As provided in paragraph (a) of this section, a bank
may receive consideration for a loan, investment, or service that
supports community development as described in paragraphs (b) through
(l) of this section.
(a) Full and partial credit
for community development loans, community development investments,
and community development services.
(1) Full credit. A bank will receive credit for its entire loan, investment, or service
if it meets the majority standard in paragraph (a)(1)(i) of this section;
meets the bona fide intent standard in paragraph (a)(1)(ii) of this
section; involves an MDI, WDI, LICU, or CDFI as provided in paragraph
(a)(1)(iii) of this section; or involves a LIHTC as provided in paragraph
(a)(1)(iv) of this section.
(i) Majority standard. A loan,
investment, or service meets the majority standard if:
(A) The loan,
investment, or service supports community development under one or
more of paragraphs (b) through (l) of this section; and
(B) (1) For loans, investments,
or services supporting community development under paragraphs (b)(1)
through (3) of this section, the majority of the housing units are
affordable to low- or moderate-income individuals, families, or households;
(2) For loans, investments, or services supporting community development
under paragraphs (b)(4) and (5) and (d) of this section, the majority
of the beneficiaries are, or the majority of dollars benefit or serve,
low- or moderate-income individuals, families, or households;
(3) For loans, investments,
or services supporting community development under paragraph (c) of
this section, the majority of the beneficiaries are, or the majority
of dollars benefit or serve, small businesses or small farms;
(4) For loans, investments,
or services supporting community development under paragraphs (e),
(f), (g), and (i) of this section, the majority of the beneficiaries
are, or the majority of dollars benefit or serve, residents of targeted
census tracts;
(5) For loans, investments, or services supporting community development
under paragraph (h) of this section, the majority of the beneficiaries
are, or the majority of dollars benefit or serve, residents of designated
disaster areas;
(6) For loans, investments, or services supporting community development
under paragraph (j) of this section, the majority of the beneficiaries
are, or the majority of dollars benefit or serve, residents of Native
land areas; or
(7) For loans, investments, or services supporting community development
under paragraph (l) of this section, the loan, investment,
or service primarily supports community development under paragraph
(l) of this section.
(ii) Bona fide intent
standard. A loan, investment, or service meets the bona fide intent
standard if:
(A) The housing units, beneficiaries, or proportion
of dollars necessary to meet the majority standard are not reasonably
quantifiable pursuant to paragraph (a)(1)(i) of this section;
(B) The loan, investment, or
service has the express, bona fide intent of community development
under one or more of paragraphs (b) through (l) of this section;
and
(C) The loan, investment,
or service is specifically structured to achieve community development
under one or more of paragraphs (b) through (l) of this section.
(iii) MDI, WDI, LICU, or CDFI. The loan, investment, or service supports
community development under paragraph (k) of this section.
(iv) LIHTC. The loan,
investment, or service supports LIHTC-financed affordable housing
under paragraph (b)(1) of this section.
(2) Partial credit. If a loan, investment, or service supporting affordable housing
under paragraph (b)(1) of this section does not meet the majority
standard under paragraph (a)(1)(i) of this section, a bank will receive
partial credit for the loan, investment, or service in proportion
to the percentage of total housing units in any development that are
affordable to low- or moderate-income individuals.
(b) Affordable housing. Affordable housing comprises the following:
(1) Rental housing
in conjunction with a government affordable housing plan, program,
initiative, tax credit, or subsidy. Rental housing for low- or
moderate-income individuals purchased, developed, financed, rehabilitated,
improved, or preserved in conjunction with a federal, state, local,
or tribal government affordable housing plan, program, initiative,
tax credit, or subsidy.
