Texas federal judge blocks updated fair lending rules
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[April 01, 2024]
By Nate Raymond
(Reuters) - A federal judge in Texas on Friday blocked enforcement of
new regulations adopted during the Biden administration that sought to
overhaul how lenders extend loans and other services to low- and
moderate-income Americans.
U.S. District Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk in Amarillo, Texas, sided with
banking and business groups including the American Bankers Association
and U.S. Chamber of Commerce in finding the new rules ran afoul of the
Community Reinvestment Act of 1977.
The judge, an appointee of Republican former President Donald Trump,
issued a preliminary injunction blocking their enforcement before they
could take effect Monday. The agencies and trade groups did not respond
to requests for comment.
The Federal Reserve, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and Office of
the Comptroller of the Currency last year updated their rules enforcing
the 1977 fair lending law, which seeks to ensure banks lend in their
local communities.
Conceived to prevent red lining - a discriminatory practice where banks
refuse or offer only limited lending to certain areas or populations,
primarily minorities - CRA regulations gauge how well banks service
areas where they operate.
The new rules broadened the geographies in which lenders were be
required to extend loans and other services to low-income Americans, a
change regulators said was needed to reflect the rise of online banking
and the decline of bank branches.
But Kacsmaryk agreed with the business and banking groups who had sued
in February in finding the new regulations went beyond what the 1977 law
authorized.
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He said the rules went too far by allowing banks be assessed not
just in the geographic areas they maintain physical branches but
also in other areas in which they conduct retail lending and by
allowing the regulators to assess the availability of a bank’s
deposit products, not just credit, in a community.
Kacsmaryk said the agencies never before claimed authority to assess
banks wherever they conducted retail lending. "On the contrary, they
have — since 1978 — limited themselves to areas surrounding
deposit-taking facilities," he said.
Kacsmaryk is the lone active judge in Amarillo, helping make his
courthouse a favored venue for conservative litigants challenging
federal government policies during President Joe Biden's
administration.
He gained national attention last year when he suspended approval of
the abortion pill mifepristone. The U.S. Supreme Court has allowed
the pill to remain on the market while it considers the case, which
it heard arguments in on Tuesday.
The U.S. Judicial Conference, the judiciary's policymaking body,
earlier this month adopted a discretionary policy that aims to
ensure cases challenging laws are randomly assigned judges and
cannot be "judge shopped" by litigants to sympathetic jurists in
single-judge courts.
(Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; Editing by Kim Coghill)
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