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Welcoming Remarks: Third Annual Community Banking in the 21st
Century
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September 30, 2015
St. Louis Fed President James Bullard welcomed
attendees to the third annual community banking research
and policy conference, hosted by the Federal Reserve
System and the Conference of State Bank Supervisors. In
addition to welcoming Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen
to the conference, Bullard discussed regulatory burden and
said more can be done to reduce that burden on
community banks. He encouraged a healthy debate on
these issues at this year's conference.
Remarks: pdf | text (below)
Full text of remarks:
Welcoming Remarks by James Bullard, President and CEO
Third Annual Community Banking in the 21st Century
Research and Policy Conference
The Federal Reserve System and the Conference of State
Bank Supervisors (CSBS)
St. Louis, Mo.
Sept. 30, 2015

James Bullard
President and Chief
Executive O cer
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Good afternoon, and welcome to the Federal Reserve Bank
of St. Louis. The St. Louis Fed is proud to serve as the host
site for the third annual Community Banking in the 21st
Century research and policy conference. It is jointly
sponsored by the Federal Reserve System and the
Conference of State Bank Supervisors.
Last year, in addition to hearing some of the latest research
on community banking from a wide range of academic
institutions and regulatory agencies, we also engaged in a
spirited debate on the opportunities and challenges facing
community banks. Perhaps not surprisingly, regulatory
burden was at the forefront of the discussion.
The energy from last year's event helped inform much of
the debate that has already taken place in 2015.

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"Rationally, let it be said in a
whisper, experience is certainly
worth more than theory."
Amerigo Vespucci

For example, last December, the federal regulatory
agencies conducted their rst of six meetings under the
Economic Growth and Regulatory Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1996. Under the law, agencies are required, every 10
years, to conduct a review for the speci c purpose of
identifying outdated, unnecessary or unduly burdensome
regulations.
Many of the individuals who either attended last year's
conference or were part of the conference program were
actively involved in these discussions. We have received
numerous comments from the four meetings that have
taken place so far, and look forward to seeing the
outcomes from these meetings next year.
There have been additional actions. Importantly, in April,
the Fed announced that it was increasing the asset-size
threshold for small bank holding companies and savings
and loan holding companies from $500 million to $1
billion. This change means that more holding company
organizations are not subject to consolidated capital
requirements, making it easier for parent companies to
borrow to nance certain transactions.
In addition, some changes to call report requirements were
announced several weeks ago by the Federal Financial
Institutions Examination Council. The Federal Reserve is
conducting its own review of the call report and other
areas and is searching for additional burden-reducing
changes that may be applicable in the future.
From my own perspective, more could be done. There
appear to be some areas where we have su cient
information and experience to warrant additional action.
For example, we may want to consider the transaction
value threshold under which a property requires an
appraisal by a state-certi ed or licensed appraiser. The
current limit of $250,000 has been in place since 1994,
when it was increased from $100,000. In ation adjustment
alone suggests that the threshold in 2015 should be higher.
Based upon a sample of community bank examinations
recently performed in the St. Louis Fed's District, we
estimate the number of required appraisals would decline
signi cantly. Appraisals on properties in rural areas are
often of limited value, especially when the nearest
appraiser may be a signi cant distance away. In many rural
communities, bankers know local land values better than
anyone outside, and likely even inside, their market. This is
a reality of rural markets.
As another example, serious consideration should be given
to mandatory escrow requirements for taxes and insurance
premiums on mortgages that are held in a community
bank's portfolio. Recent amendments to Regulation Z were
helpful in that they provided a number of exemptions for
certain types of loans made in rural or underserved areas.
However, these exemptions do not go far enough. More

can likely be done to address escrow requirements for
community banks in locations that hold mortgages in
portfolio.
We have touched upon these and other issues in past
conferences, and I look forward to a healthy debate during
this year's conference.
I want to express my appreciation to our conference cosponsors and to all of the researchers, community bankers
and regulators who make this conference possible. This
conference has gained a lot of momentum in the three
years since it rst launched, and I expect that to continue.
Before we move on to the research portion of our program,
however, it is my great pleasure to introduce Federal
Reserve Chair Janet Yellen.
Janet Yellen became chair of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System on Feb. 3, 2014. She is the rst
woman to hold this position in the history of the Fed. She is
an outstanding research economist with a long and
in uential research record, much of which was established
during her time as a professor at the University of
California at Berkeley, one of the premier economics
departments in the world. Prior to her appointment as
chair, she provided stellar public service as a member of
the Board of Governors, the vice chair of the Board of
Governors, chair of the Council of Economic Advisers, chair
of the Economic Policy Committee of the Organization for
Economic Cooperation and Development, and as president
and chief executive o cer of the Federal Reserve Bank of
San Francisco. She is a member of both the Council on
Foreign Relations and the American Academy of Arts and
Sciences.
Please join me in welcoming my esteemed colleague and
chair of the Federal Reserve, Janet Yellen.

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