 
    institution's record of helping to meet the credit needs of its entire 
    community, consistent with the safe and sound operation of the 
    institution. A number of industry commenters were concerned that the 
    1994 proposal would not have stressed the importance of the safety and 
    soundness of an institution's operation to the same extent as the CRA 
    statute or the current regulations. These commenters responded 
    primarily to the omission of a statement in the 1993 proposal that the 
    CRA does not require any institution to make loans or investments that 
    are expected to result in losses or are otherwise inconsistent with 
    safe and sound operations. The agencies did not intend by this omission 
    to encourage unprofitable or otherwise unsafe and unsound practices. 
    The agencies firmly believe that institutions can and should expect 
    lending and investments encouraged by the CRA to be profitable. The 
    final rule explicitly reflects this belief and addresses the importance 
    of safety and soundness considerations in several sections and in the 
    ratings appendix. The agencies assess an institution's record of 
    helping to meet community credit needs with careful attention to the 
    constraints imposed by safety and soundness. As in other areas of bank 
    and thrift operations, unsafe and unsound practices are viewed 
    unfavorably. The ratings appendix specifically states: ``The bank's 
    overall performance, however, must be consistent with safe and sound 
    banking practices. * * *''
        Flexible underwriting approaches. The final rule states that the 
    agencies permit and encourage an institution's use of flexible 
    underwriting approaches to facilitate lending to low- and moderate-
    income individuals and areas, but only if consistent with safe and 
    sound operations. This is consistent with, and clarifies, language in 
    the 1994 proposal. Some commenters urged that the rule expressly 
    identify particular types of areas or borrowers covered by this 
    provision. Mentioning particular types of borrowers or areas in the 
    regulatory text is unnecessary and inconsistent with the principle of 
    evaluating each institution and its community based on their 
    characteristics, capacity, and needs. However, certain borrowers or 
    areas, such as Native Americans residing in Indian country, may face 
    difficulties obtaining credit that could warrant special consideration. 
    The efforts of lenders that utilize innovative or flexible methods, in 
    a safe and sound manner, to address these or other unusual underwriting 
    issues are recognized under the lending test.
    
    The Lending Test
    
        The lending test in the final rule is substantially similar to the 
    1994 proposal. However, there are some significant changes in response 
    to the comments.
        Consideration of originations and purchases. The 1994 proposal 
    would [[Page 22164]] have evaluated home mortgage lending based on HMDA 
    data, which is based on loan originations and purchases. However, the 
    proposal would have required institutions to collect, report, and be 
    evaluated on loans outstanding for other types of loans. The agencies 
    took this approach in an effort to reduce burden on the industry, 
    because institutions must already report loans outstanding on Call 
    Reports and TFRs.
        The vast majority of commenters who addressed this issue (almost 
    exclusively industry commenters) stated that use of originations would 
    provide a substantially more accurate picture of actual lending 
    activity, because current activity would not be obscured by past 
    activity and the data would reflect seasonal variations and sale of 
    loans in the secondary market. Moreover, using originations rewards, 
    rather than penalizes, institutions for selling loans on the secondary 
    market, which frees up capital for additional lending and increases 
    credit availability. The commenters did not support the premise that 
    use of originations would be more burdensome than using loans 
    outstanding. Because institutions would have to collect and report 
    additional information on each loan for CRA purposes, using loans 
    outstanding would not significantly decrease burden. The bulk, if not 
    all, of the burden reduction would be achieved by using the Call Report 
    and TFR definitions. The final rule therefore uses originations and 
    purchases, instead of loans outstanding, for all types of loans.
        Lines of credit are considered originated at the time the line is 
    approved or increased; and an increase is considered a new origination. 
    Generally, the full amount of the credit line (or in the case of an 
    increase in an existing line, the amount of the increase) is the amount 
    that is considered originated. Although some lines of credit may be for 
    both home improvement and other purposes, only the amount that is 
    considered to be for home improvement purposes is reported as a home 
    improvement loan under HMDA. Lines of credit should be considered in 
    assessing an institution's lending activity in all applicable loan 
    types. Therefore, where a portion of a line of credit is reported under 
    HMDA and another portion meets the definition either of a ``small 
    business loan'' or a ``consumer loan,'' the full amount of the line of 
    credit should be reported as a small business loan or collected as a 
    consumer loan, as appropriate, and the agencies will also consider as a 
    home mortgage loan the portion of the credit line that is reported 
    under HMDA.
        The final rule contains an option for lenders also to provide data 
    on loans outstanding, which may, in certain circumstances, enhance an 
    examiner's understanding of an institution's performance. Institutions 
    may also provide for examiner consideration information on letters of 
    credit and commitments, as well as any other loan information. The 
    language of the lending test (and the definition of ``community 
    development loan'') has been adjusted as appropriate to reflect these 
    changes.
        Consumer loan evaluation. Under the 1994 proposal, consumer lending 
    would have been evaluated under the lending test only if an institution 
    elected to have it evaluated and provided the necessary loan data. 
    Thus, the 1994 proposal would have permitted an institution that is 
    primarily a consumer lender not to be evaluated on a substantial 
    portion of its business if it so chose. Under these circumstances, 
    meaningful evaluation of certain institutions might have been very 
    difficult. The final rule, therefore, changes the treatment of consumer 
    lending. Under the rule, if a substantial majority of an institution's 
    business is consumer lending, this lending is evaluated in the lending 
    test. The rule does not impose any reporting requirements for consumer 
    lending, however. If an examiner determines that a substantial portion 
    of an institution's business is consumer lending, and the institution 
    has not elected to provide consumer loan data, the examiner will 
    evaluate consumer lending by analyzing an appropriate sample of the 
    institution's consumer loan portfolio. In addition, this aspect of the 
    final rule does not affect the evaluation of a limited purpose bank, 
    because the bank will be evaluated under the community development 
    test, not the lending test.
        The 1994 proposal would have required that institutions provide 
    information on all consumer loans if they choose to provide information 
    on any consumer loans. The agencies included this requirement because 
    they were concerned that, otherwise, an institution might provide 
    information only on those consumer products that would reflect well on 
    the institution's CRA performance and would choose not to provide 
    information on those products that would reflect poorly.
        Many industry commenters stated that the prospect of reporting all 
    their consumer loan information was so burdensome that they would not 
    report any information. On the other hand, consumer and community 
    groups commented that, if consumer lending is to be considered in CRA 
    at all, consumer loan reporting should be mandatory. After considering 
    these comments, the agencies have decided to permit institutions to 
    provide information on one or more categories (motor vehicle, credit 
    card, home equity, other secured, and other unsecured) of consumer 
    loans.
        Although an institution may have some opportunity to mask poor 
    performance or otherwise inappropriately influence its CRA evaluation 
    through selective provision of data, this opportunity will be limited 
    by the provision in the final rule requiring an institution to maintain 
    data on all loans in the category or categories in which it seeks to be 
    evaluated. For example, if an institution provides information on its 
    credit card lending, it would have to provide information on all its 
    credit card lending, although it need not provide information on its 
    motor vehicle lending. Furthermore, under the final rule, if an 
    institution is a substantial consumer lender, the agencies will 
    evaluate its consumer lending in appropriate categories regardless of 
    whether the institution reports data for those categories.
        Relative weight of different lending categories. The 1994 proposal 
    explicitly stated that home mortgage, small business, and small farm 
    lending (and consumer lending if it was considered) would have been 
    weighted to reflect the relative importance of the categories to the 
    institution's overall business. The proposal also stated that community 
    development lending would have been weighted to reflect the 
    characteristics and needs of an institution's assessment area(s), the 
    capacity and constraints of the institution, and the opportunities 
    available for this lending. Several commenters expressed concern about 
    the lack of certainty in these provisions; some also believed that 
    community development lending would have received excessive weight. 
    However, a fixed formula for the relative weight of different 
    categories would require a determination that some categories of 
    lending are uniformly more important than others, when the appropriate 
    weight depends on the specific institution and its community. The 
    agencies have removed the discussion of the relative weight assigned to 
    different lending categories because examiners will determine the 
    appropriate weight based on the performance context.
        Lending activity criterion. The lending test in the 1994 proposal, 
    unlike the current CRA regulations, did not specifically consider the 
    volume of lending activity--the number and amount of home mortgage, 
    small business, small farm, and consumer loans located in the 
    institution's [[Page 22165]] assessment area(s). Experience under the 
    current regulations has demonstrated that this criterion can be useful 
    in assessing performance. Therefore, based on further internal agency 
    considerations, the final rule contains a lending activity performance 
    criterion. This criterion encourages an institution that does not 
    itself engage in the categories of lending evaluated under the lending 
    test to seek designation as a wholesale or limited purpose institution 
    so that the institution's CRA performance can be evaluated under 
    criteria appropriate to the institution. The criterion also creates a 
    disincentive for institutions to try to influence inappropriately the 
    evaluation of their CRA performance by conducting activities viewed 
    favorably under CRA in the institution and other activities in an 
    affiliate. An institution's performance on the lending activity 
    criterion will be assessed taking into account the information 
    described in the section of the preamble discussing the performance 
    context, including the institution's business strategy regarding the 
    lending conducted by the institution itself and the lending conducted 
    by affiliates.
        Market share analysis. Many commenters, particularly community and 
    consumer groups, suggested that the market share evaluation of the 1993 
    proposal be reinstated or that the agencies substitute an alternative 
    objective ratio to serve as the linchpin for an institution's lending 
    test rating. Other commenters, particularly those representing the 
    industry, opposed using any market share analysis. In the agencies' 
    opinion, the 1994 proposal struck the appropriate balance between 
    objective performance measures and subjective judgments. A single, 
    standardized set of performance evaluation tools is not appropriate 
    because of the variety of institutions and the differences among the 
    communities that they serve. The public evaluation prepared by the 
    agencies will explain the data and analytic tools used to evaluate the 
    institution.
        The geographic distribution of an institution's loans remains a 
    component of the lending test. One element of the geographic 
    distribution analysis, both in the 1994 proposal and in the final rule, 
    is the amount of lending to low-, moderate-, middle- and upper-income 
    geographies. As part of the performance context, examiners would 
    consider, among other considerations described earlier in this 
    preamble, the performance of other similarly-situated lenders. In this 
    regard, examiners would use market share and other analyses to assist 
    in evaluating the geographic distribution of an institution's lending 
    where such analyses would provide accurate insight. However, the final 
    rule does not require examiners to use any single type of analysis, and 
    would not link a particular market share ratio, or any ratio, with a 
    particular lending test rating.
        Proportion of lending within assessment areas. Under the final 
    rule, as under the 1994 proposal, another component of the geographic 
    distribution criterion is the proportion of total loans made in an 
    institution's assessment area(s). Some commenters believed that this 
    criterion is inappropriate; they noted that safety and soundness 
    considerations require an institution to lend to a geographically 
    dispersed area. This criterion is a consideration under the existing 
    CRA rules and has proved over the years to be one useful indicator of 
    the degree to which an institution is focused on serving its local 
    community. Moreover, the agencies believe the criterion encourages an 
    institution to draw its assessment area broadly enough to allow the 
    dispersion of its lending and distribution of its loans among 
    geographies of different income levels. Therefore, the agencies 
    retained the provision unchanged in the final rule.
        Dispersion. The third component of the geographic distribution 
    criterion of the lending test is the dispersion of the institution's 
    lending activity. The 1994 proposal would have assessed the degree of 
    dispersion ``throughout'' an institution's assessment area(s). For 
    clarification, the word ``throughout'' has been changed to ``in'' in 
    the final rule. The agencies will still examine the entire assessment 
    area; however, an institution is not expected to lend evenly throughout 
    or to every geography in its assessment area. Rather, an institution's 
    lending pattern should not exhibit conspicuous gaps that are not 
    adequately explained by the performance context.
        Borrower distribution. The lending test also considers the 
    distribution of an institution's loans among borrowers of different 
    income levels and businesses of different sizes. Favorable 
    consideration is given for loans to low- and moderate-income persons 
    and small businesses and farm loans outside of the institution's 
    assessment area, provided that the institution has adequately served 
    borrowers within its assessment area. The importance of this criterion, 
    particularly in relation to the geographic distribution criterion, will 
    depend on the performance context. For example, borrower distribution 
    may be more important in rural areas or in assessment areas without 
    identifiable geographies of different income categories; geographic 
    distribution may be more important in urban areas and assessment areas 
    with the full range of geographies of different income categories.
        Some commenters recommended that the lending test evaluate an 
    institution's record of lending to different racial and ethnic groups 
    and to women. The final rule does not incorporate this suggestion. The 
    appropriate inquiry regarding service to particular racial or ethnic 
    groups and men and women is whether the institution is operating in a 
    non-discriminatory manner. Therefore, in arriving at an institution's 
    assigned rating, the agencies consider whether there is evidence of 
    discrimination in violation of the Fair Housing Act or Equal Credit 
    Opportunity Act, or evidence of other illegal credit practices.
        Innovative or flexible lending practices. The final rule, like the 
    1994 proposal, assesses an institution's use of innovative or flexible 
    lending practices in a safe and sound manner to address the credit 
    needs of low- and moderate-income individuals or geographies. An 
    innovative practice is one that serves low- and moderate-income 
    creditworthy borrowers in new ways or serves groups of creditworthy 
    borrowers not previously served by the institution. Both innovative 
    practices and flexible practices are favorably considered. Although a 
    practice ceases to be innovative if its use is widespread, it may 
    nonetheless receive consideration if it is a flexible practice. An 
    institution need not provide lending data connected with a practice in 
    order to receive consideration. For example, an examiner could consider 
    an institution's secured credit card program as a flexible lending 
    practice even though the institution has not provided its credit card 
    loan data for evaluation under the other criteria of the lending test.
        Compliance with private commitments. Some commenters suggested 
    that, in the lending test, the agencies should consider the extent to 
    which an institution has fulfilled lending agreements that the 
    institution has made with third parties. The final rule does not 
    incorporate this suggestion. The CRA requires the agencies to assess an 
    institution's record of helping to meet the credit needs of its 
    community, not to enforce privately negotiated agreements. Therefore, 
    an institution's record of fulfilling these types of agreements is not 
    an appropriate CRA performance criterion.
        Affiliate lending. The 1994 proposal would have permitted 
    consideration of affiliate lending at an institution's option or if the 
    agency determined that [[Page 22166]] the affiliate's activity is 
    integral to the institution's business. Many industry commenters 
    opposed consideration of affiliate lending except at the institution's 
    option on the ground that consideration without the institution's 
    consent may be equivalent to extending CRA coverage to affiliates that 
    may not be subject to the statute. Some community and consumer groups 
    supported consideration of affiliate activity and urged that the 
    regulatory language be strengthened to require the agencies to take 
    affiliate lending into account under certain circumstances. In the 
    final rule, affiliate lending is considered only at the election of the 
    institution, except with regard to the lending activity criterion, 
    where, as described earlier, it will provide context for the assessment 
    in order to discourage an institution from inappropriately influencing 
    an evaluation of its CRA performance by conducting activities that 
    would be viewed unfavorably in an affiliate. The agencies also received 
    comments that the phrase ``integral to the institution's business'' in 
    the proposal was unclear. The final rule does not use this phrase.
        The other limitations on consideration of affiliate lending 
    contained in the 1994 proposal have been retained in the final rule. 
    However, the limitation against double-counting of loans has been 
    modified to clarify that an institution can count as a purchase a loan 
    originated by an affiliate, or count as an origination a loan sold to 
    an affiliate, provided the same loans are not sold several times to 
    inflate their value for CRA purposes.
        The agencies have added language to the final rule to clarify that 
    affiliate lending is not considered in evaluating the proportion of 
    total lending made within an institution's assessment area(s). The 
    agencies also wish to clarify that if an institution elects to have the 
    lending activities of its affiliates considered in the evaluation of 
    the institution's lending, the geographies served by the affiliate's 
    lending activities do not affect the institution's delineation of 
    assessment area(s).
        Furthermore, the final rule would not change the existing 
    supervisory authority of the agencies over institutions and their 
    affiliates. Therefore, although lending by affiliates may be treated as 
    lending by an institution, this treatment for CRA purposes will not 
    permit a regulatory agency to examine any institution or its affiliate 
    if it does not otherwise have such authority.
        Direct and indirect lending. Many consumer and community groups 
    expressed concern that the 1994 proposal did not adequately emphasize 
    direct lending by the institution as compared to indirect lending 
    carried out through consortia and third parties. Other commenters, 
    particularly from the industry, urged a return to the provisions of the 
    1993 proposal that would have treated direct and indirect lending as 
    interchangeable. The final rule clarifies that loans originated or 
    purchased by third parties and consortia in which an institution 
    participates or invests may only be considered if they qualify as 
    community development loans and may only be considered under the 
    community development lending criterion. Indirect loans will not affect 
    an institution's performance under the other four lending test 
    criteria. Under the final rule, direct lending performance is an 
    essential element of an institution's CRA performance.
        Some commenters requested clarification whether an institution is 
    required to participate directly in making or funding each loan that is 
    made through a consortium or third party in order for the loan to be 
    considered under the community development lending criterion of the 
    lending test. An institution need not directly participate in the 
    making or funding of consortia- and third party-loans for the loans to 
    be considered (subject to the constraints set out in the rule) under 
    the community development lending criterion, provided the loans meet 
    the definition of community development loan. Loans originated directly 
    on the books of the institution or purchased by the institution are 
    considered to have been made directly by the institution, even if the 
    institution originated or purchased the loans as a result of its 
    participation in a loan consortium.
    
    Investment Test
    
        The 1994 proposal would have focused on the dollar amount of an 
    institution's qualified investments, the innovativeness and complexity 
    of the qualified investments and their responsiveness to the credit and 
    economic development needs of the community. The 1994 proposal also 
    would have clarified that the investment test considers all qualified 
    investments benefitting a broader statewide or regional area that 
    included an institution's assessment area. Most of the comments on the 
    investment test concerned the definition of qualified investment and 
    have been discussed earlier in the preamble.
        Limited investment authority. One group of commenters representing 
    institutions with statutory constraints on their authority to make this 
    type of investment maintained that reliance on an investment test in 
    assigning a CRA rating could unfairly stigmatize their CRA performance. 
    As previously discussed, the final rule has modified the performance 
    context for CRA evaluations to account for financial institutions with 
    limited investment authority. These modifications would permit an 
    institution with limited authority to make investments to receive a low 
    satisfactory rating under the investment test, although it has made few 
    or no qualified investments, if the institution has a strong lending 
    record, thereby preventing potential anomalies in the CRA performance 
    ratings.
        Disposition of branch premises. To implement the statutory 
    requirement in 12 U.S.C. 2907(a), the final rule specifies that a 
    donation, sale on favorable terms or rent-free occupancy of a branch 
    (in whole or in part) in a predominantly minority neighborhood to any 
    minority- or women-owned depository institution is a qualifying 
    investment. Similar disposition of branch premises to a financial 
    institution with a primary mission of promoting community development 
    is also a qualified investment.
    Service Test
    
        Compared to the 1993 proposal, the service test in the 1994 
    proposal would have reduced the significance in the CRA performance 
    evaluation of an institution's full service, ``brick and mortar'' 
    branch structure by elevating the consideration given to alternative 
    systems for delivering retail banking services (e.g., ATMs, mobile 
    branches, loan production offices, or banking-by-telephone or banking-
    by-computer). In this regard, the provision of retail banking services 
    would have been evaluated on the basis of an institution's: (1) 
    Distribution of branches and ATMs among low-, moderate-, middle-, and 
    upper-income areas; (2) record of opening and closing branches and 
    ATMs; (3) range of services to low-, moderate-, middle-, and upper-
    income areas; and (4) efforts to make alternative delivery systems 
    responsive to the needs of low- and moderate-income areas and 
    individuals. In addition, the extent to which an institution provided 
    innovative and responsive community development services would also 
    have been considered under the service test. The final rule retains the 
    essential structure and elements of the test as proposed but makes some 
    modifications.
        Relative weight of branches and alternative delivery systems. The 
    overwhelming majority of community and consumer group commenters stated 
    [[Page 22167]] that the 1994 proposal placed too little emphasis on the 
    location of an institution's full service branches in evaluating 
    performance under the service test. Many of those commenters also were 
    concerned that the proposed service test would have erroneously equated 
    ATMs with full service branches. On the other hand, several industry 
    commenters commended the proposal's recognition that full service 
    branches should not be the determining factor under the service test as 
    consistent with the trend in the industry toward the use of alternative 
    service delivery systems.
        The final rule responds to these issues by adjusting the balance of 
    the service performance evaluation in favor of full-service branches 
    while still considering alternative systems. In this regard, references 
    to ATMs in the criteria for evaluating the distribution of an 
    institution's branches have been removed, and conforming changes have 
    been made in the ratings appendix. These changes signify a recognition 
    that convenient access to full-service branches within a community is 
    an important factor in determining the availability of credit and non-
    credit services. The focus of the service test, however, remains on an 
    institution's current distribution of branches, and the test does not 
    require an institution to expand its branch network or operate 
    unprofitable branches.
        The final rule emphasizes that alternative systems for delivering 
    retail banking services, such as ATMs, are to be considered only to the 
    extent that they are effective alternatives in providing needed 
    services to low- and moderate-income areas and individuals. 
    Furthermore, network ATMs owned by other institutions do not receive 
    the same consideration in an institution's evaluation as ATMs owned by 
    or operated exclusively for that institution.
        An institution's branches and other service delivery systems need 
    not be accessible to every part of an institution's assessment area. 
    However, the service delivery systems should not exhibit conspicuous 
    gaps in accessibility, particularly to low- or moderate-income areas or 
    individuals, unless the gaps are adequately explained by the 
    performance context.
        Other issues. The final rule conforms the community development 
    services component of the service test to that of the investment test 
    by giving consideration to community development services that benefit 
    a broader statewide or regional area encompassing an institution's 
    assessment area.
        Some of the specific suggestions in the comments were not 
    implemented in the final rule. For example, the rule does not require 
    institutions to provide basic banking services or low-cost checking 
    accounts, because the CRA permits institutions substantial leeway to 
    determine the specific policies and programs that help meet credit 
    needs in their communities. In addition, the final rule does not 
    evaluate the effectiveness of service performance on the basis of 
    deposit growth. This measurement is not clearly related to helping to 
    meet the credit needs of the community and could necessitate burdensome 
    coding of deposit accounts on a geographic basis. Finally, debit cards 
    are not a retail credit delivery system, and therefore the agencies 
    have not included debit cards in the list of examples of alternative 
    delivery systems for retail services.
    
    Community Development Test
    
        The performance of wholesale and limited purpose institutions would 
    have been evaluated in the 1994 proposal separately under the community 
    development test. This test would have focused on the record of these 
    institutions in helping to meet credit needs through community 
    development lending, qualified investments, and community development 
    services. The 1994 proposal also would have required wholesale or 
    limited purpose institutions to serve a designated local area and would 
    have placed limits on consideration of activities outside this 
    designated area. The final rule maintains the community development 
    test with some changes.
        Request for designation as a wholesale or limited purpose 
    institution. In response to comments on the 1994 proposal, the final 
    rule provides more detail on the process by which an institution is 
    designated wholesale or limited purpose. An institution that seeks 
    designation as wholesale or limited purpose must file a request in 
    writing at least three months prior to the proposed effective date of 
    the designation. If the designation is approved, it remains in effect 
    until the institution requests revocation of the designation or until 
    one year after the agency notifies the institution that the agency has 
    revoked the designation on its own initiative. Thus, once an 
    institution has received a designation, the institution need not 
    reapply before each CRA examination.
        Benefit to assessment area. Many commenters, including both 
    industry and some community group commenters, maintained that the 
    limitations placed on considering out-of-assessment area activities 
    were too restrictive and did not account for the broader business 
    strategies and operations of wholesale and limited purpose 
    institutions, which often serve communities on a nationwide basis.
        The final rule removes the specific limitation that community 
    development activities outside an institution's assessment area be 
    considered only up to the amount of activities within the institution's 
    assessment area. Under the final rule, the agencies consider all 
    activities that benefit the institution's assessment area(s) or a 
    broader statewide or regional area that includes the assessment 
    area(s). In addition, other activities receive full consideration as 
    long as the institution has adequately addressed the needs of its 
    assessment area.
        Technical changes and clarifications. The final rule clarifies that 
    investments in third party community development organizations may be 
    treated either as qualified investments or as community development 
    loans (with the institution receiving credit for a pro rata share of 
    the loans made by the third party, at the institution's option). In 
    addition, the agencies note that a wholesale or limited purpose 
    institution need not engage in all three categories of activities 
    considered under the community development test but can perform well 
    under the test by engaging in one or more of these categories. 
    Technical changes have also been made to conform with the 
    modifications, previously discussed, to the definition of community 
    development loans, the definitions of wholesale and limited purpose 
    institutions, and the focus of lending performance assessments on 
    originations and purchases rather than loans outstanding.
    
    Small Institution Performance Standards
    
        The small institution performance standards have been retained in 
    the final rule essentially as proposed in 1994, except for the change 
    in the eligibility threshold described earlier. As a technical matter, 
    the final rule has been changed to clarify that an institution that was 
    a small institution as of the end of the prior calendar year is 
    examined as a small institution.
        Many commenters, predominantly representing community organizations 
    but also including some larger institutions, stated that the 
    streamlined approach would amount to a de facto exemption from CRA for 
    small institutions. Other commenters, predominantly representing the 
    industry, supported the proposal for streamlined examinations and an 
    exemption from new data collection and [[Page 22168]] reporting. Many 
    commenters representing the industry stated that data collection may 
    place a greater relative burden on smaller institutions than larger 
    institutions due to limitations in staff and financial resources. After 
    considering the comments, the agencies have decided not to change 
    materially the smaller institution performance standards. Examinations 
    of small banks and thrifts will be streamlined and will not require the 
    periodic reporting of new data. Examinations will be meaningful and 
    will not be implemented as de facto exemptions.
        Performance criteria. The 1994 proposal provided that to determine 
    whether a small institution's CRA record is satisfactory, the agencies 
    would consider the institution's loan-to-deposit ratio, adjusted for 
    seasonal variation and, as appropriate, other lending-related 
    activities, such as loan originations for sale to the secondary 
    markets, community development loans or qualified investments. This 
    provision of the 1994 proposal responded to concerns following the 1993 
    proposal that institutions that package and sell their loans would be 
    disadvantaged when compared to portfolio lenders by a strict loan-to-
    deposit ratio test. This provision of the 1994 proposal has been 
    retained in the final rule. Evaluations will also take into account the 
    institution's size, financial condition, and the credit needs of its 
    assessment area.
        The final rule also requires consideration of the proportion of the 
    institution's total lending made to borrowers in its assessment area. 
    The agencies will take into account local lending and investment 
    opportunities in assessing this criterion.
        In addition, the agencies will evaluate the distribution of loans 
    and lending-related activities among individuals of different income 
    levels and businesses and farms of different sizes. Where appropriate, 
    the agencies will also evaluate the geographic distribution of loans in 
    the institution's assessment area, including low- and moderate-income 
    geographies. Contrary to the concerns expressed by some commenters, 
    however, a small institution is not expected to lend evenly throughout 
    its service area; rather, loan distribution will be evaluated within 
    the context of an institution's capacity to lend, local economic 
    conditions, and lending opportunities in the assessment area.
        The agencies also will evaluate whether an institution has taken 
    appropriate action, as warranted, in response to written complaints 
    about the institution's performance in helping to meet the credit needs 
    of its assessment area(s). Some commenters suggested that complaints 
    resolved satisfactorily for the complainant not be considered in the 
    evaluation. The agencies will consider those complaints, but their 
    satisfactory resolution will be a favorable element in an evaluation. 
    Other commenters expressed concern that the agencies might not 
    adequately consider bona fide complaints from community members. 
    However, the agencies intend to consider all CRA complaints in the 
    course of an examination. Therefore, this criterion is retained in the 
    final rule as proposed.
        Elements of outstanding performance. Some commenters requested a 
    clarification of the circumstances under which a small institution 
    could earn an ``outstanding'' rating. Others urged that some 
    flexibility be provided to consider a range of activities that enhance 
    credit availability and promote community development. Under the final 
    rule, in addition to determining whether an institution has exceeded 
    some or all of the standards for a satisfactory rating, the agencies 
    will consider a small institution's investment and service performance 
    based on the broad range of investment and service activities discussed 
    in the rule for other institutions.
    
    Strategic Plan
    
        The provisions of the strategic plan in the 1994 proposal have been 
    adopted largely as proposed, with some changes.
        The 1994 proposal provided that, as an alternative to being rated 
    under the lending, service, and investment tests, or the small 
    institution performance standards, a bank or thrift could submit to its 
    supervisory agency for approval a strategic plan developed with 
    community input detailing how the institution proposed to meet its CRA 
    obligation. The 1994 proposal made clear that an institution would not 
    be assessed under a plan unless the plan had been approved by its 
    supervisory agency. To facilitate examinations of institutions with 
    approved plans, the final rule clarifies that an institution is only 
    evaluated under a plan if the plan is in effect and if the institution 
    has operated under an approved plan (although not necessarily the 
    particular plan currently in effect) for at least one year. Affiliates 
    may prepare joint plans. The final rule permits activities to be 
    allocated among affiliated institutions at the institutions' option, 
    provided that the same activities are not considered for more than one 
    institution. This change was made in response to comments requesting 
    greater flexibility and increased opportunities for affiliated 
    institutions sharing the same assessment area(s) to work together to 
    help meet the credit needs of their communities and, in particular, in 
    low- and moderate-income areas.
        Public participation. The final rule retains the public 
    participation provisions in the 1994 proposal. The final rule requires 
    an institution informally to seek suggestions from the public while 
    developing a plan. Once the institution has developed a plan, it must 
    publish notice of the plan and solicit written public comment for at 
    least 30 days. In order to avoid unduly lengthening the plan approval 
    process, the final rule does not extend the minimum comment period. 
    After the comment period, the institution shall submit the plan to its 
    regulator, along with any written comments received. If the plan was 
    revised in light of the comments received, the institution shall also 
    submit the plan in the form released for public comment. The agencies 
    have added in the final rule a requirement that an institution submit 
    with its plan a description of its informal efforts to seek suggestions 
    from members of the public. As under the 1994 proposal, the final rule 
    states that a plan will be approved if the agency fails to act on it 
    within 60 days after submission, unless the agency extends the review 
    period for good cause.
        Because of the importance of constructive community involvement in 
    the plan process, the agencies have not changed in the final rule the 
    amount of public participation required. Requiring an institution to 
    seek informal suggestions in formulating a plan, and then to solicit 
    formal comment before submitting a plan to the agency, encourages 
    consultation between an institution and its community, including local 
    government, community leaders, the public and tribal governments. There 
    is no need for a further comment period after the institution submits 
    its proposed plan to the agency because such a comment period could 
    undermine the direct communication and consultation between an 
    institution and its community that is most beneficial to the process.
        Several comments appeared to misunderstand why the strategic plan 
    provides for comment from the public. The strategic plan option 
    provides institutions an opportunity to tailor their CRA objectives to 
    the needs of their community and their capacity and expertise. Several 
    industry comments were concerned that under the strategic plan option, 
    community organizations would play an inappropriate role in an 
    [[Page 22169]] institution's operations. However, the purpose of the 
    consultation is for the institution to develop the fullest possible 
    information about the needs of its community and how these needs might 
    be met. The institution nevertheless makes all decisions regarding how 
    it plans to help meet those needs. In reviewing the public 
    participation, the agencies will not consider whether community 
    organizations unanimously support the plan, but whether the institution 
    made an appropriate investigation to determine the needs of its 
    community, and whether the goals of the plan serve those needs.
        As a technical clarification, the final rule provides that an 
    institution may impose a reasonable charge for copying or mailing a 
    plan but may not charge for reviewing the plan.
        Assessment of performance under the plan. Under the final rule, as 
    under the 1994 proposal, the agencies will generally rate an 
    institution's performance under an approved plan solely in relation to 
    goals set out in the plan. An institution has the option, however, to 
    elect in its plan to be subject to the standard tests should it fail to 
    meet substantially its ``satisfactory'' goals under the plan. The final 
    rule makes this election clear. An institution operating under an 
    approved plan would, during the period of the plan, not be subject to 
    assessment under the standard tests, unless the institution so chose. 
    In considering whether an institution has substantially met plan goals, 
    an agency will give consideration to circumstances beyond the 
    institution's control, such as economic conditions, that have affected 
    its ability to perform.
        Confidential information. A number of industry commenters indicated 
    that the possibility of public disclosure of confidential information 
    presented a major disincentive to their use of the strategic plan 
    alternative. In response to similar comments on the 1993 proposal, the 
    1994 proposal would have permitted institutions to submit additional 
    information to the relevant agency on a confidential basis. The final 
    rule includes this provision, which adequately addresses 
    confidentiality concerns.
        Data collection and reporting responsibilities. Despite industry 
    comments to the contrary, the final rule provides that approval of a 
    plan does not affect an institution's data collection responsibilities. 
    These data are useful to the agencies in assessing overall lending in 
    communities, and would also be of value to the public. Since the 
    institution's plan will be in its public file, the public will have the 
    appropriate context in which to evaluate the lending data.
    
    Assigned Ratings
    
        In the final rule, as under the 1994 proposal, an institution will 
    be assigned one of the four assigned ratings required by the statute: 
    ``outstanding,'' ``satisfactory,'' ``needs to improve,'' or 
    ``substantial noncompliance.'' (12 U.S.C. 2906(b)(2)) For institutions 
    that are evaluated under the community development test for wholesale 
    or limited purpose institutions, the small institution performance 
    standards, or an approved strategic plan, the rating on these tests 
    will be the institution's assigned rating with adjustment for any 
    evidence of discrimination. Retail institutions that are evaluated 
    under the lending, investment and service tests will be assigned a 
    rating based upon the assigned rating principles and the matrix that 
    implements these principles, also with adjustment for any evidence of 
    discrimination.
        Ratings principles and matrix. A number of comments discussed the 
    principles and methodology by which an assigned rating would be given 
    to retail institutions evaluated under the lending, investment and 
    service tests. The 1994 proposal set forth five principles that 
    governed the assignment of this rating. The methodology for calculating 
    the assigned rating was described in Appendix A. The proposal would 
    have required that an institution's rating on the lending test count 
    for at least 50 percent of its assigned rating. Furthermore, an 
    institution would have been required to achieve a ``satisfactory'' 
    rating on the lending test in order to receive an assigned rating of 
    ``satisfactory.'' In addition, the 1994 proposal would have allowed 
    investment and service performance to raise a institution's assigned 
    rating if it had earned at least a ``satisfactory'' rating on the 
    lending test. Poor performance on either the investment or service test 
    also could have negatively affected an institution's assigned rating. 
    The proposal would have required the agencies to adjust ratings for all 
    institutions, regardless of which test the agencies used to evaluate 
    their performance, to take into consideration evidence of 
    discriminatory or other illegal credit practices. Finally, an 
    institution that otherwise would have received a ``needs to improve'' 
    rating would have been rated as ``substantial noncompliance'' if it 
    received no better than a ``needs to improve'' rating on each of its 
    two previous examinations.
        Commenters generally supported the 1994 proposal's emphasis on 
    lending performance, but a number were concerned about several 
    apparently anomalous ratings that would have resulted from applying the 
    rating principles and the matrix in the appendix. Several commenters, 
    particularly community groups, were concerned that an institution could 
    receive an assigned rating of ``satisfactory'' even if it received a 
    rating of ``substantial noncompliance'' on both the investment and 
    service tests, if its rating on the lending test was at least a ``high 
    satisfactory.'' In addition, an institution with a rating of 
    ``substantial noncompliance'' on either the service or investment test 
    could get an ``outstanding'' composite rating if its rating on the 
    lending and the third test was ``outstanding.'' These commenters 
    suggested revising the rating principles and matrix to avoid these 
    anomalous results.
        After considering the comments, the agencies have revised the final 
    rule to eliminate these anomalies. The agencies eliminated the 
    principle that an ``outstanding'' rating on the lending test and either 
    the service or investment test would mean an ``outstanding'' assigned 
    rating even if the rating on the third test was ``substantial 
    noncompliance.'' The agencies also eliminated the principle that an 
    institution's rating on the lending test would count for at least 50 
    percent of its assigned rating. This change does not alter the 
    agencies' emphasis on the primacy of lending when evaluating CRA 
    performance, because no institution may receive an assigned rating of 
    ``satisfactory'' unless it receives a rating of at least ``low 
    satisfactory'' on the lending test.
        In light of the comments, the matrix that sets forth the 
    methodology for aggregating an institution's scores on the lending, 
    service and investment tests to arrive at an assigned rating has also 
    been revised. The number of points to be given for each rating on the 
    lending, service and investment tests remains unchanged as shown in the 
    following table.
    
                                                                                                                    
    [[Page 22170]]
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
             Component test ratings            Lending   Service  Investment
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Outstanding.............................        12         6          6 
    High Satisfactory.......................         9         4          4 
    Low Satisfactory........................         6         3          3 
    Needs to Improve........................         3         1          1 
    Substantial Noncompliance...............         0         0          0 
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
      The number of points needed to achieve each of the four composite 
    assigned ratings has been modified slightly, as shown in the following 
    table, to remove the anomalies discussed earlier.
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                    Points                     Composite assigned rating    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    20 or over...........................  Outstanding.                     
    11 through 19........................  Satisfactory.                    
    5 through 10.........................  Needs to Improve.                
    0 through 4..........................  Substantial Noncompliance.       
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        To ensure that an institution does not receive an assigned rating 
    of ``satisfactory'' unless it receives a rating of at least ``low 
    satisfactory'' on the lending test, an institution's assigned rating 
    will be calculated using three times the lending test score if the 
    institution's point total exceeds three times the lending test score.
        The agencies have removed the matrix from Appendix A. This change 
    will allow the agencies some flexibility in adjusting the matrix to 
    prevent any other unintended anomalies that may be found during the 
    examination process. If the agencies change the matrix in the future, 
    the new matrix will be published for information, but not necessarily 
    for comment, in the Federal Register.
        Automatic downgrade of third ``needs to improve'' rating. The 
    agencies have also removed the requirement that an institution's CRA 
    rating be downgraded automatically from ``needs to improve'' to 
    ``substantial noncompliance'' if it received no better than a ``needs 
    to improve'' rating on each of its two previous examinations. Even 
    though the automatic downgrading has been eliminated in the final rule, 
    the agencies will consider an institution's past performance in its 
    overall evaluation. If the poor performance continues, an institution 
    could be rated ``substantial noncompliance'' if prior ratings were 
    ``needs to improve'' and the institution has not made efforts to 
    improve its performance.
        Weight of service test. Some consumer groups urged that an 
    institution be required to get at least a ``low satisfactory'' on the 
    service test in order to get an assigned rating of ``satisfactory'' or 
    better. The agencies considered this suggestion, but decided that 
    because the CRA's focus is on helping to meet a community's credit 
    needs, it would be inappropriate to impose this requirement. However, 
    the changes to the ratings principles and matrix increase the weight of 
    both the service and investment tests.
        High satisfactory and low satisfactory ratings. Some commenters 
    found confusing the use of a ``high'' and ``low'' satisfactory rating 
    on the lending, service and investment tests and only a 
    ``satisfactory'' on the assigned rating. Because a wide range of 
    performance may be rated as satisfactory, the agencies decided to keep 
    the five ratings on the underlying tests, even though the assigned 
    ratings are limited to the four statutory ratings. This will permit the 
    agencies, banks and thrifts, and their customers to recognize the 
    stronger performances on the lending, investment, and service tests of 
    those institutions that are doing a very good, but not quite 
    outstanding, job of helping to meet the credit needs of their 
    communities.
    Effect of CRA Performance on Applications
    
        The CRA requires the agencies to consider an institution's CRA 
    performance record when considering an application by the institution 
    to establish a deposit facility. The statute defines applications for a 
    deposit facility as including applications for a Federal financial 
    institution charter or FDIC deposit insurance, applications to 
    establish or relocate a branch or home office, and applications for 
    mergers, consolidations, or the purchase of assets or assumption of 
    liabilities of a regulated financial institution. The 1994 proposal 
    provided that in considering an institution's application for a deposit 
    facility, the agencies would consider the institution's CRA performance 
    and take into account any views expressed by interested parties 
    submitted in accordance with the applicable agency's rules and 
    procedures. The proposal also stated that an institution's record of 
    CRA performance could provide a basis for approving, denying, or 
    conditioning approval of an application.
        A number of comments from financial institutions asked the agencies 
    to create a ``safe harbor'' from CRA protests for banks with good CRA 
    ratings that apply to establish a deposit facility. Some commenters 
    suggested that a ``safe harbor'' would provide an incentive to achieve 
    an outstanding rating. Community and consumer groups, on the other 
    hand, opposed any sort of safe harbor from CRA protests.
        The agencies have consistently recognized that materials relating 
    to CRA performance received during the applications process can and do 
    provide relevant and valuable information. The agencies also continue 
    to believe, as provided in the Interagency Policy Statement Regarding 
    the Community Reinvestment Act, that information from an examination is 
    a particularly important consideration in the applications process 
    because it represents the on-site evaluation of an institution's CRA 
    performance by its primary Federal regulator. The final rule implements 
    without change the balance given in the 1994 proposal between CRA 
    performance ratings and material information presented through public 
    comment in the applications process.
        The agencies noted in the preamble to the 1993 proposal that the 
    frequency with which the agencies will examine an institution will 
    depend in part on its record of performance. A similar discussion was 
    inadvertently omitted from the 1994 proposal. Examination frequency 
    will be based, in part, on an institution's record of performance. This 
    policy combines an efficient use of agency resources with an incentive 
    for good performance.
    
    Assessment Area Delineation
    
        As a result of numerous comments received on this issue, the final 
    rule makes several changes to the definition of service area in the 
    1994 proposal.
        Assessment area. The CRA requires the agencies to assess an 
    institution's record of helping to meet the credit needs of its local 
    community. The assessment area as defined in the final rule represents 
    the community within which the agencies assess an institution's record 
    of CRA performance.
        As noted earlier in the preamble, in the final rule, the term 
    ``assessment area'' replaces the term ``service area,'' which was used 
    in the 1993 and 1994 proposals. The agencies believe the term 
    ``assessment area'' more accurately [[Page 22171]] describes the 
    geographic area within which the specific performance criteria in the 
    rule will be assessed. Based on the continuing criticisms of the 
    ``delineated community'' in the current regulation and the ``service 
    area'' in both the 1993 and 1994 proposals, the agencies have decided 
    to place a different emphasis on the institution's specific delineation 
    and the methods used by the institution to establish that delineation. 
    The agencies do not expect that, simply because a census tract or block 
    numbering area is within an institution's assessment area, the 
    institution must lend to that census tract or block numbering area. The 
    capacity and constraints of the institution, its business decisions 
    about how it can best help to meet the needs of its assessment area, 
    including those of low- and moderate-income neighborhoods, and other 
    aspects of the performance context, would be relevant to explain why 
    the institution is not serving portions of the assessment area(s).
        The rule also clarifies that an institution's delineation of its 
    assessment area(s) is not separately evaluated as an aspect of CRA 
    performance, although the delineation will be reviewed for compliance 
    with the assessment area requirements of the rule. If, for example, an 
    institution delineated the entire county in which it is located as its 
    assessment area but could have delineated its assessment area as only a 
    portion of the county, it will not be penalized for lending only in 
    that portion of the county, so long as that portion does not reflect 
    illegal discrimination or arbitrarily exclude low- or moderate-income 
    geographies.
        Assessment area boundaries. The 1994 proposal would have prohibited 
    a financial institution, other than a wholesale or limited purpose 
    institution, from delineating a service area that extends substantially 
    across boundaries of a metropolitan statistical area (MSA) or state 
    boundaries, unless the service area was located in a multistate MSA. 
    Further, the proposal would have prohibited an institution's service 
    area from reflecting illegal discrimination or arbitrarily excluding 
    low- and moderate-income geographies (taking into account the 
    institution's size and financial condition).
        The final rule states that an institution shall not delineate an 
    assessment area extending substantially across the boundaries of a 
    consolidated metropolitan statistical area (CMSA). An institution shall 
    delineate separate assessment areas for the areas inside and outside 
    the CMSA and for different CMSAs. The 1994 proposal expressed these 
    limitations in terms of MSAs rather than CMSAs. The change in the final 
    rule has been made to address a technical shortcoming in the 1994 
    proposal, but does not change its substance. The final rule retains the 
    provision from both the 1993 and 1994 proposals that an assessment area 
    not extend substantially across state boundaries unless the assessment 
    area is located in a multistate MSA. The final rule applies these 
    limitations to wholesale and limited purpose institutions as well as 
    other institutions because of changes made to the community development 
    test.
        To simplify the process of delineating an assessment area, the 
    final rule encourages institutions to establish assessment area 
    boundaries that coincide with the boundaries of one or more MSAs or one 
    or more contiguous political subdivisions, such as counties, cities, or 
    towns. An institution is permitted, but is not required, to adjust the 
    boundaries of its assessment area(s) so as to include only the portion 
    of a political subdivision it reasonably can be expected to serve. This 
    provision gives institutions some flexibility in their delineations, 
    particularly in the case of an area that would otherwise be extremely 
    large, of unusual configuration, or divided by significant geographic 
    barriers. As with the 1994 proposal, however, such adjustments may not 
    arbitrarily exclude low- and moderate-income geographies from the 
    institution's assessment area(s). For purposes of assessment area 
    delineation, an institution should use the MSA and CMSA boundaries in 
    effect on January 1 of the calendar year in which the institution is 
    making the delineation.
        Equidistance principle. The 1994 proposal would have adopted the 
    effective lending territory principle from the current regulations in 
    slightly modified form. The 1994 proposal would have explicitly linked 
    an institution's CRA obligations to the areas around its branches and 
    deposit-taking ATMs, rather than its other non-deposit taking offices. 
    The service area delineated by the institution would have had to 
    include all geographies around its branches in which the institution 
    originated or had outstanding during the previous year a significant 
    number and amount of home mortgage, small business and small farm, and 
    consumer loans and any other geographies equidistant from its branches 
    and deposit-taking ATMs.
        The final rule eliminates the equidistance principle as a required 
    part of the delineation of an assessment area. This change provides 
    institutions greater flexibility in their delineations. Several 
    commenters suggested that, in certain circumstances, the equidistance 
    requirement could be inappropriate, because institutions do not 
    routinely serve areas that are uniformly equidistant from their 
    deposit-taking offices. The final rule retains the requirement that an 
    assessment area not arbitrarily exclude low- or moderate-income 
    geographies.
        Wholesale and limited purpose institutions. The final rule requires 
    that the assessment area(s) for a wholesale or limited purpose 
    institution must generally consist of one or more MSAs or one or more 
    contiguous political subdivisions in which the institution has its main 
    office, branches, and deposit-taking ATMs. This requirement is 
    substantively consistent with the 1994 proposed delineation of service 
    area for wholesale and limited purpose institutions, but the final rule 
    differs from the 1994 proposal in two ways. First, the final rule 
    specifies that the assessment area must generally consist of one or 
    more MSAs or contiguous political subdivisions; the 1994 proposal would 
    have required the institution to delineate ``an area or areas around 
    its offices.'' Second, the assessment area has been modified to conform 
    to changes made to the scope of the community development test. The 
    community development test permits consideration of community 
    development activities that are outside of an institution's assessment 
    area, but that are in a broader statewide or regional area that 
    includes the institution's assessment area. As a result, an institution 
    need not delineate a statewide or regional, rather than local, 
    assessment area in order to receive consideration for these activities.
        Use of assessment area. In response to comments indicating concern 
    that examiners might modify the area delineated by the institution, the 
    final rule explicitly provides that the agencies will use the 
    assessment area delineated by the institution, unless they determine 
    that the assessment area does not comply with the requirements for 
    assessment areas set forth in the final rule. If the assessment area 
    fails to comply with the rule's requirements, the examiner will 
    designate an area that does comply and will use that area in evaluating 
    the institution's performance.
        Technical changes and clarifications. The final rule includes other 
    technical changes to provide clarification. For example, some 
    commenters interpreted the use of the phrase ``significant number and 
    amount of loans'' in the 1994 proposal to have a different meaning than 
    the phrase ``substantial portion of its loans'' in the current 
    [[Page 22172]] regulations. The agencies did not intend a different 
    meaning and have used the wording from the current regulations in the 
    final rule. In addition, changes in the final rule reflect the rule's 
    shift in focus from loans outstanding to originations and the different 
    circumstances under which the lending test considers consumer loans.
    
