Loans in Areas Having Special Flood Hazards; Interagency Questions and Answers Regarding Flood Insurance, 15259-15278 [E8-5787]
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 56 / Friday, March 21, 2008 / Notices
1700 G Street, NW., Washington, DC
20552.
Dated: March 17, 2008.
Deborah Dakin,
Senior Deputy Chief Counsel, Regulations and
Legislation Division.
[FR Doc. E8–5759 Filed 3–20–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6720–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency
[Docket ID OCC–2008–0002]
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
[Docket No. OP–1311]
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE
CORPORATION
RIN 3064–ZA00
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of Thrift Supervision
[Docket ID OTS–2008–0001]
FARM CREDIT ADMINISTRATION
RIN 3052–AC46
NATIONAL CREDIT UNION
ADMINISTRATION
RIN 3133–AD41
Loans in Areas Having Special Flood
Hazards; Interagency Questions and
Answers Regarding Flood Insurance
Office of the Comptroller of
the Currency, Treasury (OCC); Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System (Board); Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC); Office of
Thrift Supervision, Treasury (OTS);
Farm Credit Administration (FCA);
National Credit Union Administration
(NCUA).
ACTION: Notice and request for comment.
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AGENCIES:
SUMMARY: The OCC, Board, FDIC, OTS,
FCA, and NCUA (collectively, the
Agencies) are soliciting comment on
proposed revisions to the Interagency
Questions and Answers Regarding
Flood Insurance (Interagency Questions
and Answers). To help financial
institutions meet their responsibilities
under Federal flood insurance
legislation and to increase public
understanding of their flood insurance
regulations, the staffs of the Agencies
have prepared proposed new and
revised guidance addressing the most
frequently asked questions and answers
about flood insurance. The proposed
revised Interagency Questions and
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Answers contain staff guidance for
agency personnel, financial institutions,
and the public.
DATE: Comments must be submitted on
or before May 20, 2008.
ADDRESSES: OCC: Because paper mail in
the Washington, DC area and at the
Agencies is subject to delay,
commenters are encouraged to submit
comments by e-mail, if possible. Please
use the title ‘‘Loans in Areas Having
Special Flood Hazards; Interagency
Questions and Answers Regarding
Flood Insurance’’ to facilitate the
organization and distribution of the
comments. You may submit comments
by any of the following methods:
• E-mail:
regs.comments@occ.treas.gov.
• Mail: Office of the Comptroller of
the Currency, 250 E Street, SW., Mail
Stop 1–5, Washington, DC 20219.
• Fax: (202) 874–4448.
• Hand Delivery/Courier: 250 E
Street, SW., Attn: Public Information
Room, Mail Stop 1–5, Washington, DC
20219.
Instructions: You must include
‘‘OCC’’ as the agency name and ‘‘Docket
ID OCC–2008–0002’’ in your comment.
Comments received, including
attachments and other supporting
materials, are part of the public record
and subject to public disclosure. Do not
enclose any information in your
comment or supporting materials that
you consider confidential or
inappropriate for public disclosure.
You may review comments and other
related materials that pertain to this
notice by any of the following methods:
• Viewing Comments Personally: You
may personally inspect and photocopy
comments at the OCC’s Public
Information Room, 250 E Street, SW.,
Washington, DC. For security reasons,
the OCC requires that visitors make an
appointment to inspect comments. You
may do so by calling (202) 874–5043.
Upon arrival, visitors will be required to
present valid government-issued photo
identification and submit to security
screening in order to inspect and
photocopy comments.
• Docket: You may also view or
request available background
documents and project summaries using
the methods described above.
Board: You may submit comments,
identified by Docket No. OP–1311, by
any of the following methods:
• Agency Web Site: https://
www.federalreserve.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments at
https://www.federalreserve.gov/
generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm.
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
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15259
• E-mail:
regs.comments@federalreserve.gov.
Include docket number in the subject
line of the message.
• Fax: (202) 452–3819 or (202) 452–
3102.
• Mail: Jennifer J. Johnson, Secretary,
Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, 20th Street and
Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington,
DC 20551.
All public comments are available
from the Board’s Web site at https://
www.federalreserve.gov/generalinfo/
foia/ProposedRegs.cfm as submitted,
unless modified for technical reasons.
