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Editor:

Banks provide capital for community development initiatives, work with nonprofits on financial literacy efforts and donate millions of dollars to charities. In fact, a recent survey of 43 Virginia banks showed that $13.7 million was donated to different charities in 2016 by just those banks. Additionally, $627,678 was provided by those banks to provide scholarships to students in 2016.

Since the passage of the Dodd-Frank Act in 2010 and the thousands of pages of ensuing regulations, community banks’ ability to contribute to their local communities has been hindered. Providing financial services that individuals and small businesses need to succeed has become harder and harder each year, as these new laws and regulations continue to make it more difficult for community banks like mine to do business. In turn, this affects our abilities to be able to give back to the communities it is our mission to serve. The one-size-fits-all regulation we have encountered has negative economic consequences and is burdensome, unsuitable and inefficient not only for banks but for our customers.

We appreciate the fact that Virginia Senators Mark Warner and Tim Kaine seem ready to work together in a bipartisan manner to address this issue, signing on as co-sponsors of S.2155, the Economic Growth, Regulatory Relief and Consumer Protection Act. This bill is a bipartisan piece of legislation that includes commonsense improvements in the nation’s financial rules, which will allow banks to better serve their communities and foster greater economic and job growth. It will make it easier for the banking industry to expand mortgage offerings for consumers and expand the availability of capital and other resources for increased lending.

We continue to ask Senators Mark Warner and Tim Kaine for their support of S.2155 by voting yes when the bill is soon considered on the Senate floor. This bill is an important first step in right-sizing the rules for America’s banks. This is an opportunity for legislators to put in place a more effective and efficient set of policies that will allow banks to do what they do best — serve their customers and help America’s economy grow.

J. Peter Clements

Chairman, president and CEO

Bank of Southside Virginia

Carson

To the editor:

Virginia’s Main Street banks play a vital role in ensuring a vibrant economy, providing the necessary capital for building homes, businesses and schools. As leaders in our communities, banks have invested in financial education, community revitalization and philanthropic programs.

American National Bank, as well as all other banks, provides financial services that individuals and small businesses need to succeed. But regulatory burdens have grown dramatically in recent years, hindering your local banks’ ability to help neighboring businesses grow and create jobs. This has become harder as thousands of pages of ill-fitting rules have made it cumbersome and, sometimes, even impossible to do business.

The pendulum has swung too far, and it’s time to right-size regulation in a more tailored approach.

U.S. Senate Bill 2155 — the Economic Growth, Regulatory Relief and Consumer Protection Act — is a carefully crafted bipartisan bill that makes commonsense improvements to the nation’s financial rules. It allows Main Street banks to better serve their customers and communities by opening doors for more creditworthy borrowers and businesses. It strikes the right balance between ensuring fundamental standards while offering flexibility to meet the specific needs of Virginians.

I want to thank Virginia’s U.S. senators, Mark Warner and Tim Kaine, for cosponsoring S. 2155. These sensible regulatory changes will help banks like ours continue to serve our communities and make it easier to help our neighbors purchase a home or expand their business.

With frequent gridlock in Washington, this bipartisan legislation is a shining example of how our elected leaders can advance solutions by working together and across the aisle.

JEFFREY V. HALEY

President and Chief Executive Officer

American National Bank

By Rick Finley For The Virginian-Pilot

RURAL VIRGINIA is still struggling to recover from the Great Recession. Eighty-five of Virginia’s 133 counties and cities have shed jobs since 2007. Our state’s southern and western regions are facing particularly dim economic prospects. Nearly half of their residents rated the economy as “poor” or “not so good” in a recent Washington Post poll.

Well-intentioned but overly restrictive regulations on financial institutions deserve some of the blame. Federal officials put these measures in place after the financial crisis to protect Americans from Wall Street’s predatory behavior. But the rules have hobbled many of the credit unions and community banks that are so vital to small towns and medium-size cities across Virginia.

Thankfully, U.S. Sens. Tim Kaine and Mark Warner are working to advance a bill that seeks to ease this regulatory burden. It’s one of the most bipartisan pieces of legislation we’ve seen in a long time, and if it becomes law, it will help rejuvenate communities throughout Virginia that the economic recovery has left behind.

Big banks helped cause the 2008 financial crisis. For years, they pushed mortgage loans onto customers who were unlikely to be able to pay them back. The banks packaged these loans and sold them to investors. When people failed to keep up with their payments, a chain reaction of defaults followed — one that nearly broke the global financial system.

To prevent risky lending practices from ever again wrecking the economy, Congress passed the Dodd-Frank Act in 2010. Regulators subsequently wrote thousands of pages of rules fleshing out and clarifying the law’s provisions.

As leaders from both parties now acknowledge, Dodd-Frank’s central flaw is its indiscriminate treatment of all lenders — including the credit unions and community banks that had virtually nothing to do with the 2008 crisis. The burden of complying with these complicated rules has hamstrung Virginia’s smaller financial institutions and diminished their ability to help communities bounce back from the Great Recession.

Take the regulation that requires lenders to stringently evaluate a borrower’s ability to repay a mortgage. This mandate makes sense for large banks with a history of giving loans to borrowers with questionable prospects for repaying them.

But it makes little sense for credit unions, which are small, member-owned institutions. Credit union members put their own money at risk when they make loans. So they have a strong incentive to lend responsibly.

Further, since only members can borrow from credit unions, they tend to know far more about their borrowers than a larger bank does. This knowledge allows them to make sensible lending decisions without the need for onerous federal oversight.

Dodd-Frank’s regulations cost Virginia’s 140 credit unions $478 million a year — and another $144 million in lost revenue. Not only is that a direct cost borne by Virginia’s 2.6 million credit union member-owners, but it’s also money that can’t be lent out to small businesses looking to hire more workers or families hoping to purchase homes.

The bill championed by Kaine and Warner — SB 2155, the Economic Growth, Regulatory Relief and Consumer Protection Act — would undo much of this damage.

For starters, it would exempt small financial institutions that don’t make many mortgages from rules requiring them to disclose all sorts of information on those mortgages. Collecting and reporting that data can be very expensive and time-consuming — and thus raise the cost of credit for consumers.

The act also would allow credit unions to classify loans made to small-scale landlords purchasing one- to four-unit properties as real estate loans, rather than business loans. That distinction matters because credit unions can only lend a certain percentage of their assets to businesses.

This change could free up an estimated $4 billion for credit unions to lend to small businesses across the country. It would also put credit unions on equal regulatory footing with banks — and thus increase competition, to the benefit of consumers.

Common-sense regulatory reform for credit unions and community banks would inject new life into communities all over Virginia. It’s time for the rest of the Senate to join Kaine and Warner and hold Wall Street accountable without hindering small financial institutions.

Rick Finley is CEO of WJC Federal Credit Union in Damascus.

On Friday, Moran (R-Kan.) and Warner (D-Va.) introduced the fourth version of their Startup Act — a piece of legislation they have been lobbying for and tinkering with for more than four years, and one that, in its latest iteration, would tweak the nation’s tax code, immigration laws and regulatory system in ways intended to help revive America’s entrepreneurial economy.
On Monday, Senator Warner spoke at Crowdcheck’s second annual crowdfunding conference. The Senator spoke about the potential of securities crowdfunding, which would allow startup companies to make equity offerings to investors through websites and raise up to $1 million per year from investors online.