Woodstock Institute influences policy at the local, regional, and national level by closely analyzing the impact of pending proposals on lower-income and minority communities. Many of these letters are available for download.
Woodstock Institute submitted a comment letter requesting the denial of the application of H&R Block to become a national thrift. The OTS, which regulates thrifts and approved the application in March of 2006, should withhold approval based on new information provided by the Attorney General of New York describing the bank's intent to use the thrift charter to continue offering a type of retirement product that has been shown to consume any potential earnings with undisclosed fees.
Opposes amendment to 2005 appropriations bill which would undermine the final rules adopted by the U.S. Department of the Treasury in accordance with Section 326 of the USA PATRIOT Act, which allows for financial institutions to accept the Matricula Consular.
Woodstock Institute's comment letter opposing the OCC preemption of state consumer protection statutes for
national banks. This preemption removed much of the consumer and fair
lending authority previously granted to states by Congress and failed to provide a national policy to protect borrowers from
abusive lending practices.
Woodstock Institute's comments in response to the
request for comments by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System on proposed changes to Regulation C: Home Mortgage Disclosure
Act data regulations. The letter supports the proposed changes to
require the collection of the annual percentage rate, HOEPA status, and
manufactured home status. Additionally, the letter suggests that
additional fields should be adding including points and fees, the age
of the applicant, and an indicator of credit history.
Comments on the FDIC's proposed changes to their regulation of the Community Reinvestment Act (RIN3064-AC50) which would repleace the three part test with the lending and community development test for FDIC banks between $250 million and $1 billion in assets.