.12(g)—1: Are community
development activities limited to those that promote economic development?
A1. No. Although the definition of “community
development” includes activities that promote economic development
by financing small businesses or farms, the rule does not limit community
development loans and services and qualified investments to those
activities. Community development also includes community- or tribal-based
child care, educational, health, social services, or workforce development
or job training programs targeted to low- or moderate-income persons,
affordable housing for low- or moderate-income individuals, and activities
that revitalize or stabilize low- or moderate-income areas, designated
disaster areas, or underserved or distressed nonmetropolitan middle-income
geographies.
6-1269.1
.12(g)—2: Must a community development activity
occur inside a low- or moderate-income area, designated disaster area,
or underserved or distressed nonmetropolitan middle-income area in
order for an institution to receive CRA consideration for the activity?
A2. No. Community development includes activities,
regardless of their location, that provide affordable housing for,
or community services targeted to, low- or moderate-income individuals
and activities that promote economic development by financing small
businesses and farms. Activities that stabilize or revitalize particular
low- or moderate-income areas, designated disaster areas, or underserved
or distressed nonmetropolitan middle-income areas (including by creating,
retaining, or improving jobs for low- or moderate-income persons)
also qualify as community development, even if the activities are
not located in these areas. One example is financing a supermarket
that serves as an anchor store in a small strip mall located at the
edge of a middle-income area, if the mall stabilizes the adjacent
low-income community by providing needed shopping services that are
not otherwise available in the low-income community.
6-1269.2
.12(g)—3: Does the regulation provide flexibility in considering
performance in high-cost areas?
A3. Yes, the
flexibility of the performance standards allows examiners to account in their
evaluations for conditions in high-cost areas. Examiners consider
lending and services to individuals and geographies of all income
levels and businesses of all sizes and revenues. In addition, the
flexibility in the requirement that community development loans, community
development services, and qualified investments have as their “primary”
purpose community development allows examiners to account for conditions
in high-cost areas. For example, examiners could take into account
the fact that activities address a credit shortage among middle-income
people or areas caused by the disproportionately high cost of building,
maintaining or acquiring a house when determining whether an institution’s
loan to or investment in an organization that funds affordable housing
for middle-income people or areas, as well as low- and moderate-income
people or areas, has as its primary purpose community development. See also Q&A section .12(h)-8 for more information on “primary
purpose.”
.12(g)—4: Can examples of community
development activities discussed in a particular Q&A also apply
to other types of community development activities not specifically
discussed in that Q&A if they have a similar community development
purpose?
A4. Yes. The Interagency Questions
and Answers Regarding Community Reinvestment (Questions and Answers)
provide examples of particular activities that may receive consideration
as community development activities. Because a particular Q&A
often describes a single type of community development activity, such
as a community development loan, the corresponding examples are of
community development loans. However, because community development
loans, qualified investments, and community development services all
must have a primary purpose of community development, a qualified
investment or community development service that supports a community
development purpose similar to the activity described in the context
of the community development loan would likely receive consideration
under the applicable test. The same would be true if the community
development activity described in a particular Q&A were a qualified
investment or community development service. For example, Q&A
section .12(h)-1 provides an example of a community development loan
to a not-for-profit organization supporting primarily low- or moderate-income
housing needs. Similarly, a grant to the same not-for-profit organization
would be considered a qualified investment or technical assistance,
such as writing a grant proposal for the not-for-profit organization,
would be considered as a community development service. Further if
a financial institution engaged in all of these activities, each would
be considered under the applicable test. See Q&A section
.23(b)-1.
Moreover, lists of examples included throughout the Questions
and Answers are not exhaustive. A Q&A may include examples to
demonstrate activities that may qualify under that Q&A, but the
examples are not the only activities that might qualify. Financial
institutions may submit information about activities they believe
meet the definition of community development loan, qualified investment,
or community development service to examiners for consideration.
6-1269.5
.12(g)(1) Affordable Housing
(Including Multifamily Rental Housing) for Low- or Moderate-Income
Individuals .12(g)(1)—1: When determining
whether a project is “affordable housing for low- or moderate-income
individuals,” thereby meeting the definition of “community development,”
will it be sufficient to use a formula that relates the cost of ownership,
rental, or borrowing to the income levels in the area as the only
factor, regardless of whether the users, likely users, or beneficiaries
of that affordable housing are low- or moderate-income individuals?