Accordingly, your comments will not be
edited to remove any identifying or
contact information.
Public comments may also be viewed
electronically or in paper in Room MP–
500 of the Board’s Martin Building (20th
and C Streets, NW.) between 9 a.m. and
5 p.m. on weekdays.
FDIC: You may submit comments,
identified by RIN number 3064–ZA00
by any of the following methods:
• Agency Web site: https://
www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/federal/
propose.html. Follow instructions for
submitting comments on the Agency
Web Site.
• E-mail: Comments@FDIC.gov.
Include the RIN number in the subject
line of the message.
• Mail: Robert E. Feldman, Executive
Secretary, Attention: Comments, Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation, 550 17th
Street, NW., Washington, DC 20429.
• Hand Delivery/Courier: Guard
station at the rear of the 550 17th Street
Building (located on F Street) on
business days between 7 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Instructions: All submissions received
must include the agency name and RIN
number. All comments received will be
posted without change to https://
www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/federal/
propose.html including any personal
information provided.
OTS: You may submit comments,
identified by OTS–2007–0001, by any of
the following methods:
• E-mail:
regs.comments@ots.treas.gov. Please
include ID OTS–2008–0001 in the
subject line of the message and include
your name and telephone number in the
message.
• Fax: (202) 906–6518.
• Mail: Regulation Comments, Chief
Counsel’s Office, Office of Thrift
Supervision, 1700 G Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20552, Attention: OTS–
2008–0001.
• Hand Delivery/Courier: Guard’s
Desk, East Lobby Entrance, 1700 G
Street, NW., from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on
business days, Attention: Regulation
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Comments, Chief Counsel’s Office,
Attention: OTS–2008–0001.
• Instructions: All submissions
received must include the agency name
and docket number for this rulemaking.
All comments received will be entered
into the docket and posted on
Regulations.gov without change,
including any personal information
provided. Comments, including
attachments and other supporting
materials received are part of the public
record and subject to public disclosure.
Do not enclose any information in your
comment or supporting materials that
you consider confidential or
inappropriate for public disclosure.
Viewing Comments Electronically:
OTS will post comments on the OTS
Internet Site at https://www.ots.treas.gov/
pagehtml.cfm?catNumber=67&an=1.
Viewing Comments On-Site: You may
inspect comments at the Public Reading
Room, 1700 G Street, NW., by
appointment. To make an appointment
for access, call (202) 906–5922, send an
e-mail to public.info@ots.treas.gov, or
send a facsimile transmission to (202)
906–6518. (Prior notice identifying the
materials you will be requesting will
assist us in serving you.) We schedule
appointments on business days between
10 a.m. and 4 p.m. In most cases,
appointments will be available the next
business day following the date we
receive a request.
FCA: We offer a variety of methods for
you to submit comments. For accuracy
and efficiency reasons, we encourage
commenters to submit comments by email or through the Agency’s Web site
or the Federal eRulemaking Portal. You
may also send comments by mail or by
facsimile transmission. Regardless of the
method you use, please do not submit
your comment multiple times via
different methods. You may submit
comments by any of the following
methods:
• E-mail: Send us an e-mail at
regcomm@fca.gov.
• Agency Web Site: https://
www.fca.gov. Once you are at the Web
site, select ‘‘Legal Info,’’ then ‘‘Pending
Regulations and Notices.’’
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Mail: Gary K. Van Meter, Deputy
Director, Office of Regulatory Policy,
Farm Credit Administration, 1501 Farm
Credit Drive, McLean, VA 22102–5090.
• Fax: (703) 883–4477. Posting and
processing of faxes may be delayed.
Please consider another means to
comment, if possible.
You may review copies of comments
we receive at our office in McLean,
Virginia, or from our Web site at
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https://www.fca.gov. Once you are in the
Web site, select ‘‘Legal Info,’’ and then
select ‘‘Public Comments.’’ We will
show your comments as submitted, but
for technical reasons we may omit items
such as logos and special characters.
Identifying information that you
provide, such as phone numbers and
addresses, will be publicly available.
However, we will attempt to remove email addresses to help reduce Internet
spam.
NCUA: You may submit comments by
any of the following methods (Please
send comments by one method only):
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments,
• NCUA Web Site: https://
www.ncua.gov/
RegulationsOpinionsLaws/
proposed_regs/proposed_regs.html.
