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Northwestern Financial Review, Aug 1-Aug 14, 2004
Agency shuffle in Illinois
The Illinois Office of Banks and Real Estate was consolidated July 1 along with four other state units into the new Department of Financial and Professional Regulation, under the direction of Secretary Fernando Grille.
Scott Clarke, assistant commissioner in what is now the Division of Banks and Real Estate, said the move will not change the way banks interact with the state regulator. "The change is purely administrative," Clarke said. "Banks and trust companies should not see any difference. They will continue to receive the same quality of regulation."
D. Lorenzo Padron, who was commissioner of the Office of Banks and Real Estate, is now the acting director of the division, pending legislative approval.
By streamlining administrative and operational functions, the state expects to save $14 million annually. Other merged entities are the Department of Financial Institutions, Department of Insurance, Department of Professional Regulation and the administration of the state's comprehensive health insurance plan.
When it was a stand-alone agency, the Office of Banks and Real Estate had 280 employees. Clarke said none of the 150 employees with direct supervisory responsibilities will be affected by the consolidation.
Across the five combined units, the state already has announced it hopes to reduce staffing by 121 positions; 60 positions currently are open and will not be filled, leaving 61 to be eliminated through other means which have yet to be determined.
Wisconsin bank changes name
Wisconsin Business Bank, Sheboygan, recently changed its name to Heartland Business Bank. The name change follows the five-year-old bank's recent expansion into Minnesota where it opened a loan production office. The bank also operates two full-service offices in Wisconsin and said it has expansion plans for the Northeast.
"As we undertook this very important step for our organization, it was critical that our new name not only represent the expanding scope of our business, but also reflect our primary focus - that is, to partner with our business clients," said Kevin Tenpas, president.
The name change became effective July 1. Ownership structure of Heartland Business Bank remains unchanged; the bank is a branch of Wisconsin Community Bank, Madison. Wisconsin Community Bank is held by the $2.4 billion Heartland Financial USA based in Dubuque, Iowa.
Bankers testify before Senate committee on regulatory overkill
Senate Banking Committee members got an earful from bankers tired of increasing regulatory burden. Dale Leighty, chairman of the Independent Community Bankers of America, and Mark Macomber, who serves on the board of America's Community Bankers, told the committee that banks would be better able to serve their customers if the weight of regulation was lighter.
"We have had to devote so much of our resources to compliance that our ability to attract capital and support the credit needs of our customers is diminished," said Leighty, president and chairman of First National Bank of Las Animas, Colo.
Macomber urged the committee to consider increasing the limit for banks to qualify for the small bank CRA examination to $1 billion from its current $250 million. He cited a Congressional Research Service report that estimates the streamlined CRA saves a bank 40 percent in compliance costs.
Flood insurance gets reform
On June 30, President Bush signed the Bunning-Bereuter-Blumenauer Flood Insurance Reform Act of 2004; the measure became effective immediately and will remain in force for five years.
Reforms in the law address the problem of repetitive loss properties through flood mitigation while also authorizing a pilot program that will require people to either accept mitigation assistance or face significantly higher premiums. Owners who refuse assistance will no longer be eligible for subsidized flood insurance. The bill, co-sponsored by Rep. Doug Bereuter (R-Neb.), includes a provision designed to protect lenders by requiring notification when mitigation assistance is offered or refused.
The National Flood Insurance Program is administered by the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
Wells Fargo makes volunteer service awards
Wells Fargo doled out its yearly Volunteer Service Awards recently with $29,000 in contributions distributed to nonprofit organizations in Minnesota. The bulk of the awards were in the amount of $1,000 and Minnesota agencies to receive money include: Orphan Advocates International, Camp New Hope, China Outreach Ministries, Congdon Park Foundation, Make-a-Wish Foundation, Second Harvest Heartland, Minnesota National Guard Youth Camp, and the Center for Youth of African Descent.
Elaine Morrow, a database analyst for Wells Fargo who lives in Delano, Minn., nabbed one of only five $10,000 awards the bank distributes; her award goes to The Ninety-Nines, an organization for women pilots Morrow has been active with for 18 years. Morrow, a licensed pilot, flies blood and supplies for the American Red Cross among other things.
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