A1. The concept of “affordable housing” for low-
or moderate-income individuals does hinge on whether low- or moderate-income
individuals benefit, or are likely to benefit, from the housing. It
would be inappropriate to give consideration to a project that exclusively
or predominately houses families that are not low- or moderate-income
simply because the rents or housing prices are set according to a
particular formula.
For projects that do not yet have occupants, and for which
the income of the potential occupants cannot be determined in advance,
or in other projects where the income of occupants cannot be verified,
examiners will review factors such as demographic, economic, and market
data to determine the likelihood that the housing will “primarily”
accommodate low- or moderate-income individuals. For example, examiners
may look at median rents of the assessment area and the project; the
median home value of either the assessment area, low- or moderate-income
geographies or the project; the low- or moderate-income population
in the area of the project; or the past performance record of the
organization(s) undertaking the project. Further, such a project could
receive consideration if its express, bona fide intent, as
stated, for example, in a prospectus, loan proposal, or community
action plan, is community development.
6-1269.7
.12(g)(2) Community Services Targeted to Low- or Moderate-Income
Individuals .12(g)(2)—1: Community
development includes community services targeted to low- or moderate-income
individuals. What are examples of ways that an institution could determine
that community services are offered to low- or moderate-income individuals?
A1. Examples of ways in which an institution
could determine that community services are targeted to low- or moderate-income
persons include, but are not limited to:
- The community service is targeted to the clients of
a nonprofit organization that has a defined mission of serving low-
and moderate-income persons, or, because of government grants, for
example, is limited to offering services only to low- or moderate-income
persons.
- The community service is offered by a nonprofit organization
that is located in and serves a low- or moderate-income geography.
- The community service is conducted in a low- or moderate-income
area and targeted to the residents of the area.
- The community service is a clearly defined program
that benefits primarily low- or moderate-income persons, even if it
is provided by an entity that offers other programs that serve individuals
of all income levels.
- The community service is offered at a workplace to
workers who are low- and moderate-income, based on readily available
data for the average wage for workers in that particular occupation
or industry (see, e.g., http://www.bls.gov/bls/blswage.htm
(Bureau of Labor Statistics)).
- The community service is provided to students or their
families from 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.
- The community service is targeted to individuals who
receive or are eligible to receive Medicaid.
- The community service is provided to recipients of
government assistance programs that have income qualifications equivalent
to, or stricter than, the definitions of low- and moderate-income
as defined by the CRA Regulations. Examples include U.S. Department
of Housing and Urban Development’s section 8, 202, 515, and 811 programs
or U.S. Department of Agriculture’s section 514, 516, and Supplemental
Nutrition Assistance programs.
6-1270
.12(g)(3) Activities That Promote
Economic Development by Financing Businesses or Farms That Meet Certain
Size Eligibility Standards .12(g)(3)—1: “Community development” includes activities that promote economic
development by financing businesses or farms that meet certain size
eligibility standards. Are all activities that finance businesses and farms
that meet the size eligibility standards considered to be community
development?
A1. No. The concept of “community
development” under 12 CFR .12(g)(3) involves both a “size” test and
a “purpose” test that clarify what economic development activities
are considered under CRA. An institution’s loan, investment, or service
meets the “size” test if it finances, either directly, or through
an intermediary, businesses or farms that either meet the size eligibility
standards of the Small Business Administration’s Development Company
(SBDC) or Small Business Investment Company (SBIC) programs, or have
gross annual revenues of $1 million or less. For consideration under
the “size test,” the term financing is considered broadly and includes
technical assistance that readies a business that meets the size eligibility
standards to obtain financing. To meet the “purpose test,” the institution’s
loan, investment, or service must promote economic development. These
activities are considered to promote economic development if they
support
- permanent job creation, retention, and/or improvement
- for low- or moderate-income persons;
- in low- or moderate-income geographies;
- in areas targeted for redevelopment
by federal, state, local, or tribal governments;
- by financing intermediaries that lend
to, invest in, or provide technical assistance to start-ups or recently
formed small businesses or small farms; or
- through technical assistance or supportive
services for small businesses or farms, such as shared space, technology,
or administrative assistance; or
- federal, state, local, or tribal economic development
initiatives that include provisions for creating or improving access
by low- or moderate-income persons to jobs or to job training or workforce
development programs.