Follow the instructions for submitting
comments.
• E-mail: Address to
regcomments@ncua.gov. Include ‘‘[Your
name] Comments on Flood Insurance,
Interagency Questions & Answers’’ in
the e-mail subject line.
• Fax: (703) 518–6319. Use the
subject line described above for e-mail.
• Mail: Address to Mary Rupp,
Secretary of the Board, National Credit
Union Administration, 1775 Duke
Street, Alexandria, Virginia 22314–
3428.
• Hand Delivery/Courier: Same as
mail address.
Public Inspection: All public
comments are available on the agency’s
Web site at https://www.ncua.gov/
RegulationsOpinionsLaws/comments as
submitted, except as may not be
possible for technical reasons. Public
comments will not be edited to remove
any identifying or contact information.
Paper copies of comments may be
inspected in NCUA’s law library at 1775
Duke Street, Alexandria, Virginia 22314,
by appointment weekdays between 9
a.m. and 3 p.m. To make an
appointment, call (703) 518–6546 or
send an e-mail to OGCMail@ncua.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
OCC: Pamela Mount, National Bank
Examiner, Compliance Policy, (202)
874–4428; or Margaret Hesse, Special
Counsel, Community and Consumer
Law Division, (202) 874–5750, Office of
the Comptroller of the Currency, 250 E
Street, SW., Washington, DC 20219.
Board: Vivian Wong, Senior Attorney,
Division of Consumer and Community
Affairs, (202) 452–2412; Anjanette
Kichline, Senior Supervisory Consumer
Financial Services Analyst, (202) 785–
6054; or Brad Fleetwood, Senior
Counsel, Legal Division, (202) 452–
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3721, Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, 20th Street and
Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington,
DC 20551. For the deaf, hard of hearing,
and speech impaired only,
teletypewriter (TTY), (202) 263–4869.
FDIC: Mira N. Marshall, Senior Policy
Analyst (Compliance), Division of
Supervision and Consumer Protection,
(202) 898–3912; or Mark Mellon,
Counsel, Legal Division, (202) 898–
3884, Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, 550 17th Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20429. For the hearing
impaired only, telecommunications
device for the deaf (TDD): 800–925–
4618.
OTS: Ekita Mitchell, Consumer
Regulations Analyst, (202) 906–6451;
Glenn Gimble, Senior Project Manager,
(202) 906–7158; or Richard S. Bennett,
Senior Compliance Counsel, (202) 906–
7409, Office of Thrift Supervision, 1700
G Street, NW., Washington, DC 20552.
FCA: Mark L. Johansen, Senior Policy
Analyst, Office of Regulatory Policy,
(703) 993–4498; or Mary Alice Donner,
Attorney Advisor, Office of General
Counsel, (703) 883–4033, Farm Credit
Administration, 1501 Farm Credit Drive,
McLean, VA 22102–5090. For the
hearing impaired only, TDD: (703) 883–
4444.
NCUA: Moisette I. Green, Staff
Attorney, Office of General Counsel,
(703) 518–6540, National Credit Union
Administration, 1775 Duke Street,
Alexandria, VA 22314–3428.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The National Flood Insurance Reform
Act of 1994 (the Reform Act) (Title V of
the Riegle Community Development and
Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994)
comprehensively revised the two federal
flood insurance statutes, the National
Flood Insurance Act of 1968 and the
Flood Disaster Protection Act of 1973.
The Reform Act required the OCC,
Board, FDIC, OTS, and NCUA to revise
their flood insurance regulations and
required the FCA to promulgate flood
insurance regulations for the first time.
The OCC, Board, FDIC, OTS, NCUA,
and FCA (collectively, ‘‘the Agencies’’)
fulfilled these requirements by issuing a
joint final rule in the summer of 1996.
See 61 FR 45684 (August 29, 1996).
In connection with the 1996 joint
rulemaking process, the Agencies
received a number of requests to clarify
specific issues covering a wide
spectrum of the proposed rule’s
provisions. Many of these requests were
addressed in the preamble to the joint
final rule. The Agencies concluded,
however, that given the number, level of
detail, and diversity of subject matter of
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the requests for additional information,
guidance addressing the more technical
compliance issues would be helpful and
appropriate. Consequently, the Agencies
decided to issue guidance to address
these technical issues subsequent to the
promulgation of the final rule (61 FR at
45685–86). That objective was fulfilled
by the initial release of the Interagency
Questions and Answers in 1997 (1997
Interagency Questions and Answers) by
the Federal Financial Institution
Examination Council (FFIEC). 62 FR
39523 (July 23, 1997).