(2) Multifamily rental housing with affordable
rents. Multifamily rental housing purchased, developed, financed,
rehabilitated, improved, or preserved if:
(i) For the majority
of units, the monthly rent as underwritten by the bank, reflecting
post-construction or post-renovation changes as applicable, does not
exceed 30 percent of 80 percent of the area median income; and
(ii) One or more of
the following additional criteria are met:
(A) The housing is located
in a low- or moderate-income census tract;
(B) The housing is located in a census tract
in which the median income of renters is low- or moderate-income and
the median rent does not exceed 30 percent of 80 percent of the area
median income;
(C) The
housing is purchased, developed, financed, rehabilitated, improved,
or preserved by any nonprofit organization with a stated mission of,
or that otherwise directly supports, providing affordable housing;
or
(D) The bank provides
documentation that a majority of the housing units are occupied by
low- or moderate-income individuals, families, or households.
(3) One-to-four
family rental housing with affordable rents in a nonmetropolitan area. One-to-four family rental housing purchased, developed, financed,
rehabilitated, improved, or preserved in a nonmetropolitan area that
meets the criteria in paragraph (b)(2) of this section.
(4) Affordable owner-occupied housing for low- or moderate-income individuals. Assistance for low- or moderate-income individuals to obtain, maintain,
rehabilitate, or improve affordable owner-occupied housing, excluding
loans by a bank directly to one or more owner-occupants of such housing.
(5) Mortgage-backed securities. Purchases of
mortgage-backed securities where a majority of the underlying loans
are not loans that the bank originated or purchased and:
(i) Are home
mortgage loans made to low- or moderate-income individuals; or
(ii) Are loans that
finance multifamily affordable housing that meets the requirements
of paragraph (b)(1) of this section.
(c) Economic development. Economic development comprises:
(1) Government-related
support for small businesses and small farms. Loans, investments,
and services undertaken in conjunction or in syndication with federal,
state, local, or tribal government plans, programs, or initiatives
that support small businesses or small farms, as follows:
(i) Loans,
investments, and services other than direct loans to small businesses
and small farms. Loans, investments, and services that support
small businesses or small farms in accordance with how small businesses
and small farms are defined in the applicable plan, program, or initiative,
but excluding loans by a bank directly to small businesses or small
farms (either as defined in a government plan, program, or initiative
or in section 228.12). If the government plan, program, or initiative
does not identify a standard for the size of the small businesses
or small farms supported by the plan, program, or initiative, the
small businesses or small farms supported must meet the definition
of small business or small farm in section 228.12. Loans to, investments
in, or services provided to the following are presumed to meet the
criteria of this paragraph (c)(1)(i):
(A) Small Business Investment
Company (13 CFR part 107);
(B) New Markets Venture Capital Company (13 CFR part 108);
(C) Qualified Community Development
Entity (26 U.S.C. 45D(c)); or
(D) U.S. Department of Agriculture Rural Business Investment Company
(7 CFR 4290.50).
(ii) Direct loans to small businesses
and small farms. Loans by a bank directly to businesses or farms,
including, but not limited to, loans in conjunction or syndicated
with a U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) Certified Development
Company (13 CFR 120.10) or Small Business Investment Company (13 CFR
part 107), that meet the following size and purpose criteria:
(A) Size eligibility
standard. Loans that may be considered under paragraph (c)(1)(ii)
of this section must be to businesses and farms that meet the size
eligibility standards of the U.S. Small Business Administration Development
Company (13 CFR 121.301) or Small Business Investment Company (13
CFR 121.301 and 121.201) programs or that meet the definition of small
business or small farm in section 228.12.
(B) Purpose test. Loans that may be
considered under paragraph (c)(1)(ii) of this section must have the
purpose of promoting permanent job creation or retention for low-
or moderate-income individuals or in low- or moderate-income census
tracts.
(2) Intermediary
support for small businesses and small farms. Loans, investments,
or services provided to intermediaries that lend to, invest in, or
provide assistance, such as financial counseling, shared space, technology,
or administrative assistance, to small businesses or small farms.
(3) Other support for small businesses and small
farms. Assistance, such as financial counseling, shared space,
technology, or administrative assistance, to small businesses or small
farms.
