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Redlining In the News Again

By Melanie H. Brody on August 7, 2019
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Redlining is back in the news.  Last week, the Department of Housing and Urban Development announced that it approved a settlement resolving redlining claims brought by the California Reinvestment Coalition against a California-based depository institution.

Unlike DOJ’s June redlining settlement with First Merchants Bank, which we wrote about here, this new case was not initiated by a government investigation, but rather by a CRC complaint filed with HUD.  Unfortunately, the Conciliation Agreement does not provide details about that facts underlying CRC’s concerns; it only states that CRC filed a complaint with HUD in February 2017 alleging that the bank’s “branch locations, marketing, and origination of mortgages discriminated against the residents of majority-minority neighborhoods” in the bank’s Community Reinvestment Act assessment area.

The settlement terms look similar to those found in other redlining settlements, and include a requirement that the bank open or acquire a branch in a majority-minority and low-to-moderate income census tract within the bank’s assessment area.  The bank also agreed to:

  • originate $100 million worth of owner-occupied, residential mortgage loans (within the GSE conforming loan limit) in majority-minority census tracts in its assessment area;
  • impose no minimum loan amount;
  • offer and market FHA-insured loans in all of its assessment area branches;
  • provide $5 million worth of discounts or subsidies on loans in majority-minority census tracts as part of an Affordable Home Mortgage Program;
  • provide $1million to non-profit community service organizations that provide financial literacy and other benefits in majority-minority census tracts; and
  • dedicate $1.3 million toward marketing and outreach to consumers in majority-minority census tracts.

Although this new settlement does not provide much detail about the factors that could prompt a redlining complaint, the settlement terms do provide insights about how institutions can expand credit opportunities in majority-minority communities and thus reduce their redlining risk.

Photo of Melanie H. Brody Melanie H. Brody

Melanie Brody is a partner in Mayer Brown’s Washington DC office and a member of the Consumer Financial Services group. She concentrates her practice on federal and state government enforcement matters, primarily for banks, mortgage lenders, auto lenders, credit card issuers, student lenders…

Melanie Brody is a partner in Mayer Brown’s Washington DC office and a member of the Consumer Financial Services group. She concentrates her practice on federal and state government enforcement matters, primarily for banks, mortgage lenders, auto lenders, credit card issuers, student lenders and other financial service providers. She represents clients in investigations, examinations and enforcement actions by the US Department of Justice, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Federal Reserve Board, Department of Housing and Urban Development, Federal Trade Commission, state banking regulators and state attorneys general.

Read Melanie’s full bio

Read more about Melanie H. BrodyEmail
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  • Posted in:
    Real Estate & Construction
  • Blog:
    Consumer Financial Services Review
  • Organization:
    Mayer Brown
  • Article: View Original Source

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