In response to issues that have been
brought to the attention of the Agencies
in coordination with the Federal
Emergency Management Agency
(FEMA), the Agencies are releasing for
public comment proposed revisions to
the 1997 Interagency Questions and
Answers.1 Among the changes the
Agencies are proposing are the
introduction of new questions and
answers in a number of areas, including
second lien mortgages, the imposition of
civil money penalties, and loan
syndications/participations. The
Agencies are also proposing substantive
modifications to questions and answers
previously adopted in the 1997
Interagency Questions and Answers
pertaining to construction loans and
condominiums. Finally, the Agencies
are proposing to revise and reorganize
certain of the existing questions and
answers to clarify areas of potential
misunderstanding and to provide
clearer guidance to users. It is the
intention of the Agencies that after
public comment has been received and
considered, and the Interagency
Questions and Answers have been
adopted in final form, they will
supersede the 1997 Interagency
Questions and Answers and supplement
other guidance or interpretations issued
by the Agencies and FEMA.
For ease of reference, the following
terms are used throughout this
document: ‘‘Act’’ refers to the National
Flood Insurance Act of 1968 and the
Flood Disaster Protection Act of 1973, as
revised by the National Flood Insurance
Reform Act of 1994 (codified at 42
U.S.C. 4001 et seq.). ‘‘Regulation’’ refers
to each agency’s current final rule.2
1 The proposed Interagency Questions and
Answers have been prepared by staff from the OCC,
Board, FDIC, OTS, NCUA and FCA in consultation
with and with the assistance of the FFIEC pursuant
to 12 U.S.C. 3305(g).
2 The Agencies’ rules are codified at 2 CFR part
22 (OCC), 12 CFR part 208 (Board), 12 CFR part 339
(FDIC), 12 CFR part 572 (OTS), 12 CFR part 614
(FCA), and 12 CFR part 760 (NCUA).
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Section-by-Section Analysis
Section I. Determining When Certain
Loans Are Designated Loans for Which
Flood Insurance Is Required Under the
Act and Regulation
The Agencies propose to eliminate
current section I entitled ‘‘Definitions’’
and replace it with new proposed
section I to address more specific
circumstances a lender may encounter
when deciding whether a loan should
be a designated loan for purposes of
flood insurance. The Agencies are
proposing to move the questions and
answers currently in section I into
subsequent sections for better
organization. Meanwhile, questions and
answers currently in other sections of
the 1997 Interagency Questions and
Answers that deal with determining
when a loan is a designated loan under
the Act and Regulation would be
included in new section I.
Specifically, proposed question 1,
which covers the applicability of the
Regulation to a loan in a
nonparticipating community, would be
moved from current question 1 of
section II. Further, the Agencies propose
to move current question 2 of section II,
discussing whether a loan is a
designated loan when a lender
purchases a whole loan, to question 3 of
new section I. Current question 9 of
section I, discussing whether a loan is
a designated loan when a lender
restructures a loan, would be moved to
question 4 of this new section I, and
proposed question 5, which addresses
table funded loans, would be moved
from question 3 of current section II. In
addition, minor nonsubstantive changes
have been made to these moved
questions and answers to provide
additional clarity.
The Agencies are also proposing to
add two new questions and answers to
this section in response to questions the
Agencies have received from lenders.
Proposed new question 2 explains that,
upon a FEMA map change that results
in a building or mobile home securing
a loan being removed from a special
flood hazard area (SFHA), the lender no
longer must require mandatory flood
insurance; however, the lender may
choose to continue to require flood
insurance for risk management
purposes.
Proposed new question 6 explains
that portfolio reviews of existing loans
are not required by the Act or
Regulation; however, sound risk
management practices may lead a lender
to conduct periodic reviews. These two
new questions and answers are based on
current guidance the Agencies have
provided to lenders.
