{"database": "lobbying", "table": "lobbying_activities", "rows": [[2677069, "932db911-17d6-47ff-9e70-164177d8624f", "Q3", "COMMUNITY BANKERS ASSOCIATION OF ILLINOIS", 400531588, "COMMUNITY BANKERS ASSOCIATION OF ILLINOIS", 2021, "third_quarter", "ECN", "CBAI 2021 Federal Policy Priorities -\n\nCommunity Bank Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic\n\nCOVID-19 has focused community bank efforts on helping their individual and small business customers and their communities weather the virus crisis and assist in the recovery effort. This was a commitment above and beyond what was normally expected, but one which community bankers were happy to fulfill. Community banks stepped-up during the crisis despite the many challenges and frustrations they encountered. They should be commended for what they are doing, treated fairly and equally, encouraged to do more, and not penalized for successfully performing their essential function.\n\nThe Independent Community Bankers of Americas Legislative and Regulatory Agenda Contained in their Community Focus 2020: The Community Bank Agenda for Expanding Economic Opportunity\n\nCBAI joins the Independent Community Bankers of America (ICBA) in supporting 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 support the nations economic growth and development in every corner of the country.\n\nAdditional Meaningful Regulatory Relief for Community Banks\n\nCommunity bankers seek additional regulatory relief including on several fronts (i.e., BSA reform, CTRs, and SARs) to permit them to better serve their customers and communities while proudly fulfilling their reasonable responsibility to identify and report illicit actors. \n\nThe Community Bank Position on Credit Unions and Their Expanded Powers\n\nCredit unions have long-since strayed from their founding purpose of serving individuals of modest means and with a common bond. They blatantly abuse their competitive advantages and are virtually indistinguishable from tax-paying community banks. Credit union acquisitions of community banks is a recent and disturbing trend that negatively impacts all taxpayers. This escalation of credit unions abusing of their tax-exemption should prompt Congress to Wake Up and act - NOW. This abuse is an existential threat to community banks and the communities they serve.\n\nThe Community Bank Position on the Farm Credit System and its Expanded Powers\n\nThe Farm Credit System (FCS) has long-since strayed from its founding purposes, blatantly abusing its competitive advantages against community banks. The FCS is the only GSE that competes directly with community banks. This blatant and continuing discrimination against community banks must end and FCS competitive advantages must be reined-in, and the playing field leveled for community banks.\n\nThe Federal Reserves Role in Payments System Improvement\n\nA fast and secure payments system is the very foundation of financial services and economy and must be modernized. The payments system must not be monopolized by The Clearing House and its 25 large bank owners that endangered our financial system and the entire economy during the financial crisis. Community banks, small businesses and consumers must rely on the Federal Reserve to provide access to a safe and secure payments system. The Federal Reserve must be supported in its development of the FedNow Service to ensure that all participants have access to a real-time system on a fair and impartial basis. \n\nModernizing the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA)\n\nThe 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 every financial institutions performance in serving their communities. A modernization of the CRA that does not encompass credit unions, Farm Credit System lenders and Fintechs (including the OCCs Special Purpose National Banks) will be a sham. All the banking regulators must agree on joint final rule to modernize the CRA.\n\nAgriculture and Rural America\n\nA vibrant rural economy is vital to Americas prosperity. The multi-year Farm Bill provided a strong safety net for farmers and ranchers including adequate price-protection programs and enhanced USDA-guaranteed farm and business loan programs. These programs must be protected from cuts or any adverse changes that would discourage farmer and rancher participation or undermine private-sector delivery. \n\nFinally Address the Risks of Too-Big-To-Fail Banks and Financial Firms to Protect Our Financial System, the Economy, and American Taxpayers from Future Bailouts\n\nThe financial crisis, taxpayer bailouts, and subsequent recession was caused by the misconduct of the nations largest banks and financial firms. 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.\n\n(House and Senate)\n\n\nLegislation and Regulation -\n\nProposal in legislation known as the American Family Plan to increase various taxes including - corporate tax rate, individual tax rates, taxation of capital gains, deductions under the Tax Code Section 199A for shareholders of Subchapter S community banks and other pass through small businesses, a 3.8% net investment income tax on the income of Subchapter S shareholders, taxation at death or the removal of step-up basis, limitations on Section 1031 exchanges, and new requirements that banks transfer additional customer financial data to the IRS (House and Senate)\n\n\n\nLetters -\n\nNone\n\n\nAction Alerts -\n\nAction Alert regarding proposal in legislation known as the American Family Plan to increase various taxes including - corporate tax rate, individual tax rates, taxation of capital gains, deductions under the Tax Code Section 199A for shareholders of Subchapter S community banks and other pass through small businesses, a 3.8% net investment income tax on the income of Subchapter S shareholders, taxation at death or the removal of step-up basis, limitations on Section 1031 exchanges, and new requirements that banks transfer additional customer financial data to the IRS (House and Senate)\n\n\nMiscellaneous -\n\nBanking trade associations meeting with the Acting Comptroller of the OCC discussing topics including - the OCCs review of overdraft policies and practices, modernization of the CRA, novel (i.e., fintech) charters and banking powers, regulatory priorities-CECL versus faster payments, the proposed new plan for banks to collect and report customer accounts information (account flows) to the IRS (OCC)", "Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC),Federal Reserve System,HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES,Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC),SENATE", null, 60000, 0, 0, "2021-10-07T14:44:06.507000-04:00"]], "columns": ["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"], "primary_keys": ["id"], "primary_key_values": ["2677069"], "units": {}, "query_ms": 0.35654695238918066, "source": "Federal Register API & Regulations.gov API", "source_url": "https://www.federalregister.gov/developers/api/v1", "license": "Public Domain (U.S. Government data)", "license_url": "https://www.regulations.gov/faq"}