    Data Collection and Reporting
    
        In the final rule, the agencies continued their efforts to 
    streamline data collection and reporting requirements in response to 
    comments concerning potential burden. The final rule simplifies data 
    requirements and eliminates Appendix C.
        Application of data collection provisions to small institutions and 
    wholesale and limited purpose institutions. The 1994 proposal would not 
    have applied small business and farm loan and community development 
    loan data requirements to small institutions. Some commenters 
    criticized the exemption from data collection and reporting 
    requirements for small institutions because only a subset of data would 
    actually be collected, restricting the regulators' ability accurately 
    to assess the overall performance of institutions in helping to meet 
    credit needs. These commenters stated that the benefits of collecting 
    the data across the industry outweighed the associated burden. However, 
    the burden on small institutions would be significant and the benefit 
    less than the commenters assert. Therefore, the final rule does not 
    subject a small institution to additional data collection and reporting 
    requirements. The volume of originations of loans other than home 
    mortgage loans in a small institution will generally be small enough 
    that an examiner can view a substantial sampling of loans without 
    advance collection and reporting of information by the institution. In 
    addition, although small institutions are large in number, they have a 
    relatively small percentage of the total assets of the industry.
        An institution that was a small institution during the prior 
    calendar year but is no longer a small institution would be subject to 
    data collection and maintenance requirements but not data reporting 
    requirements. The data reporting requirements do not apply because the 
    institution would not have collected the data to report. The 
    institution would be subject to data reporting requirements in the year 
    following the first year for which it was required to collect data, 
    provided the institution does not qualify as a small institution at the 
    time the data must be reported.
        The 1994 proposal would have required large wholesale and limited 
    purpose institutions to collect and report data. Some commenters urged 
    that wholesale and limited purpose institutions be exempt from data 
    collection and reporting. The final rule does not include an exemption. 
    The data are necessary for the agencies to determine whether the 
    institutions initially qualify and continue to remain qualified for 
    treatment as wholesale or limited purpose institutions. The data also 
    will be helpful in understanding the context in which the performance 
    of other institutions should be evaluated.
        Collection and reporting of originations and purchases rather than 
    loans outstanding. For the reasons stated in the discussion of the 
    lending test earlier in the preamble, the final rule requires reporting 
    of and evaluation based on originations and purchases for all 
    categories of loans. Institutions still have the option to provide data 
    on loans outstanding, which examiners would consider to round out the 
    picture of lending performance.
        Community development loan reporting. The community development 
    loan reporting provisions in the final rule have been modified to 
    reflect the decision to rely on originations and purchases. 
    Institutions, except small institutions and institutions that were 
    small institutions during the prior calendar year, are required to 
    report to their primary regulator annually on March 1 the aggregate 
    number and aggregate amount of community development loans originated 
    and purchased during the prior calendar year. The agencies will include 
    this information in the CRA Disclosure Statements that they prepare for 
    each institution, and which an institution shall place in its public 
    file within three days of receipt.
        Some commenters requested reporting and disclosure of more detailed 
    information on community development loans, including a breakdown by 
    location and purpose of the loan. The agencies did not adopt these 
    suggestions because the additional burden would outweigh the potential 
    usefulness of more specific data. In assessing an institution's 
    performance under the lending or community development test, examiners 
    will review actual community development loan files to determine the 
    complexity and innovativeness of the loans and their responsiveness to 
    credit and community development needs. Examiners will discuss the 
    community development loans reviewed in the public portion of the 
    institution's CRA performance evaluation. The discussion will include 
    the nature and location (if relevant) of the activities supported by 
    the loans reviewed.
        Consumer loan collection and maintenance. In the final rule, as in 
    the 1994 proposal, data collection and maintenance are optional for 
    consumer loans, and there are no reporting requirements. As described 
    in the discussion of the lending test earlier in the preamble, an 
    institution may provide data on one or more categories of consumer 
    loans, such as motor vehicle loans, and not on others. However, if an 
    institution provides data for any loan in a category, it is required to 
    provide data for all loans in the category. For each loan category for 
    which an institution elects to provide data, the data must include for 
    each loan in the category originated or purchased since the last CRA 
    examination: (1) the amount at origination or purchase, (2) the loan 
    location, and (3) the gross annual income of the borrower that the 
    institution considered in making the credit decision. If the 
    institution does not consider income in making an underwriting 
    decision, it need not collect income information. Further, if the 
    institution routinely collects, but does not verify, a borrower's 
    income when making a credit decision, it need not verify the income for 
    purposes of data maintenance. The location of the loan must be 
    maintained by census tract or block numbering area.
        Reporting of loan information outside assessment areas and outside 
    MSAs. Some commenters asked that institutions not be required to report 
    small business and small farm loans located outside their assessment 
    areas or outside MSAs. The agencies have not made this change in the 
    final rule. The data on lending in rural areas provide important 
    information on how well institutions are serving rural communities 
    where they have branches. The data are also necessary for the lending 
    test assessment criterion that evaluates the degree to which an 
    institution's lending is inside its assessment area. Finally, the 
    lending data provide information that assists examiners in 
    understanding the context in which the performance of other 
    institutions should be evaluated. The commenters that opposed reporting 
    of small business and small farm loans outside their assessment areas 
    or outside MSAs also generally opposed the proposed change to require 
    institutions that are not small institutions and are subject to HMDA to 
    report the location of applications and originations of home mortgage 
    loans outside the MSAs in which the [[Page 22173]] institutions have 
    offices. The agencies have adopted the proposed change despite these 
    objections for the same reasons that the agencies did not change the 
    final rule for collecting of small business and small farm loans 
    outside MSAs or assessment areas. Conforming amendments to Regulation C 
    (HMDA) have been adopted by the Board.
        Race and gender information on small business borrower not 
    required. The 1994 proposal would have required each institution, other 
    than a small institution, to collect and report data on the race and 
    gender of small business and small farm borrowers. This provision, 
    which was the most frequently addressed issue in the comments, was 
    proposed in order to support the fair lending component of the CRA 
    assessment. The agencies have removed this proposed requirement from 
    the final rule.
        Many commenters, including virtually every community or consumer 
    group that addressed the issue, supported the provision. These 
    commenters believed that the information was critical to determine 
    whether discrimination was occurring in small business and small farm 
    lending. The commenters noted the value of HMDA data on race and gender 
    in monitoring home mortgage lending. Nearly every industry comment 
    opposed the collection as proposed. These commenters stated that the 
    requirement was burdensome and the data, as proposed to be collected 
    and reported, would be of limited utility. They asserted that reporting 
    institutions would be at a competitive disadvantage because small 
    institutions and non-financial institution lenders not only would not 
    be required to collect and report the information but actually would be 
    prohibited from doing so (because of the Board's Regulation B, 
    implementing the Equal Credit Opportunity Act). Some commenters also 
    questioned the relevance of the race and gender data to CRA. A few 
    industry commenters endorsed collection of race and gender data, 
    provided it was done through Regulation B. A larger number opposed 
    collection, but believed that, if the agencies concluded the data were 
    necessary, collection should be required under Regulation B.
        The agencies have removed the proposed requirement from the final 
    rule. Although the agencies believe that fair lending performance is 
    directly relevant to CRA performance, they recognize the anomaly of 
    requiring some institutions to collect and report information that 
    other lenders are prohibited from collecting. Therefore, they believe 
    that it is more appropriate to address the issue of race and gender 
    data in fair lending regulations that apply equally to all lenders.
        Small business data collection, maintenance, and reporting 
    generally. In response to industry comments regarding the burden 
    associated with the small business and small farm loan data 
    requirements, the final rule streamlines the data collection, 
    maintenance and reporting. The agencies have replaced loan-by-loan 
    reporting using loan registers with aggregate reporting by census 
    tract.
        The 1994 proposal would have required lenders to indicate whether 
    small business borrowers had gross annual revenues $1 million or less. 
    Some commenters suggested that the requirement be eliminated because 
    they believed it was burdensome and unnecessary. The final rule retains 
    the requirement. The burden of collecting this information is minimal, 
    because $1 million is already used in the Board's Regulation B as a 
    threshold for certain requirements related to adverse action 
    notifications and record retention. Therefore, many institutions 
    already have a reason to track business and farm loans based on this 
    revenue figure.
        The information on the revenue size of business and farm borrowers 
    is useful because, in combination with loan amount information, it will 
    enable the agencies to make accurate judgments about the size of 
    businesses and farms receiving reported loans. Some commenters 
    questioned whether an institution should report the revenue of the 
    entity to which the loan is actually extended or of its parent 
    corporation if the entity is a subsidiary. An institution should report 
    the revenues that the institution considered in making its credit 
    decision.
        Some commenters asked that the agencies require collection and 
    reporting of data on applications and denials. The agencies did not 
    adopt this suggestion. The small business lending process is generally 
    far less formal than the consumer or home mortgage lending process. 
    Sometimes institutions do not require written applications for small 
    business loans; when they do, applications often come after potential 
    problems have been addressed in informal discussions. Because the 
    agencies do not believe information on applications and denials would 
    be particularly helpful, the final rule does not require collection or 
    reporting of information on small business and small farm applications 
    and denials. Instead, institutions are required to report all small 
    business and small farm loans that they originate or purchase.
        Under the final rule, each covered institution is required to 
    collect and maintain in a standardized, machine readable format the 
    following information on each small business loan originated or 
    purchased since the prior CRA examination: (1) amount at origination; 
    (2) location; and (3) an indicator whether the loan was to a business 
    with $1 million or less in gross annual revenues. The location of the 
    loan must be maintained by census tract or block numbering area.
        Each covered institution is required to report in machine-readable 
    form annually on March 1 the following information, aggregated for each 
    census tract/block numbering area in which the institution made at 
    least one small business or small farm loan during the prior calendar 
    year: (1) number and amount of loans with original amounts of $100,000 
    or less; (2) number and amount of loans with original amounts of more 
    than $100,000 but less than or equal to $250,000; (3) number and amount 
    of loans with original amounts of more than $250,000; and (4) number 
    and amount of loans to businesses and farms with gross annual revenues 
    of $1 million or less (using the revenues the institution considered in 
    making its credit decision).
        Need for data collection and reporting. Some commenters continued 
    to question the validity and propriety of any data collection and 
    reporting for larger institutions. As discussed earlier, the agencies 
    have significantly reduced the data collection and reporting from that 
    originally proposed, and where feasible the rule relies on existing 
    data collections. However, the rule continues to provide for some 
    additional data collection and reporting by larger institutions. In a 
    performance-based CRA process, these requirements are necessary to 
    permit the agencies to carry out their statutory obligation to examine 
    and assess institutions' CRA records and to prepare the public sections 
    of CRA performance evaluations. The emphasis on actual performance 
    responds to the nearly universal criticism that current CRA 
    examinations rely too heavily on documentation of an institution's 
    policies, procedures and community contacts rather than lending. While 
    the agencies recognize that the collection of data regarding lending 
    activity will impose burden on many institutions, the final rule has 
    been tailored to rely primarily on data readily available to or already 
    collected by institutions in order to minimize the collection burden. 
    In addition, the burden of collecting actual loan performance data will 
    be offset somewhat by the elimination of requirements under the current 
    CRA [[Page 22174]] evaluation scheme that institutions document 
    policies, procedures, and CRA contacts. Finally, the agencies will 
    prescribe a standardized format for data maintenance and reporting and 
    make available software to facilitate data maintenance and reporting.
        Disclosure of small business and small farm loan data. Under the 
    1994 proposal, every large institution would have been required to 
    include in its public file the following information on small business 
    loans: (1) the number and amount of loans in low-, moderate-, middle- 
    and upper-income census tracts; (2) a list of each census tract with at 
    least one loan; (3) the number and amount of loans inside the 
    institution's service areas and outside the institution's service 
    areas; (4) the number and amount of loans to businesses with gross 
    annual revenues of $1 million or less; (5) the number and amount of 
    loans to minority-owned businesses; and (6) the number and amount of 
    loans to women-owned businesses. The proposal did not provide that the 
    agencies would make any aggregate data available to the public.
        The vast majority of consumer and community group commenters 
    maintained that the public disclosure provisions of the 1994 proposal 
    were not sufficient. They asked that small business loan data be made 
    available to the public in a HMDA-like format for individual 
    institutions and in aggregated form. They asked that, at a minimum, 
    data be available to the public on an aggregate and institution-by-
    institution basis by individual census tract, including for each census 
    tract the number and volume of loans. Otherwise, the public would not 
    be able to judge how an institution is performing in one low-income 
    neighborhood as compared to another and, without incurring unreasonable 
    cost, would not be able to compare the performance of one institution 
    with the performance of another. The commenters also expressed concern 
    about the agencies' using certain data to evaluate institutions but not 
    making the data available to the public. Industry commenters generally 
    opposed detailed data collection and reporting requirements as 
    burdensome.
        Census tract-by-census tract information provides the most detailed 
    information to the public. However, some commenters were concerned that 
    disclosure at this level for each institution might invade the privacy 
    of small business and small farm borrowers, could reveal protected 
    business information, might erroneously signal an expectation that an 
    institution lend in each census tract in its assessment area(s), and 
    might lead to misinterpretation of the data.
        Based on these considerations, under the final rule, the agencies, 
    rather than the institutions, will prepare disclosure statements in 
    order to reduce burden on the industry. The agencies will prepare 
    annually individual CRA Disclosure Statements for each reporting 
    institution and aggregate disclosure statements for each MSA and the 
    non-MSA portion of each state. The agencies will make both the 
    individual and the aggregate disclosure statements available to the 
    public at central depositories.
        The aggregate disclosure statements will indicate, for each 
    geography, the number and amount of small business and small farm loans 
    originated or purchased by all reporting institutions, except that the 
    agencies may adjust the form of the disclosure if necessary, because of 
    special circumstances, to protect the privacy of a borrower or the 
    competitive position of an institution.
        The disclosure statements for the individual institutions will be 
    prepared on a state-by-state basis and will contain for each county 
    (and each assessment area smaller than a county) with a population of 
    500,000 or fewer in which the institution reported a small business or 
    small farm loan: (1) The number and amount of small business and small 
    farm loans located in low-, moderate-, middle-, and upper-income census 
    tracts or block numbering areas; (2) a list of each census tract or 
    block numbering area in the county or assessment area grouped according 
    to whether the geography is low-, moderate-, middle-, or upper income; 
    (3) a list of each census tract or block numbering area in which the 
    institution reported a small business or small farm loan; and (4) the 
    number and amount of small business and small farm loans to businesses 
    and farms with gross annual revenues of $1 million or less. For each 
    county (and each assessment area smaller than a county) with a 
    population greater than 500,000, the number and amount of small 
    business and small farm loans will be provided for geographies grouped 
    according to whether the median income of the geography relative to the 
    area median income is less than 10 percent, 10 or more but less than 20 
    percent, 20 or more but less than 30 percent, 30 or more but less than 
    40 percent, 40 or more but less than 50 percent, 50 or more but less 
    than 60 percent, 60 or more but less than 70 percent, 70 or more but 
    less than 80 percent, 80 or more but less than 90 percent, 90 or more 
    but less than 100 percent, 100 or more but less than 110 percent, 110 
    or more but less than 120 percent, or 120 percent or more.
        The disclosure statements will also contain information on the 
    number and amount of loans inside each and outside any assessment area 
    of the institution and the institution's community development loan 
    information. The disclosure statements will include affiliate lending 
    if the institution reported the affiliate lending for consideration in 
    its assessment.
        An institution itself no longer has to prepare information on small 
    business and small farm lending or community development lending to 
    place in its public file. Instead, each institution is required to put 
    its CRA Disclosure Statement in its public file within three days of 
    receipt of the statement from its regulator.
        List of geographies in assessment area and map of each assessment 
    area. The 1994 proposal also would have required each institution to 
    report (and include in its public file) a list of the geographies the 
    institution considers to be within its assessment area and a map of 
    each assessment area showing its geographies. Several industry comments 
    suggested that this requirement was overly burdensome and that either a 
    map or a list of the geographies in the assessment area(s) be reported 
    but not both. Under the final rule, institutions would only report the 
    list of geographies in each assessment area, and small institutions or 
    institutions that were small during the prior calendar year would not 
    have to report at all. In addition, the agencies have changed the 
    reporting date to March 1 to provide a uniform date for reporting of 
    information required under the final rule.
        All institutions would still have to include a map of each 
    assessment area in the public file because the agencies believe a list 
    of census tract numbers is likely not to be useful to many members of 
    the public. To reduce burden, the final rule clarifies that the map 
    itself need not show the geographies. The geographies may be identified 
    on the map; alternatively, if the institution provides a separate list 
    of the geographies contained in the area, the map may need to show only 
    the boundaries of the area.
    
    Public File
    
        Other aspects of the public file requirements have also been 
    amended to provide more clarity and to respond to the criticism that 
    the requirements in the 1994 proposal were burdensome.
        List of branches, ATMs, and services. The 1994 proposal would have 
    required the public file to include a list of the 
    [[Page 22175]] institution's branches and ATMs, their street addresses, 
    and geographies; a list of branches and ATMs opened or closed by the 
    institution during the current and each of the prior two calendar 
    years, their street addresses, and geographies; and a list of services 
    offered at the institution's branches and ATMs. Many industry 
    commenters stated that these requirements were extremely burdensome, 
    particularly the list of services offered at the branches. Much of this 
    information is central to the institution's performance under the 
    service test, and the public should have access to it. The final rule 
    therefore retains the requirement that the public file include a list 
    of services offered at the branches as well as the requirement that the 
    file include a list of the branches, their street addresses, and 
    geographies and a list of branches opened and closed during the current 
    and prior two calendar years.
        However, the final rule does not require institutions to list ATMs 
    by street address or geography. Nor does the final rule require that 
    institutions provide a list of ATMs that have been opened or closed in 
    the current or prior two years. This change reduces burden on an 
    institution in trying to keep the public file current because ATMs may 
    be opened and closed more frequently than branches. This change is also 
    consistent with other changes that clarify that the agencies do not 
    consider ATMs as equivalent to branches in providing services to the 
    community.
        Small business, small farm, consumer, and community development 
    loan data. The 1994 proposal would have required institutions that were 
    not small institutions (and small institutions that elected to be 
    evaluated under the lending, investment, and service tests) to include 
    data collected or reported to the agencies for each of the prior two 
    calendar years in their public file. The 1994 proposal would not have 
    required public disclosure of data if it might reasonably be expected 
    to disclose the identity of the borrower because of the small number of 
    loans made in particular geographies or to particular groups of 
    borrowers.
        Institutions will no longer have to compile information on small 
    business, small farm, and community development loans for inclusion in 
    their public files. As described earlier, the information regarding 
    these loans that continues to be relevant under the final rule will be 
    contained in the institution's CRA Disclosure Statement prepared by the 
    agencies.
        Institutions that elect to have any portion of their consumer 
    lending portfolios considered under the lending test will be required 
    to provide in the public file information on the number and amount of 
    consumer loans to
    low-, moderate-, middle- and upper-income borrowers and census tracts, 
    as well as information on the number and amount of consumer loans 
    located both inside and outside of the institution's assessment area.
        The final rule also removes the exception to providing data in the 
    public file that might reasonably be expected to disclose the identity 
    of the borrower. Because of changes to data disclosure in the final 
    rule, the agencies believe that a privacy exception is not necessary 
    for the individual CRA Disclosure Statements. As described earlier, the 
    agencies will take privacy concerns into account in preparing aggregate 
    disclosure statements.
        Inclusion of comments received. The 1994 proposal would have 
    required an institution to include in the public file all signed, 
    written comments that it received from the public for the past two 
    years. A few industry commenters did not perceive a need to keep 
    correspondence related to complaints that have been satisfactorily 
    resolved. The agencies have not made a change in response to these 
    comments because, as discussed earlier, satisfactorily resolved 
    comments are relevant to assessment of the institution's performance. 
    The final rule removes the requirement that written comments be signed 
    in order to be included in the public file, because all written 
    comments should be considered even if the commenter wishes to remain 
    anonymous. Of course, the response appropriate to a comment may well 
    vary depending on whether the commenter has provided his or her name.
        Loan-to-deposit ratio for small institutions. The 1994 proposal 
    would have required small institutions to include in the public file 
    their loan-to-deposit ratios computed at the end of the most recent 
    calendar year. Many small institutions requested that the public file 
    requirement for loan-to-deposit ratio information be expanded to 
    include loan-to-deposit ratios for each quarter, or alternatively, that 
    an annual average loan-to-deposit ratio be placed in the file in order 
    to better convey seasonal fluctuations in lending to the public. In 
    accordance with the comments, the final rule requires a small 
    institution to place annually in the public file the loan-to-deposit 
    ratio at the end of each quarter of the prior calendar year.
        Public file location and number of copies. The 1994 proposal would 
    have required that institutions maintain a complete copy of the public 
    file at the home office. At least one branch office in each assessment 
    area would have been required to have the HMDA Disclosure Statement and 
    any materials from the public file relating to that assessment area 
    available to the public. In addition, if a request for the public file 
    was made at a branch office that did not maintain the file, the 
    institution would have been required to make a complete copy of the 
    file for that assessment area available for review at the branch within 
    five days at no cost. An institution could have imposed reasonable 
    copying and mailing charges if a member of the public requested copies 
    of information in the file.
        Industry commenters maintained that the requirement to keep 
    multiple copies of the public file was extremely burdensome, 
    particularly given the large amount of information in the file. These 
    commenters suggested that only one public file should be required.
        Under the final rule, an institution need maintain only one copy of 
    its public file in each state in which it has its main office or a 
    branch. The final rule provides that each institution shall make 
    available to the public for inspection upon request and at no cost the 
    information in the file at the main office and, if the institution is 
    an interstate institution, at one branch office in each state. At each 
    branch, an institution shall provide its public evaluation and a list 
    of services provided at the branch. The institution shall also make all 
    information in the public file relating to the assessment area in which 
    the branch is located available for review at the branch within five 
    calendar days of a request to review the file. These changes reduce the 
    burden associated with the maintenance of public files at a branch in 
    each assessment area while making it easier for the public to access 
    the file at any branch. They also reflect the statutory provisions of 
    the IBEA requiring separate written evaluations for each state in which 
    an interstate institution operates.
        Additional clarifications. Some commenters requested the agencies 
    to specify a date on which the public file information should be 
    updated. The final rule provides that the public file be updated as of 
    April 1 of each year unless the rule specifies another time for a 
    particular element, such as the CRA Disclosure Statement. The final 
    rule also clarifies that contents of the public file can be 
    supplemented with any other information the institution deems 
    appropriate. The final rule further clarifies that lending data 
    contained in the public file relate to lending not only by the 
    institution, but [[Page 22176]] also its affiliates, if the lending by 
    affiliates is considered in the assessment of the institution.
    
    Transition
    
        The 1994 proposal would have established a transition period from 
    July 1, 1995, to July 1, 1996. Institutions subject to data collection 
    and reporting requirements would have been required to begin collecting 
    home mortgage, small business, and consumer loan data on July 1, 1995. 
    Assessments under the proposed standards would have begun July 1, 1996. 
    However, small institutions would have had the opportunity to be 
    examined, at their option, under the small institution assessment 
    method anytime after July 1, 1995. Anytime on or after July 1, 1995, an 
    institution could have elected to submit for approval a strategic plan, 
    and examinations under approved strategic plans would have begun July 
    1, 1996.
        Many industry commenters requested that the transition period be 
    lengthened to provide institutions with more time to develop procedures 
    for satisfying the data collection requirements. Also, some of these 
    commenters recommended against implementing the data collection 
    requirements on July 1, because they believed that data collected for a 
    half year would not be useful. Moreover, some industry commenters asked 
    that data collection begin on January 1, to fall in line with other 
    materials that are maintained on a calendar-year basis.
        In light of these comments and the fact that the implementation 
    dates set forth in the 1994 proposal reflected anticipated publication 
    of the final rule in January 1995, the data collection requirements set 
    forth in the final rule will become effective January 1, 1996. The 
    reporting requirements will become effective January 1, 1997. 
    Evaluations under the lending, investment, service, and community 
    development tests will begin July 1, 1997, in order to allow the 
    agencies to use the newly reported data. However, evaluations under the 
    small bank performance standards, which do not utilize new data, will 
    begin January 1, 1996. In addition, beginning January 1, 1996, any 
    institution may submit a strategic plan for approval or elect to be 
    examined under the revised performance tests, if the institution 
    provides the necessary data.
        An institution that elects evaluation under the lending, 
    investment, and service tests before July 1, 1997, must provide, in 
    machine readable form, data on small business and small farm loans and 
    community development loans for the twelve month period preceding the 
    examination. The institution must also provide, in machine readable 
    form, the location of home mortgage loans located outside MSAs in which 
    the institution has an office (or outside any MSA) for that period. If 
    the institution elects evaluation of any category of consumer loans, 
    the institution must also provide consumer loan data, in machine 
    readable form, for that category for that period. An institution that 
    seeks evaluation under the community development test must apply for 
    designation as a wholesale or limited purpose bank three months prior 
    to its examination and must provide data on community development loans 
    for the twelve months prior to the examination. All institutions 
    evaluated under the revised tests and standards or under an approved 
    strategic plan before July 1, 1997, must delineate their assessment 
    areas in accordance with the provisions of the final rule.
    
    CRA Notice
    
        The 1994 proposal would have made minor changes to the notice 
    requirements set forth in the 1993 proposal. The term ``head office'' 
    was changed to ``main office'' for clarity. Within the notice, the 
    statement of what is included in the CRA performance file would have 
    been expanded to describe more accurately the contents of the file. The 
    final rule makes additional changes to reflect changes in the public 
    file provisions.
    
    Multiple Assessment Areas
    
        The 1994 proposal did not address how institutions with multiple 
    assessment areas would be examined or how performance in different 
    assessment areas would affect the overall rating. The agencies received 
    comments expressing a broad range of opinions regarding the examination 
    treatment and assessment of institutions with multiple assessment 
    areas. Several community group commenters stated that ``sampling'' 
    among assessment areas was unacceptable, while an industry organization 
    suggested an elaborate sampling procedure. Other commenters proposed 
    that certain assessment area characteristics, such as the percentage of 
    the institution's deposits or assets in the assessment area, should 
    determine the weight that performance in that assessment area should 
    have on the overall rating of the institution. Other commenters were 
    concerned that such proposals could mean that rural assessment areas 
    would not be given appropriate consideration in the examination 
    process.
        The agencies continue to believe that the examination treatment of 
    multiple assessment areas is best left for examination procedures, 
    rather than stated in regulatory text. Whether an institution has one 
    assessment area or several, the examiner must have an adequate factual 
    basis on which to assess an institution's record of performance, and 
    the overall rating must be fair and appropriate. These objectives do 
    not necessarily require that an agency examine an institution's 
    performance in every assessment area in the same way or that the rule 
    state how performance in different assessment areas is aggregated. Just 
    as a single mathematical calculation cannot determine performance in an 
    assessment area, so the appropriate treatment of multiple assessment 
    areas cannot be reduced to a formula.
        The agencies note that the IBEA amended the provisions of the CRA 
    regarding written evaluations, and the examination procedures will be 
    consistent with those requirements.
    
    Written Evaluations
    
        Although the 1994 proposal did not directly address the content of 
    the written performance evaluations required by the CRA statute, some 
    commenters did. These commenters focused on whether the agencies would 
    disclose an institution's ratings on the lending, investment, and 
    service tests to the institution and to the public.
        The agencies jointly will issue guidelines for the contents and 
    disclosure of written evaluations prepared under the final rule, and 
    these guidelines will implement the IBEA amendments regarding written 
    evaluations. To address the issue raised in the comments, the agencies 
    envision that these guidelines will provide that an institution's 
    ratings on the different tests in the rule be disclosed both to the 
    institution and, as part of the public section of the written 
    evaluation, to the public. A guiding principle of the CRA reform effort 
    has been to clarify for all concerned the basis for an institution's 
    rating, and the disclosure of ratings will provide essential 
    information regarding the assessment of an institution's performance. 
    Contrary to the claim raised in some comments, neither the use of five 
    ratings, nor the disclosure of those ratings to the public, conflicts 
    with the statutory mandate that the agencies use four ratings in 
    assessing the overall performance of an institution.
    
    Appeals
    
        Many commenters requested that the agencies establish an 
    interagency appeals process. The final rule does not adopt this 
    suggestion. Each agency has a process under which an institution 
    [[Page 22177]] can appeal its CRA rating. The agencies have recently 
    reviewed and modified, as necessary, their appeals processes pursuant 
    to the Community Development and Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994. In 
    light of the recent review, the agencies do not believe that it is 
    necessary to adopt an interagency appeals process in the final rule.
    
    Additional Interagency Initiatives
    
        In addition to this rulemaking, the agencies will work together to 
    improve training for examiners, to increase interagency efforts to 
    apply standards consistently and reliably, and to minimize unnecessary 
    compliance burden. These efforts will focus on producing a CRA 
    assessment process that imposes fewer burdens on institutions yet 
    yields better results for the local communities in which they are 
    chartered to do business.
        The agencies have also agreed to conduct a full review of the final 
    rule in the year 2002, five years after the rule is fully implemented. 
    This review will be conducted to determine whether the rule has been 
    effective in achieving the goals of the final rule, including 
    emphasizing performance rather than process, promoting consistency in 
    evaluations, and eliminating unnecessary burden. Any regulatory changes 
    that are determined to be necessary to improve the rule's effectiveness 
    will be made at that time.
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        OCC: The collections of information contained in this final rule 
    have been reviewed and approved by the Office of Management and Budget 
    in accordance with the requirements of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 
    1980 (44 U.S.C. 3504(h)) under control number 1557-0160.
        The estimated annual burden per respondent varies, depending on 
    individual circumstances, from 2 hours for a small bank required to 
    perform only recordkeeping, to 280 hours for a large bank required to 
    perform all elements in part 25, with an estimated average burden of 
    18.5 hours.
        The collections of information in this final rule are in 12 CFR 
    25.25, 25.27, 25.29, 25.41, 25.42, and 25.43.
        Comments concerning the accuracy of this burden estimate and 
    suggestions for reducing this burden should be directed to Legislative 
    and Regulatory Activities Division, Attention: 1557-0160, Office of the 
    Comptroller of the Currency, 250 E Street, SW., Washington, DC 20219, 
    and to the Office of Management and Budget, Paperwork Reduction Project 
    (1557-0160), Washington, DC 20503.
        Board: In accordance with section 3507 of the Paperwork Reduction 
    Act of 1980 (44 U.S.C. Ch. 35; 5 CFR 1320.13), the proposed information 
    collection was reviewed by the Board under the authority delegated to 
    the Board by the Office of Management and Budget after consideration of 
    the comments received during the public comment period.
        The collections of information in this rule are in 12 CFR 228.25, 
    228.27, 228.41, 228.42, and 228.43. This information is required to 
    evidence the efforts of State member banks in helping to meet the 
    credit needs of their entire communities, including low- and moderate-
    income areas. This information will be used to assess State member bank 
    performance in satisfying the credit needs of their communities and in 
    evaluating certain applications.
        The estimated annual burden per respondent/recordkeeper varies from 
    2 to 280 hours, depending on individual circumstances, with an 
    estimated average of 17 hours. There will be an estimated 969 
    recordkeepers, averaging 16 hours. Among those will be an estimated 274 
    respondents, responsible for an additional average of 4 hours of 
    reporting burden. These estimates include a prediction that five 
    percent of respondents/recordkeepers will keep or submit optional data.
        Comments concerning the accuracy of this burden estimate and 
    suggestions for reducing this burden should be directed to Secretary, 
    Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 20th and C Streets, 
    NW., Washington, DC 20551; and to the Office of Management and Budget, 
    Paperwork Reduction Project (7100-0247), Washington, DC 20503.
        FDIC: The collections of information contained in this final rule 
    have been reviewed and approved by the Office of Management and Budget 
    in accordance with the requirements of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 
    1980 (44 U.S.C. 3504(h)) under control number 3064-0092.
        The estimated annual burden per respondent varies, depending on 
    individual circumstances, from 2 hours for a small bank required to 
    perform only recordkeeping, to 280 hours for a large bank required to 
    perform all elements in part 345, with an estimated average burden of 
    12 hours.
        The collections of information in this final rule are in 12 CFR 
    345.25, 345.27, 345.29, 345.41, 345.42, and 345.43.
        Comments concerning the accuracy of this burden estimate and 
    suggestions for reducing this burden should be directed to the Office 
    of Management and Budget, Paperwork Reduction Project (3604-0092), 
    Washington, DC 20503, with copies of such comments to be sent to Steven 
    F. Hanft, Office of the Executive Secretary, room F-453, Federal 
    Deposit Insurance Corporation, 550 17th Street, NW., Washington, DC 
    20429.
        OTS: The collections of information contained in this final rule 
    have been reviewed and approved by the Office of Management and Budget 
    in accordance with the requirements of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 
    1980 (44 U.S.C. 3504(h)) under control number 1550-0012.
        The estimated annual burden per respondent varies, depending on 
    individual circumstances, from 2 hours for a small savings association 
    required to perform only recordkeeping, to 214 hours for a large 
    savings association required to perform all elements in part 563e, with 
    an estimated average burden of 16 hours.
        The collections of information in this final rule are in 12 CFR 
    563e.25, 563e.27, 563e.29, 563e.41, 563e.42, and 563e.43.
        Comments concerning the accuracy of this burden estimate and 
    suggestions for reducing this burden should be directed to the Office 
    of Management and Budget, Paperwork Reduction Project (1550-0012), 
    Washington, DC 20503, with copies to the Office of Thrift Supervision, 
    1700 G Street, NW., Washington, DC 20552.
    
    Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
        The agencies concluded that the 1994 proposal, if adopted as a 
    final rule, would not have a significant economic impact on a 
    substantial number of small banks and thrifts and invited comment on 
    this determination. In response to comments received, the agencies have 
    conducted an analysis under The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 
    601-612, the ``Act'').
        The Act requires an agency to take certain considerations into 
    account when a rule will have a significant economic impact on a 
    substantial number of small entities. Two of the three requirements of 
    a final regulatory flexibility analysis (5 U.S.C. 604)--(1) a succinct 
    statement of the need for and the objectives of the rule, and (2) a 
    summary of the issues raised by the public comments, the agency's 
    assessment of the issues, and a statement of the changes made in the 
    final rule in response to the comments--are discussed earlier in the 
    preamble. The third requirement is for a description of the 
    alternatives the agency considered to the rule being adopted that were 
    designed to minimize the effect on small entities subject to the rule 
    and why, if applicable, they were rejected. [[Page 22178]] 
        The agencies have carefully considered the effects of the final 
    rule on small entities and the alternatives available to mitigate its 
    potential burdens. The final rule provides separate, less burdensome 
    treatment for small institutions, which are defined as institutions 
    with total assets of $250 million or less that are either independent 
    or are affiliates of a holding company with banking and thrift assets 
    of less than $1 billion. The rule contains a specific small institution 
    performance evaluation that relies on simplified criteria, to account 
    for the operational differences between large and small institutions. 
    Small institutions are also not subject to the data collection and 
    reporting provisions in the rule for large institutions.
        The agencies believe that the rule has minimized the burden on 
    small institutions, while still enabling the agencies to fulfill their 
    statutory mandate to examine the CRA record of these institutions. 
    Although exempting small institutions from evaluation under the CRA 
    would eliminate any possible burden imposed by the final rule, the CRA 
    does not provide an exemption for small institutions.
        Some small institutions would continue to be subject to the same 
    potential burdens imposed on large institutions if they were affiliates 
    in a holding company with banking and thrift assets of more than $1 
    billion. The agencies have rejected the alternative of eliminating the 
    holding company limitation altogether in order to prevent holding 
    companies from manipulating the asset size of their institutions to 
    qualify for the small institution treatment.
        However, by raising the holding company asset limit from $250 
    million in the 1994 proposal to $1 billion in the final rule, the 
    agencies have sought to mitigate any unfairness and unnecessary burden 
    resulting from the holding company limitation. The agencies selected a 
    higher asset level for the holding company limitation in recognition 
    that smaller holding companies may be unable to provide the necessary 
    support for the CRA activities of their small institution subsidiaries. 
    The agencies anticipate that larger holding companies under the final 
    rule would be capable of supporting the CRA activities of their 
    subsidiary small institutions.
    
    Executive Order 12866
        OCC and OTS: The OCC and OTS have determined that this document is 
    a significant regulatory action because of the legal and policy issues 
    it raises. Because of the significance of the rule, the OCC and OTS 
    will review its effectiveness in achieving the goals of the CRA prior 
    to and in preparation for the full CRA regulatory review in the year 
    2002, discussed earlier.
    
    Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
    
        OCC and OTS: Section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 
    1995, signed into law on March 22, 1995, provides that before 
    promulgating certain rulemakings, covered agencies must prepare a 
    written statement containing a cost/benefit analysis. Under section 
    205, before promulgating any rule for which a written statement is 
    required under section 202, covered agencies must identify and consider 
    a reasonable number of regulatory alternatives, and from those 
    alternatives, select the least costly, most cost-effective, or least 
    burdensome one that achieves the objective of the rulemaking.
        In promulgating this rulemaking, the Federal financial supervisory 
    agencies considered a wide range of alternatives described in notices 
    of proposed rulemaking published in 1993 and 1994. In addition to the 
    comments that the agencies received in response to the notices of 
    proposed rulemaking, the agencies conducted a series of seven public 
    hearings across the country in 1993, at which hundreds of witnesses 
    commented and others provided written statements. Although the OCC and 
    OTS have determined that they are not required to prepare a written 
    statement under section 202 or to make a finding under section 205, 
    they conclude that, on balance, this final rule provides the most cost-
    effective and least burdensome alternative to achieve the objectives of 
    the rule, consistent with statutory requirements.
    
    List of Subjects
    
    12 CFR Part 25
    
        Community development, Credit, Investments, National banks, 
    Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
    
    12 CFR Part 228
    
        Banks, Banking, Community development, Credit, Federal Reserve 
    System, Investments, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
    
    12 CFR Part 345
    
        Banks, Banking, Community development, Credit, Investments, 
    Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
    
    12 CFR Part 563e
    
        Community development, Credit, Investments, Reporting and 
    recordkeeping requirements, Savings associations.
    
    Authority and Issuance
    
    Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
    
    12 CFR Chapter I
    
        For the reasons outlined in the joint preamble, the Office of the 
    Comptroller of the Currency amends 12 CFR chapter I as set forth below:
    
    PART 25--COMMUNITY REINVESTMENT ACT REGULATIONS
    
        1. The authority citation for part 25 is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 12 U.S.C. 21, 22, 26, 27, 30, 36, 93a, 161, 215, 
    215a, 481, 1814, 1816, 1828(c), and 2901 through 2907.
    
        2. Part 25 is amended by adding Subparts A through D and Appendices 
    A and B to read as follows:
    
    Subpart A--General
    
    Sec.
    25.11  Authority, purposes, and scope.
    25.12  Definitions.
    
    Subpart B--Standards for Assessing Performance
    
    25.21  Performance tests, standards, and ratings, in general.
    25.22  Lending test.
    25.23  Investment test.
    25.24  Service test.
    25.25  Community development test for wholesale or limited purpose 
    banks.
    25.26  Small bank performance standards.
    25.27  Strategic plan.
    25.28  Assigned ratings.
    25.29  Effect of CRA performance on applications.
    
    Subpart C--Records, Reporting, and Disclosure Requirements
    
    25.41  Assessment area delineation.
    25.42  Data collection, reporting, and disclosure.
    25.43  Content and availability of public file.
    25.44  Public notice by banks.
    25.45  Publication of planned examination schedule.
    
    Subpart D--Transition Rules
    
    25.51  Transition rules.
    
    Appendix A to Part 25--Ratings
    
    Appendix B to Part 25--CRA Notice
    
    Subpart A--General
    
    
    Sec. 25.11  Authority, purposes, and scope.
    
        (a) Authority and OMB control number--(1) Authority. The authority 
    for this part is 12 U.S.C. 21, 22, 26, 27, 30, 36, 93a, 161, 215, 215a, 
    481, 1814, 1816, 1828(c), and 2901 through 2907.
        (2) OMB control number. The information collection requirements 
    contained in this part were approved by the Office of Management and 
    Budget [[Page 22179]] under the provisions of 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. 
    and have been assigned OMB control number 1557-0160.
        (b) Purposes. In enacting the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA), the 
    Congress required each appropriate Federal financial supervisory agency 
    to assess an institution's record of helping to meet the credit needs 
    of the local communities in which the institution is chartered, 
    consistent with the safe and sound operation of the institution, and to 
    take this record into account in the agency's evaluation of an 
    application for a deposit facility by the institution. This part is 
    intended to carry out the purposes of the CRA by:
        (1) Establishing the framework and criteria by which the Office of 
    the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) assesses a bank's record of 
    helping to meet the credit needs of its entire community, including 
    low- and moderate-income neighborhoods, consistent with the safe and 
    sound operation of the bank; and
        (2) Providing that the OCC takes that record into account in 
    considering certain applications.
        (c) Scope--(1)General. This part applies to all banks except as 
    provided in paragraphs (c)(2) and (c)(3) of this section.
        (2) Federal branches and agencies. (i) This part applies to all 
    insured Federal branches and to any Federal branch that is uninsured 
    that results from an acquisition described in section 5(a)(8) of the 
    International Banking Act of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3103(a)(8)).
        (ii) Except as provided in paragraph (c)(2)(i) of this section, 
    this part does not apply to Federal branches that are uninsured, 
    limited Federal branches, or Federal agencies, as those terms are 
    defined in part 28 of this chapter.
        (3) Certain special purpose banks. This part does not apply to 
    special purpose banks that do not perform commercial or retail banking 
    services by granting credit to the public in the ordinary course of 
    business, other than as incident to their specialized operations. These 
    banks include banker's banks, as defined in 12 U.S.C. 24 (Seventh), and 
    banks that engage only in one or more of the following activities: 
    providing cash management controlled disbursement services or serving 
    as correspondent banks, trust companies, or clearing agents.
    
    
    Sec. 25.12  Definitions.
    
        For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:
        (a) Affiliate means any company that controls, is controlled by, or 
    is under common control with another company. The term ``control'' has 
    the meaning given to that term in 12 U.S.C. 1841(a)(2), and a company 
    is under common control with another company if both companies are 
    directly or indirectly controlled by the same company.
        (b) Area median income means:
        (1) The median family income for the MSA, if a person or geography 
    is located in an MSA; or
        (2) The statewide nonmetropolitan median family income, if a person 
    or geography is located outside an MSA.
        (c) Assessment area means a geographic area delineated in 
    accordance with Sec. 25.41.
        (d) Automated teller machine (ATM) means an automated, unstaffed 
    banking facility owned or operated by, or operated exclusively for, the 
    bank at which deposits are received, cash dispersed, or money lent.
        (e) Bank means a national bank (including a Federal branch as 
    defined in part 28 of this chapter) with Federally insured deposits, 
    except as provided in Sec. 25.11(c).
        (f) Branch means a staffed banking facility authorized as a branch, 
    whether shared or unshared, including, for example, a mini-branch in a 
    grocery store or a branch operated in conjunction with any other local 
    business or nonprofit organization.
        (g) CMSA means a consolidated metropolitan statistical area as 
    defined by the Director of the Office of Management and Budget.
        (h) Community development means:
        (1) Affordable housing (including multifamily rental housing) for 
    low- or moderate-income individuals;
        (2) Community services targeted to low- or moderate-income 
    individuals;
        (3) Activities that promote economic development by financing 
    businesses or farms that meet the size eligibility standards of 13 CFR 
    121.802(a)(2) or have gross annual revenues of $1 million or less; or
        (4) Activities that revitalize or stabilize low- or moderate-income 
    geographies.
        (i) Community development loan means a loan that:
        (1) Has as its primary purpose community development; and
        (2) Except in the case of a wholesale or limited purpose bank:
        (i) Has not been reported or collected by the bank or an affiliate 
    for consideration in the bank's assessment as a home mortgage, small 
    business, small farm, or consumer loan, unless it is a multifamily 
    dwelling loan (as described in Appendix A to Part 203 of this title); 
    and
        (ii) Benefits the bank's assessment area(s) or a broader statewide 
    or regional area that includes the bank's assessment area(s).
        (j) Community development service means a service that:
        (1) Has as its primary purpose community development;
        (2) Is related to the provision of financial services; and
        (3) Has not been considered in the evaluation of the bank's retail 
    banking services under Sec. 25.24(d).
        (k) Consumer loan means a loan to one or more individuals for 
    household, family, or other personal expenditures. A consumer loan does 
    not include a home mortgage, small business, or small farm loan. 
    Consumer loans include the following categories of loans:
        (1) Motor vehicle loan, which is a consumer loan extended for the 
    purchase of and secured by a motor vehicle;
        (2) Credit card loan, which is a line of credit for household, 
    family, or other personal expenditures that is accessed by a borrower's 
    use of a ``credit card,'' as this term is defined in Sec. 226.2 of this 
    title;
        (3) Home equity loan, which is a consumer loan secured by a 
    residence of the borrower;
        (4) Other secured consumer loan, which is a secured consumer loan 
    that is not included in one of the other categories of consumer loans; 
    and
        (5) Other unsecured consumer loan, which is an unsecured consumer 
    loan that is not included in one of the other categories of consumer 
    loans.
        (l) Geography means a census tract or a block numbering area 
    delineated by the United States Bureau of the Census in the most recent 
    decennial census.
        (m) Home mortgage loan means a ``home improvement loan'' or a 
    ``home purchase loan'' as defined in Sec. 203.2 of this title.
        (n) Income level includes:
        (1) Low-income, which means an individual income that is less than 
    50 percent of the area median income, or a median family income that is 
    less than 50 percent, in the case of a geography.
        (2) Moderate-income, which means an individual income that is at 
    least 50 percent and less than 80 percent of the area median income, or 
    a median family income that is at least 50 and less than 80 percent, in 
    the case of a geography.
        (3) Middle-income, which means an individual income that is at 
    least 80 percent and less than 120 percent of the area median income, 
    or a median family income that is at least 80 and less than 120 
    percent, in the case of a geography.
        (4) Upper-income, which means an individual income that is 120 
    percent or more of the area median income, or a median family income 
    that is 120 [[Page 22180]] percent or more, in the case of a geography.
        (o) Limited purpose bank means a bank that offers only a narrow 
    product line (such as credit card or motor vehicle loans) to a regional 
    or broader market and for which a designation as a limited purpose bank 
    is in effect, in accordance with Sec. 25.25(b).
        (p) Loan location. A loan is located as follows:
        (1) A consumer loan is located in the geography where the borrower 
    resides;
        (2) A home mortgage loan is located in the geography where the 
    property to which the loan relates is located; and
        (3) A small business or small farm loan is located in the geography 
    where the main business facility or farm is located or where the loan 
    proceeds otherwise will be applied, as indicated by the borrower.
        (q) Loan production office means a staffed facility, other than a 
    branch, that is open to the public and that provides lending-related 
    services, such as loan information and applications.
        (r) MSA means a metropolitan statistical area or a primary 
    metropolitan statistical area as defined by the Director of the Office 
    of Management and Budget.
        (s) Qualified investment means a lawful investment, deposit, 
    membership share, or grant that has as its primary purpose community 
    development.
        (t) Small bank means a bank that, as of December 31 of either of 
    the prior two calendar years, had total assets of less than $250 
    million and was independent or an affiliate of a holding company that, 
    as of December 31 of either of the prior two calendar years, had total 
    banking and thrift assets of less than $1 billion.
        (u) Small business loan means a loan included in ``loans to small 
    businesses'' as defined in the instructions for preparation of the 
    Consolidated Report of Condition and Income.
        (v) Small farm loan means a loan included in ``loans to small 
    farms'' as defined in the instructions for preparation of the 
    Consolidated Report of Condition and Income.
        (w) Wholesale bank means a bank that is not in the business of 
    extending home mortgage, small business, small farm, or consumer loans 
    to retail customers, and for which a designation as a wholesale bank is 
    in effect, in accordance with Sec. 25.25(b).
    