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Section II. Determining the Appropriate
Amount of Flood Insurance Required
Under the Act and Regulation
Proposed section II would provide
guidance on how lenders should
determine the appropriate amount of
flood insurance to require the borrower
to purchase. The Agencies are proposing
to retain existing questions 5 and 7 of
section II in new section II and
renumbering them as proposed
questions 12 and 11, respectively.
Although minor changes have been
made to these two questions and
answers for purposes of clarity, the
changes are not substantive.
Furthermore, part of the guidance
currently provided in existing question
7 would be moved to proposed question
22 in section V, as discussed below.
Proposed new question 7 would
discuss what is meant by the
‘‘maximum limit of coverage available
for the particular type of property under
the Act.’’ This concept is important
because the Regulation states that the
amount of flood insurance required
‘‘must be at least equal to the lesser of
the outstanding principal balance of the
designated loan or the maximum limit
of coverage available for the particular
type of property under the Act.’’
Proposed question 7 would introduce
and define the insurance term,
‘‘insurable value,’’ as it relates to the
determination of the maximum limit of
coverage available under the Act.
Proposed question 7 would also
introduce the terms, ‘‘residential
building’’ and ‘‘nonresidential
building.’’ These terms would be more
fully defined in proposed new questions
8 and 9 of this section, respectively.
Proposed new question 10 would
discuss how much flood insurance is
required on a building located in an
SFHA in a participating community. It
would also provide an example showing
how to calculate the amount of required
flood insurance on a nonresidential
building.
Proposed new question 13 would
clarify that a lender can require more
flood insurance than the minimum
required by the Regulation. The
Regulation requires a minimum amount
of flood insurance; however, lenders
may require more coverage, if
appropriate.
Proposed new question 14 would
address lender considerations regarding
the amount of the deductible on a flood
insurance policy purchased by a
borrower. Generally, the guidance
advises a lender to determine the
reasonableness of the deductible on a
case-by-case basis, taking into account
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the risk that such a deductible would
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Section III. Exemptions from the
mandatory flood insurance
requirements
As with current section III, proposed
section III would contain only one
question and answer, which describes
the statutory exemptions from the
mandatory flood insurance
requirements. Proposed question and
answer 15 under section III would be
revised to provide greater clarity, with
no intended change in substance or
meaning.
Section IV. Flood insurance
requirements for construction loans
The Agencies are proposing a series of
new and revised questions and answers
to clarify the requirements regarding the
mandatory purchase of flood insurance
for construction loans to erect buildings
that will be located in an SFHA. The
Agencies believe that these questions
and answers are necessary in light of
recent concerns raised by some
regulated lenders regarding borrowers’
difficulties in obtaining flood insurance
for construction loans at the time of loan
origination.
Existing question 2 in section I would
be revised to provide greater clarity and
would be moved to proposed question
16 under proposed section IV. The
proposed answer to question 16 would
revise the existing guidance to limit its
scope and explain that a loan secured by
raw land located in an SFHA is not a
designated loan that would require
flood insurance coverage. The
remaining guidance currently in the
answer to existing question 2 in section
I would be discussed in subsequent
questions and answers in section IV in
the proposed document, as detailed
below.
Proposed question 17, derived from
current question 1 in section I, would
address whether a loan secured or to be
secured by a building in the course of
construction that is located or to be
located in an SFHA in which flood
insurance is available under the Act is
a designated loan. The answer would
provide that a lender must make a flood
determination prior to loan origination
for a construction loan. If the flood
determination shows that the building
securing the loan will be located in an
SFHA, the lender must provide notice to
the borrower, and must comply with the
mandatory purchase requirements.
Proposed question 18 would explain
that, generally, a building in the course
of construction is eligible for coverage
under a National Flood Insurance
Program (NFIP) policy, and that
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coverage may be purchased prior to the
start of construction.
Proposed question 19 would address
the timing of when flood insurance
must be purchased for buildings under
the course of construction. The Act and
Regulation provide that lenders may not
make, increase, extend, or renew any
loan secured by improved real estate or
a mobile home that is located or to be
located in an SFHA unless the building
is covered by adequate flood insurance.
One way for lenders to comply with the
mandatory purchase requirement for a
loan secured by a building in the course
of construction that is located in an
SFHA is to require borrowers to have a
flood insurance policy in place at the
time of loan origination.