The agencies will presume that any loan or service to
or investment in a SBDC, SBIC, Rural Business Investment Company,
New Markets Venture Capital Company, New Markets Tax Credit-Eligible
Community Development Entity, or Community Development Financial Institution
that finances small businesses or small farms, promotes economic development.
(See also Q&As section .42(b)(2)-2, section .12(h)-2, and
section .12(h)-3 for more information about which loans may be considered
community development loans.)
Examiners will employ appropriate flexibility in reviewing
any information provided by a financial institution that reasonably
demonstrates that the purpose, mandate, or function of the activity
meets the “purpose test.” Examiners will also consider the qualitative
aspects of performance. For example, activities will be considered
more responsive to community needs if a majority of jobs created,
retained, and/or improved benefit low- or moderate-income individuals.
6-1270.1
.12(g)(4) Activities That Revitalize
or Stabilize Certain Geographies .12(g)(4)—1: Is the definition of “community development” applicable to all institutions?
A1. The definition of “community development”
is applicable to all institutions, regardless of a particular institution’s
size or the performance criteria under which it is evaluated.
6-1270.2
.12(g)(4)—2: Will activities that provide housing for middle-income
and upper-income persons qualify for favorable consideration as community
development activities when they help to revitalize or stabilize a
distressed or underserved nonmetropolitan middle-income geography
or designated disaster areas?
A2. An activity
that provides housing for middle- or upper-income individuals qualifies
as an activity that revitalizes or stabilizes a distressed nonmetropolitan
middle-income geography or a designated disaster area if the housing
directly helps to revitalize or stabilize the community by attracting
new, or retaining existing, businesses or residents and, in the case of a
designated disaster area, is related to disaster recovery. The agencies
generally will consider all activities that revitalize or stabilize
a distressed nonmetropolitan middle-income geography or designated
disaster area, but will give greater weight to those activities that
are most responsive to community needs, including needs of low- or
moderate-income individuals or neighborhoods. Thus, for example, a
loan solely to develop middle- or upper-income housing in a community
in need of low- and moderate-income housing would be given very little
weight if there is only a short-term benefit to low- and moderate-income
individuals in the community through the creation of temporary construction
jobs. (Except in connection with intermediate small institutions,
a housing-related loan is not evaluated as a “community development
loan” if it has been reported or collected by the institution or its
affiliate as a home mortgage loan, unless it is a multifamily dwelling
loan. See 12 CFR .12(h)(2)(i) and Q&As sections .12(h)-2
and .12(h)-3.) An activity will be presumed to revitalize or stabilize
such a geography or area if the activity is consistent with a bona
fide government revitalization or stabilization plan or disaster
recovery plan. See Q&As section .12(g)(4)(i)-1 and section
.12(h)-5.
In underserved nonmetropolitan middle-income geographies,
activities that provide housing for middle- and upper-income individuals
may qualify as activities that revitalize or stabilize such underserved areas if the activities also provide housing for low- or moderate-income
individuals. For example, a loan to build a mixed-income housing development
that provides housing for middle- and upper-income individuals in
an underserved nonmetropolitan middle-income geography would
receive positive consideration if it also provides housing for low-
or moderate-income individuals.
6-1270.3
.12(g)(4)(i) Activities that revitalize
or stabilize low- or moderate-income geographies .12(g)(4)(i)—1: What activities are considered to
“revitalize or stabilize” a low- or moderate-income geography, and
how are those activities considered?