    Subpart B--Standards for Assessing Performance
    
    
    Sec. 25.21  Performance tests, standards, and ratings, in general.
    
        (a) Performance tests and standards. The OCC assesses the CRA 
    performance of a bank in an examination as follows:
        (1) Lending, investment, and service tests. The OCC applies the 
    lending, investment, and service tests, as provided in Secs. 25.22 
    through 25.24, in evaluating the performance of a bank, except as 
    provided in paragraphs (a)(2), (a)(3), and (a)(4) of this section.
        (2) Community development test for wholesale or limited purpose 
    banks. The OCC applies the community development test for a wholesale 
    or limited purpose bank, as provided in Sec. 25.25, except as provided 
    in paragraph (a)(4) of this section.
        (3) Small bank performance standards. The OCC applies the small 
    bank performance standards as provided in Sec. 25.26 in evaluating the 
    performance of a small bank or a bank that was a small bank during the 
    prior calendar year, unless the bank elects to be assessed as provided 
    in paragraphs (a)(1), (a)(2), or (a)(4) of this section. The bank may 
    elect to be assessed as provided in paragraph (a)(1) of this section 
    only if it collects and reports the data required for other banks under 
    Sec. 25.42.
        (4) Strategic plan. The OCC evaluates the performance of a bank 
    under a strategic plan if the bank submits, and the OCC approves, a 
    strategic plan as provided in Sec. 25.27.
        (b) Performance context. The OCC applies the tests and standards in 
    paragraph (a) of this section and also considers whether to approve a 
    proposed strategic plan in the context of:
        (1) Demographic data on median income levels, distribution of 
    household income, nature of housing stock, housing costs, and other 
    relevant data pertaining to a bank's assessment area(s);
        (2) Any information about lending, investment, and service 
    opportunities in the bank's assessment area(s) maintained by the bank 
    or obtained from community organizations, state, local, and tribal 
    governments, economic development agencies, or other sources;
        (3) The bank's product offerings and business strategy as 
    determined from data provided by the bank;
        (4) Institutional capacity and constraints, including the size and 
    financial condition of the bank, the economic climate (national, 
    regional, and local), safety and soundness limitations, and any other 
    factors that significantly affect the bank's ability to provide 
    lending, investments, or services in its assessment area(s);
        (5) The bank's past performance and the performance of similarly 
    situated lenders;
        (6) The bank's public file, as described in Sec. 25.43, and any 
    written comments about the bank's CRA performance submitted to the bank 
    or the OCC; and
        (7) Any other information deemed relevant by the OCC.
        (c) Assigned ratings. The OCC assigns to a bank one of the 
    following four ratings pursuant to Sec. 25.28 and Appendix A of this 
    part: ``outstanding''; ``satisfactory''; ``needs to improve''; or 
    ``substantial noncompliance'' as provided in 12 U.S.C. 2906(b)(2). The 
    rating assigned by the OCC reflects the bank's record of helping to 
    meet the credit needs of its entire community, including low- and 
    moderate-income neighborhoods, consistent with the safe and sound 
    operation of the bank.
        (d) Safe and sound operations. This part and the CRA do not require 
    a bank to make loans or investments or to provide services that are 
    inconsistent with safe and sound operations. To the contrary, the OCC 
    anticipates banks can meet the standards of this part with safe and 
    sound loans, investments, and services on which the banks expect to 
    make a profit. Banks are permitted and encouraged to develop and apply 
    flexible underwriting standards for loans that benefit low- or 
    moderate-income geographies or individuals, only if consistent with 
    safe and sound operations.
    
    
    Sec. 25.22  Lending test.
    
        (a) Scope of test. (1) The lending test evaluates a bank's record 
    of helping to meet the credit needs of its assessment area(s) through 
    its lending activities by considering a bank's home mortgage, small 
    business, small farm, and community development lending. If consumer 
    lending constitutes a substantial majority of a bank's business, the 
    OCC will evaluate the bank's consumer lending in one or more of the 
    following categories: motor vehicle, credit card, home equity, other 
    secured, and other unsecured loans. In addition, at a bank's option, 
    the OCC will evaluate one or more categories of consumer lending, if 
    the bank has collected and maintained, as required in Sec. 25.42(c)(1), 
    the data for each category that the bank elects to have the OCC 
    evaluate.
        (2) The OCC considers originations and purchases of loans. The OCC 
    will also consider any other loan data the bank may choose to provide, 
    including [[Page 22181]] data on loans outstanding, commitments and 
    letters of credit.
        (3) A bank may ask the OCC to consider loans originated or 
    purchased by consortia in which the bank participates or by third 
    parties in which the bank has invested only if the loans meet the 
    definition of community development loans and only in accordance with 
    paragraph (d) of this section. The OCC will not consider these loans 
    under any criterion of the lending test except the community 
    development lending criterion.
        (b) Performance criteria. The OCC evaluates a bank's lending 
    performance pursuant to the following criteria:
        (1) Lending activity. The number and amount of the bank's home 
    mortgage, small business, small farm, and consumer loans, if 
    applicable, in the bank's assessment area(s);
        (2) Geographic distribution. The geographic distribution of the 
    bank's home mortgage, small business, small farm, and consumer loans, 
    if applicable, based on the loan location, including:
        (i) The proportion of the bank's lending in the bank's assessment 
    area(s);
        (ii) The dispersion of lending in the bank's assessment area(s); 
    and
        (iii) The number and amount of loans in low-, moderate-, middle-, 
    and upper-income geographies in the bank's assessment area(s);
        (3) Borrower characteristics. The distribution, particularly in the 
    bank's assessment area(s), of the bank's home mortgage, small business, 
    small farm, and consumer loans, if applicable, based on borrower 
    characteristics, including the number and amount of:
        (i) Home mortgage loans to low-, moderate-, middle-, and upper-
    income individuals;
        (ii) Small business and small farm loans to businesses and farms 
    with gross annual revenues of $1 million or less;
        (iii) Small business and small farm loans by loan amount at 
    origination; and
        (iv) Consumer loans, if applicable, to low-, moderate-, middle-, 
    and upper-income individuals;
        (4) Community development lending. The bank's community development 
    lending, including the number and amount of community development 
    loans, and their complexity and innovativeness; and
        (5) Innovative or flexible lending practices. The bank's use of 
    innovative or flexible lending practices in a safe and sound manner to 
    address the credit needs of low- or moderate-income individuals or 
    geographies.
        (c) Affiliate lending. (1) At a bank's option, the OCC will 
    consider loans by an affiliate of the bank, if the bank provides data 
    on the affiliate's loans pursuant to Sec. 25.42.
        (2) The OCC considers affiliate lending subject to the following 
    constraints:
        (i) No affiliate may claim a loan origination or loan purchase if 
    another institution claims the same loan origination or purchase; and
        (ii) If a bank elects to have the OCC consider loans within a 
    particular lending category made by one or more of the bank's 
    affiliates in a particular assessment area, the bank shall elect to 
    have the OCC consider, in accordance with paragraph (c)(1) of this 
    section, all the loans within that lending category in that particular 
    assessment area made by all of the bank's affiliates.
        (3) The OCC does not consider affiliate lending in assessing a 
    bank's performance under paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section.
        (d) Lending by a consortium or a third party. Community development 
    loans originated or purchased by a consortium in which the bank 
    participates or by a third party in which the bank has invested:
        (1) Will be considered, at the bank's option, if the bank reports 
    the data pertaining to these loans under Sec. 25.42(b)(2); and
        (2) May be allocated among participants or investors, as they 
    choose, for purposes of the lending test, except that no participant or 
    investor:
        (i) May claim a loan origination or loan purchase if another 
    participant or investor claims the same loan origination or purchase; 
    or
        (ii) May claim loans accounting for more than its percentage share 
    (based on the level of its participation or investment) of the total 
    loans originated by the consortium or third party.
        (e) Lending performance rating. The OCC rates a bank's lending 
    performance as provided in Appendix A of this part.
    
    
    Sec. 25.23  Investment test.
    
        (a) Scope of test. The investment test evaluates a bank's record of 
    helping to meet the credit needs of its assessment area(s) through 
    qualified investments that benefit its assessment area(s) or a broader 
    statewide or regional area that includes the bank's assessment area(s).
        (b) Exclusion. Activities considered under the lending or service 
    tests may not be considered under the investment test.
        (c) Affiliate investment. At a bank's option, the OCC will 
    consider, in its assessment of a bank's investment performance, a 
    qualified investment made by an affiliate of the bank, if the qualified 
    investment is not claimed by any other institution.
        (d) Disposition of branch premises. Donating, selling on favorable 
    terms, or making available on a rent-free basis a branch of the bank 
    that is located in a predominantly minority neighborhood to a minority 
    depository institution or women's depository institution (as these 
    terms are defined in 12 U.S.C. 2907(b)) will be considered as a 
    qualified investment.
        (e) Performance criteria. The OCC evaluates the investment 
    performance of a bank pursuant to the following criteria:
        (1) The dollar amount of qualified investments;
        (2) The innovativeness or complexity of qualified investments;
        (3) The responsiveness of qualified investments to credit and 
    community development needs; and
        (4) The degree to which the qualified investments are not routinely 
    provided by private investors.
        (f) Investment performance rating. The OCC rates a bank's 
    investment performance as provided in Appendix A of this part.
    
    
    Sec. 25.24  Service test.
    
        (a) Scope of test. The service test evaluates a bank's record of 
    helping to meet the credit needs of its assessment area(s) by analyzing 
    both the availability and effectiveness of a bank's systems for 
    delivering retail banking services and the extent and innovativeness of 
    its community development services.
        (b) Area(s) benefitted. Community development services must benefit 
    a bank's assessment area(s) or a broader statewide or regional area 
    that includes the bank's assessment area(s).
        (c) Affiliate service. At a bank's option, the OCC will consider, 
    in its assessment of a bank's service performance, a community 
    development service provided by an affiliate of the bank, if the 
    community development service is not claimed by any other institution.
        (d) Performance criteria--retail banking services. The OCC 
    evaluates the availability and effectiveness of a bank's systems for 
    delivering retail banking services, pursuant to the following criteria:
        (1) The current distribution of the bank's branches among low-,
    moderate-, middle-, and upper-income geographies;
        (2) In the context of its current distribution of the bank's 
    branches, the bank's record of opening and closing branches, 
    particularly branches located in low- or moderate-income geographies or 
    primarily serving low- or moderate-income individuals;
        (3) The availability and effectiveness of alternative systems for 
    delivering [[Page 22182]] retail banking services (e.g., ATMs, ATMs not 
    owned or operated by or exclusively for the bank, banking by telephone 
    or computer, loan production offices, and bank-at-work or bank-by-mail 
    programs) in low- and moderate-income geographies and to low- and 
    moderate-income individuals; and
        (4) The range of services provided in low-, moderate-, middle-, and 
    upper-income geographies and the degree to which the services are 
    tailored to meet the needs of those geographies.
        (e) Performance criteria--community development services. The OCC 
    evaluates community development services pursuant to the following 
    criteria:
        (1) The extent to which the bank provides community development 
    services; and
        (2) The innovativeness and responsiveness of community development 
    services.
        (f) Service performance rating. The OCC rates a bank's service 
    performance as provided in Appendix A of this part.
    
    
    Sec. 25.25  Community development test for wholesale or limited purpose 
    banks.
    
        (a) Scope of test. The OCC assesses a wholesale or limited purpose 
    bank's record of helping to meet the credit needs of its assessment 
    area(s) under the community development test through its community 
    development lending, qualified investments, or community development 
    services.
        (b) Designation as a wholesale or limited purpose bank. In order to 
    receive a designation as a wholesale or limited purpose bank, a bank 
    shall file a request, in writing, with the OCC, at least three months 
    prior to the proposed effective date of the designation. If the OCC 
    approves the designation, it remains in effect until the bank requests 
    revocation of the designation or until one year after the OCC notifies 
    the bank that the OCC has revoked the designation on its own 
    initiative.
        (c) Performance criteria. The OCC evaluates the community 
    development performance of a wholesale or limited purpose bank pursuant 
    to the following criteria:
        (1) The number and amount of community development loans (including 
    originations and purchases of loans and other community development 
    loan data provided by the bank, such as data on loans outstanding, 
    commitments, and letters of credit), qualified investments, or 
    community development services;
        (2) The use of innovative or complex qualified investments, 
    community development loans, or community development services and the 
    extent to which the investments are not routinely provided by private 
    investors; and
        (3) The bank's responsiveness to credit and community development 
    needs.
        (d) Indirect activities. At a bank's option, the OCC will consider 
    in its community development performance assessment:
        (1) Qualified investments or community development services 
    provided by an affiliate of the bank, if the investments or services 
    are not claimed by any other institution; and
        (2) Community development lending by affiliates, consortia and 
    third parties, subject to the requirements and limitations in 
    Sec. 25.22(c) and (d).
        (e) Benefit to assessment area(s)--(1) Benefit inside assessment 
    area(s). The OCC considers all qualified investments, community 
    development loans, and community development services that benefit 
    areas within the bank's assessment area(s) or a broader statewide or 
    regional area that includes the bank's assessment area(s).
        (2) Benefit outside assessment area(s). The OCC considers the 
    qualified investments, community development loans, and community 
    development services that benefit areas outside the bank's assessment 
    area(s), if the bank has adequately addressed the needs of its 
    assessment area(s).
        (f) Community development performance rating. The OCC rates a 
    bank's community development performance as provided in Appendix A of 
    this part.
    
    
    Sec. 25.26  Small bank performance standards.
    
        (a) Performance criteria. The OCC evaluates the record of a small 
    bank, or a bank that was a small bank during the prior calendar year, 
    of helping to meet the credit needs of its assessment area(s) pursuant 
    to the following criteria:
        (1) The bank's loan-to-deposit ratio, adjusted for seasonal 
    variation and, as appropriate, other lending-related activities, such 
    as loan originations for sale to the secondary markets, community 
    development loans, or qualified investments;
        (2) The percentage of loans and, as appropriate, other lending-
    related activities located in the bank's assessment area(s);
        (3) The bank's record of lending to and, as appropriate, engaging 
    in other lending-related activities for borrowers of different income 
    levels and businesses and farms of different sizes;
        (4) The geographic distribution of the bank's loans; and
        (5) The bank's record of taking action, if warranted, in response 
    to written complaints about its performance in helping to meet credit 
    needs in its assessment area(s).
        (b) Small bank performance rating. The OCC rates the performance of 
    a bank evaluated under this section as provided in Appendix A of this 
    part.
    
    
    Sec. 25.27  Strategic plan.
    
        (a) Alternative election. The OCC will assess a bank's record of 
    helping to meet the credit needs of its assessment area(s) under a 
    strategic plan if:
        (1) The bank has submitted the plan to the OCC as provided for in 
    this section;
        (2) The OCC has approved the plan;
        (3) The plan is in effect; and
        (4) The bank has been operating under an approved plan for at least 
    one year.
        (b) Data reporting. The OCC's approval of a plan does not affect 
    the bank's obligation, if any, to report data as required by 
    Sec. 25.42.
        (c) Plans in general.--(1) Term. A plan may have a term of no more 
    than five years, and any multi-year plan must include annual interim 
    measurable goals under which the OCC will evaluate the bank's 
    performance.
        (2) Multiple assessment areas. A bank with more than one assessment 
    area may prepare a single plan for all of its assessment areas or one 
    or more plans for one or more of its assessment areas.
        (3) Treatment of affiliates. Affiliated institutions may prepare a 
    joint plan if the plan provides measurable goals for each institution. 
    Activities may be allocated among institutions at the institutions' 
    option, provided that the same activities are not considered for more 
    than one institution.
        (d) Public participation in plan development. Before submitting a 
    plan to the OCC for approval, a bank shall:
        (1) Informally seek suggestions from members of the public in its 
    assessment area(s) covered by the plan while developing the plan;
        (2) Once the bank has developed a plan, formally solicit public 
    comment on the plan for at least 30 days by publishing notice in at 
    least one newspaper of general circulation in each assessment area 
    covered by the plan; and
        (3) During the period of formal public comment, make copies of the 
    plan available for review by the public at no cost at all offices of 
    the bank in any assessment area covered by the plan and provide copies 
    of the plan upon request for a reasonable fee to cover copying and 
    mailing, if applicable.
        (e) Submission of plan. The bank shall submit its plan to the OCC 
    at least three months prior to the proposed effective date of the plan. 
    The bank shall also [[Page 22183]] submit with its plan a description 
    of its informal efforts to seek suggestions from members of the public, 
    any written public comment received, and, if the plan was revised in 
    light of the comment received, the initial plan as released for public 
    comment.
        (f) Plan content.--(1) Measurable goals. (i) A bank shall specify 
    in its plan measurable goals for helping to meet the credit needs of 
    each assessment area covered by the plan, particularly the needs of 
    low- and moderate-income geographies and low- and moderate-income 
    individuals, through lending, investment, and services, as appropriate.
        (ii) A bank shall address in its plan all three performance 
    categories and, unless the bank has been designated as a wholesale or 
    limited purpose bank, shall emphasize lending and lending-related 
    activities. Nevertheless, a different emphasis, including a focus on 
    one or more performance categories, may be appropriate if responsive to 
    the characteristics and credit needs of its assessment area(s), 
    considering public comment and the bank's capacity and constraints, 
    product offerings, and business strategy.
        (2) Confidential information. A bank may submit additional 
    information to the OCC on a confidential basis, but the goals stated in 
    the plan must be sufficiently specific to enable the public and the OCC 
    to judge the merits of the plan.
        (3) Satisfactory and outstanding goals. A bank shall specify in its 
    plan measurable goals that constitute ``satisfactory'' performance. A 
    plan may specify measurable goals that constitute ``outstanding'' 
    performance. If a bank submits, and the OCC approves, both 
    ``satisfactory'' and ``outstanding'' performance goals, the OCC will 
    consider the bank eligible for an ``outstanding'' performance rating.
        (4) Election if satisfactory goals not substantially met. A bank 
    may elect in its plan that, if the bank fails to meet substantially its 
    plan goals for a satisfactory rating, the OCC will evaluate the bank's 
    performance under the lending, investment, and service tests, the 
    community development test, or the small bank performance standards, as 
    appropriate.
        (g) Plan approval.--(1) Timing. The OCC will act upon a plan within 
    60 calendar days after the OCC receives the complete plan and other 
    material required under paragraph (d) of this section. If the OCC fails 
    to act within this time period, the plan shall be deemed approved 
    unless the OCC extends the review period for good cause.
        (2) Public participation. In evaluating the plan's goals, the OCC 
    considers the public's involvement in formulating the plan, written 
    public comment on the plan, and any response by the bank to public 
    comment on the plan.
        (3) Criteria for evaluating plan. The OCC evaluates a plan's 
    measurable goals using the following criteria, as appropriate:
        (i) The extent and breadth of lending or lending-related 
    activities, including, as appropriate, the distribution of loans among 
    different geographies, businesses and farms of different sizes, and 
    individuals of different income levels, the extent of community 
    development lending, and the use of innovative or flexible lending 
    practices to address credit needs;
        (ii) The amount and innovativeness, complexity, and responsiveness 
    of the bank's qualified investments; and
        (iii) The availability and effectiveness of the bank's systems for 
    delivering retail banking services and the extent and innovativeness of 
    the bank's community development services.
        (h) Plan amendment. During the term of a plan, a bank may request 
    the OCC to approve an amendment to the plan on grounds that there has 
    been a material change in circumstances. The bank shall develop an 
    amendment to a previously approved plan in accordance with the public 
    participation requirements of paragraph (c) of this section.
        (i) Plan assessment. The OCC approves the goals and assesses 
    performance under a plan as provided for in Appendix A of this part.
    
    
    Sec. 25.28  Assigned ratings.
    
        (a) Ratings in general. Subject to paragraphs (b) and (c) of this 
    section, the OCC assigns to a bank a rating of ``outstanding,'' 
    ``satisfactory,'' ``needs to improve,'' or ``substantial 
    noncompliance'' based on the bank's performance under the lending, 
    investment and service tests, the community development test, the small 
    bank performance standards, or an approved strategic plan, as 
    applicable.
        (b) Lending, investment, and service tests. The OCC assigns a 
    rating for a bank assessed under the lending, investment, and service 
    tests in accordance with the following principles:
        (1) A bank that receives an ``outstanding'' rating on the lending 
    test receives an assigned rating of at least ``satisfactory'';
        (2) A bank that receives an ``outstanding'' rating on both the 
    service test and the investment test and a rating of at least ``high 
    satisfactory'' on the lending test receives an assigned rating of 
    ``outstanding''; and
        (3) No bank may receive an assigned rating of ``satisfactory'' or 
    higher unless it receives a rating of at least ``low satisfactory'' on 
    the lending test.
        (c) Effect of evidence of discriminatory or other illegal credit 
    practices. Evidence of discriminatory or other illegal credit practices 
    adversely affects the OCC's evaluation of a bank's performance. In 
    determining the effect on the bank's assigned rating, the OCC considers 
    the nature and extent of the evidence, the policies and procedures that 
    the bank has in place to prevent discriminatory or other illegal credit 
    practices, any corrective action that the bank has taken or has 
    committed to take, particularly voluntary corrective action resulting 
    from self-assessment, and other relevant information.
    
    
    Sec. 25.29  Effect of CRA performance on applications.
        (a) CRA performance. Among other factors, the OCC takes into 
    account the record of performance under the CRA of each applicant bank 
    in considering an application for:
        (1) The establishment of a domestic branch;
        (2) The relocation of the main office or a branch;
        (3) Under the Bank Merger Act (12 U.S.C. 1828(c)), the merger or 
    consolidation with or the acquisition of assets or assumption of 
    liabilities of an insured depository institution; and
        (4) The conversion of an insured depository institution to a 
    national bank charter.
        (b) Charter application. An applicant (other than an insured 
    depository institution) for a national bank charter shall submit with 
    its application a description of how it will meet its CRA objectives. 
    The OCC takes the description into account in considering the 
    application and may deny or condition approval on that basis.
        (c) Interested parties. The OCC takes into account any views 
    expressed by interested parties that are submitted in accordance with 
    the OCC's procedures set forth in part 5 of this chapter in considering 
    CRA performance in an application listed in paragraphs (a) and (b) of 
    this section.
        (d) Denial or conditional approval of application. A bank's record 
    of performance may be the basis for denying or conditioning approval of 
    an application listed in paragraph (a) of this section.
        (e) Insured depository institution. For purposes of this section, 
    the term ``insured depository institution'' has the 
    [[Page 22184]] meaning given to that term in 12 U.S.C. 1813.
    
    Subpart C--Records, Reporting, and Disclosure Requirements
    
    
    Sec. 25.41  Assessment area delineation.
    
        (a) In general. A bank shall delineate one or more assessment areas 
    within which the OCC evaluates the bank's record of helping to meet the 
    credit needs of its community. The OCC does not evaluate the bank's 
    delineation of its assessment area(s) as a separate performance 
    criterion, but the OCC reviews the delineation for compliance with the 
    requirements of this section.
        (b) Geographic area(s) for wholesale or limited purpose banks. The 
    assessment area(s) for a wholesale or limited purpose bank must consist 
    generally of one or more MSAs (using the MSA boundaries that were in 
    effect as of January 1 of the calendar year in which the delineation is 
    made) or one or more contiguous political subdivisions, such as 
    counties, cities, or towns, in which the bank has its main office, 
    branches, and deposit-taking ATMs.
        (c) Geographic area(s) for other banks. The assessment area(s) for 
    a bank other than a wholesale or limited purpose bank must:
        (1) Consist generally of one or more MSAs (using the MSA boundaries 
    that were in effect as of January 1 of the calendar year in which the 
    delineation is made) or one or more contiguous political subdivisions, 
    such as counties, cities, or towns; and
        (2) Include the geographies in which the bank has its main office, 
    its branches, and its deposit-taking ATMs, as well as the surrounding 
    geographies in which the bank has originated or purchased a substantial 
    portion of its loans (including home mortgage loans, small business and 
    small farm loans, and any other loans the bank chooses, such as those 
    consumer loans on which the bank elects to have its performance 
    assessed).
        (d) Adjustments to geographic area(s). A bank may adjust the 
    boundaries of its assessment area(s) to include only the portion of a 
    political subdivision that it reasonably can be expected to serve. An 
    adjustment is particularly appropriate in the case of an assessment 
    area that otherwise would be extremely large, of unusual configuration, 
    or divided by significant geographic barriers.
        (e) Limitations on the delineation of an assessment area. Each 
    bank's assessment area(s):
        (1) Must consist only of whole geographies;
        (2) May not reflect illegal discrimination;
        (3) May not arbitrarily exclude low- or moderate-income 
    geographies, taking into account the bank's size and financial 
    condition; and
        (4) May not extend substantially beyond a CMSA boundary or beyond a 
    state boundary unless the assessment area is located in a multistate 
    MSA. If a bank serves a geographic area that extends substantially 
    beyond a state boundary, the bank shall delineate separate assessment 
    areas for the areas in each state. If a bank serves a geographic area 
    that extends substantially beyond a CMSA boundary, the bank shall 
    delineate separate assessment areas for the areas inside and outside 
    the CMSA.
        (f) Banks serving military personnel. Notwithstanding the 
    requirements of this section, a bank whose business predominantly 
    consists of serving the needs of military personnel or their dependents 
    who are not located within a defined geographic area may delineate its 
    entire deposit customer base as its assessment area.
        (g) Use of assessment area(s). The OCC uses the assessment area(s) 
    delineated by a bank in its evaluation of the bank's CRA performance 
    unless the OCC determines that the assessment area(s) do not comply 
    with the requirements of this section.
    
    
    Sec. 25.42  Data collection, reporting, and disclosure.
    
        (a) Loan information required to be collected and maintained. A 
    bank, except a small bank, shall collect, and maintain in machine 
    readable form (as prescribed by the OCC) until the completion of its 
    next CRA examination, the following data for each small business or 
    small farm loan originated or purchased by the bank:
        (1) A unique number or alpha-numeric symbol that can be used to 
    identify the relevant loan file;
        (2) The loan amount at origination;
        (3) The loan location; and
        (4) An indicator whether the loan was to a business or farm with 
    gross annual revenues of $1 million or less.
        (b) Loan information required to be reported. A bank, except a 
    small bank or a bank that was a small bank during the prior calendar 
    year, shall report annually by March 1 to the OCC in machine readable 
    form (as prescribed by the OCC) the following data for the prior 
    calendar year:
        (1) Small business and small farm loan data. For each geography in 
    which the bank originated or purchased a small business or small farm 
    loan, the aggregate number and amount of loans:
        (i) With an amount at origination of $100,000 or less;
        (ii) With amount at origination of more than $100,000 but less than 
    or equal to $250,000;
        (iii) With an amount at origination of more than $250,000; and
        (iv) To businesses and farms with gross annual revenues of $1 
    million or less (using the revenues that the bank considered in making 
    its credit decision);
        (2) Community development loan data. The aggregate number and 
    aggregate amount of community development loans originated or 
    purchased; and
        (3) Home mortgage loans. If the bank is subject to reporting under 
    part 203 of this title, the location of each home mortgage loan 
    application, origination, or purchase outside the MSAs in which the 
    bank has a home or branch office (or outside any MSA) in accordance 
    with the requirements of part 203 of this title.
        (c) Optional data collection and maintenance.--(1) Consumer loans. 
    A bank may collect and maintain in machine readable form (as prescribed 
    by the OCC) data for consumer loans originated or purchased by the bank 
    for consideration under the lending test. A bank may maintain data for 
    one or more of the following categories of consumer loans: motor 
    vehicle, credit card, home equity, other secured, and other unsecured. 
    If the bank maintains data for loans in a certain category, it shall 
    maintain data for all loans originated or purchased within that 
    category. The bank shall maintain data separately for each category, 
    including for each loan:
        (i) A unique number or alpha-numeric symbol that can be used to 
    identify the relevant loan file;
        (ii) The loan amount at origination or purchase;
        (iii) The loan location; and
        (iv) The gross annual income of the borrower that the bank 
    considered in making its credit decision.
        (2) Other loan data. At its option, a bank may provide other 
    information concerning its lending performance, including additional 
    loan distribution data.
        (d) Data on affiliate lending. A bank that elects to have the OCC 
    consider loans by an affiliate, for purposes of the lending or 
    community development test or an approved strategic plan, shall 
    collect, maintain, and report for those loans the data that the bank 
    would have collected, maintained, and reported pursuant to paragraphs 
    (a), (b), and (c) of this section had the loans been originated or 
    purchased by the bank. For home mortgage loans, the bank shall also be 
    prepared to identify the home [[Page 22185]] mortgage loans reported 
    under part 203 of this title by the affiliate.
        (e) Data on lending by a consortium or a third party. A bank that 
    elects to have the OCC consider community development loans by a 
    consortium or third party, for purposes of the lending or community 
    development tests or an approved strategic plan, shall report for those 
    loans the data that the bank would have reported under paragraph (b)(2) 
    of this section had the loans been originated or purchased by the bank.
        (f) Small banks electing evaluation under the lending, investment, 
    and service tests. A bank that qualifies for evaluation under the small 
    bank performance standards but elects evaluation under the lending, 
    investment, and service tests shall collect, maintain, and report the 
    data required for other banks pursuant to paragraphs (a) and (b) of 
    this section.
        (g) Assessment area data. A bank, except a small bank or a bank 
    that was a small bank during the prior calendar year, shall collect and 
    report to the OCC by March 1 of each year a list for each assessment 
    area showing the geographies within the area.
        (h) CRA Disclosure Statement. The OCC prepares annually for each 
    bank that reports data pursuant to this section a CRA Disclosure 
    Statement that contains, on a state-by-state basis:
        (1) For each county (and for each assessment area smaller than a 
    county) with a population of 500,000 persons or fewer in which the bank 
    reported a small business or small farm loan:
        (i) The number and amount of small business and small farm loans 
    reported as originated or purchased located in low-, moderate-, middle-
    , and upper-income geographies;
        (ii) A list grouping each geography according to whether the 
    geography is low-, moderate-, middle-, or upper-income;
        (iii) A list showing each geography in which the bank reported a 
    small business or small farm loan; and
        (iv) The number and amount of small business and small farm loans 
    to businesses and farms with gross annual revenues of $1 million or 
    less;
        (2) For each county (and for each assessment area smaller than a 
    county) with a population in excess of 500,000 persons in which the 
    bank reported a small business or small farm loan:
        (i) The number and amount of small business and small farm loans 
    reported as originated or purchased located in geographies with median 
    income relative to the area median income of less than 10 percent, 10 
    or more but less than 20 percent, 20 or more but less than 30 percent, 
    30 or more but less than 40 percent, 40 or more but less than 50 
    percent, 50 or more but less than 60 percent, 60 or more but less than 
    70 percent, 70 or more but less than 80 percent, 80 or more but less 
    than 90 percent, 90 or more but less than 100 percent, 100 or more but 
    less than 110 percent, 110 or more but less than 120 percent, and 120 
    percent or more;
        (ii) A list grouping each geography in the county or assessment 
    area according to whether the median income in the geography relative 
    to the area median income is less than 10 percent, 10 or more but less 
    than 20 percent, 20 or more but less than 30 percent, 30 or more but 
    less than 40 percent, 40 or more but less than 50 percent, 50 or more 
    but less than 60 percent, 60 or more but less than 70 percent, 70 or 
    more but less than 80 percent, 80 or more but less than 90 percent, 90 
    or more but less than 100 percent, 100 or more but less than 110 
    percent, 110 or more but less than 120 percent, and 120 percent or 
    more;
        (iii) A list showing each geography in which the bank reported a 
    small business or small farm loan; and
        (iv) The number and amount of small business and small farm loans 
    to businesses and farms with gross annual revenues of $1 million or 
    less;
        (3) The number and amount of small business and small farm loans 
    located inside each assessment area reported by the bank and the number 
    and amount of small business and small farm loans located outside the 
    assessment area(s) reported by the bank; and
        (4) The number and amount of community development loans reported 
    as originated or purchased.
        (i) Aggregate disclosure statements. The OCC, in conjunction with 
    the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, the Federal 
    Deposit Insurance Corporation, and the Office of Thrift Supervision, 
    prepares annually, for each MSA (including an MSA that crosses a state 
    boundary) and the non-MSA portion of each state, an aggregate 
    disclosure statement of small business and small farm lending by all 
    institutions subject to reporting under this part or parts 228, 345, or 
    563e of this title. These disclosure statements indicate, for each 
    geography, the number and amount of all small business and small farm 
    loans originated or purchased by reporting institutions, except that 
    the OCC may adjust the form of the disclosure if necessary, because of 
    special circumstances, to protect the privacy of a borrower or the 
    competitive position of an institution.
        (j) Central data depositories. The OCC makes the aggregate 
    disclosure statements, described in paragraph (i) of this section, and 
    the individual bank CRA Disclosure Statements, described in paragraph 
    (h) of this section, available to the public at central data 
    depositories. The OCC publishes a list of the depositories at which the 
    statements are available.
    
    
    Sec. 25.43  Content and availability of public file.
    
        (a) Information available to the public. A bank shall maintain a 
    public file that includes the following information:
        (1) All written comments received from the public for the current 
    year and each of the prior two calendar years that specifically relate 
    to the bank's performance in helping to meet community credit needs, 
    and any response to the comments by the bank, if neither the comments 
    nor the responses contain statements that reflect adversely on the good 
    name or reputation of any persons other than the bank or publication of 
    which would violate specific provisions of law;
        (2) A copy of the public section of the bank's most recent CRA 
    Performance Evaluation prepared by the OCC. The bank shall place this 
    copy in the public file within 30 business days after its receipt from 
    the OCC;
        (3) A list of the bank's branches, their street addresses, and 
    geographies;
        (4) A list of branches opened or closed by the bank during the 
    current year and each of the prior two calendar years, their street 
    addresses, and geographies;
        (5) A list of services (including hours of operation, available 
    loan and deposit products, and transaction fees) generally offered at 
    the bank's branches and descriptions of material differences in the 
    availability or cost of services at particular branches, if any. At its 
    option, a bank may include information regarding the availability of 
    alternative systems for delivering retail banking services (e.g., ATMs, 
    ATMs not owned or operated by or exclusively for the bank, banking by 
    telephone or computer, loan production offices, and bank-at-work or 
    bank-by-mail programs);
        (6) A map of each assessment area showing the boundaries of the 
    area and identifying the geographies contained within the area, either 
    on the map or in a separate list; and
        (7) Any other information the bank chooses.
        (b) Additional information available to the public.--(1) Banks 
    other than small banks. A bank, except a small bank or a bank that was 
    a small bank [[Page 22186]] during the prior calendar year, shall 
    include in its public file the following information pertaining to the 
    bank and its affiliates, if applicable, for each of the prior two 
    calendar years:
        (i) If the bank has elected to have one or more categories of its 
    consumer loans considered under the lending test, for each of these 
    categories, the number and amount of loans:
        (A) To low-, moderate-, middle-, and upper-income individuals;
        (B) Located in low-, moderate-, middle-, and upper-income census 
    tracts; and
        (C) Located inside the bank's assessment area(s) and outside the 
    bank's assessment area(s); and
        (ii) The bank's CRA Disclosure Statement. The bank shall place the 
    statement in the public file within three business days of its receipt 
    from the OCC.
        (2) Banks required to report Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA) 
    data. A bank required to report home mortgage loan data pursuant part 
    203 of this title shall include in its public file a copy of the HMDA 
    Disclosure Statement provided by the Federal Financial Institutions 
    Examination Council pertaining to the bank for each of the prior two 
    calendar years. In addition, a bank that elected to have the OCC 
    consider the mortgage lending of an affiliate for any of these years 
    shall include in its public file the affiliate's HMDA Disclosure 
    Statement for those years. The bank shall place the statement(s) in the 
    public file within three business days after its receipt.
        (3) Small banks. A small bank or a bank that was a small bank 
    during the prior calendar year shall include in its public file:
        (i) The bank's loan-to-deposit ratio for each quarter of the prior 
    calendar year and, at its option, additional data on its loan-to-
    deposit ratio; and
        (ii) The information required for other banks by paragraph (b)(1) 
    of this section, if the bank has elected to be evaluated under the 
    lending, investment, and service tests.
        (4) Banks with strategic plans. A bank that has been approved to be 
    assessed under a strategic plan shall include in its public file a copy 
    of that plan. A bank need not include information submitted to the OCC 
    on a confidential basis in conjunction with the plan.
        (5) Banks with less than satisfactory ratings. A bank that received 
    a less than satisfactory rating during its most recent examination 
    shall include in its public file a description of its current efforts 
    to improve its performance in helping to meet the credit needs of its 
    entire community. The bank shall update the description quarterly.
        (c) Location of public information. A bank shall make available to 
    the public for inspection upon request and at no cost the information 
    required in this section as follows:
        (1) At the main office and, if an interstate bank, at one branch 
    office in each state, all information in the public file; and
        (2) At each branch:
        (i) A copy of the public section of the bank's most recent CRA 
    Performance Evaluation and a list of services provided by the branch; 
    and
        (ii) Within five calendar days of the request, all the information 
    in the public file relating to the assessment area in which the branch 
    is located.
        (d) Copies. Upon request, a bank shall provide copies, either on 
    paper or in another form acceptable to the person making the request, 
    of the information in its public file. The bank may charge a reasonable 
    fee not to exceed the cost of copying and mailing (if applicable).
        (e) Updating. Except as otherwise provided in this section, a bank 
    shall ensure that the information required by this section is current 
    as of April 1 of each year.
    
    
    Sec. 25.44  Public notice by banks.
    
        A bank shall provide in the public lobby of its main office and 
    each of its branches the appropriate public notice set forth in 
    Appendix B of this part. Only a branch of a bank having more than one 
    assessment area shall include the bracketed material in the notice for 
    branch offices. Only a bank that is an affiliate of a holding company 
    shall include the next to the last sentence of the notices. A bank 
    shall include the last sentence of the notices only if it is an 
    affiliate of a holding company that is not prevented by statute from 
    acquiring additional banks.
    
    
    Sec. 25.45  Publication of planned examination schedule.
    
        The OCC publishes at least 30 days in advance of the beginning of 
    each calendar quarter a list of banks scheduled for CRA examinations in 
    that quarter.
    
    Subpart D--Transition Rules
    
    
    Sec. 25.51  Transition rules.
    
        (a) Effective date. Sections of this part become applicable over a 
    period of time in accordance with the schedule set forth in paragraph 
    (c) of this section.
        (b) Data collection and reporting; strategic plan; performance 
    tests and standards. (1) Data collection and reporting. (i) On January 
    1, 1996, the data collection requirements set forth in Sec. 25.42 
    (except Sec. 25.42 (b) and (g)) become applicable.
        (ii) On January 1, 1997, the data reporting requirements set forth 
    in Sec. 25.42 (b) and (g) become applicable.
        (2) Small banks. Beginning January 1, 1996, the OCC evaluates banks 
    that qualify for the small bank performance standards described in 
    Sec. 25.26 under that section.
        (3) Strategic plan. Beginning January 1, 1996, a bank that elects 
    to be evaluated under an approved strategic plan pursuant to Sec. 25.27 
    may submit its strategic plan to the OCC for approval.
        (4) Other performance tests. (i) Beginning January 1, 1996, a bank 
    may elect to be evaluated under the pertinent revised performance tests 
    described in Secs. 25.22, 25.23, 25.24, and 25.25, if the bank provides 
    the necessary data to permit evaluation.
        (ii) Beginning July 1, 1997, the OCC evaluates all banks under the 
    pertinent revised performance tests.
        (c) Schedule. (1) On July 1, 1995, Secs. 25.11, 25.12, 25.29, and 
    25.51 become applicable, and Secs. 25.1, 25.2, 25.8 and 25.101 expire.
        (2) On January 1, 1996, Sec. 25.41 and the pertinent provisions of 
    Subpart B of this part will apply to banks that elect to be evaluated 
    under Secs. 25.22 through 25.25, banks that submit for approval 
    strategic plans under Sec. 25.27, and banks that qualify for the small 
    bank performance standards described in Sec. 25.26.
        (3) On January 1, 1996, Secs. 25.42 (except Sec. 25.42 (b) and (g)) 
    and 25.45 become applicable.
        (4) On January 1, 1997, Secs. 25.41 and 25.42 (b) and (g) become 
    applicable.
        (5) On July 1, 1997, Secs. 25.21 through 25.28, 25.43, and 25.44 
    become applicable, and Secs. 25.3 through 25.7, and 25.51 expire.
    