Recently, lenders have informed
agency staff, however, that borrowers
have been encountering difficulties in
obtaining flood insurance for
construction loans at the time of loan
origination due to insurers’ refusals to
write policies on undeveloped land
until either an elevation certificate has
been issued for the structure or at least
two walls and a roof for the building
have been erected. The Agencies have
also received reports that borrowers
who are able to obtain flood insurance
for construction loans at loan
origination often pay the highest
premiums possible because elevations
for the insured property have not yet
been established.
To address these concerns, the
Agencies, in the answer to proposed
question 19, would provide lenders
with flexibility regarding the timing of
the mandatory purchase requirement for
construction loans by permitting lenders
to allow borrowers to defer the purchase
of flood insurance until a foundation
slab has been poured and/or an
elevation certificate has been issued.
Lenders, however, must require the
borrower to have flood insurance in
place before funds are disbursed to pay
for building construction on the
property securing the loan (except as
necessary to pour the slab or perform
preliminary site work). A lender who
elects this approach and does not
require flood insurance at loan
origination must have adequate internal
controls in place to ensure compliance.
The Agencies also propose to add new
question 20 to clarify whether the 30day waiting period for an NFIP policy
applies when the purchase of flood
insurance is deferred in connection with
a construction loan since there has been
confusion among lenders on this issue
in the past. Per guidance from FEMA,
the answer would provide that the 30day waiting period would not apply in
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such cases.3 The NFIP would rely on the
insurance agent’s representation that the
exception applies unless a loss has
occurred during the first 30 days of the
policy period.
Section V. Flood insurance
requirements for agricultural buildings
The Agencies are proposing a new
section V to address the flood insurance
requirements for agricultural buildings
that are taken as security for a loan, but
that have limited utility to a farming
operation. The section would also
address loans secured by multiple
buildings where some buildings are
located in a flood hazard area and some
buildings are not.
The proposed answer to new question
21 would explain that all buildings
taken as security for a loan and located
in an SFHA require flood insurance.
Lenders have the option of carving a
building from the security for a loan;
however, the Agencies believe that it is
typically inappropriate for credit risk
management reasons to do so.
The guidance in current question 7
under section II would be split between
question 11 under proposed section II,
as discussed above, and question 22
under proposed section V. The
proposed answer to question 22 would
explain that a lender is always required
to determine whether a building
securing a loan is located in an SFHA,
but that only those buildings located in
an SFHA and within a participating
community are required to have flood
insurance. Flood insurance need not be
required on those properties that (1) are
not located in a special flood hazard
area (whether or not within a
participating community) or (2) are
located in a special flood hazard area
that is not within a participating
community.
Section VI. Flood insurance
requirements for residential
condominiums
For organizational purposes, the
Agencies are proposing to consolidate
questions and answers relating to the
Regulation’s flood insurance
requirements for residential
condominiums into a new section VI. In
addition to modifying and expanding
the two existing questions in the 1997
Interagency Questions and Answers on
residential condominiums, the Agencies
are proposing to add five additional
3 FEMA, Mandatory Purchase of Flood Insurance
Guidelines, (September 2007) at 30. FEMA has
made available a new version of this booklet
electronically at https://www.fema.gov/library/
viewRecord.do?id=2954. Hard copies are available
by calling FEMA’s Publication Warehouse at (800)
480–2520.
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questions and answers to provide better
clarity on the requirements.
Proposed question and answer 24
would modify and expand current
question 8 under section II to more
completely address the Regulation’s
flood insurance requirements for
residential condominium units. The
proposed answer would first explain
that the amount of flood insurance
coverage on the condominium unit
required by the Regulation is the lesser
of the outstanding principal balance of
the loan or the maximum amount of
coverage available under the NFIP.
The proposed answer would then
explain that if the outstanding principal
balance of the loan is greater than the
maximum amount of coverage available
under the NFIP, the lender must require
a borrower whose loan is secured by a
residential condominium unit to either:
• Ensure the condominium owners
association has purchased an NFIP
Residential Condominium Building
Association Policy (RCBAP) covering
either 100 percent of the insurable value
(replacement cost) of the building,
including amounts to repair or replace
the foundation and its supporting
structures, or an amount equal to the
total number of units in the
condominium building times $250,000,
whichever is less; or
• Obtain an individual unit owner’s
dwelling policy in an amount sufficient
to meet the Regulation’s flood insurance
requirements, if there is no RCBAP or
the RCBAP coverage is less than either
100 percent of the insurable value
(replacement cost) of the building or the
amount equal to the total number of
units in the condominium building
times $250,000, whichever is less.