(d) Community supportive
services. Community supportive services are activities that assist,
benefit, or contribute to the health, stability, or well-being of
low- or moderate-income individuals, such as childcare, education,
workforce development and job training programs, health services programs,
and housing services programs. Community supportive services include,
but are not limited to, activities that
(1) Are conducted with a mission-driven
nonprofit organization;
(2) Are conducted with a nonprofit organization located in and serving
low- or moderate-income census tracts;
(3) Are conducted in a low- or moderate-income
census tract and targeted to the residents of the census tract;
(4) Are offered to individuals
at a workplace where the majority of employees are low- or moderate-income,
based on U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data for the average wage
for workers in that particular occupation or industry;
(5) Are provided to students
or their families through a school at which the majority of students
qualify for free or reduced-price meals under the U.S. Department
of Agriculture’s National School Lunch Program;
(6) Primarily benefit or serve individuals
who receive or are eligible to receive Medicaid;
(7) Primarily benefit or serve individuals
who receive or are eligible to receive Federal Supplemental Security
Income, Social Security Disability Insurance, or support through other
federal disability assistance programs; or
(8) Primarily benefit or serve recipients
of government assistance plans, programs, or initiatives that have
income qualifications equivalent to, or stricter than, the definitions
of low- and moderate-income as defined in this part. Examples include,
but are not limited to, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s
section 8, 202, 515, and 811 programs or the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s
section 514, 516, and Supplemental Nutrition Assistance programs.
(e) Revitalization or stabilization.
(1) In general. Revitalization or stabilization comprises activities that support
revitalization or stabilization of targeted census tracts, including
adaptive reuse of vacant or blighted buildings, brownfield redevelopment,
support of a plan for a business improvement district or main street
program, or any other activity that supports revitalization or stabilization,
and that:
(i) Are undertaken in conjunction with
a plan, program, or initiative of a federal, state, local, or tribal
government or a mission-driven nonprofit organization, where the plan,
program, or initiative includes a focus on revitalizing or stabilizing
targeted census tracts;
(ii) Benefit or serve residents, including low- or moderate-income
individuals, of targeted census tracts; and
(iii) Do not directly result in the
forced or involuntary relocation of low- or moderate-income individuals
in targeted census tracts.
(2) Mixed-use
revitalization or stabilization project. Projects to revitalize
or stabilize a targeted census tract that include both commercial
and residential components qualify as revitalization or stabilization
activities under this paragraph (e)(2), if:
(i) The criteria in
paragraph (e)(1) of this section are met; and
(ii) More than 50 percent of the project
is non-residential as measured by the percentage of total square footage
or dollar amount of the project.
(f) Essential community
facilities. Essential community facilities are public facilities
that provide essential services generally accessible by a local community,
including, but not limited to, schools, libraries, childcare facilities,
parks, hospitals, healthcare facilities, and community centers that
benefit or serve targeted census tracts, and that:
(1) Are undertaken in conjunction with
a plan, program, or initiative of a federal, state, local, or tribal
government or a mission-driven nonprofit organization, where the plan,
program, or initiative includes a focus on benefitting or serving
targeted census tracts;
(2) Benefit or serve residents, including low- or moderate-income
individuals, of targeted census tracts; and
(3) Do not directly result in the forced
or involuntary relocation of low- or moderate-income individuals in
targeted census tracts.
(g) Essential community
infrastructure. Essential community infrastructure comprises
activities benefitting or serving targeted census tracts, including,
but not limited to, broadband, telecommunications, mass transit, water
supply and distribution, and sewage treatment and collection systems,
and that:
(1) Are undertaken in conjunction with
a plan, program, or initiative of a federal, state, local, or tribal
government or a mission-driven nonprofit organization, where the plan,
program, or initiative includes a focus on benefitting or serving
targeted census tracts;
(2) Benefit or serve residents, including low- or moderate-income
individuals, of targeted census tracts; and
(3) Do not directly result in the forced
or involuntary relocation of low- or moderate-income individuals in
targeted census tracts.
(h) Recovery of designated
disaster areas.
