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lobbying_activities: 2426980

Individual lobbying activities reported in quarterly filings. Each row is one issue area for one client — includes the specific issues lobbied on, government entities contacted, and income/expense amounts.

Data license: Public Domain (U.S. Government data) · Data source: Federal Register API & Regulations.gov API

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id filing_uuid filing_type registrant_name registrant_id client_name filing_year filing_period issue_code specific_issues government_entities income_amount expense_amount is_no_activity is_termination received_date
2426980 f864b746-7eaa-4fb2-b67c-3302a03c02d3 Q1 COMMUNITY BANKERS ASSOCIATION OF ILLINOIS 400531588 COMMUNITY BANKERS ASSOCIATION OF ILLINOIS 2020 first_quarter SMB CBAI Federal Policy Priorities - 2019 The Community Bankers Association of Illinois (CBAI) supports fair competition for financial services, tiered regulation, the separation of banking and commerce, the dual banking system/charter choice, and financial innovation; and opposes discrimination favoring certain financial service providers, banking industry consolidation and systemic risk. The Independent Community Bankers of Americas legislative and regulatory agenda contained in their Community Focus 2020: The Community Bank Agenda for Expanding Economic Opportunity proposes a more efficient system of regulation, unbiased laws governing the financial sector, a safer and more secure business environment, and more efficient agricultural policies to extend the nations economic growth to every corner of the country. The swift implementation of the remaining regulatory relief provisions for community banks - consistent with Congressional intent - contained the Economic Growth, Regulatory Relief and Consumer Protection Act (S. 2155) which became law in May of 2018. The passage of additional meaningful regulatory relief for community banks including modernizing the Bank Secrecy Act (BSA)/Currency Transaction Report (CTR) threshold/Suspicious Activity Report (SAR) threshold. Also, data for the new beneficial ownership reporting requirements should be collected and verified by the appropriate federal/state government agencies when a legal entity is formed or when subsequent changes occur. Credit unions and Farm Credit System (FCS) lenders have long-since strayed from their founding purposes, blatantly abusing their competitive advantages. This blatant and continuing discrimination against community banks must end. Either the credit union and FCS competitive advantages must be reined-in or there must be tax credits or deductions for community banks lending to small businesses, farmers and ranchers, homebuyers, and low- and middle-income individuals. These changes in the tax code would help sustain and strengthen community bank lending and would begin to offset the competitive advantage enjoyed by tax-exempt credit unions and FCS lenders. The United States payments system (System), which is the very foundation of our financial services and economy, must be modernized to meet the demands of consumers and to keep pace with the rest of the world. System improvements must not be dominated by the largest banks and financial firms or private-sector non-banks. Community banks, small businesses and consumers must rely on the Federal Reserve to provide access to a safe and secure payments system which requires the Federal Reserve to continue to play a preeminent role in the Systems improvement. The Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) needs to be updated to incorporate new financial products and services delivered in modern ways. Community banks have traditionally excelled in the performance of their CRA compliance and examinations. The modernization of the CRA must enhance the ability of community banks to serve their communities and must not impose any additional regulatory burden. All financial service providers must be subject to the CRA to provide a complete picture of financial institutions performance in serving their communities - including credit unions, Farm Credit System lenders and Fintechs (including the OCCs Special Purpose National Banks). Community banks are strong guardians of the security and confidentiality of their customers information and are on the frontline of defending against cyber security threats. Core data security principals in legislation and regulations must include the complete cost of data breaches being borne by that party that caused the breach; all participants in the payment system should be subject to verifiable Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act-like data security standards; a national data security breach and notification standard should replace the current patchwork of state laws; and any new data security standard proposals should ensure that community banks are not burdened with having to reassess existing critical systems, and implement and comply with new regulations, only to achieve the same superior results they currently attain. There is an emerging threat to the security of consumer data from the proliferation of companies seeking to access bank customer account information (i.e., customer data sharing). The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) is responsible under the Dodd-Frank Act to promulgate this rule. While community banks support responsible innovation in financial products and services, the integrity of consumer data and privacy is only as strong as the weakest link. Community banks are financially sound and take great care in protecting consumer privacy, but non-bank entities are typically not well capitalized, have no significant assets and are financially unable to make restitution in the event of a loss. They must none-the-less be held responsible for ensuring the safety of the customer information they are accessing and be able to satisfy the liability for any financial harm which they cause community banks and their consumers. While community banks represent less than 20% of banking industry assets, they make 60% of the small business loans and 80% of agricultural loans. The requirement for reporting small business data collection stems from Section 1071 of the Dodd-Frank Act and is meant to facilitate the enforcement of fair lending laws in small business lending. The data, however, clearly suggests fair lending is not a problem at community banks as they treat their customers honestly and fairly. The regulatory burden of the collection and reporting requirements fall disproportionately hard on community banks that lack scale and compliance resources, and Section 1071 should either be repealed or community banks should be provided with a meaningful exception. The recent financial crisis, taxpayer bail-outs and subsequent recession was caused by the misconduct of the nations largest banks and financial firms (Too-Big-To-Fail Banks and Financial Firms). The Dodd-Frank Act was intended to reign-in their destructive behavior. Unfortunately, this was an inadequate legislative and regulatory response which has allowed these financial behemoths to grow in size, complexity and influence; they will continue to abuse their consumers; and they remain a significant threat to our financial system and economy. These megabanks have proven, at great cost to American taxpayers, that they cannot be effectively managed, supervised or disciplined. They are clearly too-big-to-change, too-big-to-fail and must be downsized. (House, Senate, OCC) Legislation - SAFE Banking Act (H.R. 1595 and S. 1200) (All Sections), cannabis banking safe harbor (House, Senate, OCC) Enhances Credit Opportunities in Rural America (ECORA) (H.R. 1872 and S.1641) (All Sections), interest earned on agricultural real estate and rural single family home loans would not be taxable (House, Senate, OCC) Corporate Transparency Act of 2019 and Coordinating Oversight/Illicit Cash Act (H.R. 2513&14 and S. 2563) (All Sections), which amends the Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) to require beneficial ownership information to be collected by the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) (House, Senate, OCC) Preserving Small Business Lending Act of 2020 (H.R. 5574) (All Sections), regarding Section 1071 of the Dodd-Frank Act about small business data collection (House, Senate, OCC) Letters - Comment Letter to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) regarding Permissible Interest on Loans that are Sold, Assigned, or Otherwise Transferred; Docket ID OCC-2019-0027 and RIN 1557-AE73 (OCC) Action Alerts - Action Alert regarding tax-exempt credit unions purchasing taxpaying community banks and Congressional oversight of credit unions (House, Senate) Miscellaneous - Modernization of the CRA, OCC Comment Letter - Reforming the CRA Regulatory Framework, Docket ID OCC-2018-0008 and RIN 1557-AE34 (House) Modernization of the CRA (OCC) Tax-exempt credit unions purchasing taxpaying community banks (House and Senate, OCC) Rural America and Farm Credit System lenders (House, Senate, OCC) Community bank response to Coronavirus (House, Senate) Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB),Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC),HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES,Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC),SENATE   60000 0 0 2020-04-15T16:31:55.247000-04:00
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