A1. Activities
that revitalize or stabilize a low- or moderate-income geography are
activities that help to attract new, or retain existing, businesses
or residents. Examiners will presume that an activity revitalizes
or stabilizes a low- or moderate-income geography if the activity
has been approved by the governing board of an Enterprise Community
or Empowerment Zone (designated pursuant to 26 U.S.C. 1391) and is
consistent with the board’s strategic plan. They will make the same
presumption if the activity has received similar official designation
as consistent with a federal, state, local, or tribal government plan
for the revitalization or stabilization of the low- or moderate-income
geography. For example, foreclosure prevention programs with the objective
of providing affordable, sustainable, long-term loan restructurings
or modifications to homeowners in low- or moderate-income geographies,
consistent with safe and sound banking practices, may help to revitalize
or stabilize those geographies.
To determine whether other activities revitalize or stabilize
a low- or moderate-income geography, examiners will evaluate the activity’s
actual impact on the geography, if information about this is available.
If not, examiners will determine whether the activity is consistent
with the community’s formal or informal plans for the revitalization
and stabilization of the low- or moderate-income geography. For more
information on what activities revitalize or stabilize a low- or moderate-income
geography, see Q&As sections .12(g)-2 and .12(h)-5.
6-1270.4
.12(g)(4)(ii) Activities that
revitalize or stabilize designated disaster areas .12(g)(4)(ii)—1: What is a “designated disaster area”
and how long does it last?
A1. A “designated
disaster area” is a major disaster area designated by the federal
government. Such disaster designations include, in particular,
Major Disaster Declarations administered by the Federal Emergency
Management Agency (FEMA) (http://www.fema.gov), but excludes counties
designated to receive only FEMA Public Assistance Emergency Work Category
A (Debris Removal) and/or Category B (Emergency Protective Measures).
Examiners will consider institution activities related
to disaster recovery that revitalize or stabilize a designated disaster
area for 36 months following the date of designation. Where there
is a demonstrable community need to extend the period for recognizing
revitalization or stabilization activities in a particular disaster
area to assist in long-term recovery efforts, this time period may
be extended.
6-1270.5
.12(g)(4)(ii)—2: What activities are considered
to “revitalize or stabilize” a designated disaster area, and how are
those activities considered?
A2. The agencies
generally will consider an activity to revitalize or stabilize a designated
disaster area if it helps to attract new, or retain existing, businesses
or residents and is related to disaster recovery. An activity will
be presumed to revitalize or stabilize the area if the activity is
consistent with a bona fide government revitalization or stabilization
plan or disaster recovery plan. The agencies generally will consider
all activities relating to disaster recovery that revitalize or stabilize
a designated disaster area, but will give greater weight to those
activities that are most responsive to community needs, including
the needs of low- or moderate-income individuals or neighborhoods.
Qualifying activities may include, for example, providing financing
to help retain businesses in the area that employ local residents,
including low- and moderate- income individuals; providing financing
to attract a major new employer that will create long-term job opportunities,
including for low- and moderate-income individuals; providing financing
or other assistance for essential community-wide infrastructure, community
services, and rebuilding needs; and activities that provide housing,
financial assistance, and services to individuals in designated disaster
areas and to individuals who have been displaced from those areas,
including low- and moderate-income individuals (see, e.g.,
Q&As sections .12(i)-3; .12(t)-4; .22(b)(2) & (3)-4; .22(b)(2)
& (3)-5; and .24(d)(3)-1).
6-1270.6
.12(g)(4)(iii) Activities that revitalize or stabilize distressed
or underserved nonmetropolitan middle-income geographies .12(g)(4)(iii)—1: What criteria are used to identify
distressed or underserved nonmetropolitan, middle-income geographies?
A1. Eligible nonmetropolitan middle-income geographies
are those designated by the agencies as being in distress or that
could have difficulty meeting essential community needs (underserved).
A particular geography could be designated as both distressed and
underserved. As defined in 12 CFR .12(k), a geography is a census
tract delineated by the U.S. Bureau of the Census.
A nonmetropolitan middle-income geography will
be designated as distressed if it is in a county that meets one or
more of the following triggers: (1) An unemployment rate of at least
1.5 times the national average, (2) a poverty rate of 20 percent or
more, or (3) a population loss of 10 percent or more between the previous
and most recent decennial census or a net migration loss of five percent
or more over the five-year period preceding the most recent census.