The proposed answer revises and
clarifies the current answer to question
8 under section II. The current answer
provides that ‘‘to meet federal flood
insurance requirements, an RCBAP
should be purchased in an amount of at
least 80 percent of the replacement
value of the building or the maximum
amount available under the NFIP
(currently $250,000 multiplied by the
number of units), whichever is less.’’
The proposed question and answer
recognizes that neither the Act nor the
Regulation addresses explicitly the
appropriate level of RCBAP coverage;
rather, they address the general
purchase requirement applicable to all
types of buildings and mobile homes:
The lesser of the outstanding principal
balance of the loan or the maximum
amount of insurance available under the
NFIP. The proposed question and
answer acknowledges the standard set
forth in the Regulation, and clarifies that
the maximum amount of insurance
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available under the NFIP for a
residential condominium unit is the
lesser of the maximum limit available
for a residential condominium unit
(currently, $250,000) or the insurable
value of the unit (the replacement value
of the building divided by the number
of units).4 The proposed question and
answer would also reflect that where the
outstanding principal balance of the
loan is greater than the maximum
amount of coverage available under the
NFIP, an RCBAP written at 80 percent
of the replacement cost value of the
building does not meet the Regulation’s
flood insurance requirements (unless
that amount were equal to the maximum
amount of insurance available under the
NFIP, which is $250,000 multiplied by
the number of units), whereas the
current answer suggested that such a
coverage level was adequate. While
FEMA’s recent guidance prescribes 80
percent replacement cost value coverage
as the minimum amount necessary to
avoid imposition of a co-insurance
penalty at the time of loss,5 proposed
answer 24 clarifies that this amount of
insurance is insufficient to comply with
the Act’s and Regulation’s minimum
requirements. The proposed answer
would provide that where the
outstanding principal balance of the
loan is greater than the maximum
amount of coverage available under the
NFIP and the RCBAP is written at less
than 100 percent of the insurable value
(replacement cost) of the building or an
amount equal to $250,000 multiplied by
the number of units, whichever is less,
the lender must require the borrower to
obtain an individual unit owner’s
dwelling policy to meet the Regulation’s
flood insurance requirements.
The Agencies are proposing the
modification contained in proposed
question 24 and its answer to be in
accordance with the general mandatory
purchase requirement in the Regulation.
As FEMA has noted:
Although unit owners have a shared
interest in the common areas of the
condominium building, as well as in their
own unit, unit owners are unable to
individually protect such common areas.
Therefore, the RCBAP, insured to its full
replacement cost value (RCV) to the extent
possible under the NFIP, is the correct way
to insure a residential condominium building
against flood loss. A properly placed RCBAP
protects the financial interests of the
4 In recent guidance, FEMA expressly discusses
the statutory standard for determining the required
amount of flood insurance for a condominium.
FEMA Mandatory Purchase of Flood Insurance
Guidelines, at 46.
5 FEMA’s recent guidance encourages
condominium associations to obtain 100 percent
coverage. Id. at 47.
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association, unit owners, and lenders and
also satisfies the statutory requirements.6
The Agencies plan that any guidance
adopted as final in question and answer
24 would apply to any loan that is
made, increased, extended, or renewed
after the effective date of the revised
guidance. The Agencies further plan
that the revised guidance would apply
to any loan made prior to the effective
date of the revised guidance, which a
lender determines to be covered by
flood insurance in an amount less than
required by the Regulation, as set forth
in proposed question and answer 24, at
the first flood insurance policy renewal
period following the effective date of the
revised guidance.
Proposed question 27 would modify
and expand current question 9 under
section II to address lenders’ options
when a loan secured by a residential
condominium unit is in a multi-unit
complex whose condominium
association allows its existing flood
insurance policy to lapse. Specifically,
if the borrower/unit owner or the
condominium association fails to
purchase adequate flood insurance
within 45 days of the lender’s
notification of inadequate insurance
coverage, the lender must force place
flood insurance to cover the unit
owner’s dwelling in an amount
adequate to meet the Regulation’s flood
insurance requirements.