(1) In general. Activities that promote recovery of a designated disaster area are
those that revitalize or stabilize geographic areas subject to a Major
Disaster Declaration administered by the Federal Emergency Management
Agency (FEMA), and that:
(i) Are undertaken in conjunction with
a disaster plan, program, or initiative of a federal, state, local,
or tribal government or a mission-driven nonprofit organization, where
the plan, program, or initiative includes a focus on benefitting or
serving the designated disaster area;
(ii) Benefit or serve residents, including
low- or moderate-income individuals, of the designated disaster area;
and
(iii) Do not directly
result in the forced or involuntary relocation of low- or moderate-income
individuals in the designated disaster area.
(2) Eligibility limitations for loans, investments, or services supporting
recovery of a designated disaster area.
(i) Loans, investments,
or services that support recovery from a designated disaster in counties
designated to receive only FEMA Public Assistance Emergency Work Category
A (Debris Removal) and/or Category B (Emergency Protective Measures)
are not eligible for consideration under this paragraph (h)(2), unless
the Board, the FDIC, and the OCC announce a temporary exception.
(ii) The Board will
consider loans, investments, and services that support recovery from
a designated disaster under this paragraph (h)(2) for 36 months after
a Major Disaster Declaration, unless that time period is extended
by the Board, the FDIC, and the OCC.
(i) Disaster preparedness
and weather resiliency. Disaster preparedness and weather resiliency
activities assist individuals and communities to prepare for, adapt
to, and withstand natural disasters or weather-related risks or disasters.
Disaster preparedness and weather resiliency activities benefit or
serve targeted census tracts and:
(1) Are undertaken in conjunction with
a plan, program, or initiative of a federal, state, local, or tribal
government or a mission-driven nonprofit organization, where the plan,
program, or initiative includes a focus on benefitting or serving
targeted census tracts;
(2) Benefit or serve residents, including low- or moderate-income
individuals, in targeted census tracts; and
(3) Do not directly result in the forced
or involuntary relocation of low- or moderate-income individuals in
targeted census tracts.
(j) Revitalization or stabilization,
essential community facilities, essential community infrastructure,
and disaster preparedness and weather resiliency in Native land areas.
(1) Revitalization or stabilization, essential
community facilities, essential community infrastructure, and disaster
preparedness and weather resiliency activities in Native land areas
are activities specifically targeted to and conducted in Native land
areas.
(2) Revitalization
or stabilization activities in Native land areas are defined consistent
with paragraph (e) of this section, but specifically:
(i) Are
undertaken in conjunction with a plan, program, or initiative of a
federal, state, local, or tribal government or a mission-driven nonprofit
organization, where the plan, program, or initiative includes an explicit
focus on revitalizing or stabilizing Native land areas and a particular
focus on low- or moderate-income households;
(ii) Benefit or serve residents in Native
land areas, with substantial benefits for low- or moderate-income
individuals in Native land areas; and
(iii) Do not directly result in the
forced or involuntary relocation of low- or moderate-income individuals
in Native land areas.
(3) Essential community facilities, essential
community infrastructure, and disaster preparedness and weather resiliency
activities in Native land areas are defined consistent with paragraphs
(f), (g), and (i) of this section, respectively, but specifically:
(i) Are undertaken in conjunction with a plan, program, or initiative
of a federal, state, local, or tribal government or a mission-driven
nonprofit organization, where the plan, program, or initiative includes
an explicit focus on benefitting or serving Native land areas;
(ii) Benefit or serve
residents, including low- or moderate-income individuals, in Native
land areas; and
(iii)
Do not directly result in the forced or involuntary relocation of
low- or moderate-income individuals in Native land areas.
(k) Activities with MDIs,
WDIs, LICUs, or CDFIs. Activities with MDIs, WDIs, LICUs, or
CDFIs are loans, investments, or services undertaken by any bank,
including by an MDI, WDI, or CDFI bank evaluated under this part or
12 CFR part 25 or 345, in cooperation with an MDI, WDI, LICU, or CDFI.
Such activities do not include investments by an MDI, WDI, or CDFI
bank in itself.
(l) Financial literacy. Activities that promote financial literacy are those that assist
individuals, families, and households, including low- or moderate-income
individuals, families, and households, to make informed financial
decisions regarding managing income, savings, credit, and expenses,
including with respect to homeownership.