A nonmetropolitan middle-income geography will be designated
as underserved if it meets criteria for population size, density,
and dispersion that indicate the area’s population is sufficiently
small, thin, and distant from a population center that the tract is
likely to have difficulty financing the fixed costs of meeting essential
community needs. The agencies will use as the basis for these designations
the “urban influence codes,” numbered “7,” “10,” “11,” and “12,” maintained
by the Economic Research Service of the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
The agencies publish data source informa tion along
with the list of eligible nonmetropolitan census tracts on the Federal
Financial Institutions Examination Council (FFIEC) Web site (http://www.ffiec.gov).
6-1270.7
.12(g)(4)(iii)—2: How often will the agencies update
the list of designated distressed and underserved nonmetropolitan
middle-income geographies?
A2. The agencies
will review and update the list annually. The list is published on
the FFIEC Web site (http://www.ffiec.gov).
To the extent that changes to the designated census tracts
occur, the agencies have determined to adopt a one-year “lag period.”
This lag period will be in effect for the 12 months immediately following
the date when a census tract that was designated as distressed or
underserved is removed from the designated list. Revitalization or
stabilization activities undertaken during the lag period will receive
consideration as community development activities if they would have
been considered to have a primary purpose of community development
if the census tract in which they were located were still designated
as distressed or underserved.
6-1270.8
.12(g)(4)(iii)—3: What activities are considered to “revitalize or stabilize” a distressed
nonmetropolitan middle-income geography, and how are those activities
evaluated?
A3. An activity revitalizes or stabilizes
a distressed nonmetropolitan middle-income geography if it helps to
attract new, or retain existing, businesses or residents. An activity
will be presumed to revitalize or stabilize the area if the activity
is consistent with a bona fide government revitalization or
stabilization plan. The agencies generally will consider all activities
that revitalize or stabilize a distressed nonmetropolitan middle-income
geography, but will give greater weight to those activities that are
most responsive to community needs, including needs of low- or moderate-income
individuals or neighborhoods. Qualifying activities may include, for
example, providing financing to attract a major new employer that
will create long-term job opportunities, including for low- and moderate-income
individuals, and activities that provide financing or other assistance
for essential infrastructure or facilities necessary to attract or
retain businesses or residents. See Q&As sections .12(g)(4)(i)-1
and .12(h)-5.
6-1270.9
.12(g)(4)(iii)—4: What activities
are considered to “revitalize or stabilize” an underserved nonmetropolitan
middle-income geography, and how are those activities evaluated?
A4. The regulation provides that activities
revitalize or stabilize an underserved nonmetropolitan middle-income
geography if they help to meet essential community needs, including
needs of low- or moderate-income individuals. Activities, such as
financing for the construction, expansion, improvement, maintenance,
or operation of essential infrastructure or facilities for health
services, education, public safety, public services, industrial parks,
affordable housing, or communication services, will be evaluated under
these criteria to determine if they qualify for revitalization or
stabilization consideration. Examples of the types of projects that
qualify as meeting essential community needs, including needs of low-
or moderate-income individuals, would be
- a new or expanded hospital that serves the entire
county, including low- and moderate-income residents;
- an industrial park for businesses whose employees
include low- or moderate-income individuals;
- a new or rehabilitated sewer line that serves community
residents, including low- or moderate-income residents;
- a mixed-income housing development that includes
affordable housing for low- and moderate-income families;
- a renovated elementary school that serves children
from the community, including children from low- and moderate-income
families;
- a new or rehabilitated communications infrastructure,
such as broadband internet service, that serves the community, including
low- and moderate-income residents; or
- a new or rehabilitated flood control measure, such
as a levee or storm drain, that serves the community, including low-
and moderate-income residents.
Other activities in the area, such as financing a project
to build a sewer line spur that connects services to a middle- or
upper-income housing development while bypassing a low- or moderate-income
development that also needs the sewer services, generally would not
qualify for revitalization or stabilization consideration in geographies
designated as underserved. If an underserved geography is also designated
as a distressed or a disaster area, additional activities may be considered
to revitalize or stabilize the geography, as explained in Q&As
sections .12(g)(4)(ii)-2 and .12(g)(4)(iii)-3.