    Appendix A to Part 25--Ratings
    
        (a) Ratings in general. (1) In assigning a rating, the OCC 
    evaluates a bank's performance under the applicable performance 
    criteria in this part, in accordance with Sec. 25.21, and 
    Sec. 25.28, which provides for adjustments on the basis of evidence 
    of discriminatory or other illegal credit practices.
        (2) A bank's performance need not fit each aspect of a 
    particular rating profile in order to receive that rating, and 
    exceptionally strong performance with respect to some aspects may 
    compensate for weak performance in others. The bank's overall 
    performance, however, must be consistent with safe and sound banking 
    practices and generally with the appropriate rating profile as 
    follows.
        (b) Banks evaluated under the lending, investment, and service 
    tests. (1) Lending performance rating. The OCC assigns each bank's 
    lending performance one of the five following ratings. 
    [[Page 22187]] 
        (i) Outstanding. The OCC rates a bank's lending performance 
    ``outstanding'' if, in general, it demonstrates:
        (A) Excellent responsiveness to credit needs in its assessment 
    area(s), taking into account the number and amount of home mortgage, 
    small business, small farm, and consumer loans, if applicable, in 
    its assessment area(s);
        (B) A substantial majority of its loans are made in its 
    assessment area(s);
        (C) An excellent geographic distribution of loans in its 
    assessment area(s);
        (D) An excellent distribution, particularly in its assessment 
    area(s), of loans among individuals of different income levels and 
    businesses (including farms) of different sizes, given the product 
    lines offered by the bank;
        (E) An excellent record of serving the credit needs of highly 
    economically disadvantaged areas in its assessment area(s), low-
    income individuals, or businesses (including farms) with gross 
    annual revenues of $1 million or less, consistent with safe and 
    sound operations;
        (F) Extensive use of innovative or flexible lending practices in 
    a safe and sound manner to address the credit needs of low- or 
    moderate-income individuals or geographies; and
        (G) It is a leader in making community development loans.
        (ii) High satisfactory. The OCC rates a bank's lending 
    performance ``high satisfactory'' if, in general, it demonstrates:
        (A) Good responsiveness to credit needs in its assessment 
    area(s), taking into account the number and amount of home mortgage, 
    small business, small farm, and consumer loans, if applicable, in 
    its assessment area(s);
        (B) A high percentage of its loans are made in its assessment 
    area(s);
        (C) A good geographic distribution of loans in its assessment 
    area(s);
        (D) A good distribution, particularly in its assessment area(s), 
    of loans among individuals of different income levels and businesses 
    (including farms) of different sizes, given the product lines 
    offered by the bank;
        (E) A good record of serving the credit needs of highly 
    economically disadvantaged areas in its assessment area(s), low-
    income individuals, or businesses (including farms) with gross 
    annual revenues of $1 million or less, consistent with safe and 
    sound operations;
        (F) Use of innovative or flexible lending practices in a safe 
    and sound manner to address the credit needs of low- or moderate-
    income individuals or geographies; and
        (G) It has made a relatively high level of community development 
    loans.
        (iii) Low satisfactory. The OCC rates a bank's lending 
    performance ``low satisfactory'' if, in general, it demonstrates:
        (A) Adequate responsiveness to credit needs in its assessment 
    area(s), taking into account the number and amount of home mortgage, 
    small business, small farm, and consumer loans, if applicable, in 
    its assessment area(s);
        (B) An adequate percentage of its loans are made in its 
    assessment area(s);
        (C) An adequate geographic distribution of loans in its 
    assessment area(s);
        (D) An adequate distribution, particularly in its assessment 
    area(s), of loans among individuals of different income levels and 
    businesses (including farms) of different sizes, given the product 
    lines offered by the bank;
        (E) An adequate record of serving the credit needs of highly 
    economically disadvantaged areas in its assessment area(s), low-
    income individuals, or businesses (including farms) with gross 
    annual revenues of $1 million or less, consistent with safe and 
    sound operations;
        (F) Limited use of innovative or flexible lending practices in a 
    safe and sound manner to address the credit needs of low- or 
    moderate-income individuals or geographies; and
        (G) It has made an adequate level of community development 
    loans.
        (iv) Needs to improve. The OCC rates a bank's lending 
    performance ``needs to improve'' if, in general, it demonstrates:
        (A) Poor responsiveness to credit needs in its assessment 
    area(s), taking into account the number and amount of home mortgage, 
    small business, small farm, and consumer loans, if applicable, in 
    its assessment area(s);
        (B) A small percentage of its loans are made in its assessment 
    area(s);
        (C) A poor geographic distribution of loans, particularly to 
    low- or moderate-income geographies, in its assessment area(s);
        (D) A poor distribution, particularly in its assessment area(s), 
    of loans among individuals of different income levels and businesses 
    (including farms) of different sizes, given the product lines 
    offered by the bank;
        (E) A poor record of serving the credit needs of highly 
    economically disadvantaged areas in its assessment area(s), low-
    income individuals, or businesses (including farms) with gross 
    annual revenues of $1 million or less, consistent with safe and 
    sound operations;
        (F) Little use of innovative or flexible lending practices in a 
    safe and sound manner to address the credit needs of low- or 
    moderate-income individuals or geographies; and
        (G) It has made a low level of community development loans.
        (v) Substantial noncompliance. The OCC rates a bank's lending 
    performance as being in ``substantial noncompliance'' if, in 
    general, it demonstrates:
        (A) A very poor responsiveness to credit needs in its assessment 
    area(s), taking into account the number and amount of home mortgage, 
    small business, small farm, and consumer loans, if applicable, in 
    its assessment area(s);
        (B) A very small percentage of its loans are made in its 
    assessment area(s);
        (C) A very poor geographic distribution of loans, particularly 
    to low- or moderate-income geographies, in its assessment area(s);
        (D) A very poor distribution, particularly in its assessment 
    area(s), of loans among individuals of different income levels and 
    businesses (including farms) of different sizes, given the product 
    lines offered by the bank;
        (E) A very poor record of serving the credit needs of highly 
    economically disadvantaged areas in its assessment area(s), low-
    income individuals, or businesses (including farms) with gross 
    annual revenues of $1 million or less, consistent with safe and 
    sound operations;
        (F) No use of innovative or flexible lending practices in a safe 
    and sound manner to address the credit needs of low- or moderate-
    income individuals or geographies; and
        (G) It has made few, if any, community development loans.
        (2) Investment performance rating. The OCC assigns each bank's 
    investment performance one of the five following ratings.
        (i) Outstanding. The OCC rates a bank's investment performance 
    ``outstanding'' if, in general, it demonstrates:
        (A) An excellent level of qualified investments, particularly 
    those that are not routinely provided by private investors, often in 
    a leadership position;
        (B) Extensive use of innovative or complex qualified 
    investments; and
        (C) Excellent responsiveness to credit and community development 
    needs.
        (ii) High satisfactory. The OCC rates a bank's investment 
    performance ``high satisfactory'' if, in general, it demonstrates:
        (A) A significant level of qualified investments, particularly 
    those that are not routinely provided by private investors, 
    occasionally in a leadership position;
        (B) Significant use of innovative or complex qualified 
    investments; and
        (C) Good responsiveness to credit and community development 
    needs.
        (iii) Low satisfactory. The OCC rates a bank's investment 
    performance ``low satisfactory'' if, in general, it demonstrates:
        (A) An adequate level of qualified investments, particularly 
    those that are not routinely provided by private investors, although 
    rarely in a leadership position;
        (B) Occasional use of innovative or complex qualified 
    investments; and
        (C) Adequate responsiveness to credit and community development 
    needs. 
        (iv) Needs to improve. The OCC rates a bank's investment 
    performance ``needs to improve'' if, in general, it demonstrates:
        (A) A poor level of qualified investments, particularly those 
    that are not routinely provided by private investors;
        (B) Rare use of innovative or complex qualified investments; and
        (C) Poor responsiveness to credit and community development 
    needs.
        (v) Substantial noncompliance. The OCC rates a bank's investment 
    performance as being in ``substantial noncompliance'' if, in 
    general, it demonstrates:
        (A) Few, if any, qualified investments, particularly those that 
    are not routinely provided by private investors;
        (B) No use of innovative or complex qualified investments; and
        (C) Very poor responsiveness to credit and community development 
    needs.
        (3) Service performance rating. The OCC assigns each bank's 
    service performance one of the five following ratings.
        (i) Outstanding. The OCC rates a bank's service performance 
    ``outstanding'' if, in general, the bank demonstrates:
        (A) Its service delivery systems are readily accessible to 
    geographies and individuals of [[Page 22188]] different income 
    levels in its assessment area(s);
        (B) To the extent changes have been made, its record of opening 
    and closing branches has improved the accessibility of its delivery 
    systems, particularly in low- or moderate-income geographies or to 
    low- or moderate-income individuals;
        (C) Its services (including, where appropriate, business hours) 
    are tailored to the convenience and needs of its assessment area(s), 
    particularly low- or moderate-income geographies or low- or 
    moderate-income individuals; and
        (D) It is a leader in providing community development services.
        (ii) High satisfactory. The OCC rates a bank's service 
    performance ``high satisfactory'' if, in general, the bank 
    demonstrates:
        (A) Its service delivery systems are accessible to geographies 
    and individuals of different income levels in its assessment 
    area(s);
        (B) To the extent changes have been made, its record of opening 
    and closing branches has not adversely affected the accessibility of 
    its delivery systems, particularly in low- and moderate-income 
    geographies and to low- and moderate-income individuals;
        (C) Its services (including, where appropriate, business hours) 
    do not vary in a way that inconveniences its assessment area(s), 
    particularly low- and moderate-income geographies and low- and 
    moderate-income individuals; and
        (D) It provides a relatively high level of community development 
    services.
        (iii) Low satisfactory. The OCC rates a bank's service 
    performance ``low satisfactory'' if, in general, the bank 
    demonstrates:
        (A) Its service delivery systems are reasonably accessible to 
    geographies and individuals of different income levels in its 
    assessment area(s);
        (B) To the extent changes have been made, its record of opening 
    and closing branches has generally not adversely affected the 
    accessibility of its delivery systems, particularly in low- and 
    moderate-income geographies and to low- and moderate-income 
    individuals;
        (C) Its services (including, where appropriate, business hours) 
    do not vary in a way that inconveniences its assessment area(s), 
    particularly low- and moderate-income geographies and low- and 
    moderate-income individuals; and
        (D) It provides an adequate level of community development 
    services.
        (iv) Needs to improve. The OCC rates a bank's service 
    performance ``needs to improve'' if, in general, the bank 
    demonstrates:
        (A) Its service delivery systems are unreasonably inaccessible 
    to portions of its assessment area(s), particularly to low- or 
    moderate-income geographies or to low- or moderate-income 
    individuals;
        (B) To the extent changes have been made, its record of opening 
    and closing branches has adversely affected the accessibility its 
    delivery systems, particularly in low- or moderate-income 
    geographies or to low- or moderate-income individuals;
        (C) Its services (including, where appropriate, business hours) 
    vary in a way that inconveniences its assessment area(s), 
    particularly low- or moderate-income geographies or low- or 
    moderate-income individuals; and
        (D) It provides a limited level of community development 
    services.
        (v) Substantial noncompliance. The OCC rates a bank's service 
    performance as being in ``substantial noncompliance'' if, in 
    general, the bank demonstrates:
        (A) Its service delivery systems are unreasonably inaccessible 
    to significant portions of its assessment area(s), particularly to 
    low- or moderate-income geographies or to low- or moderate-income 
    individuals;
        (B) To the extent changes have been made, its record of opening 
    and closing branches has significantly adversely affected the 
    accessibility of its delivery systems, particularly in low- or 
    moderate-income geographies or to low- or moderate-income 
    individuals;
        (C) Its services (including, where appropriate, business hours) 
    vary in a way that significantly inconveniences its assessment 
    area(s), particularly low- or moderate-income geographies or low- or 
    moderate-income individuals; and
        (D) It provides few, if any, community development services.
        (c) Wholesale or limited purpose banks. The OCC assigns each 
    wholesale or limited purpose bank's community development 
    performance one of the four following ratings.
        (1) Outstanding. The OCC rates a wholesale or limited purpose 
    bank's community development performance ``outstanding'' if, in 
    general, it demonstrates:
        (i) A high level of community development loans, community 
    development services, or qualified investments, particularly 
    investments that are not routinely provided by private investors;
        (ii) Extensive use of innovative or complex qualified 
    investments, community development loans, or community development 
    services; and
        (iii) Excellent responsiveness to credit and community 
    development needs in its assessment area(s).
        (2) Satisfactory. The OCC rates a wholesale or limited purpose 
    bank's community development performance ``satisfactory'' if, in 
    general, it demonstrates:
        (i) An adequate level of community development loans, community 
    development services, or qualified investments, particularly 
    investments that are not routinely provided by private investors;
        (ii) Occasional use of innovative or complex qualified 
    investments, community development loans, or community development 
    services; and
        (iii) Adequate responsiveness to credit and community 
    development needs in its assessment area(s).
        (3) Needs to improve. The OCC rates a wholesale or limited 
    purpose bank's community development performance as ``needs to 
    improve'' if, in general, it demonstrates:
        (i) A poor level of community development loans, community 
    development services, or qualified investments, particularly 
    investments that are not routinely provided by private investors;
        (ii) Rare use of innovative or complex qualified investments, 
    community development loans, or community development services; and
        (iii) Poor responsiveness to credit and community development 
    needs in its assessment area(s).
        (4) Substantial noncompliance. The OCC rates a wholesale or 
    limited purpose bank's community development performance in 
    ``substantial noncompliance'' if, in general, it demonstrates:
        (i) Few, if any, community development loans, community 
    development services, or qualified investments, particularly 
    investments that are not routinely provided by private investors;
        (ii) No use of innovative or complex qualified investments, 
    community development loans, or community development services; and
        (iii) Very poor responsiveness to credit and community 
    development needs in its assessment area(s).
        (d) Banks evaluated under the small bank performance standards. 
    The OCC rates the performance of each bank evaluated under the small 
    bank performance standards as follows:
        (1) Eligibility for a satisfactory rating. The OCC rates a 
    bank's performance ``satisfactory'' if, in general, the bank 
    demonstrates:
        (i) A reasonable loan-to-deposit ratio (considering seasonal 
    variations) given the bank's size, financial condition, the credit 
    needs of its assessment area(s), and taking into account, as 
    appropriate, lending-related activities such as loan originations 
    for sale to the secondary markets and community development loans 
    and qualified investments;
        (ii) A majority of its loans and, as appropriate, other lending-
    related activities are in its assessment area(s);
        (iii) A distribution of loans to and, as appropriate, other 
    lending related-activities for individuals of different income 
    levels (including low- and moderate-income individuals) and 
    businesses and farms of different sizes that is reasonable given the 
    demographics of the bank's assessment area(s);
        (iv) A record of taking appropriate action, as warranted, in 
    response to written complaints, if any, about the bank's performance 
    in helping to meet the credit needs of its assessment area(s); and
        (v) A reasonable geographic distribution of loans given the 
    bank's assessment area(s).
        (2) Eligibility for an outstanding rating. A bank that meets 
    each of the standards for a ``satisfactory'' rating under this 
    paragraph and exceeds some or all of those standards may warrant 
    consideration for an overall rating of ``outstanding.'' In assessing 
    whether a bank's performance is ``outstanding,'' the OCC considers 
    the extent to which the bank exceeds each of the performance 
    standards for a ``satisfactory'' rating and its performance in 
    making qualified investments and its performance in providing 
    branches and other services and delivery systems that 
    [[Page 22189]] enhance credit availability in its assessment 
    area(s).
        (3) Needs to improve or substantial noncompliance ratings. A 
    bank also may receive a rating of ``needs to improve'' or 
    ``substantial noncompliance'' depending on the degree to which its 
    performance has failed to meet the standards for a ``satisfactory'' 
    rating.
        (e) Strategic plan assessment and rating--(1) Satisfactory 
    goals. The OCC approves as ``satisfactory'' measurable goals that 
    adequately help to meet the credit needs of the bank's assessment 
    area(s).
        (2) Outstanding goals. If the plan identifies a separate group 
    of measurable goals that substantially exceed the levels approved as 
    ``satisfactory,'' the OCC will approve those goals as 
    ``outstanding.''
        (3) Rating. The OCC assesses the performance of a bank operating 
    under an approved plan to determine if the bank has met its plan 
    goals:
        (i) If the bank substantially achieves its plan goals for a 
    satisfactory rating, the OCC will rate the bank's performance under 
    the plan as ``satisfactory.''
        (ii) If the bank exceeds its plan goals for a satisfactory 
    rating and substantially achieves its plan goals for an outstanding 
    rating, the OCC will rate the bank's performance under the plan as 
    ``outstanding.''
        (iii) If the bank fails to meet substantially its plan goals for 
    a satisfactory rating, the OCC will rate the bank as either ``needs 
    to improve'' or ``substantial noncompliance,'' depending on the 
    extent to which it falls short of its plan goals, unless the bank 
    elected in its plan to be rated otherwise, as provided in 
    Sec. 25.27(f)(4).
    
    Appendix B to Part 25--CRA Notice
    
        (a) Notice for main offices and, if an interstate bank, one 
    branch office in each state.
    
    Community Reinvestment Act Notice
    
        Under the Federal Community Reinvestment Act (CRA), the 
    Comptroller of the Currency evaluates our record of helping to meet 
    the credit needs of this community consistent with safe and sound 
    operations. The Comptroller also takes this record into account when 
    deciding on certain applications submitted by us.
        Your involvement is encouraged.
        You are entitled to certain information about our operations and 
    our performance under the CRA, including, for example, information 
    about our branches, such as their location and services provided at 
    them; the public section of our most recent CRA Performance 
    Evaluation, prepared by the Comptroller; and comments received from 
    the public relating to our performance in helping to meet community 
    credit needs, as well as our responses to those comments. You may 
    review this information today.
        At least 30 days before the beginning of each quarter, the 
    Comptroller publishes a nationwide list of the banks that are 
    scheduled for CRA examination in that quarter. This list is 
    available from the Deputy Comptroller (address). You may send 
    written comments about our performance in helping to meet community 
    credit needs to (name and address of official at bank) and Deputy 
    Comptroller (address). Your letter, together with any response by 
    us, will be considered by the Comptroller in evaluating our CRA 
    performance and may be made public.
        You may ask to look at any comments received by the Deputy 
    Comptroller. You may also request from the Deputy Comptroller an 
    announcement of our applications covered by the CRA filed with the 
    Comptroller. We are an affiliate of (name of holding company), a 
    bank holding company. You may request from the (title of responsible 
    official), Federal Reserve Bank of ________ (address) an 
    announcement of applications covered by the CRA filed by bank 
    holding companies.
        (b) Notice for branch offices.
    
    Community Reinvestment Act Notice
    
        Under the Federal Community Reinvestment Act (CRA), the 
    Comptroller of the Currency evaluates our record of helping to meet 
    the credit needs of this community consistent with safe and sound 
    operations. The Comptroller also takes this record into account when 
    deciding on certain applications submitted by us.
        Your involvement is encouraged.
        You are entitled to certain information about our operations and 
    our performance under the CRA. You may review today the public 
    section of our most recent CRA evaluation, prepared by the 
    Comptroller, and a list of services provided at this branch. You may 
    also have access to the following additional information, which we 
    will make available to you at this branch within five calendar days 
    after you make a request to us: (1) A map showing the assessment 
    area containing this branch, which is the area in which the 
    Comptroller evaluates our CRA performance in this community; (2) 
    information about our branches in this assessment area; (3) a list 
    of services we provide at those locations; (4) data on our lending 
    performance in this assessment area; and (5) copies of all written 
    comments received by us that specifically relate to our CRA 
    performance in this assessment area, and any responses we have made 
    to those comments. If we are operating under an approved strategic 
    plan, you may also have access to a copy of the plan.
        [If you would like to review information about our CRA 
    performance in other communities served by us, the public file for 
    our entire bank is available at (name of office located in state), 
    located at (address).]
        At least 30 days before the beginning of each quarter, the 
    Comptroller publishes a nationwide list of the banks that are 
    scheduled for CRA examination in that quarter. This list is 
    available from the Deputy Comptroller (address). You may send 
    written comments about our performance in helping to meet community 
    credit needs to (name and address of official at bank) and Deputy 
    Comptroller (address). Your letter, together with any response by 
    us, will be considered by the Comptroller in evaluating our CRA 
    performance and may be made public.
        You may ask to look at any comments received by the Deputy 
    Comptroller. You may also request from the Deputy Comptroller an 
    announcement of our applications covered by the CRA filed with the 
    Comptroller. We are an affiliate of (name of holding company), a 
    bank holding company. You may request from the (title of responsible 
    official), Federal Reserve Bank of ________ (address) an 
    announcement of applications covered by the CRA filed by bank 
    holding companies.
    
    
    Secs. 25.1, 25.2, 25.8, and 25.101, and the undesignated center heading 
    preceding Sec. 25.101  [Removed]
    
        3. Sections 25.1, 25.2, 25.8 and 25.101 and the undesignated center 
    heading preceding Sec. 25.101 are removed effective July 1, 1995.
    
    
    Secs. 25.3, 25.4, 25.5, 25.6, 25.7, and Subpart D  [Removed]
    
        4. Sections 25.3, 25.4, 25.5, 25.6, and 25.7 and subpart D, 
    consisting of Sec. 25.51, are removed effective July 1, 1997.
    
        Dated: April 19, 1995.
    Eugene A. Ludwig,
    Comptroller of the Currency.
    Federal Reserve System
    
    12 CFR CHAPTER II
    
        For the reasons outlined in the joint preamble, the Board of 
    Governors of the Federal Reserve System amends 12 CFR chapter II as set 
    forth below:
    
    PART 228--COMMUNITY REINVESTMENT (REGULATION BB)
    
        1. The authority citation for part 228 is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 12 U.S.C. 321, 325, 1828(c), 1842, 1843, 1844, and 
    2901 et seq.
    
        2. Part 228 is amended by adding Subparts A through D and 
    Appendices A and B to read as follows:
    
    Subpart A--General
    
    Sec.
    228.11  Authority, purposes, and scope.
    228.12  Definitions.
    
    Subpart B--Standards for Assessing Performance
    
    228.21  Performance tests, standards, and ratings, in general.
    228.22  Lending test.
    228.23  Investment test.
    228.24  Service test.
    228.25  Community development test for wholesale or limited purpose 
    banks.
    228.26  Small bank performance standards.
    228.27  Strategic plan.
    228.28  Assigned ratings.
    228.29  Effect of CRA performance on applications.
    
    Subpart C--Records, Reporting, and Disclosure Requirements
    
    228.41  Assessment area delineation.
    228.42  Data collection, reporting, and disclosure.
    228.43  Content and availability of public file. [[Page 22190]] 
    228.44  Public notice by banks.
    228.45  Publication of planned examination schedule.
    
    Subpart D--Transition Rules
    
    228.51  Transition rules.
    
    Appendix A to Part 228--Ratings
    
    Appendix B to Part 228--CRA Notice
    Subpart A--General
    
    
    Sec. 228.11  Authority, purposes, and scope.
    
        (a) Authority. The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System 
    (the Board) issues this part to implement the Community Reinvestment 
    Act (12 U.S.C. 2901 et seq.) (CRA). The regulations comprising this 
    part are issued under the authority of the CRA and under the provisions 
    of the United States Code authorizing the Board:
        (1) To conduct examinations of State-chartered banks that are 
    members of the Federal Reserve System (12 U.S.C. 325);
        (2) To conduct examinations of bank holding companies and their 
    subsidiaries (12 U.S.C. 1844); and
        (3) To consider applications for:
        (i) Domestic branches by State member banks (12 U.S.C. 321);
        (ii) Mergers in which the resulting bank would be a State member 
    bank (12 U.S.C. 1828(c));
        (iii) Formations of, acquisitions of banks by, and mergers of, bank 
    holding companies (12 U.S.C. 1842); and
        (iv) The acquisition of savings associations by bank holding 
    companies (12 U.S.C. 1843).
        (b) Purposes. In enacting the CRA, the Congress required each 
    appropriate Federal financial supervisory agency to assess an 
    institution's record of helping to meet the credit needs of the local 
    communities in which the institution is chartered, consistent with the 
    safe and sound operation of the institution, and to take this record 
    into account in the agency's evaluation of an application for a deposit 
    facility by the institution. This part is intended to carry out the 
    purposes of the CRA by:
        (1) Establishing the framework and criteria by which the Board 
    assesses a bank's record of helping to meet the credit needs of its 
    entire community, including low- and moderate-income neighborhoods, 
    consistent with the safe and sound operation of the bank; and
        (2) Providing that the Board takes that record into account in 
    considering certain applications.
        (c) Scope--(1) General. This part applies to all banks except as 
    provided in paragraph (c)(3) of this section.
        (2) Foreign bank acquisitions. This part also applies to an 
    uninsured State branch (other than a limited branch) of a foreign bank 
    that results from an acquisition described in section 5(a)(8) of the 
    International Banking Act of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3103(a)(8)). The terms 
    ``State branch'' and ``foreign bank'' have the same meanings as in 
    section 1(b) of the International Banking Act of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3101 
    et seq.); the term ``uninsured State branch'' means a State branch the 
    deposits of which are not insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance 
    Corporation; the term ``limited branch'' means a State branch that 
    accepts only deposits that are permissible for a corporation organized 
    under section 25A of the Federal Reserve Act (12 U.S.C. 611 et seq.).
        (3) Certain special purpose banks. This part does not apply to 
    special purpose banks that do not perform commercial or retail banking 
    services by granting credit to the public in the ordinary course of 
    business, other than as incident to their specialized operations. These 
    banks include banker's banks, as defined in 12 U.S.C. 24 (Seventh), and 
    banks that engage only in one or more of the following activities: 
    providing cash management controlled disbursement services or serving 
    as correspondent banks, trust companies, or clearing agents.
    
    
    Sec. 228.12  Definitions.
    
        For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:
        (a) Affiliate means any company that controls, is controlled by, or 
    is under common control with another company. The term ``control'' has 
    the meaning given to that term in 12 U.S.C. 1841(a)(2), and a company 
    is under common control with another company if both companies are 
    directly or indirectly controlled by the same company.
        (b) Area median income means:
        (1) The median family income for the MSA, if a person or geography 
    is located in an MSA; or
        (2) The statewide nonmetropolitan median family income, if a person 
    or geography is located outside an MSA.
        (c) Assessment area means a geographic area delineated in 
    accordance with Sec. 228.41.
        (d) Automated teller machine (ATM) means an automated, unstaffed 
    banking facility owned or operated by, or operated exclusively for, the 
    bank at which deposits are received, cash dispersed, or money lent.
        (e) Bank means a State member bank as that term is defined in 
    section 3(d)(2) of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12 U.S.C. 
    1813(d)(2)), except as provided in Sec. 228.11(c)(3), and includes an 
    uninsured State branch (other than a limited branch) of a foreign bank 
    described in Sec. 228.11(c)(2).
        (f) Branch means a staffed banking facility approved as a branch, 
    whether shared or unshared, including, for example, a mini-branch in a 
    grocery store or a branch operated in conjunction with any other local 
    business or nonprofit organization.
        (g) CMSA means a consolidated metropolitan statistical area as 
    defined by the Director of the Office of Management and Budget.
        (h) Community development means:
        (1) Affordable housing (including multifamily rental housing) for 
    low- or moderate-income individuals;
        (2) Community services targeted to low- or moderate-income 
    individuals;
        (3) Activities that promote economic development by financing 
    businesses or farms that meet the size eligibility standards of 13 CFR 
    121.802(a)(2) or have gross annual revenues of $1 million or less; or
        (4) Activities that revitalize or stabilize low- or moderate-income 
    geographies.
        (i) Community development loan means a loan that:
        (1) Has as its primary purpose community development; and
        (2) Except in the case of a wholesale or limited purpose bank:
        (i) Has not been reported or collected by the bank or an affiliate 
    for consideration in the bank's assessment as a home mortgage, small 
    business, small farm, or consumer loan, unless it is a multifamily 
    dwelling loan (as described in Appendix A to Part 203 of this chapter); 
    and
        (ii) Benefits the bank's assessment area(s) or a broader statewide 
    or regional area that includes the bank's assessment area(s).
        (j) Community development service means a service that:
        (1) Has as its primary purpose community development;
        (2) Is related to the provision of financial services; and
        (3) Has not been considered in the evaluation of the bank's retail 
    banking services under Sec. 228.24(d).
        (k) Consumer loan means a loan to one or more individuals for 
    household, family, or other personal expenditures. A consumer loan does 
    not include a home mortgage, small business, or small farm loan. 
    Consumer loans include the following categories of loans:
        (1) Motor vehicle loan, which is a consumer loan extended for the 
    purchase of and secured by a motor vehicle;
        (2) Credit card loan, which is a line of credit for household, 
    family, or other personal expenditures that is accessed by a borrower's 
    use of a ``credit card,'' as this term is defined in Sec. 226.2 of this 
    chapter; [[Page 22191]] 
        (3) Home equity loan, which is a consumer loan secured by a 
    residence of the borrower;
        (4) Other secured consumer loan, which is a secured consumer loan 
    that is not included in one of the other categories of consumer loans; 
    and
        (5) Other unsecured consumer loan, which is an unsecured consumer 
    loan that is not included in one of the other categories of consumer 
    loans.
        (l) Geography means a census tract or a block numbering area 
    delineated by the United States Bureau of the Census in the most recent 
    decennial census.
        (m) Home mortgage loan means a ``home improvement loan'' or a 
    ``home purchase loan'' as defined in Sec. 203.2 of this chapter.
        (n) Income level includes:
        (1) Low-income, which means an individual income that is less than 
    50 percent of the area median income, or a median family income that is 
    less than 50 percent, in the case of a geography.
        (2) Moderate-income, which means an individual income that is at 
    least 50 percent and less than 80 percent of the area median income, or 
    a median family income that is at least 50 and less than 80 percent, in 
    the case of a geography.
        (3) Middle-income, which means an individual income that is at 
    least 80 percent and less than 120 percent of the area median income, 
    or a median family income that is at least 80 and less than 120 
    percent, in the case of a geography.
        (4) Upper-income, which means an individual income that is 120 
    percent or more of the area median income, or a median family income 
    that is 120 percent or more, in the case of a geography.
        (o) Limited purpose bank means a bank that offers only a narrow 
    product line (such as credit card or motor vehicle loans) to a regional 
    or broader market and for which a designation as a limited purpose bank 
    is in effect, in accordance with Sec. 228.25(b).
        (p) Loan location. A loan is located as follows:
        (1) A consumer loan is located in the geography where the borrower 
    resides;
        (2) A home mortgage loan is located in the geography where the 
    property to which the loan relates is located; and
        (3) A small business or small farm loan is located in the geography 
    where the main business facility or farm is located or where the loan 
    proceeds otherwise will be applied, as indicated by the borrower.
        (q) Loan production office means a staffed facility, other than a 
    branch, that is open to the public and that provides lending-related 
    services, such as loan information and applications.
        (r) MSA means a metropolitan statistical area or a primary 
    metropolitan statistical area as defined by the Director of the Office 
    of Management and Budget.
        (s) Qualified investment means a lawful investment, deposit, 
    membership share, or grant that has as its primary purpose community 
    development.
        (t) Small bank means a bank that, as of December 31 of either of 
    the prior two calendar years, had total assets of less than $250 
    million and was independent or an affiliate of a holding company that, 
    as of December 31 of either of the prior two calendar years, had total 
    banking and thrift assets of less than $1 billion.
        (u) Small business loan means a loan included in ``loans to small 
    businesses'' as defined in the instructions for preparation of the 
    Consolidated Report of Condition and Income.
        (v) Small farm loan means a loan included in ``loans to small 
    farms'' as defined in the instructions for preparation of the 
    Consolidated Report of Condition and Income.
        (w) Wholesale bank means a bank that is not in the business of 
    extending home mortgage, small business, small farm, or consumer loans 
    to retail customers, and for which a designation as a wholesale bank is 
    in effect, in accordance with Sec. 228.25(b).
    
    Subpart B--Standards for Assessing Performance
    
    
    Sec. 228.21  Performance tests, standards, and ratings, in general.
    
        (a) Performance tests and standards. The Board assesses the CRA 
    performance of a bank in an examination as follows:
        (1) Lending, investment, and service tests. The Board applies the 
    lending, investment, and service tests, as provided in Secs. 228.22 
    through 228.24, in evaluating the performance of a bank, except as 
    provided in paragraphs (a)(2), (a)(3), and (a)(4) of this section.
        (2) Community development test for wholesale or limited purpose 
    banks. The Board applies the community development test for a wholesale 
    or limited purpose bank, as provided in Sec. 228.25, except as provided 
    in paragraph (a)(4) of this section.
        (3) Small bank performance standards. The Board applies the small 
    bank performance standards as provided in Sec. 228.26 in evaluating the 
    performance of a small bank or a bank that was a small bank during the 
    prior calendar year, unless the bank elects to be assessed as provided 
    in paragraphs (a)(1), (a)(2), or (a)(4) of this section. The bank may 
    elect to be assessed as provided in paragraph (a)(1) of this section 
    only if it collects and reports the data required for other banks under 
    Sec. 228.42.
        (4) Strategic plan. The Board evaluates the performance of a bank 
    under a strategic plan if the bank submits, and the Board approves, a 
    strategic plan as provided in Sec. 228.27.
        (b) Performance context. The Board applies the tests and standards 
    in paragraph (a) of this section and also considers whether to approve 
    a proposed strategic plan in the context of:
        (1) Demographic data on median income levels, distribution of 
    household income, nature of housing stock, housing costs, and other 
    relevant data pertaining to a bank's assessment area(s);
        (2) Any information about lending, investment, and service 
    opportunities in the bank's assessment area(s) maintained by the bank 
    or obtained from community organizations, state, local, and tribal 
    governments, economic development agencies, or other sources;
        (3) The bank's product offerings and business strategy as 
    determined from data provided by the bank;
        (4) Institutional capacity and constraints, including the size and 
    financial condition of the bank, the economic climate (national, 
    regional, and local), safety and soundness limitations, and any other 
    factors that significantly affect the bank's ability to provide 
    lending, investments, or services in its assessment area(s);
        (5) The bank's past performance and the performance of similarly 
    situated lenders;
        (6) The bank's public file, as described in Sec. 228.43, and any 
    written comments about the bank's CRA performance submitted to the bank 
    or the Board; and
        (7) Any other information deemed relevant by the Board.
        (c) Assigned ratings. The Board assigns to a bank one of the 
    following four ratings pursuant to Sec. 228.28 and Appendix A of this 
    part: ``outstanding''; ``satisfactory''; ``needs to improve''; or 
    ``substantial noncompliance'' as provided in 12 U.S.C. 2906(b)(2). The 
    rating assigned by the Board reflects the bank's record of helping to 
    meet the credit needs of its entire community, including low- and 
    moderate-income neighborhoods, consistent with the safe and sound 
    operation of the bank.
        (d) Safe and sound operations. This part and the CRA do not require 
    a bank to make loans or investments or to provide services that are 
    inconsistent with safe and sound operations. To the contrary, the Board 
    anticipates banks can meet the standards of this part with safe and 
    sound loans, investments, and [[Page 22192]] services on which the 
    banks expect to make a profit. Banks are permitted and encouraged to 
    develop and apply flexible underwriting standards for loans that 
    benefit low- or moderate-income geographies or individuals, only if 
    consistent with safe and sound operations.
    
    
    Sec. 228.22   Lending test.
    
        (a) Scope of test. (1) The lending test evaluates a bank's record 
    of helping to meet the credit needs of its assessment area(s) through 
    its lending activities by considering a bank's home mortgage, small 
    business, small farm, and community development lending. If consumer 
    lending constitutes a substantial majority of a bank's business, the 
    Board will evaluate the bank's consumer lending in one or more of the 
    following categories: motor vehicle, credit card, home equity, other 
    secured, and other unsecured loans. In addition, at a bank's option, 
    the Board will evaluate one or more categories of consumer lending, if 
    the bank has collected and maintained, as required in 
    Sec. 228.42(c)(1), the data for each category that the bank elects to 
    have the Board evaluate.
        (2) The Board considers originations and purchases of loans. The 
    Board will also consider any other loan data the bank may choose to 
    provide, including data on loans outstanding, commitments and letters 
    of credit.
        (3) A bank may ask the Board to consider loans originated or 
    purchased by consortia in which the bank participates or by third 
    parties in which the bank has invested only if the loans meet the 
    definition of community development loans and only in accordance with 
    paragraph (d) of this section. The Board will not consider these loans 
    under any criterion of the lending test except the community 
    development lending criterion.
        (b) Performance criteria. The Board evaluates a bank's lending 
    performance pursuant to the following criteria:
        (1) Lending activity. The number and amount of the bank's home 
    mortgage, small business, small farm, and consumer loans, if 
    applicable, in the bank's assessment area(s);
        (2) Geographic distribution. The geographic distribution of the 
    bank's home mortgage, small business, small farm, and consumer loans, 
    if applicable, based on the loan location, including:
        (i) The proportion of the bank's lending in the bank's assessment 
    area(s);
        (ii) The dispersion of lending in the bank's assessment area(s); 
    and
        (iii) The number and amount of loans in low-, moderate-, middle-, 
    and upper-income geographies in the bank's assessment area(s);
        (3) Borrower characteristics. The distribution, particularly in the 
    bank's assessment area(s), of the bank's home mortgage, small business, 
    small farm, and consumer loans, if applicable, based on borrower 
    characteristics, including the number and amount of:
        (i) Home mortgage loans to low-, moderate-, middle-, and upper-
    income individuals;
        (ii) Small business and small farm loans to businesses and farms 
    with gross annual revenues of $1 million or less;
        (iii) Small business and small farm loans by loan amount at 
    origination; and
        (iv) Consumer loans, if applicable, to low-, moderate-, middle-, 
    and upper-income individuals;
        (4) Community development lending. The bank's community development 
    lending, including the number and amount of community development 
    loans, and their complexity and innovativeness; and
        (5) Innovative or flexible lending practices. The bank's use of 
    innovative or flexible lending practices in a safe and sound manner to 
    address the credit needs of low- or moderate-income individuals or 
    geographies.
        (c) Affiliate lending. (1) At a bank's option, the Board will 
    consider loans by an affiliate of the bank, if the bank provides data 
    on the affiliate's loans pursuant to Sec. 228.42.
        (2) The Board considers affiliate lending subject to the following 
    constraints:
        (i) No affiliate may claim a loan origination or loan purchase if 
    another institution claims the same loan origination or purchase; and
        (ii) If a bank elects to have the Board consider loans within a 
    particular lending category made by one or more of the bank's 
    affiliates in a particular assessment area, the bank shall elect to 
    have the Board consider, in accordance with paragraph (c)(1) of this 
    section, all the loans within that lending category in that particular 
    assessment area made by all of the bank's affiliates.
        (3) The Board does not consider affiliate lending in assessing a 
    bank's performance under paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section.
        (d) Lending by a consortium or a third party. Community development 
    loans originated or purchased by a consortium in which the bank 
    participates or by a third party in which the bank has invested:
        (1) Will be considered, at the bank's option, if the bank reports 
    the data pertaining to these loans under Sec. 228.42(b)(2); and
        (2) May be allocated among participants or investors, as they 
    choose, for purposes of the lending test, except that no participant or 
    investor:
        (i) May claim a loan origination or loan purchase if another 
    participant or investor claims the same loan origination or purchase; 
    or
        (ii) May claim loans accounting for more than its percentage share 
    (based on the level of its participation or investment) of the total 
    loans originated by the consortium or third party.
        (e) Lending performance rating. The Board rates a bank's lending 
    performance as provided in Appendix A of this part.
    
    
    Sec. 228.23  Investment test.
    
        (a) Scope of test. The investment test evaluates a bank's record of 
    helping to meet the credit needs of its assessment area(s) through 
    qualified investments that benefit its assessment area(s) or a broader 
    statewide or regional area that includes the bank's assessment area(s).
        (b) Exclusion. Activities considered under the lending or service 
    tests may not be considered under the investment test.
        (c) Affiliate investment. At a bank's option, the Board will 
    consider, in its assessment of a bank's investment performance, a 
    qualified investment made by an affiliate of the bank, if the qualified 
    investment is not claimed by any other institution.
        (d) Disposition of branch premises. Donating, selling on favorable 
    terms, or making available on a rent-free basis a branch of the bank 
    that is located in a predominantly minority neighborhood to a minority 
    depository institution or women's depository institution (as these 
    terms are defined in 12 U.S.C. 2907(b)) will be considered as a 
    qualified investment.
        (e) Performance criteria. The Board evaluates the investment 
    performance of a bank pursuant to the following criteria:
        (1) The dollar amount of qualified investments;
        (2) The innovativeness or complexity of qualified investments;
        (3) The responsiveness of qualified investments to credit and 
    community development needs; and
        (4) The degree to which the qualified investments are not routinely 
    provided by private investors.
        (f) Investment performance rating. The Board rates a bank's 
    investment performance as provided in Appendix A of this part.
    
    
    Sec. 228.24  Service test.
    
        (a) Scope of test. The service test evaluates a bank's record of 
    helping to [[Page 22193]] meet the credit needs of its assessment 
    area(s) by analyzing both the availability and effectiveness of a 
    bank's systems for delivering retail banking services and the extent 
    and innovativeness of its community development services.
        (b) Area(s) benefitted. Community development services must benefit 
    a bank's assessment area(s) or a broader statewide or regional area 
    that includes the bank's assessment area(s).
        (c) Affiliate service. At a bank's option, the Board will consider, 
    in its assessment of a bank's service performance, a community 
    development service provided by an affiliate of the bank, if the 
    community development service is not claimed by any other institution.
        (d) Performance criteria--retail banking services. The Board 
    evaluates the availability and effectiveness of a bank's systems for 
    delivering retail banking services, pursuant to the following criteria:
        (1) The current distribution of the bank's branches among low-,
    moderate-, middle-, and upper-income geographies;
        (2) In the context of its current distribution of the bank's 
    branches, the bank's record of opening and closing branches, 
    particularly branches located in low- or moderate-income geographies or 
    primarily serving low- or moderate-income individuals;
        (3) The availability and effectiveness of alternative systems for 
    delivering retail banking services (e.g., ATMs, ATMs not owned or 
    operated by or exclusively for the bank, banking by telephone or 
    computer, loan production offices, and bank-at-work or bank-by-mail 
    programs) in low- and moderate-income geographies and to low- and 
    moderate-income individuals; and
        (4) The range of services provided in low-, moderate-, middle-, and 
    upper-income geographies and the degree to which the services are 
    tailored to meet the needs of those geographies.
        (e) Performance criteria--community development services. The Board 
    evaluates community development services pursuant to the following 
    criteria:
        (1) The extent to which the bank provides community development 
    services; and
        (2) The innovativeness and responsiveness of community development 
    services.
        (f) Service performance rating. The Board rates a bank's service 
    performance as provided in Appendix A of this part.
    
    
    Sec. 228.25  Community development test for wholesale or limited 
    purpose banks.
    
        (a) Scope of test. The Board assesses a wholesale or limited 
    purpose bank's record of helping to meet the credit needs of its 
    assessment area(s) under the community development test through its 
    community development lending, qualified investments, or community 
    development services.
        (b) Designation as a wholesale or limited purpose bank. In order to 
    receive a designation as a wholesale or limited purpose bank, a bank 
    shall file a request, in writing, with the Board, at least three months 
    prior to the proposed effective date of the designation. If the Board 
    approves the designation, it remains in effect until the bank requests 
    revocation of the designation or until one year after the Board 
    notifies the bank that the Board has revoked the designation on its own 
    initiative.
        (c) Performance criteria. The Board evaluates the community 
    development performance of a wholesale or limited purpose bank pursuant 
    to the following criteria:
        (1) The number and amount of community development loans (including 
    originations and purchases of loans and other community development 
    loan data provided by the bank, such as data on loans outstanding, 
    commitments, and letters of credit), qualified investments, or 
    community development services;
        (2) The use of innovative or complex qualified investments, 
    community development loans, or community development services and the 
    extent to which the investments are not routinely provided by private 
    investors; and
        (3) The bank's responsiveness to credit and community development 
    needs.
        (d) Indirect activities. At a bank's option, the Board will 
    consider in its community development performance assessment:
        (1) Qualified investments or community development services 
    provided by an affiliate of the bank, if the investments or services 
    are not claimed by any other institution; and
        (2) Community development lending by affiliates, consortia and 
    third parties, subject to the requirements and limitations in 
    Sec. 228.22(c) and (d).
        (e) Benefit to assessment area(s)--(1) Benefit inside assessment 
    area(s). The Board considers all qualified investments, community 
    development loans, and community development services that benefit 
    areas within the bank's assessment area(s) or a broader statewide or 
    regional area that includes the bank's assessment area(s).
        (2) Benefit outside assessment area(s). The Board considers the 
    qualified investments, community development loans, and community 
    development services that benefit areas outside the bank's assessment 
    area(s), if the bank has adequately addressed the needs of its 
    assessment area(s).
        (f) Community development performance rating. The Board rates a 
    bank's community development performance as provided in Appendix A of 
    this part.
    
    
    Sec. 228.26  Small bank performance standards.
    
        (a) Performance criteria. The Board evaluates the record of a small 
    bank, or a bank that was a small bank during the prior calendar year, 
    of helping to meet the credit needs of its assessment area(s) pursuant 
    to the following criteria:
        (1) The bank's loan-to-deposit ratio, adjusted for seasonal 
    variation and, as appropriate, other lending-related activities, such 
    as loan originations for sale to the secondary markets, community 
    development loans, or qualified investments;
        (2) The percentage of loans and, as appropriate, other lending-
    related activities located in the bank's assessment area(s);
        (3) The bank's record of lending to and, as appropriate, engaging 
    in other lending-related activities for borrowers of different income 
    levels and businesses and farms of different sizes;
        (4) The geographic distribution of the bank's loans; and
        (5) The bank's record of taking action, if warranted, in response 
    to written complaints about its performance in helping to meet credit 
    needs in its assessment area(s).
        (b) Small bank performance rating. The Board rates the performance 
    of a bank evaluated under this section as provided in Appendix A of 
    this part.
    
    
    Sec. 228.27  Strategic plan.
    
        (a) Alternative election. The Board will assess a bank's record of 
    helping to meet the credit needs of its assessment area(s) under a 
    strategic plan if:
        (1) The bank has submitted the plan to the Board as provided for in 
    this section;
        (2) The Board has approved the plan;
        (3) The plan is in effect; and
        (4) The bank has been operating under an approved plan for at least 
    one year.
        (b) Data reporting. The Board's approval of a plan does not affect 
    the bank's obligation, if any, to report data as required by 
    Sec. 228.42.
        (c) Plans in general--(1) Term. A plan may have a term of no more 
    than five years, and any multi-year plan must [[Page 22194]] include 
    annual interim measurable goals under which the Board will evaluate the 
    bank's performance.
        (2) Multiple assessment areas. A bank with more than one assessment 
    area may prepare a single plan for all of its assessment areas or one 
    or more plans for one or more of its assessment areas.
        (3) Treatment of affiliates. Affiliated institutions may prepare a 
    joint plan if the plan provides measurable goals for each institution. 
    Activities may be allocated among institutions at the institutions' 
    option, provided that the same activities are not considered for more 
    than one institution.
        (d) Public participation in plan development. Before submitting a 
    plan to the Board for approval, a bank shall:
        (1) Informally seek suggestions from members of the public in its 
    assessment area(s) covered by the plan while developing the plan;
        (2) Once the bank has developed a plan, formally solicit public 
    comment on the plan for at least 30 days by publishing notice in at 
    least one newspaper of general circulation in each assessment area 
    covered by the plan; and
        (3) During the period of formal public comment, make copies of the 
    plan available for review by the public at no cost at all offices of 
    the bank in any assessment area covered by the plan and provide copies 
    of the plan upon request for a reasonable fee to cover copying and 
    mailing, if applicable.
        (e) Submission of plan. The bank shall submit its plan to the Board 
    at least three months prior to the proposed effective date of the plan. 
    The bank shall also submit with its plan a description of its informal 
    efforts to seek suggestions from members of the public, any written 
    public comment received, and, if the plan was revised in light of the 
    comment received, the initial plan as released for public comment.
        (f) Plan content--(1) Measurable goals. (i) A bank shall specify in 
    its plan measurable goals for helping to meet the credit needs of each 
    assessment area covered by the plan, particularly the needs of low- and 
    moderate-income geographies and low- and moderate-income individuals, 
    through lending, investment, and services, as appropriate.
        (ii) A bank shall address in its plan all three performance 
    categories and, unless the bank has been designated as a wholesale or 
    limited purpose bank, shall emphasize lending and lending-related 
    activities. Nevertheless, a different emphasis, including a focus on 
    one or more performance categories, may be appropriate if responsive to 
    the characteristics and credit needs of its assessment area(s), 
    considering public comment and the bank's capacity and constraints, 
    product offerings, and business strategy.
        (2) Confidential information. A bank may submit additional 
    information to the Board on a confidential basis, but the goals stated 
    in the plan must be sufficiently specific to enable the public and the 
    Board to judge the merits of the plan.
        (3) Satisfactory and outstanding goals. A bank shall specify in its 
    plan measurable goals that constitute ``satisfactory'' performance. A 
    plan may specify measurable goals that constitute ``outstanding'' 
    performance. If a bank submits, and the Board approves, both 
    ``satisfactory'' and ``outstanding'' performance goals, the Board will 
    consider the bank eligible for an ``outstanding'' performance rating.
        (4) Election if satisfactory goals not substantially met. A bank 
    may elect in its plan that, if the bank fails to meet substantially its 
    plan goals for a satisfactory rating, the Board will evaluate the 
    bank's performance under the lending, investment, and service tests, 
    the community development test, or the small bank performance 
    standards, as appropriate.
        (g) Plan approval--(1) Timing. The Board will act upon a plan 
    within 60 calendar days after the Board receives the complete plan and 
    other material required under paragraph (d) of this section. If the 
    Board fails to act within this time period, the plan shall be deemed 
    approved unless the Board extends the review period for good cause.
        (2) Public participation. In evaluating the plan's goals, the Board 
    considers the public's involvement in formulating the plan, written 
    public comment on the plan, and any response by the bank to public 
    comment on the plan.
        (3) Criteria for evaluating plan. The Board evaluates a plan's 
    measurable goals using the following criteria, as appropriate:
        (i) The extent and breadth of lending or lending-related 
    activities, including, as appropriate, the distribution of loans among 
    different geographies, businesses and farms of different sizes, and 
    individuals of different income levels, the extent of community 
    development lending, and the use of innovative or flexible lending 
    practices to address credit needs;
        (ii) The amount and innovativeness, complexity, and responsiveness 
    of the bank's qualified investments; and
        (iii) The availability and effectiveness of the bank's systems for 
    delivering retail banking services and the extent and innovativeness of 
    the bank's community development services.
        (h) Plan amendment. During the term of a plan, a bank may request 
    the Board to approve an amendment to the plan on grounds that there has 
    been a material change in circumstances. The bank shall develop an 
    amendment to a previously approved plan in accordance with the public 
    participation requirements of paragraph (c) of this section.
        (i) Plan assessment. The Board approves the goals and assesses 
    performance under a plan as provided for in Appendix A of this part.
    
    
    Sec. 228.28  Assigned ratings.
    