The Agencies are also proposing five
new questions and answers to address
additional issues regarding flood
insurance requirements for residential
condominiums. Proposed new question
23 would be added to specifically affirm
that the mandatory flood insurance
purchase requirements under the Act
and Regulation apply to loans secured
by individual residential condominium
units, including those in multi-story
condominium complexes located in an
SFHA in which flood insurance is
available under the Act.
Proposed new question 25 would
address lenders’ options when a loan
secured by a residential condominium
unit is in a multi-unit complex whose
condominium association does not
obtain or maintain the amount of flood
insurance coverage required under the
Regulation. Specifically, it would
provide that a lender must require the
borrower to purchase an individual unit
owner’s dwelling policy in an amount
sufficient to meet the Regulation’s flood
insurance requirements. The proposed
answer would also detail what is
considered an adequate amount of flood
insurance under the Regulation and
provide an example.
6 See
id. at 46.
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Proposed new question 26 would
address the steps a lender must take if
the RCBAP coverage is insufficient to
meet the Regulation’s mandatory
purchase requirements for a loan
secured by an individual residential
condominium unit. The proposed
answer would also summarize some of
the risks to which the lender and the
individual unit owner/borrower may be
exposed should a loss occur where the
condominium association did not
maintain adequate flood insurance
coverage under an RCBAP.
Proposed new question 28 would be
added to explain how the RCBAP’s coinsurance penalty applies when, at the
time of loss, the RCBAP’s coverage
amount is less than 80 percent of either
the building’s replacement cost or the
maximum amount of flood insurance
available for that building under the
NFIP (whichever is less). Examples of
how to calculate the penalty would also
be provided. Proposed new question 29
would be added to explain the interplay
between the individual unit owner’s
dwelling policy coverage limitations
and the RCBAP.
Section VII. Flood insurance
requirements for home equity loans,
lines of credit, subordinate liens, and
other security interests in collateral
located in an SFHA
Proposed new Section VII, which
addresses flood insurance requirements
for home equity loans, lines of credit,
subordinate liens, and other security
interests in collateral located in an
SFHA, would include seven questions
from current section I and parts of two
questions from current section V.
Specifically, current questions 3, 4, 5, 6,
7, 8, and 10 would be renumbered as
questions 30, 31, 34, 35 and 36, 37, 38,
and 39 respectively. Current question 5
in section V would be split into
proposed questions 32 and 33.
Proposed questions and answers 30,
31, and 39 would include minor
wording changes without any intended
change in substance or meaning.
Proposed question 32 would expand on
part of current section V, question 5, but
would not change the substance of the
answer. New question 34 would be
revised to clarify the issue discussed in
current question 5 of section I without
any change in substance or meaning.
New questions 35 and 36 would be
added to clarify the issues discussed in
current question 6 of section I.
Section VIII. Flood insurance
requirements for loan syndications/
participations
The Agencies are proposing to
include a new section VIII and new
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question 40 in response to questions
from lenders. The proposed question
and answer would explain that, with
respect to loan syndications and
participations, individual participating
lenders are responsible for ensuring
compliance with flood insurance
requirements. The Agencies believe that
the risk of flood loss can be a significant
threat to the value of improved real
property securing loans, especially in
light of many recent catastrophic floodrelated events such as Hurricane
Katrina. Therefore, the Agencies believe
that each lender in a loan participation/
syndication arrangement that is secured
by improved real property located in a
special flood hazard area should be
responsible for ensuring that the
respective interest of the lender in the
collateral that secures the lender’s
portion of the loan is protected against
the risk of flood loss, at least to the
amount required by the Regulation. This
does not mean that each lender in a
syndication or participant in a loan
must individually undertake such
activities as obtaining a flood
determination or monitoring whether
flood insurance premiums are paid.
Rather, it means that the participating
lender should perform upfront due
diligence to ensure both that the lead
lender or agent has undertaken the
necessary activities to ensure that the
borrower obtains appropriate flood
insurance and that the lead lender or
agent has adequate controls to monitor
the loan(s) on an on-going basis for
compliance with the flood insurance
requirements. The participating lender
should require as a condition to the
participation, syndication or other
credit risk sharing agreement that the
lead lender or agent will provide
participating lenders with sufficient
information on an ongoing basis to
monitor compliance with flood
insurance requirements.
Section IX. