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Expert Testimony
Woodstock staff is regularly invited to present expert testimony before the local, state, and federal legislature, as well as regulator agencies.

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Marva Williams, Woodstock Institute Senior Vice President before the U.S. Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs discussing the development of affordable transaction accounts to help lower income people access the financial mainstream. 
Geoff Smith, Woodstock Institute project director, discusses Woodstock Institute's research documenting the relationship between concentrated subprime lending and neighborhood foreclosures.

Testimony of Tom Feltner, vice president of Woodstock Institute, addressing upfront fees and credit products such as overdraft protection or payday loan-like deposit advances for general purpose reloadable cards.

Discusses the types of financial institutions that should have reinvestment responsibilities and the geographies where those responsibilities are assessed. Also includes recommendations to improve the services test portion of the CRA and improve the ratings and incentive structure of the CRA.

Testimony of Dory Rand, Woodstock Institute president, before the U.S. House of Representatives, Committee on Financial Services in support of the implementation of Dodd-Frank Act. This testimony was presented during a field hearing held in Chicago, Illinois entitled "Regulatory Reform: Examining How New Regulations are Impacting Financial Institutions, Small Business, and Consumers in Illinois."

Woodstock Institute opposes this merger on the grounds that Capital One has an inadequate past record of meeting community financial needs. We also believe that the combined financial institution, as the fifth largest bank by deposits with a vulnerable portfolio heavily concentrated in credit cards, would pose significant risk to the financial system. Finally, this application demonstrates the inadequacy of current regulatory for ensuring that large financial institutions with limited branch networks are meeting the lending and financial services needs of low-wealth communities.

While HMDA data have been a valuable tool in fighting discrimination and redlining and improving access to credit to underserved markets, there are substantial opportunities to improve the data collected to make it even more effective. One of the main limitations of the current HMDA data is the lack of sufficient information on underwriting and product characteristics. One of the major frustrations experienced when analyzing HMDA data is being able to document clear patterns that indicate discriminatory lending, but lacking the necessary data to prove that discrimination is occurring. This frustration has been compounded by the lack of action taken by regulatory agencies in the face of clear indications of discriminatory lending behavior. Whle the Dodd-Frank Act will add key data points that will solve many of these concerns, Woodstock believes that there is still opportunity to improve the data collected.

Testimony of Geoff Smith, Project Director at Woodstock Institute, before the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation regarding the need for and implementation of the HB 4050 predatory lending database pilot program.
Testimony of Geoff Smith, Project Director of Woodstock Institute focusing on the persistent disparities seen in the mortgage lending market, the impact that these disparities have on neighborhoods; and what the Federal Reserve Board can do to curb abusive lending practices.

Testimony before the US House of Representatives Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations on OTS’s actions to weaken CRA.  Comments offered suggestions to promote improvements to CRA that would increase access to lending, investments, and services in low- and moderate-income markets such as the requiring the continued reporting of small business lending data for mid-sized banks and thrifts.  They also requested that the OTS collect data on new retail accounts opened for low- and moderate-income households; and promoting investment in declining and underserved rural markets.  

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