        (a) Ratings in general. Subject to paragraphs (b) and (c) of this 
    section, the Board assigns to a bank a rating of ``outstanding,'' 
    ``satisfactory,'' ``needs to improve,'' or ``substantial 
    noncompliance'' based on the bank's performance under the lending, 
    investment and service tests, the community development test, the small 
    bank performance standards, or an approved strategic plan, as 
    applicable.
        (b) Lending, investment, and service tests. The Board assigns a 
    rating for a bank assessed under the lending, investment, and service 
    tests in accordance with the following principles:
        (1) A bank that receives an ``outstanding'' rating on the lending 
    test receives an assigned rating of at least ``satisfactory'';
        (2) A bank that receives an ``outstanding'' rating on both the 
    service test and the investment test and a rating of at least ``high 
    satisfactory'' on the lending test receives an assigned rating of 
    ``outstanding''; and
        (3) No bank may receive an assigned rating of ``satisfactory'' or 
    higher unless it receives a rating of at least ``low satisfactory'' on 
    the lending test.
        (c) Effect of evidence of discriminatory or other illegal credit 
    practices. Evidence of discriminatory or other illegal credit practices 
    adversely affects the Board's evaluation of a bank's performance. In 
    determining the effect on the bank's assigned rating, the Board 
    considers the nature and extent of the evidence, the policies and 
    procedures that the bank has in place to prevent discriminatory or 
    other illegal credit practices, any corrective action that the bank has 
    taken or has committed to take, particularly voluntary corrective 
    action resulting from self-assessment, and other relevant information.
    
    
    Sec. 228.29  Effect of CRA performance on applications.
        (a) CRA performance. Among other factors, the Board takes into 
    account the [[Page 22195]] record of performance under the CRA of:
        (1) Each applicant bank for the:
        (i) Establishment of a domestic branch by a State member bank; and
        (ii) Merger, consolidation, acquisition of assets, or assumption of 
    liabilities requiring approval under the Bank Merger Act (12 U.S.C. 
    1828(c)) if the acquiring, assuming, or resulting bank is to be a State 
    member bank; and
        (2) Each insured depository institution (as defined in 12 U.S.C. 
    1813) controlled by an applicant and subsidiary bank or savings 
    association proposed to be controlled by an applicant:
        (i) To become a bank holding company in a transaction that requires 
    approval under section 3 of the Bank Holding Company Act (12 U.S.C. 
    1842);
        (ii) To acquire ownership or control of shares or all or 
    substantially all of the assets of a bank, to cause a bank to become a 
    subsidiary of a bank holding company, or to merge or consolidate a bank 
    holding company with any other bank holding company in a transaction 
    that requires approval under section 3 of the Bank Holding Company Act 
    (12 U.S.C. 1842); and
        (iii) To own, control or operate a savings association in a 
    transaction that requires approval under section 4 of the Bank Holding 
    Company Act (12 U.S.C. 1843).
        (b) Interested parties. In considering CRA performance in an 
    application described in paragraph (a) of this section, the Board takes 
    into account any views expressed by interested parties that are 
    submitted in accordance with the Board's Rules of Procedure set forth 
    in part 262 of this chapter.
        (c) Denial or conditional approval of application. A bank's record 
    of performance may be the basis for denying or conditioning approval of 
    an application listed in paragraph (a) of this section.
        (d) Definitions. For purposes of paragraph (a)(2) of this section, 
    ``bank,'' ``bank holding company,'' ``subsidiary,'' and ``savings 
    association'' have the meanings given to those terms in section 2 of 
    the Bank Holding Company Act (12 U.S.C. 1841).
    
    Subpart C--Records, Reporting, and Disclosure Requirements
    
    
    Sec. 228.41  Assessment area delineation.
    
        (a) In general. A bank shall delineate one or more assessment areas 
    within which the Board evaluates the bank's record of helping to meet 
    the credit needs of its community. The Board does not evaluate the 
    bank's delineation of its assessment area(s) as a separate performance 
    criterion, but the Board reviews the delineation for compliance with 
    the requirements of this section.
        (b) Geographic area(s) for wholesale or limited purpose banks. The 
    assessment area(s) for a wholesale or limited purpose bank must consist 
    generally of one or more MSAs (using the MSA boundaries that were in 
    effect as of January 1 of the calendar year in which the delineation is 
    made) or one or more contiguous political subdivisions, such as 
    counties, cities, or towns, in which the bank has its main office, 
    branches, and deposit-taking ATMs.
        (c) Geographic area(s) for other banks. The assessment area(s) for 
    a bank other than a wholesale or limited purpose bank must:
        (1) Consist generally of one or more MSAs (using the MSA boundaries 
    that were in effect as of January 1 of the calendar year in which the 
    delineation is made) or one or more contiguous political subdivisions, 
    such as counties, cities, or towns; and
        (2) Include the geographies in which the bank has its main office, 
    its branches, and its deposit-taking ATMs, as well as the surrounding 
    geographies in which the bank has originated or purchased a substantial 
    portion of its loans (including home mortgage loans, small business and 
    small farm loans, and any other loans the bank chooses, such as those 
    consumer loans on which the bank elects to have its performance 
    assessed).
        (d) Adjustments to geographic area(s). A bank may adjust the 
    boundaries of its assessment area(s) to include only the portion of a 
    political subdivision that it reasonably can be expected to serve. An 
    adjustment is particularly appropriate in the case of an assessment 
    area that otherwise would be extremely large, of unusual configuration, 
    or divided by significant geographic barriers.
        (e) Limitations on the delineation of an assessment area. Each 
    bank's assessment area(s):
        (1) Must consist only of whole geographies;
        (2) May not reflect illegal discrimination;
        (3) May not arbitrarily exclude low- or moderate-income 
    geographies, taking into account the bank's size and financial 
    condition; and
        (4) May not extend substantially beyond a CMSA boundary or beyond a 
    state boundary unless the assessment area is located in a multistate 
    MSA. If a bank serves a geographic area that extends substantially 
    beyond a state boundary, the bank shall delineate separate assessment 
    areas for the areas in each state. If a bank serves a geographic area 
    that extends substantially beyond a CMSA boundary, the bank shall 
    delineate separate assessment areas for the areas inside and outside 
    the CMSA.
        (f) Banks serving military personnel. Notwithstanding the 
    requirements of this section, a bank whose business predominantly 
    consists of serving the needs of military personnel or their dependents 
    who are not located within a defined geographic area may delineate its 
    entire deposit customer base as its assessment area.
        (g) Use of assessment area(s). The Board uses the assessment 
    area(s) delineated by a bank in its evaluation of the bank's CRA 
    performance unless the Board determines that the assessment area(s) do 
    not comply with the requirements of this section.
    
    
    Sec. 228.42  Data collection, reporting, and disclosure.
    
        (a) Loan information required to be collected and maintained. A 
    bank, except a small bank, shall collect, and maintain in machine 
    readable form (as prescribed by the Board) until the completion of its 
    next CRA examination, the following data for each small business or 
    small farm loan originated or purchased by the bank:
        (1) A unique number or alpha-numeric symbol that can be used to 
    identify the relevant loan file;
        (2) The loan amount at origination;
        (3) The loan location; and
        (4) An indicator whether the loan was to a business or farm with 
    gross annual revenues of $1 million or less.
        (b) Loan information required to be reported. A bank, except a 
    small bank or a bank that was a small bank during the prior calendar 
    year, shall report annually by March 1 to the Board in machine readable 
    form (as prescribed by the Board) the following data for the prior 
    calendar year:
        (1) Small business and small farm loan data. For each geography in 
    which the bank originated or purchased a small business or small farm 
    loan, the aggregate number and amount of loans:
        (i) With an amount at origination of $100,000 or less;
        (ii) With amount at origination of more than $100,000 but less than 
    or equal to $250,000;
        (iii) With an amount at origination of more than $250,000; and
        (iv) To businesses and farms with gross annual revenues of $1 
    million or less (using the revenues that the bank considered in making 
    its credit decision);
        (2) Community development loan data. The aggregate number and 
    aggregate amount of community [[Page 22196]] development loans 
    originated or purchased; and
        (3) Home mortgage loans. If the bank is subject to reporting under 
    part 203 of this chapter, the location of each home mortgage loan 
    application, origination, or purchase outside the MSAs in which the 
    bank has a home or branch office (or outside any MSA) in accordance 
    with the requirements of part 203 of this chapter.
        (c) Optional data collection and maintenance--(1) Consumer loans. A 
    bank may collect and maintain in machine readable form (as prescribed 
    by the Board) data for consumer loans originated or purchased by the 
    bank for consideration under the lending test. A bank may maintain data 
    for one or more of the following categories of consumer loans: motor 
    vehicle, credit card, home equity, other secured, and other unsecured. 
    If the bank maintains data for loans in a certain category, it shall 
    maintain data for all loans originated or purchased within that 
    category. The bank shall maintain data separately for each category, 
    including for each loan:
        (i) A unique number or alpha-numeric symbol that can be used to 
    identify the relevant loan file;
        (ii) The loan amount at origination or purchase;
        (iii) The loan location; and
        (iv) The gross annual income of the borrower that the bank 
    considered in making its credit decision.
        (2) Other loan data. At its option, a bank may provide other 
    information concerning its lending performance, including additional 
    loan distribution data.
        (d) Data on affiliate lending. A bank that elects to have the Board 
    consider loans by an affiliate, for purposes of the lending or 
    community development test or an approved strategic plan, shall 
    collect, maintain, and report for those loans the data that the bank 
    would have collected, maintained, and reported pursuant to paragraphs 
    (a), (b), and (c) of this section had the loans been originated or 
    purchased by the bank. For home mortgage loans, the bank shall also be 
    prepared to identify the home mortgage loans reported under part 203 of 
    this chapter by the affiliate.
        (e) Data on lending by a consortium or a third party. A bank that 
    elects to have the Board consider community development loans by a 
    consortium or third party, for purposes of the lending or community 
    development tests or an approved strategic plan, shall report for those 
    loans the data that the bank would have reported under paragraph (b)(2) 
    of this section had the loans been originated or purchased by the bank.
        (f) Small banks electing evaluation under the lending, investment, 
    and service tests. A bank that qualifies for evaluation under the small 
    bank performance standards but elects evaluation under the lending, 
    investment, and service tests shall collect, maintain, and report the 
    data required for other banks pursuant to paragraphs (a) and (b) of 
    this section.
        (g) Assessment area data. A bank, except a small bank or a bank 
    that was a small bank during the prior calendar year, shall collect and 
    report to the Board by March 1 of each year a list for each assessment 
    area showing the geographies within the area.
        (h) CRA Disclosure Statement. The Board prepares annually for each 
    bank that reports data pursuant to this section a CRA Disclosure 
    Statement that contains, on a state-by-state basis:
        (1) For each county (and for each assessment area smaller than a 
    county) with a population of 500,000 persons or fewer in which the bank 
    reported a small business or small farm loan:
        (i) The number and amount of small business and small farm loans 
    reported as originated or purchased located in low-, moderate-, middle-
    , and upper-income geographies;
        (ii) A list grouping each geography according to whether the 
    geography is low-, moderate-, middle-, or upper-income;
        (iii) A list showing each geography in which the bank reported a 
    small business or small farm loan; and
        (iv) The number and amount of small business and small farm loans 
    to businesses and farms with gross annual revenues of $1 million or 
    less;
        (2) For each county (and for each assessment area smaller than a 
    county) with a population in excess of 500,000 persons in which the 
    bank reported a small business or small farm loan:
        (i) The number and amount of small business and small farm loans 
    reported as originated or purchased located in geographies with median 
    income relative to the area median income of less than 10 percent, 10 
    or more but less than 20 percent, 20 or more but less than 30 percent, 
    30 or more but less than 40 percent, 40 or more but less than 50 
    percent, 50 or more but less than 60 percent, 60 or more but less than 
    70 percent, 70 or more but less than 80 percent, 80 or more but less 
    than 90 percent, 90 or more but less than 100 percent, 100 or more but 
    less than 110 percent, 110 or more but less than 120 percent, and 120 
    percent or more;
        (ii) A list grouping each geography in the county or assessment 
    area according to whether the median income in the geography relative 
    to the area median income is less than 10 percent, 10 or more but less 
    than 20 percent, 20 or more but less than 30 percent, 30 or more but 
    less than 40 percent, 40 or more but less than 50 percent, 50 or more 
    but less than 60 percent, 60 or more but less than 70 percent, 70 or 
    more but less than 80 percent, 80 or more but less than 90 percent, 90 
    or more but less than 100 percent, 100 or more but less than 110 
    percent, 110 or more but less than 120 percent, and 120 percent or 
    more;
        (iii) A list showing each geography in which the bank reported a 
    small business or small farm loan; and
        (iv) The number and amount of small business and small farm loans 
    to businesses and farms with gross annual revenues of $1 million or 
    less;
        (3) The number and amount of small business and small farm loans 
    located inside each assessment area reported by the bank and the number 
    and amount of small business and small farm loans located outside the 
    assessment area(s) reported by the bank; and
        (4) The number and amount of community development loans reported 
    as originated or purchased.
        (i) Aggregate disclosure statements. The Board, in conjunction with 
    the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, the Federal Deposit 
    Insurance Corporation, and the Office of Thrift Supervision, prepares 
    annually, for each MSA (including an MSA that crosses a state boundary) 
    and the non-MSA portion of each state, an aggregate disclosure 
    statement of small business and small farm lending by all institutions 
    subject to reporting under this part or parts 25, 345, or 563e of this 
    title. These disclosure statements indicate, for each geography, the 
    number and amount of all small business and small farm loans originated 
    or purchased by reporting institutions, except that the Board may 
    adjust the form of the disclosure if necessary, because of special 
    circumstances, to protect the privacy of a borrower or the competitive 
    position of an institution.
        (j) Central data depositories. The Board makes the aggregate 
    disclosure statements, described in paragraph (i) of this section, and 
    the individual bank CRA Disclosure Statements, described in paragraph 
    (h) of this section, available to the public at central data 
    depositories. The Board publishes a list of the depositories at which 
    the statements are available. [[Page 22197]] 
    
    
    Sec. 228.43  Content and availability of public file.
    
        (a) Information available to the public. A bank shall maintain a 
    public file that includes the following information:
        (1) All written comments received from the public for the current 
    year and each of the prior two calendar years that specifically relate 
    to the bank's performance in helping to meet community credit needs, 
    and any response to the comments by the bank, if neither the comments 
    nor the responses contain statements that reflect adversely on the good 
    name or reputation of any persons other than the bank or publication of 
    which would violate specific provisions of law;
        (2) A copy of the public section of the bank's most recent CRA 
    Performance Evaluation prepared by the Board. The bank shall place this 
    copy in the public file within 30 business days after its receipt from 
    the Board;
        (3) A list of the bank's branches, their street addresses, and 
    geographies;
        (4) A list of branches opened or closed by the bank during the 
    current year and each of the prior two calendar years, their street 
    addresses, and geographies;
        (5) A list of services (including hours of operation, available 
    loan and deposit products, and transaction fees) generally offered at 
    the bank's branches and descriptions of material differences in the 
    availability or cost of services at particular branches, if any. At its 
    option, a bank may include information regarding the availability of 
    alternative systems for delivering retail banking services (e.g., ATMs, 
    ATMs not owned or operated by or exclusively for the bank, banking by 
    telephone or computer, loan production offices, and bank-at-work or 
    bank-by-mail programs);
        (6) A map of each assessment area showing the boundaries of the 
    area and identifying the geographies contained within the area, either 
    on the map or in a separate list; and
        (7) Any other information the bank chooses.
        (b) Additional information available to the public--(1) Banks other 
    than small banks. A bank, except a small bank or a bank that was a 
    small bank during the prior calendar year, shall include in its public 
    file the following information pertaining to the bank and its 
    affiliates, if applicable, for each of the prior two calendar years:
        (i) If the bank has elected to have one or more categories of its 
    consumer loans considered under the lending test, for each of these 
    categories, the number and amount of loans:
        (A) To low-, moderate-, middle-, and upper-income individuals;
        (B) Located in low-, moderate-, middle-, and upper-income census 
    tracts; and
        (C) Located inside the bank's assessment area(s) and outside the 
    bank's assessment area(s); and
        (ii) The bank's CRA Disclosure Statement. The bank shall place the 
    statement in the public file within three business days of its receipt 
    from the Board.
        (2) Banks required to report Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA) 
    data. A bank required to report home mortgage loan data pursuant to 
    part 203 of this chapter shall include in its public file a copy of the 
    HMDA Disclosure Statement provided by the Federal Financial 
    Institutions Examination Council pertaining to the bank for each of the 
    prior two calendar years. In addition, a bank that elected to have the 
    Board consider the mortgage lending of an affiliate for any of these 
    years shall include in its public file the affiliate's HMDA Disclosure 
    Statement for those years. The bank shall place the statement(s) in the 
    public file within three business days after its receipt.
        (3) Small banks. A small bank or a bank that was a small bank 
    during the prior calendar year shall include in its public file:
        (i) The bank's loan-to-deposit ratio for each quarter of the prior 
    calendar year and, at its option, additional data on its loan-to-
    deposit ratio; and
        (ii) The information required for other banks by paragraph (b)(1) 
    of this section, if the bank has elected to be evaluated under the 
    lending, investment, and service tests.
        (4) Banks with strategic plans. A bank that has been approved to be 
    assessed under a strategic plan shall include in its public file a copy 
    of that plan. A bank need not include information submitted to the 
    Board on a confidential basis in conjunction with the plan.
        (5) Banks with less than satisfactory ratings. A bank that received 
    a less than satisfactory rating during its most recent examination 
    shall include in its public file a description of its current efforts 
    to improve its performance in helping to meet the credit needs of its 
    entire community. The bank shall update the description quarterly.
        (c) Location of public information. A bank shall make available to 
    the public for inspection upon request and at no cost the information 
    required in this section as follows:
        (1) At the main office and, if an interstate bank, at one branch 
    office in each state, all information in the public file; and
        (2) At each branch:
        (i) A copy of the public section of the bank's most recent CRA 
    Performance Evaluation and a list of services provided by the branch; 
    and
        (ii) Within five calendar days of the request, all the information 
    in the public file relating to the assessment area in which the branch 
    is located.
        (d) Copies. Upon request, a bank shall provide copies, either on 
    paper or in another form acceptable to the person making the request, 
    of the information in its public file. The bank may charge a reasonable 
    fee not to exceed the cost of copying and mailing (if applicable).
        (e) Updating. Except as otherwise provided in this section, a bank 
    shall ensure that the information required by this section is current 
    as of April 1 of each year.
    
    
    Sec. 228.44  Public notice by banks.
    
        A bank shall provide in the public lobby of its main office and 
    each of its branches the appropriate public notice set forth in 
    Appendix B of this part. Only a branch of a bank having more than one 
    assessment area shall include the bracketed material in the notice for 
    branch offices. Only a bank that is an affiliate of a holding company 
    shall include the next to the last sentence of the notices. A bank 
    shall include the last sentence of the notices only if it is an 
    affiliate of a holding company that is not prevented by statute from 
    acquiring additional banks.
    
    
    Sec. 228.45  Publication of planned examination schedule.
    
        The Board publishes at least 30 days in advance of the beginning of 
    each calendar quarter a list of banks scheduled for CRA examinations in 
    that quarter.
    
    Subpart D--Transition Rules
    
    
    Sec. 228.51  Transition rules.
    
        (a) Effective date. Sections of this part become applicable over a 
    period of time in accordance with the schedule set forth in paragraph 
    (c) of this section.
        (b) Data collection and reporting; strategic plan; performance 
    tests and standards. (i) On January 1, 1996, the data collection 
    requirements set forth in Sec. 228.42 (except Sec. 228.42(b) and (g)) 
    become applicable.
        (ii) On January 1, 1997, the data reporting requirements set forth 
    in Sec. 228.42(b) and (g) become applicable.
        (2) Small banks. Beginning January 1, 1996, the Board evaluates 
    banks that qualify for the small bank performance standards described 
    in Sec. 228.26 under that section.
        (3) Strategic plan. Beginning January 1, 1996, a bank that elects 
    to be [[Page 22198]] evaluated under an approved strategic plan 
    pursuant to Sec. 228.27 may submit its strategic plan to the Board for 
    approval.
        (4) Other performance tests. (i) Beginning January 1, 1996, a bank 
    may elect to be evaluated under the pertinent revised performance tests 
    described in Secs. 228.22, 228.23, 228.24, and 228.25, if the bank 
    provides the necessary data to permit evaluation.
        (ii) Beginning July 1, 1997, the Board evaluates all banks under 
    the pertinent revised performance tests.
        (c) Schedule. (1) On July 1, 1995, Secs. 228.11, 228.12, 228.29, 
    and 228.51 become applicable, and Secs. 228.1, 228.2, 228.8, and 
    228.100 expire.
        (2) On January 1, 1996, Sec. 228.41 and the pertinent provisions of 
    Subpart B of this part will apply to banks that elect to be evaluated 
    under Secs. 228.22 through 228.25, banks that submit for approval 
    strategic plans under Sec. 228.27, and banks that qualify for the small 
    bank performance standards described in Sec. 228.26.
        (3) On January 1, 1996, Secs. 228.42 (except Sec. 228.42(b) and 
    (g)) and 228.45 become applicable.
        (4) On January 1, 1997, Secs. 228.41 and 228.42(b) and (g) become 
    applicable.
        (5) On July 1, 1997, Secs. 228.21 through 228.28, 228.43, and 
    228.44 become applicable, and Secs. 228.3 through 228.7, and 228.51 
    expire.
    
    Appendix A to Part 228--Ratings
        (a) Ratings in general. (1) In assigning a rating, the Board 
    evaluates a bank's performance under the applicable performance 
    criteria in this part, in accordance with Sec. 228.21, and 
    Sec. 228.28, which provides for adjustments on the basis of evidence 
    of discriminatory or other illegal credit practices.
        (2) A bank's performance need not fit each aspect of a 
    particular rating profile in order to receive that rating, and 
    exceptionally strong performance with respect to some aspects may 
    compensate for weak performance in others. The bank's overall 
    performance, however, must be consistent with safe and sound banking 
    practices and generally with the appropriate rating profile as 
    follows.
        (b) Banks evaluated under the lending, investment, and service 
    tests--(1) Lending performance rating. The Board assigns each bank's 
    lending performance one of the five following ratings.
        (i) Outstanding. The Board rates a bank's lending performance 
    ``outstanding'' if, in general, it demonstrates:
        (A) Excellent responsiveness to credit needs in its assessment 
    area(s), taking into account the number and amount of home mortgage, 
    small business, small farm, and consumer loans, if applicable, in 
    its assessment area(s);
        (B) A substantial majority of its loans are made in its 
    assessment area(s);
        (C) An excellent geographic distribution of loans in its 
    assessment area(s);
        (D) An excellent distribution, particularly in its assessment 
    area(s), of loans among individuals of different income levels and 
    businesses (including farms) of different sizes, given the product 
    lines offered by the bank;
        (E) An excellent record of serving the credit needs of highly 
    economically disadvantaged areas in its assessment area(s), low-
    income individuals, or businesses (including farms) with gross 
    annual revenues of $1 million or less, consistent with safe and 
    sound operations;
        (F) Extensive use of innovative or flexible lending practices in 
    a safe and sound manner to address the credit needs of low- or 
    moderate-income individuals or geographies; and
        (G) It is a leader in making community development loans.
        (ii) High satisfactory. The Board rates a bank's lending 
    performance ``high satisfactory'' if, in general, it demonstrates:
        (A) Good responsiveness to credit needs in its assessment 
    area(s), taking into account the number and amount of home mortgage, 
    small business, small farm, and consumer loans, if applicable, in 
    its assessment area(s);
        (B) A high percentage of its loans are made in its assessment 
    area(s);
        (C) A good geographic distribution of loans in its assessment 
    area(s);
        (D) A good distribution, particularly in its assessment area(s), 
    of loans among individuals of different income levels and businesses 
    (including farms) of different sizes, given the product lines 
    offered by the bank;
        (E) A good record of serving the credit needs of highly 
    economically disadvantaged areas in its assessment area(s), low-
    income individuals, or businesses (including farms) with gross 
    annual revenues of $1 million or less, consistent with safe and 
    sound operations;
        (F) Use of innovative or flexible lending practices in a safe 
    and sound manner to address the credit needs of low- or moderate-
    income individuals or geographies; and
        (G) It has made a relatively high level of community development 
    loans.
        (iii) Low satisfactory. The Board rates a bank's lending 
    performance ``low satisfactory'' if, in general, it demonstrates:
        (A) Adequate responsiveness to credit needs in its assessment 
    area(s), taking into account the number and amount of home mortgage, 
    small business, small farm, and consumer loans, if applicable, in 
    its assessment area(s);
        (B) An adequate percentage of its loans are made in its 
    assessment area(s);
        (C) An adequate geographic distribution of loans in its 
    assessment area(s);
        (D) An adequate distribution, particularly in its assessment 
    area(s), of loans among individuals of different income levels and 
    businesses (including farms) of different sizes, given the product 
    lines offered by the bank;
        (E) An adequate record of serving the credit needs of highly 
    economically disadvantaged areas in its assessment area(s), low-
    income individuals, or businesses (including farms) with gross 
    annual revenues of $1 million or less, consistent with safe and 
    sound operations;
        (F) Limited use of innovative or flexible lending practices in a 
    safe and sound manner to address the credit needs of low- or 
    moderate-income individuals or geographies; and
        (G) It has made an adequate level of community development 
    loans.
        (iv) Needs to improve. The Board rates a bank's lending 
    performance ``needs to improve'' if, in general, it demonstrates:
        (A) Poor responsiveness to credit needs in its assessment 
    area(s), taking into account the number and amount of home mortgage, 
    small business, small farm, and consumer loans, if applicable, in 
    its assessment area(s);
        (B) A small percentage of its loans are made in its assessment 
    area(s);
        (C) A poor geographic distribution of loans, particularly to 
    low- or moderate-income geographies, in its assessment area(s);
        (D) A poor distribution, particularly in its assessment area(s), 
    of loans among individuals of different income levels and businesses 
    (including farms) of different sizes, given the product lines 
    offered by the bank;
        (E) A poor record of serving the credit needs of highly 
    economically disadvantaged areas in its assessment area(s), low-
    income individuals, or businesses (including farms) with gross 
    annual revenues of $1 million or less, consistent with safe and 
    sound operations;
        (F) Little use of innovative or flexible lending practices in a 
    safe and sound manner to address the credit needs of low- or 
    moderate-income individuals or geographies; and
        (G) It has made a low level of community development loans.
        (v) Substantial noncompliance. The Board rates a bank's lending 
    performance as being in ``substantial noncompliance'' if, in 
    general, it demonstrates:
        (A) A very poor responsiveness to credit needs in its assessment 
    area(s), taking into account the number and amount of home mortgage, 
    small business, small farm, and consumer loans, if applicable, in 
    its assessment area(s);
        (B) A very small percentage of its loans are made in its 
    assessment area(s);
        (C) A very poor geographic distribution of loans, particularly 
    to low- or moderate-income geographies, in its assessment area(s);
        (D) A very poor distribution, particularly in its assessment 
    area(s), of loans among individuals of different income levels and 
    businesses (including farms) of different sizes, given the product 
    lines offered by the bank;
        (E) A very poor record of serving the credit needs of highly 
    economically disadvantaged areas in its assessment area(s), low-
    income individuals, or businesses (including farms) with gross 
    annual revenues of $1 million or less, consistent with safe and 
    sound operations;
        (F) No use of innovative or flexible lending practices in a safe 
    and sound manner to address the credit needs of low- or moderate-
    income individuals or geographies; and
        (G) It has made few, if any, community development loans. 
    [[Page 22199]] 
        (2) Investment performance rating. The Board assigns each bank's 
    investment performance one of the five following ratings.
        (i) Outstanding. The Board rates a bank's investment performance 
    ``outstanding'' if, in general, it demonstrates:
        (A) An excellent level of qualified investments, particularly 
    those that are not routinely provided by private investors, often in 
    a leadership position;
        (B) Extensive use of innovative or complex qualified 
    investments; and
        (C) Excellent responsiveness to credit and community development 
    needs.
        (ii) High satisfactory. The Board rates a bank's investment 
    performance ``high satisfactory'' if, in general, it demonstrates:
        (A) A significant level of qualified investments, particularly 
    those that are not routinely provided by private investors, 
    occasionally in a leadership position;
        (B) Significant use of innovative or complex qualified 
    investments; and
        (C) Good responsiveness to credit and community development 
    needs.
        (iii) Low satisfactory. The Board rates a bank's investment 
    performance ``low satisfactory'' if, in general, it demonstrates:
        (A) An adequate level of qualified investments, particularly 
    those that are not routinely provided by private investors, although 
    rarely in a leadership position;
        (B) Occasional use of innovative or complex qualified 
    investments; and
        (C) Adequate responsiveness to credit and community development 
    needs.
        (iv) Needs to improve. The Board rates a bank's investment 
    performance ``needs to improve'' if, in general, it demonstrates:
        (A) A poor level of qualified investments, particularly those 
    that are not routinely provided by private investors;
        (B) Rare use of innovative or complex qualified investments; and
        (C) Poor responsiveness to credit and community development 
    needs.
        (v) Substantial noncompliance. The Board rates a bank's 
    investment performance as being in ``substantial noncompliance'' if, 
    in general, it demonstrates:
        (A) Few, if any, qualified investments, particularly those that 
    are not routinely provided by private investors;
        (B) No use of innovative or complex qualified investments; and
        (C) Very poor responsiveness to credit and community development 
    needs.
        (3) Service performance rating. The Board assigns each bank's 
    service performance one of the five following ratings.
        (i) Outstanding. The Board rates a bank's service performance 
    ``outstanding'' if, in general, the bank demonstrates:
        (A) Its service delivery systems are readily accessible to 
    geographies and individuals of different income levels in its 
    assessment area(s);
        (B) To the extent changes have been made, its record of opening 
    and closing branches has improved the accessibility of its delivery 
    systems, particularly in low- or moderate-income geographies or to 
    low- or moderate-income individuals;
        (C) Its services (including, where appropriate, business hours) 
    are tailored to the convenience and needs of its assessment area(s), 
    particularly low- or moderate-income geographies or low- or 
    moderate-income individuals; and
        (D) It is a leader in providing community development services.
        (ii) High satisfactory. The Board rates a bank's service 
    performance ``high satisfactory'' if, in general, the bank 
    demonstrates:
        (A) Its service delivery systems are accessible to geographies 
    and individuals of different income levels in its assessment 
    area(s);
        (B) To the extent changes have been made, its record of opening 
    and closing branches has not adversely affected the accessibility of 
    its delivery systems, particularly in low- and moderate-income 
    geographies and to low- and moderate-income individuals;
        (C) Its services (including, where appropriate, business hours) 
    do not vary in a way that inconveniences its assessment area(s), 
    particularly low- and moderate-income geographies and low- and 
    moderate-income individuals; and
        (D) It provides a relatively high level of community development 
    services.
        (iii) Low satisfactory. The Board rates a bank's service 
    performance ``low satisfactory'' if, in general, the bank 
    demonstrates:
        (A) Its service delivery systems are reasonably accessible to 
    geographies and individuals of different income levels in its 
    assessment area(s);
        (B) To the extent changes have been made, its record of opening 
    and closing branches has generally not adversely affected the 
    accessibility of its delivery systems, particularly in low- and 
    moderate-income geographies and to low- and moderate-income 
    individuals;
        (C) Its services (including, where appropriate, business hours) 
    do not vary in a way that inconveniences its assessment area(s), 
    particularly low- and moderate-income geographies and low- and 
    moderate-income individuals; and
        (D) It provides an adequate level of community development 
    services.
        (iv) Needs to improve. The Board rates a bank's service 
    performance ``needs to improve'' if, in general, the bank 
    demonstrates:
        (A) Its service delivery systems are unreasonably inaccessible 
    to portions of its assessment area(s), particularly to low- or 
    moderate-income geographies or to low- or moderate-income 
    individuals;
        (B) To the extent changes have been made, its record of opening 
    and closing branches has adversely affected the accessibility its 
    delivery systems, particularly in low- or moderate-income 
    geographies or to low- or moderate-income individuals;
        (C) Its services (including, where appropriate, business hours) 
    vary in a way that inconveniences its assessment area(s), 
    particularly low- or moderate-income geographies or low- or 
    moderate-income individuals; and
        (D) It provides a limited level of community development 
    services.
        (v) Substantial noncompliance. The Board rates a bank's service 
    performance as being in ``substantial noncompliance'' if, in 
    general, the bank demonstrates:
        (A) Its service delivery systems are unreasonably inaccessible 
    to significant portions of its assessment area(s), particularly to 
    low- or moderate-income geographies or to low- or moderate-income 
    individuals;
        (B) To the extent changes have been made, its record of opening 
    and closing branches has significantly adversely affected the 
    accessibility of its delivery systems, particularly in low- or 
    moderate-income geographies or to low- or moderate-income 
    individuals;
        (C) Its services (including, where appropriate, business hours) 
    vary in a way that significantly inconveniences its assessment 
    area(s), particularly low- or moderate-income geographies or low- or 
    moderate-income individuals; and
        (D) It provides few, if any, community development services.
        (c) Wholesale or limited purpose banks. The Board assigns each 
    wholesale or limited purpose bank's community development 
    performance one of the four following ratings.
        (1) Outstanding. The Board rates a wholesale or limited purpose 
    bank's community development performance ``outstanding'' if, in 
    general, it demonstrates:
        (i) A high level of community development loans, community 
    development services, or qualified investments, particularly 
    investments that are not routinely provided by private investors;
        (ii) Extensive use of innovative or complex qualified 
    investments, community development loans, or community development 
    services; and
        (iii) Excellent responsiveness to credit and community 
    development needs in its assessment area(s).
        (2) Satisfactory. The Board rates a wholesale or limited purpose 
    bank's community development performance ``satisfactory'' if, in 
    general, it demonstrates:
        (i) An adequate level of community development loans, community 
    development services, or qualified investments, particularly 
    investments that are not routinely provided by private investors;
        (ii) Occasional use of innovative or complex qualified 
    investments, community development loans, or community development 
    services; and
        (iii) Adequate responsiveness to credit and community 
    development needs in its assessment area(s).
        (3) Needs to improve. The Board rates a wholesale or limited 
    purpose bank's community development performance as ``needs to 
    improve'' if, in general, it demonstrates:
        (i) A poor level of community development loans, community 
    development services, or qualified investments, particularly 
    investments that are not routinely provided by private investors;
        (ii) Rare use of innovative or complex qualified investments, 
    community development loans, or community development services; and
        (iii) Poor responsiveness to credit and community development 
    needs in its assessment area(s).
        (4) Substantial noncompliance. The Board rates a wholesale or 
    limited purpose bank's [[Page 22200]] community development 
    performance in ``substantial noncompliance'' if, in general, it 
    demonstrates:
        (i) Few, if any, community development loans, community 
    development services, or qualified investments, particularly 
    investments that are not routinely provided by private investors;
        (ii) No use of innovative or complex qualified investments, 
    community development loans, or community development services; and
        (iii) Very poor responsiveness to credit and community 
    development needs in its assessment area(s).
        (d) Banks evaluated under the small bank performance standards. 
    The Board rates the performance of each bank evaluated under the 
    small bank performance standards as follows.
        (1) Eligibility for a satisfactory rating. The Board rates a 
    bank's performance ``satisfactory'' if, in general, the bank 
    demonstrates:
        (i) A reasonable loan-to-deposit ratio (considering seasonal 
    variations) given the bank's size, financial condition, the credit 
    needs of its assessment area(s), and taking into account, as 
    appropriate, lending-related activities such as loan originations 
    for sale to the secondary markets and community development loans 
    and qualified investments;
        (ii) A majority of its loans and, as appropriate, other lending-
    related activities are in its assessment area(s);
        (iii) A distribution of loans to and, as appropriate, other 
    lending related-activities for individuals of different income 
    levels (including low- and moderate-income individuals) and 
    businesses and farms of different sizes that is reasonable given the 
    demographics of the bank's assessment area(s);
        (iv) A record of taking appropriate action, as warranted, in 
    response to written complaints, if any, about the bank's performance 
    in helping to meet the credit needs of its assessment area(s); and
        (v) A reasonable geographic distribution of loans given the 
    bank's assessment area(s).
        (2) Eligibility for an outstanding rating. A bank that meets 
    each of the standards for a ``satisfactory'' rating under this 
    paragraph and exceeds some or all of those standards may warrant 
    consideration for an overall rating of ``outstanding.'' In assessing 
    whether a bank's performance is ``outstanding,'' the Board considers 
    the extent to which the bank exceeds each of the performance 
    standards for a ``satisfactory'' rating and its performance in 
    making qualified investments and its performance in providing 
    branches and other services and delivery systems that enhance credit 
    availability in its assessment area(s).
        (3) Needs to improve or substantial noncompliance ratings. A 
    bank also may receive a rating of ``needs to improve'' or 
    ``substantial noncompliance'' depending on the degree to which its 
    performance has failed to meet the standards for a ``satisfactory'' 
    rating.
        (e) Strategic plan assessment and rating--(1) Satisfactory 
    goals. The Board approves as ``satisfactory'' measurable goals that 
    adequately help to meet the credit needs of the bank's assessment 
    area(s).
        (2) Outstanding goals. If the plan identifies a separate group 
    of measurable goals that substantially exceed the levels approved as 
    ``satisfactory,'' the Board will approve those goals as 
    ``outstanding.''
        (3) Rating. The Board assesses the performance of a bank 
    operating under an approved plan to determine if the bank has met 
    its plan goals:
        (i) If the bank substantially achieves its plan goals for a 
    satisfactory rating, the Board will rate the bank's performance 
    under the plan as ``satisfactory.''
        (ii) If the bank exceeds its plan goals for a satisfactory 
    rating and substantially achieves its plan goals for an outstanding 
    rating, the Board will rate the bank's performance under the plan as 
    ``outstanding.''
        (iii) If the bank fails to meet substantially its plan goals for 
    a satisfactory rating, the Board will rate the bank as either 
    ``needs to improve'' or ``substantial noncompliance,'' depending on 
    the extent to which it falls short of its plan goals, unless the 
    bank elected in its plan to be rated otherwise, as provided in 
    Sec. 228.27(f)(4).
    
    Appendix B to Part 228--CRA Notice
    
        (a) Notice for main offices and, if an interstate bank, one 
    branch office in each state.
    
    Community Reinvestment Act Notice
    
        Under the Federal Community Reinvestment Act (CRA), the Federal 
    Reserve Board (Board) evaluates our record of helping to meet the 
    credit needs of this community consistent with safe and sound 
    operations. The Board also takes this record into account when 
    deciding on certain applications submitted by us.
        Your involvement is encouraged.
        You are entitled to certain information about our operations and 
    our performance under the CRA, including, for example, information 
    about our branches, such as their location and services provided at 
    them; the public section of our most recent CRA Performance 
    Evaluation, prepared by the Federal Reserve Bank of ________ 
    (Reserve Bank); and comments received from the public relating to 
    our performance in helping to meet community credit needs, as well 
    as our responses to those comments. You may review this information 
    today.
        At least 30 days before the beginning of each quarter, the 
    Federal Reserve System publishes a list of the banks that are 
    scheduled for CRA examination by the Reserve Bank in that quarter. 
    This list is available from (title of responsible official), Federal 
    Reserve Bank of ________ (address). You may send written comments 
    about our performance in helping to meet community credit needs to 
    (name and address of official at bank) and (title of responsible 
    official), Federal Reserve Bank of ________ (address). Your letter, 
    together with any response by us, will be considered by the Federal 
    Reserve System in evaluating our CRA performance and may be made 
    public.
        You may ask to look at any comments received by the Reserve 
    Bank. You may also request from the Reserve Bank an announcement of 
    our applications covered by the CRA filed with the Reserve Bank. We 
    are an affiliate of (name of holding company), a bank holding 
    company. You may request from (title of responsible official), 
    Federal Reserve Bank of ________ (address) an announcement of 
    applications covered by the CRA filed by bank holding companies.
        (b) Notice for branch offices.
    
    Community Reinvestment Act Notice
    
        Under the Federal Community Reinvestment Act (CRA), the Federal 
    Reserve Board (Board) evaluates our record of helping to meet the 
    credit needs of this community consistent with safe and sound 
    operations. The Board also takes this record into account when 
    deciding on certain applications submitted by us.
        Your involvement is encouraged.
        You are entitled to certain information about our operations and 
    our performance under the CRA. You may review today the public 
    section of our most recent CRA evaluation, prepared by the Federal 
    Reserve Bank of ________ (address), and a list of services provided 
    at this branch. You may also have access to the following additional 
    information, which we will make available to you at this branch 
    within five calendar days after you make a request to us: (1) a map 
    showing the assessment area containing this branch, which is the 
    area in which the Board evaluates our CRA performance in this 
    community; (2) information about our branches in this assessment 
    area; (3) a list of services we provide at those locations; (4) data 
    on our lending performance in this assessment area; and (5) copies 
    of all written comments received by us that specifically relate to 
    our CRA performance in this assessment area, and any responses we 
    have made to those comments. If we are operating under an approved 
    strategic plan, you may also have access to a copy of the plan.
        [If you would like to review information about our CRA 
    performance in other communities served by us, the public file for 
    our entire bank is available at (name of office located in state), 
    located at (address).]
        At least 30 days before the beginning of each quarter, the 
    Federal Reserve System publishes a list of the banks that are 
    scheduled for CRA examination by the Reserve Bank in that quarter. 
    This list is available from (title of responsible official), Federal 
    Reserve Bank of ________ (address). You may send written comments 
    about our performance in helping to meet community credit needs to 
    (name and address of official at bank) and (title of responsible 
    official), Federal Reserve Bank of ________ (address). Your letter, 
    together with any response by us, will be considered by the Federal 
    Reserve System in evaluating our CRA performance and may be made 
    public.
        You may ask to look at any comments received by the Reserve 
    Bank. You may also request from the Reserve Bank an announcement of 
    our applications covered by the CRA filed with the Reserve Bank. We 
    are an affiliate of (name of holding company), a bank holding 
    company. You may request from (title of responsible official), 
    Federal Reserve Bank of ________ (address) an 
    [[Page 22201]] announcement of applications covered by the CRA filed 
    by bank holding companies.
    
    
    Secs. 228.1, 228.2, 228.8, and 228.100  [Removed]
    
        3. Sections 228.1, 228.2, 228.8, and 228.100 are removed effective 
    July 1, 1995.
    
    
    Secs. 228.3, 228.4, 228.5, 228.6, and 228.7, and Subpart D  [Removed]
    
        4. Sections 228.3, 228.4, 228.5, 228.6, and 228.7, and Subpart D, 
    consisting of Sec. 228.51 are removed effective July 1, 1997.
    
        By order of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve 
    System, April 24, 1995.
    Jennifer J. Johnson,
    Deputy Secretary of the Board.
    
    Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
    
    12 CFR Chapter III
    
        For the reasons outlined in the joint preamble, the Board of 
    Directors of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation amends 12 CFR 
    chapter III as set forth below:
    
    PART 345--COMMUNITY REINVESTMENT
    
        1. The authority citation for part 345 is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1814-1817, 1819-1820, 1828, 1831u and 2901-
    2907, 3103-3104, and 3108(a).
    
        2. Part 345 is amended by adding Subparts A through D and 
    Appendices A and B to read as follows:
    
    Subpart A--General
    
    Sec.
    345.11  Authority, purposes, and scope.
    345.12  Definitions.
    
    Subpart B--Standards for Assessing Performance
    
    345.21  Performance tests, standards, and ratings, in general.
    345.22  Lending test.
    345.23  Investment test.
    345.24  Service test.
    345.25  Community development test for wholesale or limited purpose 
    banks.
    345.26  Small bank performance standards.
    345.27  Strategic plan.
    345.28  Assigned ratings.
    345.29  Effect of CRA performance on applications.
    
    Subpart C--Records, Reporting, and Disclosure Requirements
    
    345.41  Assessment area delineation.
    345.42  Data collection, reporting, and disclosure.
    345.43  Content and availability of public file.
    345.44  Public notice by banks.
    345.45  Publication of planned examination schedule.
    
    Subpart D--Transition Rules
    
    345.51  Transition rules.
    
    Appendix A to Part 345--Ratings
    
    Appendix B to Part 345--CRA Notice
    
    Subpart A--General
    
    
    Sec. 345.11  Authority, purposes, and scope.
    
        (a) Authority and OMB control number--(1) Authority. The authority 
    for this part is 12 U.S.C. 1814-1817, 1819-1820, 1828, 1831u and 2901-
    2907, 3103-3104, and 3108(a).
        (2) OMB control number. The information collection requirements 
    contained in this part were approved by the Office of Management and 
    Budget under the provisions of 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. and have been 
    assigned OMB control number 3064-0092.
        (b) Purposes. In enacting the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA), the 
    Congress required each appropriate Federal financial supervisory agency 
    to assess an institution's record of helping to meet the credit needs 
    of the local communities in which the institution is chartered, 
    consistent with the safe and sound operation of the institution, and to 
    take this record into account in the agency's evaluation of an 
    application for a deposit facility by the institution. This part is 
    intended to carry out the purposes of the CRA by:
        (1) Establishing the framework and criteria by which the Federal 
    Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) assesses a bank's record of 
    helping to meet the credit needs of its entire community, including 
    low- and moderate-income neighborhoods, consistent with the safe and 
    sound operation of the bank; and
        (2) Providing that the FDIC takes that record into account in 
    considering certain applications.
        (c) Scope--(1) General. Except for certain special purpose banks 
    described in paragraph (c)(3) of this section, this part applies to all 
    insured State nonmember banks, including insured State branches as 
    described in paragraph (c)(2) and any uninsured State branch that 
    results from an acquisition described in section 5(a)(8) of the 
    International Banking Act of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3103(a)(8)).
        (2) Insured State branches. Insured State branches are branches of 
    a foreign bank established and operating under the laws of any State, 
    the deposits of which are insured in accordance with the provisions of 
    the Federal Deposit Insurance Act. In the case of insured State 
    branches, references in this part to ``main office'' mean the principal 
    branch within the United States and the term ``branch'' or ``branches'' 
    refers to any insured State branch or branches located within the 
    United States. The ``assessment area'' of an insured State branch is 
    the community or communities located within the United States served by 
    the branch as described in Sec. 345.41.
        (3) Certain special purpose banks. This part does not apply to 
    special purpose banks that do not perform commercial or retail banking 
    services by granting credit to the public in the ordinary course of 
    business, other than as incident to their specialized operations. These 
    banks include banker's banks, as defined in 12 U.S.C. 24 (Seventh), and 
    banks that engage only in one or more of the following activities: 
    providing cash management controlled disbursement services or serving 
    as correspondent banks, trust companies, or clearing agents.
    
    
    Sec. 345.12  Definitions.
    
        For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:
        (a) Affiliate means any company that controls, is controlled by, or 
    is under common control with another company. The term ``control'' has 
    the meaning given to that term in 12 U.S.C. 1841(a)(2), and a company 
    is under common control with another company if both companies are 
    directly or indirectly controlled by the same company.
        (b) Area median income means:
        (1) The median family income for the MSA, if a person or geography 
    is located in an MSA; or
        (2) The statewide nonmetropolitan median family income, if a person 
    or geography is located outside an MSA.
        (c) Assessment area means a geographic area delineated in 
    accordance with Sec. 345.41.
        (d) Remote Service Facility (RSF) means an automated, unstaffed 
    banking facility owned or operated by, or operated exclusively for, the 
    bank, such as an automated teller machine, cash dispensing machine, 
    point-of-sale terminal, or other remote electronic facility, at which 
    deposits are received, cash dispersed, or money lent.
        (e) Bank means a State nonmember bank, as that term is defined in 
    section 3(e)(2) of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act, as amended (FDIA) 
    (12 U.S.C. 1813(e)(2)), with Federally insured deposits, except as 
    provided in Sec. 345.11(c). The term bank also includes an insured 
    State branch as defined in Sec. 345.11(c).
        (f) Branch means a staffed banking facility authorized as a branch, 
    whether shared or unshared, including, for example, a mini-branch in a 
    grocery store or a branch operated in conjunction with any other local 
    [[Page 22202]] business or nonprofit organization. The term ``branch'' 
    only includes a ``domestic branch'' as that term is defined in section 
    3(o) of the FDIA (12 U.S.C. 1813(o)).
        (g) CMSA means a consolidated metropolitan statistical area as 
    defined by the Director of the Office of Management and Budget.
        (h) Community development means:
        (1) Affordable housing (including multifamily rental housing) for 
    low- or moderate-income individuals;
        (2) Community services targeted to low- or moderate-income 
    individuals;
        (3) Activities that promote economic development by financing 
    businesses or farms that meet the size eligibility standards of 13 CFR 
    121.802(a)(2) or have gross annual revenues of $1 million or less; or
        (4) Activities that revitalize or stabilize low- or moderate-income 
    geographies.
        (i) Community development loan means a loan that:
        (1) Has as its primary purpose community development; and
        (2) Except in the case of a wholesale or limited purpose bank:
        (i) Has not been reported or collected by the bank or an affiliate 
    for consideration in the bank's assessment as a home mortgage, small 
    business, small farm, or consumer loan, unless it is a multifamily 
    dwelling loan (as described in Appendix A to Part 203 of this title); 
    and
        (ii) Benefits the bank's assessment area(s) or a broader statewide 
    or regional area that includes the bank's assessment area(s).
        (j) Community development service means a service that:
        (1) Has as its primary purpose community development;
        (2) Is related to the provision of financial services; and
        (3) Has not been considered in the evaluation of the bank's retail 
    banking services under Sec. 345.24(d).
        (k) Consumer loan means a loan to one or more individuals for 
    household, family, or other personal expenditures. A consumer loan does 
    not include a home mortgage, small business, or small farm loan. 
    Consumer loans include the following categories of loans:
        (1) Motor vehicle loan, which is a consumer loan extended for the 
    purchase of and secured by a motor vehicle;
        (2) Credit card loan, which is a line of credit for household, 
    family, or other personal expenditures that is accessed by a borrower's 
    use of a ``credit card,'' as this term is defined in Sec. 226.2 of this 
    title;
        (3) Home equity loan, which is a consumer loan secured by a 
    residence of the borrower;
        (4) Other secured consumer loan, which is a secured consumer loan 
    that is not included in one of the other categories of consumer loans; 
    and
        (5) Other unsecured consumer loan, which is an unsecured consumer 
    loan that is not included in one of the other categories of consumer 
    loans.
        (l) Geography means a census tract or a block numbering area 
    delineated by the United States Bureau of the Census in the most recent 
    decennial census.
        (m) Home mortgage loan means a ``home improvement loan'' or a 
    ``home purchase loan'' as defined in Sec. 203.2 of this title.
        (n) Income level includes:
        (1) Low-income, which means an individual income that is less than 
    50 percent of the area median income or a median family income that is 
    less than 50 percent in the case of a geography.
        (2) Moderate-income, which means an individual income that is at 
    least 50 percent and less than 80 percent of the area median income or 
    a median family income that is at least 50 and less than 80 percent in 
    the case of a geography.
        (3) Middle-income, which means an individual income that is at 
    least 80 percent and less than 120 percent of the area median income or 
    a median family income that is at least 80 and less than 120 percent in 
    the case of a geography.
        (4) Upper-income, which means an individual income that is 120 
    percent or more of the area median income or a median family income 
    that is 120 percent or more in the case of a geography.
        (o) Limited purpose bank means a bank that offers only a narrow 
    product line (such as credit card or motor vehicle loans) to a regional 
    or broader market and for which a designation as a limited purpose bank 
    is in effect, in accordance with Sec. 345.25(b).
        (p) Loan location. A loan is located as follows:
        (1) A consumer loan is located in the geography where the borrower 
    resides;
        (2) A home mortgage loan is located in the geography where the 
    property to which the loan relates is located; and
        (3) A small business or small farm loan is located in the geography 
    where the main business facility or farm is located or where the loan 
    proceeds otherwise will be applied, as indicated by the borrower.
        (q) Loan production office means a staffed facility, other than a 
    branch, that is open to the public and that provides lending-related 
    services, such as loan information and applications.
        (r) MSA means a metropolitan statistical area or a primary 
    metropolitan statistical area as defined by the Director of the Office 
    of Management and Budget.
        (s) Qualified investment means a lawful investment, deposit, 
    membership share, or grant that has as its primary purpose community 
    development.
        (t) Small bank means a bank that, as of December 31 of either of 
    the prior two calendar years, had total assets of less than $250 
    million and was independent or an affiliate of a holding company that, 
    as of December 31 of either of the prior two calendar years, had total 
    banking and thrift assets of less than $1 billion.
        (u) Small business loan means a loan included in ``loans to small 
    businesses'' as defined in the instructions for preparation of the 
    Consolidated Report of Condition and Income.
        (v) Small farm loan means a loan included in ``loans to small 
    farms'' as defined in the instructions for preparation of the 
    Consolidated Report of Condition and Income.
        (w) Wholesale bank means a bank that is not in the business of 
    extending home mortgage, small business, small farm, or consumer loans 
    to retail customers, and for which a designation as a wholesale bank is 
    in effect, in accordance with Sec. 345.25(b).
    
    Subpart B--Standards for Assessing Performance
    
    
    Sec. 345.21  Performance tests, standards, and ratings, in general.
        (a) Performance tests and standards. The FDIC assesses the CRA 
    performance of a bank in an examination as follows:
        (1) Lending, investment, and service tests. The FDIC applies the 
    lending, investment, and service tests, as provided in Secs. 345.22 
    through 345.24, in evaluating the performance of a bank, except as 
    provided in paragraphs (a)(2), (a)(3), and (a)(4) of this section.
        (2) Community development test for wholesale or limited purpose 
    banks. The FDIC applies the community development test for a wholesale 
    or limited purpose bank, as provided in Sec. 345.25, except as provided 
    in paragraph (a)(4) of this section.
        (3) Small bank performance standards. The FDIC applies the small 
    bank performance standards as provided in Sec. 345.26 in evaluating the 
    performance of a small bank or a bank that was a small bank during the 
    prior calendar year, unless the bank elects to be assessed as provided 
    in paragraphs (a)(1), (a)(2), or (a)(4) of this section. The bank may 
    elect to be assessed as provided in paragraph (a)(1) of this section 
    only if it collects and reports the data required for other banks under 
    Sec. 345.42. [[Page 22203]] 
        (4) Strategic plan. The FDIC evaluates the performance of a bank 
    under a strategic plan if the bank submits, and the FDIC approves, a 
    strategic plan as provided in Sec. 345.27.
        (b) Performance context. The FDIC applies the tests and standards 
    in paragraph (a) of this section and also considers whether to approve 
    a proposed strategic plan in the context of:
        (1) Demographic data on median income levels, distribution of 
    household income, nature of housing stock, housing costs, and other 
    relevant data pertaining to a bank's assessment area(s);
        (2) Any information about lending, investment, and service 
    opportunities in the bank's assessment area(s) maintained by the bank 
    or obtained from community organizations, state, local, and tribal 
    governments, economic development agencies, or other sources;
        (3) The bank's product offerings and business strategy as 
    determined from data provided by the bank;
        (4) Institutional capacity and constraints, including the size and 
    financial condition of the bank, the economic climate (national, 
    regional, and local), safety and soundness limitations, and any other 
    factors that significantly affect the bank's ability to provide 
    lending, investments, or services in its assessment area(s);
        (5) The bank's past performance and the performance of similarly 
    situated lenders;
        (6) The bank's public file, as described in Sec. 345.43, and any 
    written comments about the bank's CRA performance submitted to the bank 
    or the FDIC; and
        (7) Any other information deemed relevant by the FDIC.
        (c) Assigned ratings. The FDIC assigns to a bank one of the 
    following four ratings pursuant to Sec. 345.28 and Appendix A of this 
    part: ``outstanding''; ``satisfactory''; ``needs to improve''; or 
    ``substantial noncompliance'' as provided in 12 U.S.C. 2906(b)(2). The 
    rating assigned by the FDIC reflects the bank's record of helping to 
    meet the credit needs of its entire community, including low- and 
    moderate-income neighborhoods, consistent with the safe and sound 
    operation of the bank.
        (d) Safe and sound operations. This part and the CRA do not require 
    a bank to make loans or investments or to provide services that are 
    inconsistent with safe and sound operations. To the contrary, the FDIC 
    anticipates banks can meet the standards of this part with safe and 
    sound loans, investments, and services on which the banks expect to 
    make a profit. Banks are permitted and encouraged to develop and apply 
    flexible underwriting standards for loans that benefit low- or 
    moderate-income geographies or individuals, only if consistent with 
    safe and sound operations.
    
    
    Sec. 345.22  Lending test.
    
        (a) Scope of test. (1) The lending test evaluates a bank's record 
    of helping to meet the credit needs of its assessment area(s) through 
    its lending activities by considering a bank's home mortgage, small 
    business, small farm, and community development lending. If consumer 
    lending constitutes a substantial majority of a bank's business, the 
    FDIC will evaluate the bank's consumer lending in one or more of the 
    following categories: motor vehicle, credit card, home equity, other 
    secured, and other unsecured loans. In addition, at a bank's option, 
    the FDIC will evaluate one or more categories of consumer lending, if 
    the bank has collected and maintained, as required in 
    Sec. 345.42(c)(1), the data for each category that the bank elects to 
    have the FDIC evaluate.
        (2) The FDIC considers originations and purchases of loans. The 
    FDIC will also consider any other loan data the bank may choose to 
    provide, including data on loans outstanding, commitments and letters 
    of credit.
        (3) A bank may ask the FDIC to consider loans originated or 
    purchased by consortia in which the bank participates or by third 
    parties in which the bank has invested only if the loans meet the 
    definition of community development loans and only in accordance with 
    paragraph (d) of this section. The FDIC will not consider these loans 
    under any criterion of the lending test except the community 
    development lending criterion.
        (b) Performance criteria. The FDIC evaluates a bank's lending 
    performance pursuant to the following criteria:
        (1) Lending activity. The number and amount of the bank's home 
    mortgage, small business, small farm, and consumer loans, if 
    applicable, in the bank's assessment area(s);
        (2) Geographic distribution. The geographic distribution of the 
    bank's home mortgage, small business, small farm, and consumer loans, 
    if applicable, based on the loan location, including:
        (i) The proportion of the bank's lending in the bank's assessment 
    area(s);
        (ii) The dispersion of lending in the bank's assessment area(s); 
    and
        (iii) The number and amount of loans in low-, moderate-, middle-, 
    and upper-income geographies in the bank's assessment area(s);
        (3) Borrower characteristics. The distribution, particularly in the 
    bank's assessment area(s), of the bank's home mortgage, small business, 
    small farm, and consumer loans, if applicable, based on borrower 
    characteristics, including the number and amount of:
        (i) Home mortgage loans to low-, moderate-, middle-, and upper-
    income individuals;
        (ii) Small business and small farm loans to businesses and farms 
    with gross annual revenues of $1 million or less;
        (iii) Small business and small farm loans by loan amount at 
    origination; and
        (iv) Consumer loans, if applicable, to low-, moderate-, middle-, 
    and upper-income individuals;
        (4) Community development lending. The bank's community development 
    lending, including the number and amount of community development 
    loans, and their complexity and innovativeness; and
        (5) Innovative or flexible lending practices. The bank's use of 
    innovative or flexible lending practices in a safe and sound manner to 
    address the credit needs of low- or moderate-income individuals or 
    geographies.
        (c) Affiliate lending. (1) At a bank's option, the FDIC will 
    consider loans by an affiliate of the bank, if the bank provides data 
    on the affiliate's loans pursuant to Sec. 345.42.
        (2) The FDIC considers affiliate lending subject to the following 
    constraints:
        (i) No affiliate may claim a loan origination or loan purchase if 
    another institution claims the same loan origination or purchase; and
        (ii) If a bank elects to have the FDIC consider loans within a 
    particular lending category made by one or more of the bank's 
    affiliates in a particular assessment area, the bank shall elect to 
    have the FDIC consider, in accordance with paragraph (c)(1) of this 
    section, all the loans within that lending category in that particular 
    assessment area made by all of the bank's affiliates.
        (3) The FDIC does not consider affiliate lending in assessing a 
    bank's performance under paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section.
        (d) Lending by a consortium or a third party. Community development 
    loans originated or purchased by a consortium in which the bank 
    participates or by a third party in which the bank has invested:
        (1) Will be considered, at the bank's option, if the bank reports 
    the data pertaining to these loans under Sec. 345.42(b)(2); and
        (2) May be allocated among participants or investors, as they 
    choose, [[Page 22204]] for purposes of the lending test, except that no 
    participant or investor:
        (i) May claim a loan origination or loan purchase if another 
    participant or investor claims the same loan origination or purchase; 
    or
        (ii) May claim loans accounting for more than its percentage share 
    (based on the level of its participation or investment) of the total 
    loans originated by the consortium or third party.
        (e) Lending performance rating. The FDIC rates a bank's lending 
    performance as provided in Appendix A of this part.
    
    
    Sec. 345.23  Investment test.
    
        (a) Scope of test. The investment test evaluates a bank's record of 
    helping to meet the credit needs of its assessment area(s) through 
    qualified investments that benefit its assessment area(s) or a broader 
    statewide or regional area that includes the bank's assessment area(s).
        (b) Exclusion. Activities considered under the lending or service 
    tests may not be considered under the investment test.
        (c) Affiliate investment. At a bank's option, the FDIC will 
    consider, in its assessment of a bank's investment performance, a 
    qualified investment made by an affiliate of the bank, if the qualified 
    investment is not claimed by any other institution.
        (d) Disposition of branch premises. Donating, selling on favorable 
    terms, or making available on a rent-free basis a branch of the bank 
    that is located in a predominantly minority neighborhood to a minority 
    depository institution or women's depository institution (as these 
    terms are defined in 12 U.S.C. 2907(b)) will be considered as a 
    qualified investment.
        (e) Performance criteria. The FDIC evaluates the investment 
    performance of a bank pursuant to the following criteria:
        (1) The dollar amount of qualified investments;
        (2) The innovativeness or complexity of qualified investments;
        (3) The responsiveness of qualified investments to credit and 
    community development needs; and
        (4) The degree to which the qualified investments are not routinely 
    provided by private investors.
        (f) Investment performance rating. The FDIC rates a bank's 
    investment performance as provided in Appendix A of this part.
    
    
    Sec. 345.24  Service test.
    
        (a) Scope of test. The service test evaluates a bank's record of 
    helping to meet the credit needs of its assessment area(s) by analyzing 
    both the availability and effectiveness of a bank's systems for 
    delivering retail banking services and the extent and innovativeness of 
    its community development services.
        (b) Area(s) benefited. Community development services must benefit 
    a bank's assessment area(s) or a broader statewide or regional area 
    that includes the bank's assessment area(s).
        (c) Affiliate service. At a bank's option, the FDIC will consider, 
    in its assessment of a bank's service performance, a community 
    development service provided by an affiliate of the bank, if the 
    community development service is not claimed by any other institution.
        (d) Performance criteria--retail banking services. The FDIC 
    evaluates the availability and effectiveness of a bank's systems for 
    delivering retail banking services, pursuant to the following criteria:
        (1) The current distribution of the bank's branches among low-,
    moderate-, middle-, and upper-income geographies;
        (2) In the context of its current distribution of the bank's 
    branches, the bank's record of opening and closing branches, 
    particularly branches located in low- or moderate-income geographies or 
    primarily serving low- or moderate-income individuals;
        (3) The availability and effectiveness of alternative systems for 
    delivering retail banking services (e.g., RSFs, RSFs not owned or 
    operated by or exclusively for the bank, banking by telephone or 
    computer, loan production offices, and bank-at-work or bank-by-mail 
    programs) in low- and moderate-income geographies and to low- and 
    moderate-income individuals; and
        (4) The range of services provided in low-, moderate-, middle-, and 
    upper-income geographies and the degree to which the services are 
    tailored to meet the needs of those geographies.
        (e) Performance criteria--community development services. The FDIC 
    evaluates community development services pursuant to the following 
    criteria:
        (1) The extent to which the bank provides community development 
    services; and
        (2) The innovativeness and responsiveness of community development 
    services.
        (f) Service performance rating. The FDIC rates a bank's service 
    performance as provided in Appendix A of this part.
    
    
    Sec. 345.25  Community development test for wholesale or limited 
    purpose banks.
    
        (a) Scope of test. The FDIC assesses a wholesale or limited purpose 
    bank's record of helping to meet the credit needs of its assessment 
    area(s) under the community development test through its community 
    development lending, qualified investments, or community development 
    services.
        (b) Designation as a wholesale or limited purpose bank. In order to 
    receive a designation as a wholesale or limited purpose bank, a bank 
    shall file a request, in writing, with the FDIC, at least three months 
    prior to the proposed effective date of the designation. If the FDIC 
    approves the designation, it remains in effect until the bank requests 
    revocation of the designation or until one year after the FDIC notifies 
    the bank that the FDIC has revoked the designation on its own 
    initiative.
        (c) Performance criteria. The FDIC evaluates the community 
    development performance of a wholesale or limited purpose bank pursuant 
    to the following criteria:
        (1) The number and amount of community development loans (including 
    originations and purchases of loans and other community development 
    loan data provided by the bank, such as data on loans outstanding, 
    commitments, and letters of credit), qualified investments, or 
    community development services;
        (2) The use of innovative or complex qualified investments, 
    community development loans, or community development services and the 
    extent to which the investments are not routinely provided by private 
    investors; and
        (3) The bank's responsiveness to credit and community development 
    needs.
        (d) Indirect activities. At a bank's option, the FDIC will consider 
    in its community development performance assessment:
        (1) Qualified investments or community development services 
    provided by an affiliate of the bank, if the investments or services 
    are not claimed by any other institution; and
        (2) Community development lending by affiliates, consortia and 
    third parties, subject to the requirements and limitations in 
    Sec. 345.22 (c) and (d).
        (e) Benefit to assessment area(s)--(1) Benefit inside assessment 
    area(s). The FDIC considers all qualified investments, community 
    development loans, and community development services that benefit 
    areas within the bank's assessment area(s) or a broader statewide or 
    regional area that includes the bank's assessment area(s).
        (2) Benefit outside assessment area(s). The FDIC considers the 
    qualified investments, community development loans, and community 
    development services that benefit areas outside the bank's assessment 
    area(s), if the bank [[Page 22205]] has adequately addressed the needs 
    of its assessment area(s).
        (f) Community development performance rating. The FDIC rates a 
    bank's community development performance as provided in Appendix A of 
    this part.
    
    
    Sec. 345.26  Small bank performance standards.
    
        (a) Performance criteria. The FDIC evaluates the record of a small 
    bank, or a bank that was a small bank during the prior calendar year, 
    of helping to meet the credit needs of its assessment area(s) pursuant 
    to the following criteria:
        (1) The bank's loan-to-deposit ratio, adjusted for seasonal 
    variation and, as appropriate, other lending-related activities, such 
    as loan originations for sale to the secondary markets, community 
    development loans, or qualified investments;
        (2) The percentage of loans and, as appropriate, other lending-
    related activities located in the bank's assessment area(s);
        (3) The bank's record of lending to and, as appropriate, engaging 
    in other lending-related activities for borrowers of different income 
    levels and businesses and farms of different sizes;
        (4) The geographic distribution of the bank's loans; and
        (5) The bank's record of taking action, if warranted, in response 
    to written complaints about its performance in helping to meet credit 
    needs in its assessment area(s).
        (b) Small bank performance rating. The FDIC rates the performance 
    of a bank evaluated under this section as provided in Appendix A of 
    this part.
    
    
    Sec. 345.27  Strategic plan.
    
        (a) Alternative election. The FDIC will assess a bank's record of 
    helping to meet the credit needs of its assessment area(s) under a 
    strategic plan if:
        (1) The bank has submitted the plan to the FDIC as provided for in 
    this section;
        (2) The FDIC has approved the plan;
        (3) The plan is in effect; and
        (4) The bank has been operating under an approved plan for at least 
    one year.
        (b) Data reporting. The FDIC's approval of a plan does not affect 
    the bank's obligation, if any, to report data as required by 
    Sec. 345.42.
        (c) Plans in general--(1) Term. A plan may have a term of no more 
    than five years, and any multi-year plan must include annual interim 
    measurable goals under which the FDIC will evaluate the bank's 
    performance.
        (2) Multiple assessment areas. A bank with more than one assessment 
    area may prepare a single plan for all of its assessment areas or one 
    or more plans for one or more of its assessment areas.
        (3) Treatment of affiliates. Affiliated institutions may prepare a 
    joint plan if the plan provides measurable goals for each institution. 
    Activities may be allocated among institutions at the institutions' 
    option, provided that the same activities are not considered for more 
    than one institution.
        (d) Public participation in plan development. Before submitting a 
    plan to the FDIC for approval, a bank shall:
        (1) Informally seek suggestions from members of the public in its 
    assessment area(s) covered by the plan while developing the plan;
        (2) Once the bank has developed a plan, formally solicit public 
    comment on the plan for at least 30 days by publishing notice in at 
    least one newspaper of general circulation in each assessment area 
    covered by the plan; and
        (3) During the period of formal public comment, make copies of the 
    plan available for review by the public at no cost at all offices of 
    the bank in any assessment area covered by the plan and provide copies 
    of the plan upon request for a reasonable fee to cover copying and 
    mailing, if applicable.
        (e) Submission of plan. The bank shall submit its plan to the FDIC 
    at least three months prior to the proposed effective date of the plan. 
    The bank shall also submit with its plan a description of its informal 
    efforts to seek suggestions from members of the public, any written 
    public comment received, and, if the plan was revised in light of the 
    comment received, the initial plan as released for public comment.
        (f) Plan content--(1) Measurable goals. (i) A bank shall specify in 
    its plan measurable goals for helping to meet the credit needs of each 
    assessment area covered by the plan, particularly the needs of low- and 
    moderate-income geographies and low- and moderate-income individuals, 
    through lending, investment, and services, as appropriate.
        (ii) A bank shall address in its plan all three performance 
    categories and, unless the bank has been designated as a wholesale or 
    limited purpose bank, shall emphasize lending and lending-related 
    activities. Nevertheless, a different emphasis, including a focus on 
    one or more performance categories, may be appropriate if responsive to 
    the characteristics and credit needs of its assessment area(s), 
    considering public comment and the bank's capacity and constraints, 
    product offerings, and business strategy.
        (2) Confidential information. A bank may submit additional 
    information to the FDIC on a confidential basis, but the goals stated 
    in the plan must be sufficiently specific to enable the public and the 
    FDIC to judge the merits of the plan.
        (3) Satisfactory and outstanding goals. A bank shall specify in its 
    plan measurable goals that constitute ``satisfactory'' performance. A 
    plan may specify measurable goals that constitute ``outstanding'' 
    performance. If a bank submits, and the FDIC approves, both 
    ``satisfactory'' and ``outstanding'' performance goals, the FDIC will 
    consider the bank eligible for an ``outstanding'' performance rating.
        (4) Election if satisfactory goals not substantially met. A bank 
    may elect in its plan that, if the bank fails to meet substantially its 
    plan goals for a satisfactory rating, the FDIC will evaluate the bank's 
    performance under the lending, investment, and service tests, the 
    community development test, or the small bank performance standards, as 
    appropriate.
        (g) Plan approval--(1) Timing. The FDIC will act upon a plan within 
    60 calendar days after the FDIC receives the complete plan and other 
    material required under paragraph (d) of this section. If the FDIC 
    fails to act within this time period, the plan shall be deemed approved 
    unless the FDIC extends the review period for good cause.
        (2) Public participation. In evaluating the plan's goals, the FDIC 
    considers the public's involvement in formulating the plan, written 
    public comment on the plan, and any response by the bank to public 
    comment on the plan.
        (3) Criteria for evaluating plan. The FDIC evaluates a plan's 
    measurable goals using the following criteria, as appropriate:
        (i) The extent and breadth of lending or lending-related 
    activities, including, as appropriate, the distribution of loans among 
    different geographies, businesses and farms of different sizes, and 
    individuals of different income levels, the extent of community 
    development lending, and the use of innovative or flexible lending 
    practices to address credit needs;
        (ii) The amount and innovativeness, complexity, and responsiveness 
    of the bank's qualified investments; and
        (iii) The availability and effectiveness of the bank's systems for 
    delivering retail banking services and the extent and innovativeness of 
    the bank's community development services.
        (h) Plan amendment. During the term of a plan, a bank may request 
    the FDIC to approve an amendment to the plan on grounds that there has 
    been a material change in circumstances. The bank shall 
    [[Page 22206]] develop an amendment to a previously approved plan in 
    accordance with the public participation requirements of paragraph (c) 
    of this section.
        (i) Plan assessment. The FDIC approves the goals and assesses 
    performance under a plan as provided for in Appendix A of this part.
    
    
    Sec. 345.28  Assigned ratings.
    
        (a) Ratings in general. Subject to paragraphs (b) and (c) of this 
    section, the FDIC assigns to a bank a rating of ``outstanding,'' 
    ``satisfactory,'' ``needs to improve,'' or ``substantial 
    noncompliance'' based on the bank's performance under the lending, 
    investment and service tests, the community development test, the small 
    bank performance standards, or an approved strategic plan, as 
    applicable.
        (b) Lending, investment, and service tests. The FDIC assigns a 
    rating for a bank assessed under the lending, investment, and service 
    tests in accordance with the following principles:
        (1) A bank that receives an ``outstanding'' rating on the lending 
    test receives an assigned rating of at least ``satisfactory'';
        (2) A bank that receives an ``outstanding'' rating on both the 
    service test and the investment test and a rating of at least ``high 
    satisfactory'' on the lending test receives an assigned rating of 
    ``outstanding''; and
        (3) No bank may receive an assigned rating of ``satisfactory'' or 
    higher unless it receives a rating of at least ``low satisfactory'' on 
    the lending test.
        (c) Effect of evidence of discriminatory or other illegal credit 
    practices. Evidence of discriminatory or other illegal credit practices 
    adversely affects the FDIC's evaluation of a bank's performance. In 
    determining the effect on the bank's assigned rating, the FDIC 
    considers the nature and extent of the evidence, the policies and 
    procedures that the bank has in place to prevent discriminatory or 
    other illegal credit practices, any corrective action that the bank has 
    taken or has committed to take, particularly voluntary corrective 
    action resulting from self-assessment, and other relevant information.
    
    
    Sec. 345.29  Effect of CRA performance on applications.
    
        (a) CRA performance. Among other factors, the FDIC takes into 
    account the record of performance under the CRA of each applicant bank 
    in considering an application for approval of:
        (1) The establishment of a domestic branch or other facility with 
    the ability to accept deposits;
        (2) The relocation of the bank's main office or a branch;
        (3) The merger, consolidation, acquisition of assets, or assumption 
    of liabilities; and
        (4) Deposit insurance for a newly chartered financial institution.
        (b) New financial institutions. A newly chartered financial 
    institution shall submit with its application for deposit insurance a 
    description of how it will meet its CRA objectives. The FDIC takes the 
    description into account in considering the application and may deny or 
    condition approval on that basis.
        (c) Interested parties. The FDIC takes into account any views 
    expressed by interested parties that are submitted in accordance with 
    the FDIC's procedures set forth in part 303 of this chapter in 
    considering CRA performance in an application listed in paragraphs (a) 
    and (b) of this section.
        (d) Denial or conditional approval of application. A bank's record 
    of performance may be the basis for denying or conditioning approval of 
    an application listed in paragraph (a) of this section.
    
    Subpart C--Records, Reporting, and Disclosure Requirements
    
    
    Sec. 345.41  Assessment area delineation.
    
        (a) In general. A bank shall delineate one or more assessment areas 
    within which the FDIC evaluates the bank's record of helping to meet 
    the credit needs of its community. The FDIC does not evaluate the 
    bank's delineation of its assessment area(s) as a separate performance 
    criterion, but the FDIC reviews the delineation for compliance with the 
    requirements of this section.
        (b) Geographic area(s) for wholesale or limited purpose banks. The 
    assessment area(s) for a wholesale or limited purpose bank must consist 
    generally of one or more MSAs (using the MSA boundaries that were in 
    effect as of January 1 of the calendar year in which the delineation is 
    made) or one or more contiguous political subdivisions, such as 
    counties, cities, or towns, in which the bank has its main office, 
    branches, and deposit-taking RSFs.
        (c) Geographic area(s) for other banks. The assessment area(s) for 
    a bank other than a wholesale or limited purpose bank must:
        (1) Consist generally of one or more MSAs (using the MSA boundaries 
    that were in effect as of January 1 of the calendar year in which the 
    delineation is made) or one or more contiguous political subdivisions, 
    such as counties, cities, or towns; and
        (2) Include the geographies in which the bank has its main office, 
    its branches, and its deposit-taking RSFs, as well as the surrounding 
    geographies in which the bank has originated or purchased a substantial 
    portion of its loans (including home mortgage loans, small business and 
    small farm loans, and any other loans the bank chooses, such as those 
    consumer loans on which the bank elects to have its performance 
    assessed).
        (d) Adjustments to geographic area(s). A bank may adjust the 
    boundaries of its assessment area(s) to include only the portion of a 
    political subdivision that it reasonably can be expected to serve. An 
    adjustment is particularly appropriate in the case of an assessment 
    area that otherwise would be extremely large, of unusual configuration, 
    or divided by significant geographic barriers.
        (e) Limitations on the delineation of an assessment area. Each 
    bank's assessment area(s):
        (1) Must consist only of whole geographies;
        (2) May not reflect illegal discrimination;
        (3) May not arbitrarily exclude low- or moderate-income 
    geographies, taking into account the bank's size and financial 
    condition; and
        (4) May not extend substantially beyond a CMSA boundary or beyond a 
    state boundary unless the assessment area is located in a multistate 
    MSA. If a bank serves a geographic area that extends substantially 
    beyond a state boundary, the bank shall delineate separate assessment 
    areas for the areas in each state. If a bank serves a geographic area 
    that extends substantially beyond a CMSA boundary, the bank shall 
    delineate separate assessment areas for the areas inside and outside 
    the CMSA.
        (f) Banks serving military personnel. Notwithstanding the 
    requirements of this section, a bank whose business predominantly 
    consists of serving the needs of military personnel or their dependents 
    who are not located within a defined geographic area may delineate its 
    entire deposit customer base as its assessment area.
        (g) Use of assessment area(s). The FDIC uses the assessment area(s) 
    delineated by a bank in its evaluation of the bank's CRA performance 
    unless the FDIC determines that the assessment area(s) do not comply 
    with the requirements of this section.
    
    
    Sec. 345.42  Data collection, reporting, and disclosure.
    
        (a) Loan information required to be collected and maintained. A 
    bank, except a small bank, shall collect, and maintain in machine 
    readable form (as prescribed by the FDIC) until the 
    [[Page 22207]] completion of its next CRA examination, the following 
    data for each small business or small farm loan originated or purchased 
    by the bank:
        (1) A unique number or alpha-numeric symbol that can be used to 
    identify the relevant loan file;
        (2) The loan amount at origination;
        (3) The loan location; and
        (4) An indicator whether the loan was to a business or farm with 
    gross annual revenues of $1 million or less.
        (b) Loan information required to be reported. A bank, except a 
    small bank or a bank that was a small bank during the prior calendar 
    year, shall report annually by March 1 to the FDIC in machine readable 
    form (as prescribed by the FDIC) the following data for the prior 
    calendar year:
        (1) Small business and small farm loan data. For each geography in 
    which the bank originated or purchased a small business or small farm 
    loan, the aggregate number and amount of loans:
        (i) With an amount at origination of $100,000 or less;
        (ii) With an amount at origination of more than $100,000 but less 
    than or equal to $250,000;
        (iii) With an amount at origination of more than $250,000; and
        (iv) To businesses and farms with gross annual revenues of $1 
    million or less (using the revenues that the bank considered in making 
    its credit decision);
        (2) Community development loan data. The aggregate number and 
    aggregate amount of community development loans originated or 
    purchased; and
        (3) Home mortgage loans. If the bank is subject to reporting under 
    part 203 of this title, the location of each home mortgage loan 
    application, origination, or purchase outside the MSAs in which the 
    bank has a home or branch office (or outside any MSA) in accordance 
    with the requirements of part 203 of this title.
        (c) Optional data collection and maintenance.--(1) Consumer loans. 
    A bank may collect and maintain in machine readable form (as prescribed 
    by the FDIC) data for consumer loans originated or purchased by the 
    bank for consideration under the lending test. A bank may maintain data 
    for one or more of the following categories of consumer loans: motor 
    vehicle, credit card, home equity, other secured, and other unsecured. 
    If the bank maintains data for loans in a certain category, it shall 
    maintain data for all loans originated or purchased within that 
    category. The bank shall maintain data separately for each category, 
    including for each loan:
        (i) A unique number or alpha-numeric symbol that can be used to 
    identify the relevant loan file;
        (ii) The loan amount at origination or purchase;
        (iii) The loan location; and
        (iv) The gross annual income of the borrower that the bank 
    considered in making its credit decision.
        (2) Other loan data. At its option, a bank may provide other 
    information concerning its lending performance, including additional 
    loan distribution data.
        (d) Data on affiliate lending. A bank that elects to have the FDIC 
    consider loans by an affiliate, for purposes of the lending or 
    community development test or an approved strategic plan, shall 
    collect, maintain, and report for those loans the data that the bank 
    would have collected, maintained, and reported pursuant to paragraphs 
    (a), (b), and (c) of this section had the loans been originated or 
    purchased by the bank. For home mortgage loans, the bank shall also be 
    prepared to identify the home mortgage loans reported under part 203 of 
    this title by the affiliate.
        (e) Data on lending by a consortium or a third party. A bank that 
    elects to have the FDIC consider community development loans by a 
    consortium or third party, for purposes of the lending or community 
    development tests or an approved strategic plan, shall report for those 
    loans the data that the bank would have reported under paragraph (b)(2) 
    of this section had the loans been originated or purchased by the bank.
        (f) Small banks electing evaluation under the lending, investment, 
    and service tests. A bank that qualifies for evaluation under the small 
    bank performance standards but elects evaluation under the lending, 
    investment, and service tests shall collect, maintain, and report the 
    data required for other banks pursuant to paragraphs (a) and (b) of 
    this section.
        (g) Assessment area data. A bank, except a small bank or a bank 
    that was a small bank during the prior calendar year, shall collect and 
    report to the FDIC by March 1 of each year a list for each assessment 
    area showing the geographies within the area.
        (h) CRA Disclosure Statement. The FDIC prepares annually for each 
    bank that reports data pursuant to this section a CRA Disclosure 
    Statement that contains, on a state-by-state basis:
        (1) For each county (and for each assessment area smaller than a 
    county) with a population of 500,000 persons or fewer in which the bank 
    reported a small business or small farm loan:
        (i) The number and amount of small business and small farm loans 
    reported as originated or purchased located in low-, moderate-, middle-
    , and upper-income geographies;
        (ii) A list grouping each geography according to whether the 
    geography is low-, moderate-, middle-, or upper-income;
        (iii) A list showing each geography in which the bank reported a 
    small business or small farm loan; and
        (iv) The number and amount of small business and small farm loans 
    to businesses and farms with gross annual revenues of $1 million or 
    less;
        (2) For each county (and for each assessment area smaller than a 
    county) with a population in excess of 500,000 persons in which the 
    bank reported a small business or small farm loan:
        (i) The number and amount of small business and small farm loans 
    reported as originated or purchased located in geographies with median 
    income relative to the area median income of less than 10 percent, 10 
    or more but less than 20 percent, 20 or more but less than 30 percent, 
    30 or more but less than 40 percent, 40 or more but less than 50 
    percent, 50 or more but less than 60 percent, 60 or more but less than 
    70 percent, 70 or more but less than 80 percent, 80 or more but less 
    than 90 percent, 90 or more but less than 100 percent, 100 or more but 
    less than 110 percent, 110 or more but less than 120 percent, and 120 
    percent or more;
        (ii) A list grouping each geography in the county or assessment 
    area according to whether the median income in the geography relative 
    to the area median income is less than 10 percent, 10 or more but less 
    than 20 percent, 20 or more but less than 30 percent, 30 or more but 
    less than 40 percent, 40 or more but less than 50 percent, 50 or more 
    but less than 60 percent, 60 or more but less than 70 percent, 70 or 
    more but less than 80 percent, 80 or more but less than 90 percent, 90 
    or more but less than 100 percent, 100 or more but less than 110 
    percent, 110 or more but less than 120 percent, and 120 percent or 
    more;
        (iii) A list showing each geography in which the bank reported a 
    small business or small farm loan; and
        (iv) The number and amount of small business and small farm loans 
    to businesses and farms with gross annual revenues of $1 million or 
    less;
        (3) The number and amount of small business and small farm loans 
    located inside each assessment area reported by the bank and the number 
    and amount of small business and small farm loans located outside the 
    assessment area(s) reported by the bank; and [[Page 22208]] 
        (4) The number and amount of community development loans reported 
    as originated or purchased.
        (i) Aggregate disclosure statements. The FDIC, in conjunction with 
    the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, the Office of the 
    Comptroller of the Currency, and the Office of Thrift Supervision, 
    prepares annually, for each MSA (including an MSA that crosses a state 
    boundary) and the non-MSA portion of each state, an aggregate 
    disclosure statement of small business and small farm lending by all 
    institutions subject to reporting under this part or parts 25, 228, or 
    563e of this title. These disclosure statements indicate, for each 
    geography, the number and amount of all small business and small farm 
    loans originated or purchased by reporting institutions, except that 
    the FDIC may adjust the form of the disclosure if necessary, because of 
    special circumstances, to protect the privacy of a borrower or the 
    competitive position of an institution.
        (j) Central data depositories. The FDIC makes the aggregate 
    disclosure statements, described in paragraph (i) of this section, and 
    the individual bank CRA Disclosure Statements, described in paragraph 
    (h) of this section, available to the public at central data 
    depositories. The FDIC publishes a list of the depositories at which 
    the statements are available.
    
    
    Sec. 345.43  Content and availability of public file.
    
        (a) Information available to the public. A bank shall maintain a 
    public file that includes the following information:
        (1) All written comments received from the public for the current 
    year and each of the prior two calendar years that specifically relate 
    to the bank's performance in helping to meet community credit needs, 
    and any response to the comments by the bank, if neither the comments 
    nor the responses contain statements that reflect adversely on the good 
    name or reputation of any persons other than the bank or publication of 
    which would violate specific provisions of law;
        (2) A copy of the public section of the bank's most recent CRA 
    Performance Evaluation prepared by the FDIC. The bank shall place this 
    copy in the public file within 30 business days after its receipt from 
    the FDIC;
        (3) A list of the bank's branches, their street addresses, and 
    geographies;
        (4) A list of branches opened or closed by the bank during the 
    current year and each of the prior two calendar years, their street 
    addresses, and geographies;
        (5) A list of services (including hours of operation, available 
    loan and deposit products, and transaction fees) generally offered at 
    the bank's branches and descriptions of material differences in the 
    availability or cost of services at particular branches, if any. At its 
    option, a bank may include information regarding the availability of 
    alternative systems for delivering retail banking services (e.g., RSFs, 
    RSFs not owned or operated by or exclusively for the bank, banking by 
    telephone or computer, loan production offices, and bank-at-work or 
    bank-by-mail programs);
        (6) A map of each assessment area showing the boundaries of the 
    area and identifying the geographies contained within the area, either 
    on the map or in a separate list; and
        (7) Any other information the bank chooses.
        (b) Additional information available to the public--(1) Banks other 
    than small banks. A bank, except a small bank or a bank that was a 
    small bank during the prior calendar year, shall include in its public 
    file the following information pertaining to the bank and its 
    affiliates, if applicable, for each of the prior two calendar years:
        (i) If the bank has elected to have one or more categories of its 
    consumer loans considered under the lending test, for each of these 
    categories, the number and amount of loans:
        (A) To low-, moderate-, middle-, and upper-income individuals;
        (B) Located in low-, moderate-, middle-, and upper-income census 
    tracts; and
        (C) Located inside the bank's assessment area(s) and outside the 
    bank's assessment area(s); and
        (ii) The bank's CRA Disclosure Statement. The bank shall place the 
    statement in the public file within three business days of its receipt 
    from the FDIC.
        (2) Banks required to report Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA) 
    data. A bank required to report home mortgage loan data pursuant part 
    203 of this title shall include in its public file a copy of the HMDA 
    Disclosure Statement provided by the Federal Financial Institutions 
    Examination Council pertaining to the bank for each of the prior two 
    calendar years. In addition, a bank that elected to have the FDIC 
    consider the mortgage lending of an affiliate for any of these years 
    shall include in its public file the affiliate's HMDA Disclosure 
    Statement for those years. The bank shall place the statement(s) in the 
    public file within three business days after receipt.
        (3) Small banks. A small bank or a bank that was a small bank 
    during the prior calendar year shall include in its public file:
        (i) The bank's loan-to-deposit ratio for each quarter of the prior 
    calendar year and, at its option, additional data on its loan-to-
    deposit ratio; and
        (ii) The information required for other banks by paragraph (b)(1) 
    of this section, if the bank has elected to be evaluated under the 
    lending, investment, and service tests.
        (4) Banks with strategic plans. A bank that has been approved to be 
    assessed under a strategic plan shall include in its public file a copy 
    of that plan. A bank need not include information submitted to the FDIC 
    on a confidential basis in conjunction with the plan.
        (5) Banks with less than satisfactory ratings. A bank that received 
    a less than satisfactory rating during its most recent examination 
    shall include in its public file a description of its current efforts 
    to improve its performance in helping to meet the credit needs of its 
    entire community. The bank shall update the description quarterly.
        (c) Location of public information. A bank shall make available to 
    the public for inspection upon request and at no cost the information 
    required in this section as follows:
        (1) At the main office and, if an interstate bank, at one branch 
    office in each state, all information in the public file; and
        (2) At each branch:
        (i) A copy of the public section of the bank's most recent CRA 
    Performance Evaluation and a list of services provided by the branch; 
    and
        (ii) Within five calendar days of the request, all the information 
    in the public file relating to the assessment area in which the branch 
    is located.
        (d) Copies. Upon request, a bank shall provide copies, either on 
    paper or in another form acceptable to the person making the request, 
    of the information in its public file. The bank may charge a reasonable 
    fee not to exceed the cost of copying and mailing (if applicable).
        (e) Updating. Except as otherwise provided in this section, a bank 
    shall ensure that the information required by this section is current 
    as of April 1 of each year.
    
    
    Sec. 345.44  Public notice by banks.
    
        A bank shall provide in the public lobby of its main office and 
    each of its branches the appropriate public notice set forth in 
    Appendix B of this part. Only a branch of a bank having more than one 
    assessment area shall include the bracketed material in the notice for 
    branch offices. Only a bank that is an affiliate of a holding company 
    shall include the next to the last sentence of [[Page 22209]] the 
    notices. A bank shall include the last sentence of the notices only if 
    it is an affiliate of a holding company that is not prevented by 
    statute from acquiring additional banks.
    
    
    Sec. 345.45  Publication of planned examination schedule.
    
        The FDIC publishes at least 30 days in advance of the beginning of 
    each calendar quarter a list of banks scheduled for CRA examinations in 
    that quarter.
    
    Subpart D--Transition Rules
    
    
    Sec. 345.51  Transition rules.
    
        (a) Effective date. Sections of this part become applicable over a 
    period of time in accordance with the schedule set forth in paragraph 
    (c) of this section.
        (b) Data collection and reporting; strategic plan; performance 
    tests and standards--(1) Data collection and reporting. (i) On January 
    1, 1996, the data collection requirements set forth in Sec. 345.42 
    (except Sec. 345.42(b) and (g)) become applicable.
        (ii) On January 1, 1997, the data reporting requirements set forth 
    in Sec. 345.42(b) and (g) become applicable.
        (2) Small banks. Beginning January 1, 1996, the FDIC evaluates 
    banks that qualify for the small bank performance standards described 
    in Sec. 345.26 under that section.
        (3) Strategic plan. Beginning January 1, 1996, a bank that elects 
    to be evaluated under an approved strategic plan pursuant to 
    Sec. 345.27 may submit its strategic plan to the FDIC for approval.
        (4) Other performance tests. (i) Beginning January 1, 1996, a bank 
    may elect to be evaluated under the pertinent revised performance tests 
    described in Secs. 345.22, 345.23, 345.24, and 345.25, if the bank 
    provides the necessary data to permit evaluation.
        (ii) Beginning July 1, 1997, the FDIC evaluates all banks under the 
    pertinent revised performance tests.
        (c) Schedule. (1) On July 1, 1995, Secs. 345.11, 345.12, 345.29, 
    and 345.51 become applicable, and Secs. 345.1, 345.2, 345.8, 345.101 
    and 345.102 expire.
        (2) On January 1, 1996, Sec. 345.41 and the pertinent provisions of 
    Subpart B of this part will apply to banks that elect to be evaluated 
    under Secs. 345.22 through 345.25, banks that submit for approval 
    strategic plans under Sec. 345.27, and banks that qualify for the small 
    bank performance standards described in Sec. 345.26.
        (3) On January 1, 1996, Secs. 345.42 (except Sec. 345.42(b) and 
    (g)) and 345.45 become applicable.
        (4) On January 1, 1997, Secs. 345.41 and 345.42(b) and (g) become 
    applicable.
        (5) On July 1, 1997, Secs. 345.21 through 345.28, 345.43, and 
    345.44 become applicable, and Secs. 345.3 through 345.7, and 345.51 
    expire.
    
    Appendix A to Part 345--Ratings
    
        (a) Ratings in general.--(1) In assigning a rating, the FDIC 
    evaluates a bank's performance under the applicable performance 
    criteria in this part, in accordance with Sec. 345.21, and 
    Sec. 345.28, which provides for adjustments on the basis of evidence 
    of discriminatory or other illegal credit practices.
        (2) A bank's performance need not fit each aspect of a 
    particular rating profile in order to receive that rating, and 
    exceptionally strong performance with respect to some aspects may 
    compensate for weak performance in others. The bank's overall 
    performance, however, must be consistent with safe and sound banking 
    practices and generally with the appropriate rating profile as 
    follows.
        (b) Banks evaluated under the lending, investment, and service 
    tests.--(1) Lending performance rating. The FDIC assigns each bank's 
    lending performance one of the five following ratings.
        (i) Outstanding. The FDIC rates a bank's lending performance 
    ``outstanding'' if, in general, it demonstrates:
        (A) Excellent responsiveness to credit needs in its assessment 
    area(s), taking into account the number and amount of home mortgage, 
    small business, small farm, and consumer loans, if applicable, in 
    its assessment area(s);
        (B) A substantial majority of its loans are made in its 
    assessment area(s);
        (C) An excellent geographic distribution of loans in its 
    assessment area(s);
        (D) An excellent distribution, particularly in its assessment 
    area(s), of loans among individuals of different income levels and 
    businesses (including farms) of different sizes, given the product 
    lines offered by the bank;
        (E) An excellent record of serving the credit needs of highly 
    economically disadvantaged areas in its assessment area(s), low-
    income individuals, or businesses (including farms) with gross 
    annual revenues of $1 million or less, consistent with safe and 
    sound operations;
        (F) Extensive use of innovative or flexible lending practices in 
    a safe and sound manner to address the credit needs of low- or 
    moderate-income individuals or geographies; and
        (G) It is a leader in making community development loans.
        (ii) High satisfactory. The FDIC rates a bank's lending 
    performance ``high satisfactory'' if, in general, it demonstrates:
        (A) Good responsiveness to credit needs in its assessment 
    area(s), taking into account the number and amount of home mortgage, 
    small business, small farm, and consumer loans, if applicable, in 
    its assessment area(s);
        (B) A high percentage of its loans are made in its assessment 
    area(s);
        (C) A good geographic distribution of loans in its assessment 
    area(s);
        (D) A good distribution, particularly in its assessment area(s), 
    of loans among individuals of different income levels and businesses 
    (including farms) of different sizes, given the product lines 
    offered by the bank;
        (E) A good record of serving the credit needs of highly 
    economically disadvantaged areas in its assessment area(s), low-
    income individuals, or businesses (including farms) with gross 
    annual revenues of $1 million or less, consistent with safe and 
    sound operations;
        (F) Use of innovative or flexible lending practices in a safe 
    and sound manner to address the credit needs of low- or moderate-
    income individuals or geographies; and
        (G) It has made a relatively high level of community development 
    loans.
        (iii) Low satisfactory. The FDIC rates a bank's lending 
    performance ``low satisfactory'' if, in general, it demonstrates:
        (A) Adequate responsiveness to credit needs in its assessment 
    area(s), taking into account the number and amount of home mortgage, 
    small business, small farm, and consumer loans, if applicable, in 
    its assessment area(s);
        (B) An adequate percentage of its loans are made in its 
    assessment area(s);
        (C) An adequate geographic distribution of loans in its 
    assessment area(s);
        (D) An adequate distribution, particularly in its assessment 
    area(s), of loans among individuals of different income levels and 
    businesses (including farms) of different sizes, given the product 
    lines offered by the bank;
        (E) An adequate record of serving the credit needs of highly 
    economically disadvantaged areas in its assessment area(s), low-
    income individuals, or businesses (including farms) with gross 
    annual revenues of $1 million or less, consistent with safe and 
    sound operations;
        (F) Limited use of innovative or flexible lending practices in a 
    safe and sound manner to address the credit needs of low- or 
    moderate-income individuals or geographies; and
        (G) It has made an adequate level of community development 
    loans.
        (iv) Needs to improve. The FDIC rates a bank's lending 
    performance ``needs to improve'' if, in general, it demonstrates:
        (A) Poor responsiveness to credit needs in its assessment 
    area(s), taking into account the number and amount of home mortgage, 
    small business, small farm, and consumer loans, if applicable, in 
    its assessment area(s);
        (B) A small percentage of its loans are made in its assessment 
    area(s);
        (C) A poor geographic distribution of loans, particularly to 
    low- or moderate-income geographies, in its assessment area(s);
        (D) A poor distribution, particularly in its assessment area(s), 
    of loans among individuals of different income levels and businesses 
    (including farms) of different sizes, given the product lines 
    offered by the bank;
        (E) A poor record of serving the credit needs of highly 
    economically disadvantaged areas in its assessment area(s), low-
    income individuals, or businesses (including farms) with gross 
    annual revenues of $1 million or less, consistent with safe and 
    sound operations; [[Page 22210]] 
        (F) Little use of innovative or flexible lending practices in a 
    safe and sound manner to address the credit needs of low- or 
    moderate-income individuals or geographies; and
        (G) It has made a low level of community development loans.
        (v) Substantial noncompliance. The FDIC rates a bank's lending 
    performance as being in ``substantial noncompliance'' if, in 
    general, it demonstrates:
        (A) A very poor responsiveness to credit needs in its assessment 
    area(s), taking into account the number and amount of home mortgage, 
    small business, small farm, and consumer loans, if applicable, in 
    its assessment area(s);
        (B) A very small percentage of its loans are made in its 
    assessment area(s);
        (C) A very poor geographic distribution of loans, particularly 
    to low- or moderate-income geographies, in its assessment area(s);
        (D) A very poor distribution, particularly in its assessment 
    area(s), of loans among individuals of different income levels and 
    businesses (including farms) of different sizes, given the product 
    lines offered by the bank;
        (E) A very poor record of serving the credit needs of highly 
    economically disadvantaged areas in its assessment area(s), low-
    income individuals, or businesses (including farms) with gross 
    annual revenues of $1 million or less, consistent with safe and 
    sound operations;
        (F) No use of innovative or flexible lending practices in a safe 
    and sound manner to address the credit needs of low- or moderate-
    income individuals or geographies; and
        (G) It has made few, if any, community development loans.
        (2) Investment performance rating. The FDIC assigns each bank's 
    investment performance one of the five following ratings.
        (i) Outstanding. The FDIC rates a bank's investment performance 
    ``outstanding'' if, in general, it demonstrates:
        (A) An excellent level of qualified investments, particularly 
    those that are not routinely provided by private investors, often in 
    a leadership position;
        (B) Extensive use of innovative or complex qualified 
    investments; and
        (C) Excellent responsiveness to credit and community development 
    needs.
        (ii) High satisfactory. The FDIC rates a bank's investment 
    performance ``high satisfactory'' if, in general, it demonstrates:
        (A) A significant level of qualified investments, particularly 
    those that are not routinely provided by private investors, 
    occasionally in a leadership position;
        (B) Significant use of innovative or complex qualified 
    investments; and
        (C) Good responsiveness to credit and community development 
    needs.
        (iii) Low satisfactory. The FDIC rates a bank's investment 
    performance ``low satisfactory'' if, in general, it demonstrates:
        (A) An adequate level of qualified investments, particularly 
    those that are not routinely provided by private investors, although 
    rarely in a leadership position;
        (B) Occasional use of innovative or complex qualified 
    investments; and
        (C) Adequate responsiveness to credit and community development 
    needs.
        (iv) Needs to improve. The FDIC rates a bank's investment 
    performance ``needs to improve'' if, in general, it demonstrates:
        (A) A poor level of qualified investments, particularly those 
    that are not routinely provided by private investors;
        (B) Rare use of innovative or complex qualified investments; and
        (C) Poor responsiveness to credit and community development 
    needs.
        (v) Substantial noncompliance. The FDIC rates a bank's 
    investment performance as being in ``substantial noncompliance'' if, 
    in general, it demonstrates:
        (A) Few, if any, qualified investments, particularly those that 
    are not routinely provided by private investors;
        (B) No use of innovative or complex qualified investments; and
        (C) Very poor responsiveness to credit and community development 
    needs.
        (3) Service performance rating. The FDIC assigns each bank's 
    service performance one of the five following ratings.
        (i) Outstanding. The FDIC rates a bank's service performance 
    ``outstanding'' if, in general, the bank demonstrates:
        (A) Its service delivery systems are readily accessible to 
    geographies and individuals of different income levels in its 
    assessment area(s);
        (B) To the extent changes have been made, its record of opening 
    and closing branches has improved the accessibility of its delivery 
    systems, particularly in low- or moderate-income geographies or to 
    low- or moderate-income individuals;
        (C) Its services (including, where appropriate, business hours) 
    are tailored to the convenience and needs of its assessment area(s), 
    particularly low- or moderate-income geographies or low- or 
    moderate-income individuals; and
        (D) It is a leader in providing community development services.
        (ii) High satisfactory. The FDIC rates a bank's service 
    performance ``high satisfactory'' if, in general, the bank 
    demonstrates:
        (A) Its service delivery systems are accessible to geographies 
    and individuals of different income levels in its assessment 
    area(s);
        (B) To the extent changes have been made, its record of opening 
    and closing branches has not adversely affected the accessibility of 
    its delivery systems, particularly in low- and moderate-income 
    geographies and to low- and moderate-income individuals;
        (C) Its services (including, where appropriate, business hours) 
    do not vary in a way that inconveniences its assessment area(s), 
    particularly low- and moderate-income geographies and low- and 
    moderate-income individuals; and
        (D) It provides a relatively high level of community development 
    services.
        (iii) Low satisfactory. The FDIC rates a bank's service 
    performance ``low satisfactory'' if, in general, the bank 
    demonstrates:
        (A) Its service delivery systems are reasonably accessible to 
    geographies and individuals of different income levels in its 
    assessment area(s);
        (B) To the extent changes have been made, its record of opening 
    and closing branches has generally not adversely affected the 
    accessibility of its delivery systems, particularly in low- and 
    moderate-income geographies and to low- and moderate-income 
    individuals;
        (C) Its services (including, where appropriate, business hours) 
    do not vary in a way that inconveniences its assessment area(s), 
    particularly low- and moderate-income geographies and low- and 
    moderate-income individuals; and
        (D) It provides an adequate level of community development 
    services.
        (iv) Needs to improve. The FDIC rates a bank's service 
    performance ``needs to improve'' if, in general, the bank 
    demonstrates:
        (A) Its service delivery systems are unreasonably inaccessible 
    to portions of its assessment area(s), particularly to low- or 
    moderate-income geographies or to low- or moderate-income 
    individuals;
        (B) To the extent changes have been made, its record of opening 
    and closing branches has adversely affected the accessibility its 
    delivery systems, particularly in low- or moderate-income 
    geographies or to low- or moderate-income individuals;
        (C) Its services (including, where appropriate, business hours) 
    vary in a way that inconveniences its assessment area(s), 
    particularly low- or moderate-income geographies or low- or 
    moderate-income individuals; and
        (D) It provides a limited level of community development 
    services.
        (v) Substantial noncompliance. The FDIC rates a bank's service 
    performance as being in ``substantial noncompliance'' if, in 
    general, the bank demonstrates:
        (A) Its service delivery systems are unreasonably inaccessible 
    to significant portions of its assessment area(s), particularly to 
    low- or moderate-income geographies or to low- or moderate-income 
    individuals;
        (B) To the extent changes have been made, its record of opening 
    and closing branches has significantly adversely affected the 
    accessibility of its delivery systems, particularly in low- or 
    moderate-income geographies or to low- or moderate-income 
    individuals;
        (C) Its services (including, where appropriate, business hours) 
    vary in a way that significantly inconveniences its assessment 
    area(s), particularly low- or moderate-income geographies or low- or 
    moderate-income individuals; and
        (D) It provides few, if any, community development services.
        (c) Wholesale or limited purpose banks. The FDIC assigns each 
    wholesale or limited purpose bank's community development 
    performance one of the four following ratings.
        (1) Outstanding. The FDIC rates a wholesale or limited purpose 
    bank's community development performance ``outstanding'' if, in 
    general, it demonstrates:
        (i) A high level of community development loans, community 
    development services, or qualified investments, particularly 
    investments that are not routinely provided by private investors;
        (ii) Extensive use of innovative or complex qualified 
    investments, community [[Page 22211]] development loans, or 
    community development services; and
        (iii) Excellent responsiveness to credit and community 
    development needs in its assessment area(s).
        (2) Satisfactory. The FDIC rates a wholesale or limited purpose 
    bank's community development performance ``satisfactory'' if, in 
    general, it demonstrates:
        (i) An adequate level of community development loans, community 
    development services, or qualified investments, particularly 
    investments that are not routinely provided by private investors;
        (ii) Occasional use of innovative or complex qualified 
    investments, community development loans, or community development 
    services; and
        (iii) Adequate responsiveness to credit and community 
    development needs in its assessment area(s).
        (3) Needs to improve. The FDIC rates a wholesale or limited 
    purpose bank's community development performance as ``needs to 
    improve'' if, in general, it demonstrates:
        (i) A poor level of community development loans, community 
    development services, or qualified investments, particularly 
    investments that are not routinely provided by private investors;
        (ii) Rare use of innovative or complex qualified investments, 
    community development loans, or community development services; and
        (iii) Poor responsiveness to credit and community development 
    needs in its assessment area(s).
        (4) Substantial noncompliance. The FDIC rates a wholesale or 
    limited purpose bank's community development performance in 
    ``substantial noncompliance'' if, in general, it demonstrates:
        (i) Few, if any, community development loans, community 
    development services, or qualified investments, particularly 
    investments that are not routinely provided by private investors;
        (ii) No use of innovative or complex qualified investments, 
    community development loans, or community development services; and
        (iii) Very poor responsiveness to credit and community 
    development needs in its assessment area(s).
        (d) Banks evaluated under the small bank performance standards. 
    The FDIC rates the performance of each bank evaluated under the 
    small bank performance standards as follows.
        (1) Eligibility for a satisfactory rating. The FDIC rates a 
    bank's performance ``satisfactory'' if, in general, the bank 
    demonstrates:
        (i) A reasonable loan-to-deposit ratio (considering seasonal 
    variations) given the bank's size, financial condition, the credit 
    needs of its assessment area(s), and taking into account, as 
    appropriate, lending-related activities such as loan originations 
    for sale to the secondary markets and community development loans 
    and qualified investments;
        (ii) A majority of its loans and, as appropriate, other lending-
    related activities are in its assessment area(s);
        (iii) A distribution of loans to and, as appropriate, other 
    lending related-activities for individuals of different income 
    levels (including low- and moderate-income individuals) and 
    businesses and farms of different sizes that is reasonable given the 
    demographics of the bank's assessment area(s);
        (iv) A record of taking appropriate action, as warranted, in 
    response to written complaints, if any, about the bank's performance 
    in helping to meet the credit needs of its assessment area(s); and
        (v) A reasonable geographic distribution of loans given the 
    bank's assessment area(s).
        (2) Eligibility for an outstanding rating. A bank that meets 
    each of the standards for a ``satisfactory'' rating under this 
    paragraph and exceeds some or all of those standards may warrant 
    consideration for an overall rating of ``outstanding.'' In assessing 
    whether a bank's performance is ``outstanding,'' the FDIC considers 
    the extent to which the bank exceeds each of the performance 
    standards for a ``satisfactory'' rating and its performance in 
    making qualified investments and its performance in providing 
    branches and other services and delivery systems that enhance credit 
    availability in its assessment area(s).
        (3) Needs to improve or substantial noncompliance ratings. A 
    bank also may receive a rating of ``needs to improve'' or 
    ``substantial noncompliance'' depending on the degree to which its 
    performance has failed to meet the standards for a ``satisfactory'' 
    rating.
        (e) Strategic plan assessment and rating. (1) Satisfactory 
    goals. The FDIC approves as ``satisfactory'' measurable goals that 
    adequately help to meet the credit needs of the bank's assessment 
    area(s).
        (2) Outstanding goals. If the plan identifies a separate group 
    of measurable goals that substantially exceed the levels approved as 
    ``satisfactory,'' the FDIC will approve those goals as 
    ``outstanding.''
        (3) Rating. The FDIC assesses the performance of a bank 
    operating under an approved plan to determine if the bank has met 
    its plan goals:
        (i) If the bank substantially achieves its plan goals for a 
    satisfactory rating, the FDIC will rate the bank's performance under 
    the plan as ``satisfactory.''
        (ii) If the bank exceeds its plan goals for a satisfactory 
    rating and substantially achieves its plan goals for an outstanding 
    rating, the FDIC will rate the bank's performance under the plan as 
    ``outstanding.''
        (iii) If the bank fails to meet substantially its plan goals for 
    a satisfactory rating, the FDIC will rate the bank as either ``needs 
    to improve'' or ``substantial noncompliance,'' depending on the 
    extent to which it falls short of its plan goals, unless the bank 
    elected in its plan to be rated otherwise, as provided in 
    Sec. 345.27(f)(4).
    
    Appendix B to Part 345--CRA Notice
        (a) Notice for main offices and, if an interstate bank, one 
    branch office in each state.
    
    Community Reinvestment Act Notice
    
        Under the Federal Community Reinvestment Act (CRA), the Federal 
    Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) evaluates our record of helping 
    to meet the credit needs of this community consistent with safe and 
    sound operations. The FDIC also takes this record into account when 
    deciding on certain applications submitted by us.
        Your involvement is encouraged.
        You are entitled to certain information about our operations and 
    our performance under the CRA, including, for example, information 
    about our branches, such as their location and services provided at 
    them; the public section of our most recent CRA Performance 
    Evaluation, prepared by the FDIC; and comments received from the 
    public relating to our performance in helping to meet community 
    credit needs, as well as our responses to those comments. You may 
    review this information today.
        At least 30 days before the beginning of each quarter, the FDIC 
    publishes a nationwide list of the banks that are scheduled for CRA 
    examination in that quarter. This list is available from the 
    Regional Manager, Division of Compliance and Consumer Affairs, FDIC 
    (address). You may send written comments about our performance in 
    helping to meet community credit needs to (name and address of 
    official at bank) and FDIC Regional Manager. Your letter, together 
    with any response by us, will be considered by the FDIC in 
    evaluating our CRA performance and may be made public.
        You may ask to look at any comments received by the FDIC 
    Regional Manager. You may also request from the FDIC Regional 
    Manager an announcement of our applications covered by the CRA filed 
    with the FDIC. We are an affiliate of (name of holding company), a 
    bank holding company. You may request from the (title of responsible 
    official), Federal Reserve Bank of ____________________ (address) an 
    announcement of applications covered by the CRA filed by bank 
    holding companies.
        (b) Notice for branch offices.
    
    Community Reinvestment Act Notice
    
        Under the Federal Community Reinvestment Act (CRA), the Federal 
    Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) evaluates our record of helping 
    to meet the credit needs of this community consistent with safe and 
    sound operations. The FDIC also takes this record into account when 
    deciding on certain applications submitted by us.
        Your involvement is encouraged.
        You are entitled to certain information about our operations and 
    our performance under the CRA. You may review today the public 
    section of our most recent CRA evaluation, prepared by the FDIC, and 
    a list of services provided at this branch. You may also have access 
    to the following additional information, which we will make 
    available to you at this branch within five calendar days after you 
    make a request to us: (1) a map showing the assessment area 
    containing this branch, which is the area in which the FDIC 
    evaluates our CRA performance in this community; (2) information 
    about our branches in this assessment area; (3) a list of services 
    we provide at those locations; (4) data on our lending performance 
    in this [[Page 22212]] assessment area; and (5) copies of all 
    written comments received by us that specifically relate to our CRA 
    performance in this assessment area, and any responses we have made 
    to those comments. If we are operating under an approved strategic 
    plan, you may also have access to a copy of the plan.
    
    [If you would like to review information about our CRA performance 
    in other communities served by us, the public file for our entire 
    bank is available at (name of office located in state), located at 
    (address).]
    
        At least 30 days before the beginning of each quarter, the FDIC 
    publishes a nationwide list of the banks that are scheduled for CRA 
    examination in that quarter. This list is available from the 
    Regional Manager, Division of Compliance and Consumer Affairs, FDIC 
    (address). You may send written comments about our performance in 
    helping to meet community credit needs to (name and address of 
    official at bank) and the FDIC Regional Manager. Your letter, 
    together with any response by us, will be considered by the FDIC in 
    evaluating our CRA performance and may be made public.
        You may ask to look at any comments received by the FDIC 
    Regional Manager. You may also request from the FDIC Regional 
    Manager an announcement of our applications covered by the CRA filed 
    with the FDIC. We are an affiliate of (name of holding company), a 
    bank holding company. You may request from the (title of responsible 
    official), Federal Reserve Bank of ____________________ (address) an 
    announcement of applications covered by the CRA filed by bank 
    holding companies.
    
    
    Secs. 345.1, 345.2, 345.8, 345.101, and 345.102, and the undersigned 
    center heading preceding Sec. 345.101  [Removed]
    
        3. Sections 345.1, 345.2, 345.8, 345.101 and 345.102, and the 
    undersigned center heading preceding Sec. 345.101 are removed effective 
    July 1, 1995.
    
    
    Secs. 345.3, 345.4, 345.5, 345.6, 345.7, and subpart D  [Removed]
    
        4. Sections 345.3, 345.4, 345.5, 345.6, 345.7, and 345.51 are 
    removed effective July 1, 1997.
    
        By order of the Board of Directors of the Federal Deposit 
    Insurance Corporation:
    
        Dated: April 24, 1995.
    Robert E. Feldman,
    Acting Executive Secretary.
    Office of Thrift Supervision
    
    12 CFR Chapter V
    
        For the reasons outlined in the joint preamble, the Office of 
    Thrift Supervision amends 12 CFR chapter V as set forth below:
    
    PART 563e--COMMUNITY REINVESTMENT
    
        1. The authority citation for part 563e is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1462a, 1463, 1464, 1467a, 1814, 1816, 
    1828(c), and 2901 through 2907.
    
        2. Part 563e is amended by adding Subparts A through D and 
    Appendices A and B to read as follows:
    
    Subpart A--General
    
    Sec.
    563e.11  Authority, purposes, and scope.
    563e.12  Definitions.
    
    Subpart B--Standards for Assessing Performance
    
    563e.21  Performance tests, standards, and ratings, in general.
    563e.22  Lending test.
    563e.23  Investment test.
    563e.24  Service test.
    563e.25  Community development test for wholesale or limited purpose 
    savings associations.
    563e.26  Small savings association performance standards.
    563e.27  Strategic plan.
    563e.28  Assigned ratings.
    563e.29  Effect of CRA performance on applications.
    
    Subpart C--Records, Reporting, and Disclosure Requirements
    
    563e.41  Assessment area delineation.
    563e.42  Data collection, reporting, and disclosure.
    563e.43  Content and availability of public file.
    563e.44  Public notice by savings associations.
    563e.45  Publication of planned examination schedule.
    
    Subpart D--Transition Rules
    
    563e.51  Transition rules.
    
    Appendix A to Part 563e--Ratings
    
    Appendix B to Part 563e--CRA Notice
    
    Subpart A--General
    
    
    Sec. 563e.11  Authority, purposes, and scope.
    
        (a) Authority and OMB control number--(1) Authority. This part is 
    issued under the Community Reinvestment Act of 1977 (CRA), as amended 
    (12 U.S.C. 2901 et seq.); section 5, as amended, and sections 3, 4, and 
    10, as added, of the Home Owners' Loan Act of 1933 (12 U.S.C. 1462a, 
    1463, 1464, and 1467a); and sections 4, 6, and 18(c), as amended of the 
    Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12 U.S.C. 1814, 1816, 1828(c)).
        (2) OMB control number. The information collection requirements 
    contained in this part were approved by the Office of Management and 
    Budget under the provisions of 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. and have been 
    assigned OMB control number 1550-0012.
        (b) Purposes. In enacting the CRA, the Congress required each 
    appropriate Federal financial supervisory agency to assess an 
    institution's record of helping to meet the credit needs of the local 
    communities in which the institution is chartered, consistent with the 
    safe and sound operation of the institution, and to take this record 
    into account in the agency's evaluation of an application for a deposit 
    facility by the institution. This part is intended to carry out the 
    purposes of the CRA by:
        (1) Establishing the framework and criteria by which the OTS 
    assesses a savings association's record of helping to meet the credit 
    needs of its entire community, including low- and moderate-income 
    neighborhoods, consistent with the safe and sound operation of the 
    savings association; and
        (2) Providing that the OTS takes that record into account in 
    considering certain applications.
        (c) Scope. This part applies to all savings associations as defined 
    in Sec. 561.43 of this subchapter.
    
    
    Sec. 563e.12  Definitions.
    
        For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:
        (a) Affiliate means any company that controls, is controlled by, or 
    is under common control with another company. The term ``control'' has 
    the meaning given to that term in 12 U.S.C. 1841(a)(2), and a company 
    is under common control with another company if both companies are 
    directly or indirectly controlled by the same company.
        (b) Area median income means:
        (1) The median family income for the MSA, if a person or geography 
    is located in an MSA; or
        (2) The statewide nonmetropolitan median family income, if a person 
    or geography is located outside an MSA.
        (c) Assessment area means a geographic area delineated in 
    accordance with Sec. 563e.41.
        (d) Automated teller machine (ATM) means an automated, unstaffed 
    banking facility owned or operated by, or operated exclusively for, the 
    savings association at which deposits are received, cash dispersed, or 
    money lent.
        (e) Branch means a staffed banking facility authorized as a branch, 
    whether shared or unshared, including, for example, a mini-branch in a 
    grocery store or a branch operated in conjunction with any other local 
    business or nonprofit organization.
        (f) CMSA means a consolidated metropolitan statistical area as 
    defined by the Director of the Office of Management and Budget.
        (g) Community development means:
        (1) Affordable housing (including multifamily rental housing) for 
    low or moderate-income individuals;
        (2) Community services targeted to low- or moderate-income 
    individuals; [[Page 22213]] 
        (3) Activities that promote economic development by financing 
    businesses or farms that meet the size eligibility standards of 13 CFR 
    121.802(a)(2) or have gross annual revenues of $1 million or less; or
        (4) Activities that revitalize or stabilize low- or moderate-income 
    geographies.
        (h) Community development loan means a loan that:
        (1) Has as its primary purpose community development; and
        (2) Except in the case of a wholesale or limited purpose savings 
    association:
        (i) Has not been reported or collected by the savings association 
    or an affiliate for consideration in the savings association's 
    assessment as a home mortgage, small business, small farm, or consumer 
    loan, unless it is a multifamily dwelling loan (as described in 
    Appendix A to Part 203 of this title); and
        (ii) Benefits the savings association's assessment area(s) or a 
    broader statewide or regional area that includes the savings 
    association's assessment area(s).
        (i) Community development service means a service that:
        (1) Has as its primary purpose community development;
        (2) Is related to the provision of financial services; and
        (3) Has not been considered in the evaluation of the savings 
    association's retail banking services under Sec. 563e.24(d).
        (j) Consumer loan means a loan to one or more individuals for 
    household, family, or other personal expenditures. A consumer loan does 
    not include a home mortgage, small business, or small farm loan. 
    Consumer loans include the following categories of loans:
        (1) Motor vehicle loan, which is a consumer loan extended for the 
    purchase of and secured by a motor vehicle;
        (2) Credit card loan, which is a line of credit for household, 
    family, or other personal expenditures that is accessed by a borrower's 
    use of a ``credit card,'' as this term is defined in Sec. 226.2 of this 
    title;
        (3) Home equity loan, which is a consumer loan secured by a 
    residence of the borrower;
        (4) Other secured consumer loan, which is a secured consumer loan 
    that is not included in one of the other categories of consumer loans; 
    and
        (5) Other unsecured consumer loan, which is an unsecured consumer 
    loan that is not included in one of the other categories of consumer 
    loans.
        (k) Geography means a census tract or a block numbering area 
    delineated by the United States Bureau of the Census in the most recent 
    decennial census.
        (l) Home mortgage loan means a ``home improvement loan'' or a 
    ``home purchase loan'' as defined in Sec. 203.2 of this title.
        (m) Income level includes:
        (1) Low-income, which means an individual income that is less than 
    50 percent of the area median income or a median family income that is 
    less than 50 percent in the case of a geography.
        (2) Moderate-income, which means an individual income that is at 
    least 50 percent and less than 80 percent of the area median income or 
    a median family income that is at least 50 and less than 80 percent in 
    the case of a geography.
        (3) Middle-income, which means an individual income that is at 
    least 80 percent and less than 120 percent of the area median income or 
    a median family income that is at least 80 and less than 120 percent in 
    the case of a geography.
        (4) Upper-income, which means an individual income that is 120 
    percent or more of the area median income or a median family income 
    that is 120 percent or more in the case of a geography.
        (n) Limited purpose savings association means a savings association 
    that offers only a narrow product line (such as credit card or motor 
    vehicle loans) to a regional or broader market and for which a 
    designation as a limited purpose savings association is in effect, in 
    accordance with Sec. 563e.25(b).
        (o) Loan location. A loan is located as follows:
        (1) A consumer loan is located in the geography where the borrower 
    resides;
        (2) A home mortgage loan is located in the geography where the 
    property to which the loan relates is located; and
        (3) A small business or small farm loan is located in the geography 
    where the main business facility or farm is located or where the loan 
    proceeds otherwise will be applied, as indicated by the borrower.
        (p) Loan production office means a staffed facility, other than a 
    branch, that is open to the public and that provides lending-related 
    services, such as loan information and applications.
        (q) MSA means a metropolitan statistical area or a primary 
    metropolitan statistical area as defined by the Director of the Office 
    of Management and Budget.
        (r) Qualified investment means a lawful investment, deposit, 
    membership share, or grant that has as its primary purpose community 
    development.
        (s) Small savings association means a savings association that, as 
    of December 31 of either of the prior two calendar years, had total 
    assets of less than $250 million and was independent or an affiliate of 
    a holding company that, as of December 31 of either of the prior two 
    calendar years, had total banking and thrift assets of less than $1 
    billion.
        (t) Small business loan means a loan included in ``loans to small 
    businesses'' as defined in the instructions for preparation of the 
    Thrift Financial Report.
        (u) Small farm loan means a loan included in ``loans to small 
    farms'' as defined in the instructions for preparation of the Thrift 
    Financial Report.
        (v) Wholesale savings association means a savings association that 
    is not in the business of extending home mortgage, small business, 
    small farm, or consumer loans to retail customers, and for which a 
    designation as a wholesale savings association is in effect, in 
    accordance with Sec. 563e.25(b).
    Subpart B--Standards for Assessing Performance
    
    
    Sec. 563e.21  Performance tests, standards, and ratings, in general.
    
        (a) Performance tests and standards. The OTS assesses the CRA 
    performance of a savings association in an examination as follows:
        (1) Lending, investment, and service tests. The OTS applies the 
    lending, investment, and service tests, as provided in Secs. 563e.22 
    through 563e.24, in evaluating the performance of a savings 
    association, except as provided in paragraphs (a)(2), (a)(3), and 
    (a)(4) of this section.
        (2) Community development test for wholesale or limited purpose 
    savings associations. The OTS applies the community development test 
    for a wholesale or limited purpose savings association, as provided in 
    Sec. 563e.25, except as provided in paragraph (a)(4) of this section.
        (3) Small savings association performance standards. The OTS 
    applies the small savings association performance standards as provided 
    in Sec. 563e.26 in evaluating the performance of a small savings 
    association or a savings association that was a small savings 
    association during the prior calendar year, unless the savings 
    association elects to be assessed as provided in paragraphs (a)(1), 
    (a)(2), or (a)(4) of this section. The savings association may elect to 
    be assessed as provided in paragraph (a)(1) of this section only if it 
    collects and reports the data required for other savings associations 
    under Sec. 563e.42.
        (4) Strategic plan. The OTS evaluates the performance of a savings 
    association under a strategic plan if the savings 
    [[Page 22214]] association submits, and the OTS approves, a strategic 
    plan as provided in Sec. 563e.27.
        (b) Performance context. The OTS applies the tests and standards in 
    paragraph (a) of this section and also considers whether to approve a 
    proposed strategic plan in the context of:
        (1) Demographic data on median income levels, distribution of 
    household income, nature of housing stock, housing costs, and other 
    relevant data pertaining to a savings association's assessment area(s);
        (2) Any information about lending, investment, and service 
    opportunities in the savings association's assessment area(s) 
    maintained by the savings association or obtained from community 
    organizations, state, local, and tribal governments, economic 
    development agencies, or other sources;
        (3) The savings association's product offerings and business 
    strategy as determined from data provided by the savings association;
        (4) Institutional capacity and constraints, including the size and 
    financial condition of the savings association, the economic climate 
    (national, regional, and local), safety and soundness limitations, and 
    any other factors that significantly affect the savings association's 
    ability to provide lending, investments, or services in its assessment 
    area(s);
        (5) The savings association's past performance and the performance 
    of similarly situated lenders;
        (6) The savings association's public file, as described in 
    Sec. 563e.43, and any written comments about the savings association's 
    CRA performance submitted to the savings association or the OTS; and
        (7) Any other information deemed relevant by the OTS.
        (c) Assigned ratings. The OTS assigns to a savings association one 
    of the following four ratings pursuant to Sec. 563e.28 and Appendix A 
    of this part: ``outstanding''; ``satisfactory''; ``needs to improve''; 
    or ``substantial noncompliance,'' as provided in 12 U.S.C. 2906(b)(2). 
    The rating assigned by the OTS reflects the savings association's 
    record of helping to meet the credit needs of its entire community, 
    including low- and moderate-income neighborhoods, consistent with the 
    safe and sound operation of the savings association.
        (d) Safe and sound operations. This part and the CRA do not require 
    a savings association to make loans or investments or to provide 
    services that are inconsistent with safe and sound operations. To the 
    contrary, the OTS anticipates savings associations can meet the 
    standards of this part with safe and sound loans, investments, and 
    services on which the savings associations expect to make a profit. 
    Savings associations are permitted and encouraged to develop and apply 
    flexible underwriting standards for loans that benefit low- or 
    moderate-income geographies or individuals, only if consistent with 
    safe and sound operations.
    
    
    Sec. 563e.22  Lending test.
    
        (a) Scope of test. (1) The lending test evaluates a savings 
    association's record of helping to meet the credit needs of its 
    assessment area(s) through its lending activities by considering a 
    savings association's home mortgage, small business, small farm, and 
    community development lending. If consumer lending constitutes a 
    substantial majority of a savings association's business, the OTS will 
    evaluate the savings association's consumer lending in one or more of 
    the following categories: motor vehicle, credit card, home equity, 
    other secured, and other unsecured loans. In addition, at a savings 
    association's option, the OTS will evaluate one or more categories of 
    consumer lending, if the savings association has collected and 
    maintained, as required in Sec. 563e.42(c)(1), the data for each 
    category that the savings association elects to have the OTS evaluate.
        (2) The OTS considers originations and purchases of loans. The OTS 
    will also consider any other loan data the savings association may 
    choose to provide, including data on loans outstanding, commitments and 
    letters of credit.
        (3) A savings association may ask the OTS to consider loans 
    originated or purchased by consortia in which the savings association 
    participates or by third parties in which the savings association has 
    invested only if the loans meet the definition of community development 
    loans and only in accordance with paragraph (d) of this section. The 
    OTS will not consider these loans under any criterion of the lending 
    test except the community development lending criterion.
        (b) Performance criteria. The OTS evaluates a savings association's 
    lending performance pursuant to the following criteria:
        (1) Lending activity. The number and amount of the savings 
    association's home mortgage, small business, small farm, and consumer 
    loans, if applicable, in the savings association's assessment area(s);
        (2) Geographic distribution. The geographic distribution of the 
    savings association's home mortgage, small business, small farm, and 
    consumer loans, if applicable, based on the loan location, including:
        (i) The proportion of the savings association's lending in the 
    savings association's assessment area(s);
        (ii) The dispersion of lending in the savings association's 
    assessment area(s); and
        (iii) The number and amount of loans in low-, moderate-, middle-, 
    and upper-income geographies in the savings association's assessment 
    area(s);
        (3) Borrower characteristics. The distribution, particularly in the 
    savings association's assessment area(s), of the savings association's 
    home mortgage, small business, small farm, and consumer loans, if 
    applicable, based on borrower characteristics, including the number and 
    amount of:
        (i) Home mortgage loans to low-, moderate-, middle-, and upper-
    income individuals;
        (ii) Small business and small farm loans to businesses and farms 
    with gross annual revenues of $1 million or less;
        (iii) Small business and small farm loans by loan amount at 
    origination; and
        (iv) Consumer loans, if applicable, to low-, moderate-, middle-, 
    and upper-income individuals;
        (4) Community development lending. The savings association's 
    community development lending, including the number and amount of 
    community development loans, and their complexity and innovativeness; 
    and
        (5) Innovative or flexible lending practices. The savings 
    association's use of innovative or flexible lending practices in a safe 
    and sound manner to address the credit needs of low- or moderate-income 
    individuals or geographies.
        (c) Affiliate lending. (1) At a savings association's option, the 
    OTS will consider loans by an affiliate of the savings association, if 
    the savings association provides data on the affiliate's loans pursuant 
    to Sec. 563e.42.
        (2) The OTS considers affiliate lending subject to the following 
    constraints:
        (i) No affiliate may claim a loan origination or loan purchase if 
    another institution claims the same loan origination or purchase; and
        (ii) If a savings association elects to have the OTS consider loans 
    within a particular lending category made by one or more of the savings 
    association's affiliates in a particular assessment area, the savings 
    association shall elect to have the OTS consider, in accordance with 
    paragraph (c)(1) of this section, all [[Page 22215]] the loans within 
    that lending category in that particular assessment area made by all of 
    the savings association's affiliates.
        (3) The OTS does not consider affiliate lending in assessing a 
    savings association's performance under paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this 
    section.
        (d) Lending by a consortium or a third party. Community development 
    loans originated or purchased by a consortium in which the savings 
    association participates or by a third party in which the savings 
    association has invested:
        (1) Will be considered, at the savings association's option, if the 
    savings association reports the data pertaining to these loans under 
    Sec. 563e.42(b)(2); and
        (2) May be allocated among participants or investors, as they 
    choose, for purposes of the lending test, except that no participant or 
    investor:
        (i) May claim a loan origination or loan purchase if another 
    participant or investor claims the same loan origination or purchase; 
    or
        (ii) May claim loans accounting for more than its percentage share 
    (based on the level of its participation or investment) of the total 
    loans originated by the consortium or third party.
        (e) Lending performance rating. The OTS rates a savings 
    association's lending performance as provided in Appendix A of this 
    part.
    
    
    Sec. 563e.23  Investment test.
    
        (a) Scope of test. The investment test evaluates a savings 
    association's record of helping to meet the credit needs of its 
    assessment area(s) through qualified investments that benefit its 
    assessment area(s) or a broader statewide or regional area that 
    includes the savings association's assessment area(s).
        (b) Exclusion. Activities considered under the lending or service 
    tests may not be considered under the investment test.
        (c) Affiliate investment. At a savings association's option, the 
    OTS will consider, in its assessment of a savings association's 
    investment performance, a qualified investment made by an affiliate of 
    the savings association, if the qualified investment is not claimed by 
    any other institution.
        (d) Disposition of branch premises. Donating, selling on favorable 
    terms, or making available on a rent-free basis a branch of the savings 
    association that is located in a predominantly minority neighborhood to 
    a minority depository institution or women's depository institution (as 
    these terms are defined in 12 U.S.C. 2907(b)) will be considered as a 
    qualified investment.
        (e) Performance criteria. The OTS evaluates the investment 
    performance of a savings association pursuant to the following 
    criteria:
        (1) The dollar amount of qualified investments;
        (2) The innovativeness or complexity of qualified investments;
        (3) The responsiveness of qualified investments to credit and 
    community development needs; and
        (4) The degree to which the qualified investments are not routinely 
    provided by private investors.
        (f) Investment performance rating. The OTS rates a savings 
    association's investment performance as provided in Appendix A of this 
    part.
    
    
    Sec. 563e.24  Service test.
    
        (a) Scope of test. The service test evaluates a savings 
    association's record of helping to meet the credit needs of its 
    assessment area(s) by analyzing both the availability and effectiveness 
    of a savings association's systems for delivering retail banking 
    services and the extent and innovativeness of its community development 
    services.
        (b) Area(s) benefitted. Community development services must benefit 
    a savings association's assessment area(s) or a broader statewide or 
    regional area that includes the savings association's assessment 
    area(s).
        (c) Affiliate service. At a savings association's option, the OTS 
    will consider, in its assessment of a savings association's service 
    performance, a community development service provided by an affiliate 
    of the savings association, if the community development service is not 
    claimed by any other institution.
        (d) Performance criteria--retail banking services. The OTS 
    evaluates the availability and effectiveness of a savings association's 
    systems for delivering retail banking services, pursuant to the 
    following criteria:
        (1) The current distribution of the savings association's branches 
    among low-,moderate-, middle-, and upper-income geographies;
        (2) In the context of its current distribution of the savings 
    association's branches, the savings association's record of opening and 
    closing branches, particularly branches located in low- or moderate-
    income geographies or primarily serving low- or moderate-income 
    individuals;
        (3) The availability and effectiveness of alternative systems for 
    delivering retail banking services (e.g., ATMs, ATMs not owned or 
    operated by or exclusively for the savings association, banking by 
    telephone or computer, loan production offices, and bank-at-work or 
    bank-by-mail programs) in low- and moderate-income geographies and to 
    low- and moderate-income individuals; and
        (4) The range of services provided in low-, moderate-, middle-, and 
    upper-income geographies and the degree to which the services are 
    tailored to meet the needs of those geographies.
        (e) Performance criteria--community development services. The OTS 
    evaluates community development services pursuant to the following 
    criteria:
        (1) The extent to which the savings association provides community 
    development services; and
        (2) The innovativeness and responsiveness of community development 
    services.
        (f) Service performance rating. The OTS rates a savings 
    association's service performance as provided in Appendix A of this 
    part.
    
    
    Sec. 563e.25  Community development test for wholesale or limited 
    purpose savings associations.
    
        (a) Scope of test. The OTS assesses a wholesale or limited purpose 
    savings association's record of helping to meet the credit needs of its 
    assessment area(s) under the community development test through its 
    community development lending, qualified investments, or community 
    development services.
        (b) Designation as a wholesale or limited purpose savings 
    association. In order to receive a designation as a wholesale or 
    limited purpose savings association, a savings association shall file a 
    request, in writing, with the OTS, at least three months prior to the 
    proposed effective date of the designation. If the OTS approves the 
    designation, it remains in effect until the savings association 
    requests revocation of the designation or until one year after the OTS 
    notifies the savings association that the OTS has revoked the 
    designation on its own initiative.
        (c) Performance criteria. The OTS evaluates the community 
    development performance of a wholesale or limited purpose savings 
    association pursuant to the following criteria:
        (1) The number and amount of community development loans (including 
    originations and purchases of loans and other community development 
    loan data provided by the savings association, such as data on loans 
    outstanding, commitments, and letters of credit), qualified 
    investments, or community development services;
        (2) The use of innovative or complex qualified investments, 
    community development loans, or community development services and the 
    extent to [[Page 22216]] which the investments are not routinely 
    provided by private investors; and
        (3) The savings association's responsiveness to credit and 
    community development needs.
        (d) Indirect activities. At a savings association's option, the OTS 
    will consider in its community development performance assessment:
        (1) Qualified investments or community development services 
    provided by an affiliate of the savings association, if the investments 
    or services are not claimed by any other institution; and
        (2) Community development lending by affiliates, consortia and 
    third parties, subject to the requirements and limitations in 
    Sec. 563e.22 (c) and (d).
        (e) Benefit to assessment area(s).--(1) Benefit inside assessment 
    area(s). The OTS considers all qualified investments, community 
    development loans, and community development services that benefit 
    areas within the savings association's assessment area(s) or a broader 
    statewide or regional area that includes the savings association's 
    assessment area(s).
        (2) Benefit outside assessment area(s). The OTS considers the 
    qualified investments, community development loans, and community 
    development services that benefit areas outside the savings 
    association's assessment area(s), if the savings association has 
    adequately addressed the needs of its assessment area(s).
        (f) Community development performance rating. The OTS rates a 
    savings association's community development performance as provided in 
    Appendix A of this part.
    
    
    Sec. 563e.26  Small savings association performance standards.
    
        (a) Performance criteria. The OTS evaluates the record of a small 
    savings association, or a savings association that was a small savings 
    association during the prior calendar year, of helping to meet the 
    credit needs of its assessment area(s) pursuant to the following 
    criteria:
        (1) The savings association's loan-to-deposit ratio, adjusted for 
    seasonal variation and, as appropriate, other lending-related 
    activities, such as loan originations for sale to the secondary 
    markets, community development loans, or qualified investments;
        (2) The percentage of loans and, as appropriate, other lending-
    related activities located in the savings association's assessment 
    area(s);
        (3) The savings association's record of lending to and, as 
    appropriate, engaging in other lending-related activities for borrowers 
    of different income levels and businesses and farms of different sizes;
        (4) The geographic distribution of the savings association's loans; 
    and
        (5) The savings association's record of taking action, if 
    warranted, in response to written complaints about its performance in 
    helping to meet credit needs in its assessment area(s).
        (b) Small savings association performance rating. The OTS rates the 
    performance of a savings association evaluated under this section as 
    provided in Appendix A of this part.
    
    
    Sec. 563e.27  Strategic plan.
    
        (a) Alternative election. The OTS will assess a savings 
    association's record of helping to meet the credit needs of its 
    assessment area(s) under a strategic plan if:
        (1) The savings association has submitted the plan to the OTS as 
    provided for in this section;
        (2) The OTS has approved the plan;
        (3) The plan is in effect; and
        (4) The savings association has been operating under an approved 
    plan for at least one year.
        (b) Data reporting. The OTS's approval of a plan does not affect 
    the savings association's obligation, if any, to report data as 
    required by Sec. 563e.42.
        (c) Plans in general. (1) Term. A plan may have a term of no more 
    than five years, and any multi-year plan must include annual interim 
    measurable goals under which the OTS will evaluate the savings 
    association's performance.
        (2) Multiple assessment areas. A savings association with more than 
    one assessment area may prepare a single plan for all of its assessment 
    areas or one or more plans for one or more of its assessment areas.
        (3) Treatment of affiliates. Affiliated institutions may prepare a 
    joint plan if the plan provides measurable goals for each institution. 
    Activities may be allocated among institutions at the institutions' 
    option, provided that the same activities are not considered for more 
    than one institution.
        (d) Public participation in plan development. Before submitting a 
    plan to the OTS for approval, a savings association shall:
        (1) Informally seek suggestions from members of the public in its 
    assessment area(s) covered by the plan while developing the plan;
        (2) Once the savings association has developed a plan, formally 
    solicit public comment on the plan for at least 30 days by publishing 
    notice in at least one newspaper of general circulation in each 
    assessment area covered by the plan; and
        (3) During the period of formal public comment, make copies of the 
    plan available for review by the public at no cost at all offices of 
    the savings association in any assessment area covered by the plan and 
    provide copies of the plan upon request for a reasonable fee to cover 
    copying and mailing, if applicable.
        (e) Submission of plan. The savings association shall submit its 
    plan to the OTS at least three months prior to the proposed effective 
    date of the plan. The savings association shall also submit with its 
    plan a description of its informal efforts to seek suggestions from 
    members of the public, any written public comment received, and, if the 
    plan was revised in light of the comment received, the initial plan as 
    released for public comment.
        (f) Plan content--(1) Measurable goals. (i) A savings association 
    shall specify in its plan measurable goals for helping to meet the 
    credit needs of each assessment area covered by the plan, particularly 
    the needs of low- and moderate-income geographies and low- and 
    moderate-income individuals, through lending, investment, and services, 
    as appropriate.
        (ii) A savings association shall address in its plan all three 
    performance categories and, unless the savings association has been 
    designated as a wholesale or limited purpose savings association, shall 
    emphasize lending and lending-related activities. Nevertheless, a 
    different emphasis, including a focus on one or more performance 
    categories, may be appropriate if responsive to the characteristics and 
    credit needs of its assessment area(s), considering public comment and 
    the savings association's capacity and constraints, product offerings, 
    and business strategy.
        (2) Confidential information. A savings association may submit 
    additional information to the OTS on a confidential basis, but the 
    goals stated in the plan must be sufficiently specific to enable the 
    public and the OTS to judge the merits of the plan.
        (3) Satisfactory and outstanding goals. A savings association shall 
    specify in its plan measurable goals that constitute ``satisfactory'' 
    performance. A plan may specify measurable goals that constitute 
    ``outstanding'' performance. If a savings association submits, and the 
    OTS approves, both ``satisfactory'' and ``outstanding'' performance 
    goals, the OTS will consider the savings association eligible for an 
    ``outstanding'' performance rating.
        (4) Election if satisfactory goals not substantially met. A savings 
    association may elect in its plan that, if the savings 
    [[Page 22217]] association fails to meet substantially its plan goals 
    for a satisfactory rating, the OTS will evaluate the savings 
    association's performance under the lending, investment, and service 
    tests, the community development test, or the small savings association 
    performance standards, as appropriate.
        (g) Plan approval--(1) Timing. The OTS will act upon a plan within 
    60 calendar days after the OTS receives the complete plan and other 
    material required under paragraph (d) of this section. If the OTS fails 
    to act within this time period, the plan shall be deemed approved 
    unless the OTS extends the review period for good cause.
        (2) Public participation. In evaluating the plan's goals, the OTS 
    considers the public's involvement in formulating the plan, written 
    public comment on the plan, and any response by the savings association 
    to public comment on the plan.
        (3) Criteria for evaluating plan. The OTS evaluates a plan's 
    measurable goals using the following criteria, as appropriate:
        (i) The extent and breadth of lending or lending-related 
    activities, including, as appropriate, the distribution of loans among 
    different geographies, businesses and farms of different sizes, and 
    individuals of different income levels, the extent of community 
    development lending, and the use of innovative or flexible lending 
    practices to address credit needs;
        (ii) The amount and innovativeness, complexity, and responsiveness 
    of the savings association's qualified investments; and
        (iii) The availability and effectiveness of the savings 
    association's systems for delivering retail banking services and the 
    extent and innovativeness of the savings association's community 
    development services.
        (h) Plan amendment. During the term of a plan, a savings 
    association may request the OTS to approve an amendment to the plan on 
    grounds that there has been a material change in circumstances. The 
    savings association shall develop an amendment to a previously approved 
    plan in accordance with the public participation requirements of 
    paragraph (c) of this section.
        (i) Plan assessment. The OTS approves the goals and assesses 
    performance under a plan as provided for in Appendix A of this part.
    
    
    Sec. 563e.28  Assigned ratings.
    
        (a) Ratings in general. Subject to paragraphs (b) and (c) of this 
    section, the OTS assigns to a savings association a rating of 
    ``outstanding,'' ``satisfactory,'' ``needs to improve,'' or 
    ``substantial noncompliance'' based on the savings association's 
    performance under the lending, investment and service tests, the 
    community development test, the small savings association performance 
    standards, or an approved strategic plan, as applicable.
        (b) Lending, investment, and service tests. The OTS assigns a 
    rating for a savings association assessed under the lending, 
    investment, and service tests in accordance with the following 
    principles:
        (1) A savings association that receives an ``outstanding'' rating 
    on the lending test receives an assigned rating of at least 
    ``satisfactory'';
        (2) A savings association that receives an ``outstanding'' rating 
    on both the service test and the investment test and a rating of at 
    least ``high satisfactory'' on the lending test receives an assigned 
    rating of ``outstanding''; and
        (3) No savings association may receive an assigned rating of 
    ``satisfactory'' or higher unless it receives a rating of at least 
    ``low satisfactory'' on the lending test.
        (c) Effect of evidence of discriminatory or other illegal credit 
    practices. Evidence of discriminatory or other illegal credit practices 
    adversely affects the OTS's evaluation of a savings association's 
    performance. In determining the effect on the savings association's 
    assigned rating, the OTS considers the nature and extent of the 
    evidence, the policies and procedures that the savings association has 
    in place to prevent discriminatory or other illegal credit practices, 
    any corrective action that the savings association has taken or has 
    committed to take, particularly voluntary corrective action resulting 
    from self-assessment, and other relevant information.
    
    
    Sec. 563e.29  Effect of CRA performance on applications.
    
        (a) CRA performance. Among other factors, the OTS takes into 
    account the record of performance under the CRA of each applicant 
    savings association, and for applications under section 10(e) of the 
    Home Owners' Loan Act (12 U.S.C. 1467a(e)), of each proposed subsidiary 
    savings association, in considering an application for:
        (1) The establishment of a domestic branch or other facility that 
    would be authorized to take deposits;
        (2) The relocation of the main office or a branch;
        (3) The merger or consolidation with or the acquisition of the 
    assets or assumption of the liabilities of an insured depository 
    institution requiring OTS approval under the Bank Merger Act (12 U.S.C. 
    1828(c));
        (4) A Federal thrift charter; and
        (5) Acquisitions subject to section 10(e) of the Home Owners' Loan 
    Act (12 U.S.C. 1467a(e)).
        (b) Charter application. An applicant for a Federal thrift charter 
    shall submit with its application a description of how it will meet its 
    CRA objectives. The OTS takes the description into account in 
    considering the application and may deny or condition approval on that 
    basis.
        (c) Interested parties. The OTS takes into account any views 
    expressed by interested parties that are submitted in accordance with 
    the applicable comment procedures in considering CRA performance in an 
    application listed in paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section.
        (d) Denial or conditional approval of application. A savings 
    association's record of performance may be the basis for denying or 
    conditioning approval of an application listed in paragraph (a) of this 
    section.
        (e) Insured depository institution. For purposes of this section, 
    the term ``insured depository institution'' has the meaning given to 
    that term in 12 U.S.C. 1813.
    
    Subpart C--Records, Reporting, and Disclosure Requirements
    
    
    Sec. 563e.41  Assessment area delineation.
    
        (a) In general. A savings association shall delineate one or more 
    assessment areas within which the OTS evaluates the savings 
    association's record of helping to meet the credit needs of its 
    community. The OTS does not evaluate the savings association's 
    delineation of its assessment area(s) as a separate performance 
    criterion, but the OTS reviews the delineation for compliance with the 
    requirements of this section.
        (b) Geographic area(s) for wholesale or limited purpose savings 
    associations. The assessment area(s) for a wholesale or limited purpose 
    savings association must consist generally of one or more MSAs (using 
    the MSA boundaries that were in effect as of January 1 of the calendar 
    year in which the delineation is made) or one or more contiguous 
    political subdivisions, such as counties, cities, or towns, in which 
    the savings association has its main office, branches, and deposit-
    taking ATMs.
        (c) Geographic area(s) for other savings associations. The 
    assessment area(s) for a savings association other than a wholesale or 
    limited purpose savings association must:
        (1) Consist generally of one or more MSAs (using the MSA boundaries 
    that [[Page 22218]] were in effect as of January 1 of the calendar year 
    in which the delineation is made) or one or more contiguous political 
    subdivisions, such as counties, cities, or towns; and
        (2) Include the geographies in which the savings association has 
    its main office, its branches, and its deposit-taking ATMs, as well as 
    the surrounding geographies in which the savings association has 
    originated or purchased a substantial portion of its loans (including 
    home mortgage loans, small business and small farm loans, and any other 
    loans the savings association chooses, such as those consumer loans on 
    which the savings association elects to have its performance assessed).
        (d) Adjustments to geographic area(s). A savings association may 
    adjust the boundaries of its assessment area(s) to include only the 
    portion of a political subdivision that it reasonably can be expected 
    to serve. An adjustment is particularly appropriate in the case of an 
    assessment area that otherwise would be extremely large, of unusual 
    configuration, or divided by significant geographic barriers.
        (e) Limitations on the delineation of an assessment area. Each 
    savings association's assessment area(s):
        (1) Must consist only of whole geographies;
        (2) May not reflect illegal discrimination;
        (3) May not arbitrarily exclude low- or moderate-income 
    geographies, taking into account the savings association's size and 
    financial condition; and
        (4) May not extend substantially beyond a CMSA boundary or beyond a 
    state boundary unless the assessment area is located in a multistate 
    MSA. If a savings association serves a geographic area that extends 
    substantially beyond a state boundary, the savings association shall 
    delineate separate assessment areas for the areas in each state. If a 
    savings association serves a geographic area that extends substantially 
    beyond a CMSA boundary, the savings association shall delineate 
    separate assessment areas for the areas inside and outside the CMSA.
        (f) Savings associations serving military personnel. 
    Notwithstanding the requirements of this section, a savings association 
    whose business predominantly consists of serving the needs of military 
    personnel or their dependents who are not located within a defined 
    geographic area may delineate its entire deposit customer base as its 
    assessment area.
        (g) Use of assessment area(s). The OTS uses the assessment area(s) 
    delineated by a savings association in its evaluation of the savings 
    association's CRA performance unless the OTS determines that the 
    assessment area(s) do not comply with the requirements of this section.
    
    
    Sec. 563e.42  Data collection, reporting, and disclosure.
    
        (a) Loan information required to be collected and maintained. A 
    savings association, except a small savings association, shall collect, 
    and maintain in machine readable form (as prescribed by the OTS) until 
    the completion of its next CRA examination, the following data for each 
    small business or small farm loan originated or purchased by the 
    savings association:
        (1) A unique number or alpha-numeric symbol that can be used to 
    identify the relevant loan file;
        (2) The loan amount at origination;
        (3) The loan location; and
        (4) An indicator whether the loan was to a business or farm with 
    gross annual revenues of $1 million or less.
        (b) Loan information required to be reported. A savings 
    association, except a small savings association or a savings 
    association that was a small savings association during the prior 
    calendar year, shall report annually by March 1 to the OTS in machine 
    readable form (as prescribed by the OTS) the following data for the 
    prior calendar year:
        (1) Small business and small farm loan data. For each geography in 
    which the savings association originated or purchased a small business 
    or small farm loan, the aggregate number and amount of loans:
        (i) With an amount at origination of $100,000 or less;
        (ii) With amount at origination of more than $100,000 but less than 
    or equal to $250,000;
        (iii) With an amount at origination of more than $250,000; and
        (iv) To businesses and farms with gross annual revenues of $1 
    million or less (using the revenues that the savings association 
    considered in making its credit decision);
        (2) Community development loan data. The aggregate number and 
    aggregate amount of community development loans originated or 
    purchased; and
        (3) Home mortgage loans. If the savings association is subject to 
    reporting under part 203 of this title, the location of each home 
    mortgage loan application, origination, or purchase outside the MSAs in 
    which the savings association has a home or branch office (or outside 
    any MSA) in accordance with the requirements of part 203 of this title.
        (c) Optional data collection and maintenance--(1) Consumer loans. A 
    savings association may collect and maintain in machine readable form 
    (as prescribed by the OTS) data for consumer loans originated or 
    purchased by the savings association for consideration under the 
    lending test. A savings association may maintain data for one or more 
    of the following categories of consumer loans: motor vehicle, credit 
    card, home equity, other secured, and other unsecured. If the savings 
    association maintains data for loans in a certain category, it shall 
    maintain data for all loans originated or purchased within that 
    category. The savings association shall maintain data separately for 
    each category, including for each loan:
        (i) A unique number or alpha-numeric symbol that can be used to 
    identify the relevant loan file;
        (ii) The loan amount at origination or purchase;
        (iii) The loan location; and
        (iv) The gross annual income of the borrower that the savings 
    association considered in making its credit decision.
        (2) Other loan data. At its option, a savings association may 
    provide other information concerning its lending performance, including 
    additional loan distribution data.
        (d) Data on affiliate lending. A savings association that elects to 
    have the OTS consider loans by an affiliate, for purposes of the 
    lending or community development test or an approved strategic plan, 
    shall collect, maintain, and report for those loans the data that the 
    savings association would have collected, maintained, and reported 
    pursuant to paragraphs (a), (b), and (c) of this section had the loans 
    been originated or purchased by the savings association. For home 
    mortgage loans, the savings association shall also be prepared to 
    identify the home mortgage loans reported under part 203 of this title 
    by the affiliate.
        (e) Data on lending by a consortium or a third-party. A savings 
    association that elects to have the OTS consider community development 
    loans by a consortium or third party, for purposes of the lending or 
    community development tests or an approved strategic plan, shall report 
    for those loans the data that the savings association would have 
    reported under paragraph (b)(2) of this section had the loans been 
    originated or purchased by the savings association.
        (f) Small savings associations electing evaluation under the 
    lending, investment, and service tests. A savings association that 
    qualifies for evaluation under the small savings association 
    performance standards but elects [[Page 22219]] evaluation under the 
    lending, investment, and service tests shall collect, maintain, and 
    report the data required for other savings associations pursuant to 
    paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section.
        (g) Assessment area data. A savings association, except a small 
    savings association or a savings association that was a small savings 
    association during the prior calendar year, shall collect and report to 
    the OTS by March 1 of each year a list for each assessment area showing 
    the geographies within the area.
        (h) CRA Disclosure Statement. The OTS prepares annually for each 
    savings association that reports data pursuant to this section a CRA 
    Disclosure Statement that contains, on a state-by-state basis:
        (1) For each county (and for each assessment area smaller than a 
    county) with a population of 500,000 persons or fewer in which the 
    savings association reported a small business or small farm loan:
        (i) The number and amount of small business and small farm loans 
    reported as originated or purchased located in low-, moderate-, middle-
    , and upper-income geographies;
        (ii) A list grouping each geography according to whether the 
    geography is low-, moderate-, middle-, or upper-income;
        (iii) A list showing each geography in which the savings 
    association reported a small business or small farm loan; and
        (iv) The number and amount of small business and small farm loans 
    to businesses and farms with gross annual revenues of $1 million or 
    less;
        (2) For each county (and for each assessment area smaller than a 
    county) with a population in excess of 500,000 persons in which the 
    savings association reported a small business or small farm loan:
        (i) The number and amount of small business and small farm loans 
    reported as originated or purchased located in geographies with median 
    income relative to the area median income of less than 10 percent, 10 
    or more but less than 20 percent, 20 or more but less than 30 percent, 
    30 or more but less than 40 percent, 40 or more but less than 50 
    percent, 50 or more but less than 60 percent, 60 or more but less than 
    70 percent, 70 or more but less than 80 percent, 80 or more but less 
    than 90 percent, 90 or more but less than 100 percent, 100 or more but 
    less than 110 percent, 110 or more but less than 120 percent, and 120 
    percent or more;
        (ii) A list grouping each geography in the county or assessment 
    area according to whether the median income in the geography relative 
    to the area median income is less than 10 percent, 10 or more but less 
    than 20 percent, 20 or more but less than 30 percent, 30 or more but 
    less than 40 percent, 40 or more but less than 50 percent, 50 or more 
    but less than 60 percent, 60 or more but less than 70 percent, 70 or 
    more but less than 80 percent, 80 or more but less than 90 percent, 90 
    or more but less than 100 percent, 100 or more but less than 110 
    percent, 110 or more but less than 120 percent, and 120 percent or 
    more;
        (iii) A list showing each geography in which the savings 
    association reported a small business or small farm loan; and
        (iv) The number and amount of small business and small farm loans 
    to businesses and farms with gross annual revenues of $1 million or 
    less;
        (3) The number and amount of small business and small farm loans 
    located inside each assessment area reported by the savings association 
    and the number and amount of small business and small farm loans 
    located outside the assessment area(s) reported by the savings 
    association; and
        (4) The number and amount of community development loans reported 
    as originated or purchased.
        (i) Aggregate disclosure statements. The OTS, in conjunction with 
    the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, the Federal 
    Deposit Insurance Corporation, and the Office of the Comptroller of the 
    Currency, prepares annually, for each MSA (including an MSA that 
    crosses a state boundary) and the non-MSA portion of each state, an 
    aggregate disclosure statement of small business and small farm lending 
    by all institutions subject to reporting under this part or parts 25, 
    228, or 345 of this title. These disclosure statements indicate, for 
    each geography, the number and amount of all small business and small 
    farm loans originated or purchased by reporting institutions, except 
    that the OTS may adjust the form of the disclosure if necessary, 
    because of special circumstances, to protect the privacy of a borrower 
    or the competitive position of an institution.
        (j) Central data depositories. The OTS makes the aggregate 
    disclosure statements, described in paragraph (i) of this section, and 
    the individual savings association CRA Disclosure Statements, described 
    in paragraph (h) of this section, available to the public at central 
    data depositories. The OTS publishes a list of the depositories at 
    which the statements are available.
    
    
    Sec. 563e.43  Content and availability of public file.
    
        (a) Information available to the public. A savings association 
    shall maintain a public file that includes the following information:
        (1) All written comments received from the public for the current 
    year and each of the prior two calendar years that specifically relate 
    to the savings association's performance in helping to meet community 
    credit needs, and any response to the comments by the savings 
    association, if neither the comments nor the responses contain 
    statements that reflect adversely on the good name or reputation of any 
    persons other than the savings association or publication of which 
    would violate specific provisions of law;
        (2) A copy of the public section of the savings association's most 
    recent CRA Performance Evaluation prepared by the OTS. The savings 
    association shall place this copy in the public file within 30 business 
    days after its receipt from the OTS;
        (3) A list of the savings association's branches, their street 
    addresses, and geographies;
        (4) A list of branches opened or closed by the savings association 
    during the current year and each of the prior two calendar years, their 
    street addresses, and geographies;
        (5) A list of services (including hours of operation, available 
    loan and deposit products, and transaction fees) generally offered at 
    the savings association's branches and descriptions of material 
    differences in the availability or cost of services at particular 
    branches, if any. At its option, a savings association may include 
    information regarding the availability of alternative systems for 
    delivering retail banking services (e.g., ATMs, ATMs not owned or 
    operated by or exclusively for the savings association, banking by 
    telephone or computer, loan production offices, and bank-at-work or 
    bank-by-mail programs);
        (6) A map of each assessment area showing the boundaries of the 
    area and identifying the geographies contained within the area, either 
    on the map or in a separate list; and
        (7) Any other information the savings association chooses.
        (b) Additional information available to the public--(1) Savings 
    associations other than small savings associations. A savings 
    association, except a small savings association or a savings 
    association that was a small savings association during the prior 
    calendar year, shall include in its public file the following 
    information pertaining to the savings association and its affiliates, 
    if [[Page 22220]] applicable, for each of the prior two calendar years:
        (i) If the savings association has elected to have one or more 
    categories of its consumer loans considered under the lending test, for 
    each of these categories, the number and amount of loans:
        (A) To low-, moderate-, middle-, and upper-income individuals;
        (B) Located in low-, moderate-, middle-, and upper-income census 
    tracts; and
        (C) Located inside the savings association's assessment area(s) and 
    outside the savings association's assessment area(s); and
        (ii) The savings association's CRA Disclosure Statement. The 
    savings association shall place the statement in the public file within 
    three business days of its receipt from the OTS.
        (2) Savings associations required to report Home Mortgage 
    Disclosure Act (HMDA) data. A savings association required to report 
    home mortgage loan data pursuant to part 203 of this title shall 
    include in its public file a copy of the HMDA Disclosure Statement 
    provided by the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council 
    pertaining to the savings association for each of the prior two 
    calendar years. In addition, a savings association that elected to have 
    the OTS consider the mortgage lending of an affiliate for any of these 
    years shall include in its public file the affiliate's HMDA Disclosure 
    Statement for those years. The savings association shall place the 
    statement(s) in the public file within three business days after its 
    receipt.
        (3) Small savings associations. A small savings association or a 
    savings association that was a small savings association during the 
    prior calendar year shall include in its public file:
        (i) The savings association's loan-to-deposit ratio for each 
    quarter of the prior calendar year and, at its option, additional data 
    on its loan-to-deposit ratio; and
        (ii) The information required for other savings associations by 
    paragraph (b)(1) of this section, if the savings association has 
    elected to be evaluated under the lending, investment, and service 
    tests.
        (4) Savings associations with strategic plans. A savings 
    association that has been approved to be assessed under a strategic 
    plan shall include in its public file a copy of that plan. A savings 
    association need not include information submitted to the OTS on a 
    confidential basis in conjunction with the plan.
        (5) Savings associations with less than satisfactory ratings. A 
    savings association that received a less than satisfactory rating 
    during its most recent examination shall include in its public file a 
    description of its current efforts to improve its performance in 
    helping to meet the credit needs of its entire community. The savings 
    association shall update the description quarterly.
        (c) Location of public information. A savings association shall 
    make available to the public for inspection upon request and at no cost 
    the information required in this section as follows:
        (1) At the main office and, if an interstate savings association, 
    at one branch office in each state, all information in the public file; 
    and
        (2) At each branch:
        (i) A copy of the public section of the savings association's most 
    recent CRA Performance Evaluation and a list of services provided by 
    the branch; and
        (ii) Within five calendar days of the request, all the information 
    in the public file relating to the assessment area in which the branch 
    is located.
        (d) Copies. Upon request, a savings association shall provide 
    copies, either on paper or in another form acceptable to the person 
    making the request, of the information in its public file. The savings 
    association may charge a reasonable fee not to exceed the cost of 
    copying and mailing (if applicable).
        (e) Updating. Except as otherwise provided in this section, a 
    savings association shall ensure that the information required by this 
    section is current as of April 1 of each year.
    
    
    Sec. 563e.44  Public notice by savings associations.
    
        A savings association shall provide in the public lobby of its main 
    office and each of its branches the appropriate public notice set forth 
    in Appendix B of this part. Only a branch of a savings association 
    having more than one assessment area shall include the bracketed 
    material in the notice for branch offices. Only a savings association 
    that is an affiliate of a holding company shall include the last two 
    sentences of the notices.
    
    
    Sec. 563e.45  Publication of planned examination schedule.
    
        The OTS publishes at least 30 days in advance of the beginning of 
    each calendar quarter a list of savings associations scheduled for CRA 
    examinations in that quarter.
    
    Subpart D--Transition Rules
    
    
    Sec. 563e.51  Transition rules.
    
        (a) Effective date. Sections of this part become applicable over a 
    period of time in accordance with the schedule set forth in paragraph 
    (c) of this section.
        (b) Data collection and reporting; strategic plan; performance 
    tests and standards--(1) Data collection and reporting. (i) On January 
    1, 1996, the data collection requirements set forth in Sec. 563e.42 
    (except Sec. 563e.42(b) and (g)) become applicable.
        (ii) On January 1, 1997, the data reporting requirements set forth 
    in Sec. 563e.42(b) and (g) become applicable.
        (2) Small savings associations. Beginning January 1, 1996, the OTS 
    evaluates savings associations that qualify for the small savings 
    association performance standards described in Sec. 563e.26 under that 
    section.
        (3) Strategic plan. Beginning January 1, 1996, a savings 
    association that elects to be evaluated under an approved strategic 
    plan pursuant to Sec. 563e.27 may submit its strategic plan to the OTS 
    for approval.
        (4) Other performance tests. (i) Beginning January 1, 1996, a 
    savings association may elect to be evaluated under the pertinent 
    revised performance tests described in Secs. 563e.22, 563e.23, 563e.24, 
    and 563e.25, if the savings association provides the necessary data to 
    permit evaluation.
        (ii) Beginning July 1, 1997, the OTS evaluates all savings 
    associations under the pertinent revised performance tests.
        (c) Schedule. (1) On July 1, 1995, Secs. 563e.11, 563e.12, 563e.29, 
    and 563e.51 become applicable, and Secs. 563e.1, 563e.2, and 563e.8 
    expire.
        (2) On January 1, 1996, Sec. 563e.41 and the pertinent provisions 
    of Subpart B of this part will apply to savings associations that elect 
    to be evaluated under Secs. 563e.22 through 563e.25, savings 
    associations that submit for approval strategic plans under 
    Sec. 563e.27, and savings associations that qualify for the small 
    savings association performance standards described in Sec. 563e.26.
        (3) On January 1, 1996, Secs. 563e.42 (except Sec. 563e.42(b) and 
    (g)) and 563e.45 become applicable.
        (4) On January 1, 1997, Secs. 563e.41 and 563e.42(b) and (g) become 
    applicable.
        (5) On July 1, 1997, Secs. 563e.21 through 563e.28, 563e.43, and 
    563e.44 become applicable, and Secs. 563e.3 through 563e.7, and 563e.51 
    expire.
    
    Appendix A to Part 563e--Ratings
    
        (a) Ratings in general. (1) In assigning a rating, the OTS 
    evaluates a savings association's performance under the applicable 
    performance criteria in this part, in accordance with Sec. 563e.21 
    and Sec. 563e.28, which provides for adjustments on the basis of 
    evidence of discriminatory or other illegal credit practices.
        (2) A savings association's performance need not fit each aspect 
    of a particular rating profile in order to receive that rating, and 
    [[Page 22221]] exceptionally strong performance with respect to some 
    aspects may compensate for weak performance in others. The savings 
    association's overall performance, however, must be consistent with 
    safe and sound banking practices and generally with the appropriate 
    rating profile as follows.
        (b) Savings associations evaluated under the lending, 
    investment, and service tests. (1) Lending performance rating. The 
    OTS assigns each savings association's lending performance one of 
    the five following ratings.
        (i) Outstanding. The OTS rates a savings association's lending 
    performance ``outstanding'' if, in general, it demonstrates:
        (A) Excellent responsiveness to credit needs in its assessment 
    area(s), taking into account the number and amount of home mortgage, 
    small business, small farm, and consumer loans, if applicable, in 
    its assessment area(s);
        (B) A substantial majority of its loans are made in its 
    assessment area(s);
        (C) An excellent geographic distribution of loans in its 
    assessment area(s);
        (D) An excellent distribution, particularly in its assessment 
    area(s), of loans among individuals of different income levels and 
    businesses (including farms) of different sizes, given the product 
    lines offered by the savings association;
        (E) An excellent record of serving the credit needs of highly 
    economically disadvantaged areas in its assessment area(s), low-
    income individuals, or businesses (including farms) with gross 
    annual revenues of $1 million or less, consistent with safe and 
    sound operations;
        (F) Extensive use of innovative or flexible lending practices in 
    a safe and sound manner to address the credit needs of low- or 
    moderate-income individuals or geographies; and
        (G) It is a leader in making community development loans.
        (ii) High satisfactory. The OTS rates a savings association's 
    lending performance ``high satisfactory'' if, in general, it 
    demonstrates:
        (A) Good responsiveness to credit needs in its assessment 
    area(s), taking into account the number and amount of home mortgage, 
    small business, small farm, and consumer loans, if applicable, in 
    its assessment area(s);
        (B) A high percentage of its loans are made in its assessment 
    area(s);
        (C) A good geographic distribution of loans in its assessment 
    area(s);
        (D) A good distribution, particularly in its assessment area(s), 
    of loans among individuals of different income levels and businesses 
    (including farms) of different sizes, given the product lines 
    offered by the savings association;
        (E) A good record of serving the credit needs of highly 
    economically disadvantaged areas in its assessment area(s), low-
    income individuals, or businesses (including farms) with gross 
    annual revenues of $1 million or less, consistent with safe and 
    sound operations;
        (F) Use of innovative or flexible lending practices in a safe 
    and sound manner to address the credit needs of low- or moderate-
    income individuals or geographies; and
        (G) It has made a relatively high level of community development 
    loans.
        (iii) Low satisfactory. The OTS rates a savings association's 
    lending performance ``low satisfactory'' if, in general, it 
    demonstrates:
        (A) Adequate responsiveness to credit needs in its assessment 
    area(s), taking into account the number and amount of home mortgage, 
    small business, small farm, and consumer loans, if applicable, in 
    its assessment area(s);
        (B) An adequate percentage of its loans are made in its 
    assessment area(s);
        (C) An adequate geographic distribution of loans in its 
    assessment area(s);
        (D) An adequate distribution, particularly in its assessment 
    area(s), of loans among individuals of different income levels and 
    businesses (including farms) of different sizes, given the product 
    lines offered by the savings association;
        (E) An adequate record of serving the credit needs of highly 
    economically disadvantaged areas in its assessment area(s), low-
    income individuals, or businesses (including farms) with gross 
    annual revenues of $1 million or less, consistent with safe and 
    sound operations;
        (F) Limited use of innovative or flexible lending practices in a 
    safe and sound manner to address the credit needs of low- or 
    moderate-income individuals or geographies; and
        (G) It has made an adequate level of community development 
    loans.
        (iv) Needs to improve. The OTS rates a savings association's 
    lending performance ``needs to improve'' if, in general, it 
    demonstrates:
        (A) Poor responsiveness to credit needs in its assessment 
    area(s), taking into account the number and amount of home mortgage, 
    small business, small farm, and consumer loans, if applicable, in 
    its assessment area(s);
        (B) A small percentage of its loans are made in its assessment 
    area(s);
        (C) A poor geographic distribution of loans, particularly to 
    low- or moderate-income geographies, in its assessment area(s);
        (D) A poor distribution, particularly in its assessment area(s), 
    of loans among individuals of different income levels and businesses 
    (including farms) of different sizes, given the product lines 
    offered by the savings association;
        (E) A poor record of serving the credit needs of highly 
    economically disadvantaged areas in its assessment area(s), low-
    income individuals, or businesses (including farms) with gross 
    annual revenues of $1 million or less, consistent with safe and 
    sound operations;
        (F) Little use of innovative or flexible lending practices in a 
    safe and sound manner to address the credit needs of low- or 
    moderate-income individuals or geographies; and
        (G) It has made a low level of community development loans.
        (v) Substantial noncompliance. The OTS rates a savings 
    association's lending performance as being in ``substantial 
    noncompliance'' if, in general, it demonstrates:
        (A) A very poor responsiveness to credit needs in its assessment 
    area(s), taking into account the number and amount of home mortgage, 
    small business, small farm, and consumer loans, if applicable, in 
    its assessment area(s);
        (B) A very small percentage of its loans are made in its 
    assessment area(s);
        (C) A very poor geographic distribution of loans, particularly 
    to low- or moderate-income geographies, in its assessment area(s);
        (D) A very poor distribution, particularly in its assessment 
    area(s), of loans among individuals of different income levels and 
    businesses (including farms) of different sizes, given the product 
    lines offered by the savings association;
        (E) A very poor record of serving the credit needs of highly 
    economically disadvantaged areas in its assessment area(s), low-
    income individuals, or businesses (including farms) with gross 
    annual revenues of $1 million or less, consistent with safe and 
    sound operations;
        (F) No use of innovative or flexible lending practices in a safe 
    and sound manner to address the credit needs of low- or moderate-
    income individuals or geographies; and
        (G) It has made few, if any, community development loans.
        (2) Investment performance rating. The OTS assigns each savings 
    association's investment performance one of the five following 
    ratings.
        (i) Outstanding. The OTS rates a savings association's 
    investment performance ``outstanding'' if, in general, it 
    demonstrates:
        (A) An excellent level of qualified investments, particularly 
    those that are not routinely provided by private investors, often in 
    a leadership position;
        (B) Extensive use of innovative or complex qualified 
    investments; and
        (C) Excellent responsiveness to credit and community development 
    needs.
        (ii) High satisfactory. The OTS rates a savings association's 
    investment performance ``high satisfactory'' if, in general, it 
    demonstrates:
        (A) A significant level of qualified investments, particularly 
    those that are not routinely provided by private investors, 
    occasionally in a leadership position;
        (B) Significant use of innovative or complex qualified 
    investments; and
        (C) Good responsiveness to credit and community development 
    needs.
        (iii) Low satisfactory. The OTS rates a savings association's 
    investment performance ``low satisfactory'' if, in general, it 
    demonstrates:
        (A) An adequate level of qualified investments, particularly 
    those that are not routinely provided by private investors, although 
    rarely in a leadership position;
        (B) Occasional use of innovative or complex qualified 
    investments; and
        (C) Adequate responsiveness to credit and community development 
    needs.
        (iv) Needs to improve. The OTS rates a savings association's 
    investment performance ``needs to improve'' if, in general, it 
    demonstrates:
        (A) A poor level of qualified investments, particularly those 
    that are not routinely provided by private investors;
        (B) Rare use of innovative or complex qualified investments; and
        (C) Poor responsiveness to credit and community development 
    needs. [[Page 22222]] 
        (v) Substantial noncompliance. The OTS rates a savings 
    association's investment performance as being in ``substantial 
    noncompliance'' if, in general, it demonstrates:
        (A) Few, if any, qualified investments, particularly those that 
    are not routinely provided by private investors;
        (B) No use of innovative or complex qualified investments; and
        (C) Very poor responsiveness to credit and community development 
    needs.
        (3) Service performance rating. The OTS assigns each savings 
    association's service performance one of the five following ratings.
        (i) Outstanding. The OTS rates a savings association's service 
    performance ``outstanding'' if, in general, the savings association 
    demonstrates:
        (A) Its service delivery systems are readily accessible to 
    geographies and individuals of different income levels in its 
    assessment area(s);
        (B) To the extent changes have been made, its record of opening 
    and closing branches has improved the accessibility of its delivery 
    systems, particularly in low- or moderate-income geographies or to 
    low- or moderate-income individuals;
        (C) Its services (including, where appropriate, business hours) 
    are tailored to the convenience and needs of its assessment area(s), 
    particularly low- or moderate-income geographies or low- or 
    moderate-income individuals; and
        (D) It is a leader in providing community development services.
        (ii) High satisfactory. The OTS rates a savings association's 
    service performance ``high satisfactory'' if, in general, the 
    savings association demonstrates:
        (A) Its service delivery systems are accessible to geographies 
    and individuals of different income levels in its assessment 
    area(s);
        (B) To the extent changes have been made, its record of opening 
    and closing branches has not adversely affected the accessibility of 
    its delivery systems, particularly in low- and moderate-income 
    geographies and to low- and moderate-income individuals;
        (C) Its services (including, where appropriate, business hours) 
    do not vary in a way that inconveniences its assessment area(s), 
    particularly low- and moderate-income geographies and low- and 
    moderate-income individuals; and
        (D) It provides a relatively high level of community development 
    services.
        (iii) Low satisfactory. The OTS rates a savings association's 
    service performance ``low satisfactory'' if, in general, the savings 
    association demonstrates:
        (A) Its service delivery systems are reasonably accessible to 
    geographies and individuals of different income levels in its 
    assessment area(s);
        (B) To the extent changes have been made, its record of opening 
    and closing branches has generally not adversely affected the 
    accessibility of its delivery systems, particularly in low- and 
    moderate-income geographies and to low- and moderate-income 
    individuals;
        (C) Its services (including, where appropriate, business hours) 
    do not vary in a way that inconveniences its assessment area(s), 
    particularly low- and moderate-income geographies and low- and 
    moderate-income individuals; and
        (D) It provides an adequate level of community development 
    services.
        (iv) Needs to improve. The OTS rates a savings association's 
    service performance ``needs to improve'' if, in general, the savings 
    association demonstrates:
        (A) Its service delivery systems are unreasonably inaccessible 
    to portions of its assessment area(s), particularly to low- or 
    moderate-income geographies or to low- or moderate-income 
    individuals;
        (B) To the extent changes have been made, its record of opening 
    and closing branches has adversely affected the accessibility of its 
    delivery systems, particularly in low- or moderate-income 
    geographies or to low- or moderate-income individuals;
        (C) Its services (including, where appropriate, business hours) 
    vary in a way that inconveniences its assessment area(s), 
    particularly low- or moderate-income geographies or low- or 
    moderate-income individuals; and
        (D) It provides a limited level of community development 
    services.
        (v) Substantial noncompliance. The OTS rates a savings 
    association's service performance as being in ``substantial 
    noncompliance'' if, in general, the savings association 
    demonstrates:
        (A) Its service delivery systems are unreasonably inaccessible 
    to significant portions of its assessment area(s), particularly to 
    low- or moderate-income geographies or to low- or moderate-income 
    individuals;
        (B) To the extent changes have been made, its record of opening 
    and closing branches has significantly adversely affected the 
    accessibility of its delivery systems, particularly in low- or 
    moderate-income geographies or to low- or moderate-income 
    individuals;
        (C) Its services (including, where appropriate, business hours) 
    vary in a way that significantly inconveniences its assessment 
    area(s), particularly low- or moderate-income geographies or low- or 
    moderate-income individuals; and
        (D) It provides few, if any, community development services.
        (c) Wholesale or limited purpose savings associations. The OTS 
    assigns each wholesale or limited purpose savings association's 
    community development performance one of the four following ratings.
        (1) Outstanding. The OTS rates a wholesale or limited purpose 
    savings association's community development performance 
    ``outstanding'' if, in general, it demonstrates:
        (i) A high level of community development loans, community 
    development services, or qualified investments, particularly 
    investments that are not routinely provided by private investors;
        (ii) Extensive use of innovative or complex qualified 
    investments, community development loans, or community development 
    services; and
        (iii) Excellent responsiveness to credit and community 
    development needs in its assessment area(s).
        (2) Satisfactory. The OTS rates a wholesale or limited purpose 
    savings association's community development performance 
    ``satisfactory'' if, in general, it demonstrates:
        (i) An adequate level of community development loans, community 
    development services, or qualified investments, particularly 
    investments that are not routinely provided by private investors;
        (ii) Occasional use of innovative or complex qualified 
    investments, community development loans, or community development 
    services; and
        (iii) Adequate responsiveness to credit and community 
    development needs in its assessment area(s).
        (3) Needs to improve. The OTS rates a wholesale or limited 
    purpose savings association's community development performance as 
    ``needs to improve'' if, in general, it demonstrates:
        (i) A poor level of community development loans, community 
    development services, or qualified investments, particularly 
    investments that are not routinely provided by private investors;
        (ii) Rare use of innovative or complex qualified investments, 
    community development loans, or community development services; and
        (iii) Poor responsiveness to credit and community development 
    needs in its assessment area(s).
        (4) Substantial noncompliance. The OTS rates a wholesale or 
    limited purpose savings association's community development 
    performance in ``substantial noncompliance'' if, in general, it 
    demonstrates:
        (i) Few, if any, community development loans, community 
    development services, or qualified investments, particularly 
    investments that are not routinely provided by private investors;
        (ii) No use of innovative or complex qualified investments, 
    community development loans, or community development services; and
        (iii) Very poor responsiveness to credit and community 
    development needs in its assessment area(s).
        (d) Savings associations evaluated under the small savings 
    association performance standards. The OTS rates the performance of 
    each savings association evaluated under the small savings 
    association performance standards as follows:
        (1) Eligibility for a satisfactory rating. The OTS rates a 
    savings association's performance ``satisfactory'' if, in general, 
    the savings association demonstrates:
        (i) A reasonable loan-to-deposit ratio (considering seasonal 
    variations) given the savings association's size, financial 
    condition, the credit needs of its assessment area(s), and taking 
    into account, as appropriate, lending-related activities such as 
    loan originations for sale to the secondary markets and community 
    development loans and qualified investments;
        (ii) A majority of its loans and, as appropriate, other lending-
    related activities are in its assessment area(s);
        (iii) A distribution of loans to and, as appropriate, other 
    lending related-activities for individuals of different income 
    levels (including low- and moderate-income 
    [[Page 22223]] individuals) and businesses and farms of different 
    sizes that is reasonable given the demographics of the savings 
    association's assessment area(s);
        (iv) A record of taking appropriate action, as warranted, in 
    response to written complaints, if any, about the savings 
    association's performance in helping to meet the credit needs of its 
    assessment area(s); and
        (v) A reasonable geographic distribution of loans given the 
    savings association's assessment area(s).
        (2) Eligibility for an outstanding rating. A savings association 
    that meets each of the standards for a ``satisfactory'' rating under 
    this paragraph and exceeds some or all of those standards may 
    warrant consideration for an overall rating of ``outstanding.'' In 
    assessing whether a savings association's performance is 
    ``outstanding,'' the OTS considers the extent to which the savings 
    association exceeds each of the performance standards for a 
    ``satisfactory'' rating and its performance in making qualified 
    investments and its performance in providing branches and other 
    services and delivery systems that enhance credit availability in 
    its assessment area(s).
        (3) Needs to improve or substantial noncompliance ratings. A 
    savings association also may receive a rating of ``needs to 
    improve'' or ``substantial noncompliance'' depending on the degree 
    to which its performance has failed to meet the standards for a 
    ``satisfactory'' rating.
        (e) Strategic plan assessment and rating. (1) Satisfactory 
    goals. The OTS approves as ``satisfactory'' measurable goals that 
    adequately help to meet the credit needs of the savings 
    association's assessment area(s).
        (2) Outstanding goals. If the plan identifies a separate group 
    of measurable goals that substantially exceed the levels approved as 
    ``satisfactory,'' the OTS will approve those goals as 
    ``outstanding.''
        (3) Rating. The OTS assesses the performance of a savings 
    association operating under an approved plan to determine if the 
    savings association has met its plan goals:
        (i) If the savings association substantially achieves its plan 
    goals for a satisfactory rating, the OTS will rate the savings 
    association's performance under the plan as ``satisfactory.''
        (ii) If the savings association exceeds its plan goals for a 
    satisfactory rating and substantially achieves its plan goals for an 
    outstanding rating, the OTS will rate the savings association's 
    performance under the plan as ``outstanding.''
        (iii) If the savings association fails to meet substantially its 
    plan goals for a satisfactory rating, the OTS will rate the savings 
    association as either ``needs to improve'' or ``substantial 
    noncompliance,'' depending on the extent to which it falls short of 
    its plan goals, unless the savings association elected in its plan 
    to be rated otherwise, as provided in Sec. 25.27(f)(4).
    
    Appendix B to Part 563e--CRA Notice
    
        (a) Notice for main offices and, if an interstate savings 
    association, one branch office in each state.
    Community Reinvestment Act Notice
        Under the Federal Community Reinvestment Act (CRA), the Office 
    of Thrift Supervision (OTS) evaluates our record of helping to meet 
    the credit needs of this community consistent with safe and sound 
    operations. The OTS also takes this record into account when 
    deciding on certain applications submitted by us.
        Your involvement is encouraged.
        You are entitled to certain information about our operations and 
    our performance under the CRA, including, for example, information 
    about our branches, such as their location and services provided at 
    them; the public section of our most recent CRA Performance 
    Evaluation, prepared by the OTS; and comments received from the 
    public relating to our performance in helping to meet community 
    credit needs, as well as our responses to those comments. You may 
    review this information today.
        At least 30 days before the beginning of each quarter, the OTS 
    publishes a nationwide list of the savings associations that are 
    scheduled for CRA examination in that quarter. This list is 
    available from the Regional Director (address). You may send written 
    comments about our performance in helping to meet community credit 
    needs to (name and address of official at savings association) and 
    OTS (address). Your letter, together with any response by us, will 
    be considered by the OTS in evaluating our CRA performance and may 
    be made public.
        You may ask to look at any comments received by the Regional 
    Director. You may also request from the Regional Director an 
    announcement of our applications covered by the CRA filed with the 
    OTS. We are an affiliate of (name of holding company), a savings and 
    loan holding company. You may request from the Regional Director an 
    announcement of applications covered by the CRA filed by savings and 
    loan holding companies.
        (b) Notice for branch offices.
    
    Community Reinvestment Act Notice
    
        Under the Federal Community Reinvestment Act (CRA), the Office 
    of Thrift Supervision (OTS) evaluates our record of helping to meet 
    the credit needs of this community consistent with safe and sound 
    operations. The OTS also takes this record into account when 
    deciding on certain applications submitted by us.
        Your involvement is encouraged.
        You are entitled to certain information about our operations and 
    our performance under the CRA. You may review today the public 
    section of our most recent CRA evaluation, prepared by the OTS, and 
    a list of services provided at this branch. You may also have access 
    to the following additional information, which we will make 
    available to you at this branch within five calendar days after you 
    make a request to us: (1) A map showing the assessment area 
    containing this branch, which is the area in which the OTS evaluates 
    our CRA performance in this community; (2) information about our 
    branches in this assessment area; (3) a list of services we provide 
    at those locations; (4) data on our lending performance in this 
    assessment area; and (5) copies of all written comments received by 
    us that specifically relate to our CRA performance in this 
    assessment area, and any responses we have made to those comments. 
    If we are operating under an approved strategic plan, you may also 
    have access to a copy of the plan.
        [If you would like to review information about our CRA 
    performance in other communities served by us, the public file for 
    our entire savings association is available at (name of office 
    located in state), located at (address).]
        At least 30 days before the beginning of each quarter, the OTS 
    publishes a nationwide list of the savings associations that are 
    scheduled for CRA examination in that quarter. This list is 
    available from the Regional Director (address). You may send written 
    comments about our performance in helping to meet community credit 
    needs to (name and address of official at savings association) and 
    the Regional Director (address). Your letter, together with any 
    response by us, will be considered by the OTS in evaluating our CRA 
    performance and may be made public.
        You may ask to look at any comments received by the Regional 
    Director. You may also request from the Regional Director an 
    announcement of our applications covered by the CRA filed with the 
    OTS. We are an affiliate of (name of holding company), a savings and 
    loan holding company. You may request from the Regional Director an 
    announcement of applications covered by the CRA filed by savings and 
    loan holding companies.
    
    
    Secs. 563e.1, 563e.2, and 563e.8  [Removed]
    
        3. Sections 563e.1, 563e.2, and 563e.8 are removed effective July 
    1, 1995.
    
    
    Secs. 563e.3, 563e.4, 563e.5, 563e.6, and 563e.7 and Subpart 
    D  [Removed]
    
        4. Sections 563e.3, 563e.4, 563e.5, 563e.6 and 563e.7, and subpart 
    D, consisting of 563e.51 are removed effective July 1, 1997.
    
        Dated: April 19, 1995.
    
        By the Office of Thrift Supervision.
    Jonathan L Fiechter,
    Acting Director.
    [FR Doc. 95-10503 Filed 5-3-95; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODES 4810-33-P, 6210-01-P, 6714-01-P, 6720-01-P
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
7/1/1995
Published:
05/04/1995
Department:
Thrift Supervision Office
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Joint final rule.
Document Number:
95-10503
Dates:
This joint rule is effective July 1, 1995, except 12 CFR 25.3 through 25.7 and 25.51, 12 CFR 228.3 through 228.7 and 228.51, 12 CFR 345.3 through 345.7 and 345.51, and 12 CFR 563e.3 through 563e.7 and 563e.51 are removed effective July 1, 1997.
Pages:
22156-22223 (68 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Docket No. 95-07, Regulation BB, Docket No. R-0822, Docket No. 95-72
RINs:
1550-AA69, 1557-AB32, 3064-AB27
PDF File:
95-10503.pdf
CFR: (97)
12 CFR 121.802(a)(2)
12 CFR 121.802(a)(2)
12 CFR 121.802(a)(2)
12 CFR 345.42(c)(1)
12 CFR 228.42(c)(1)
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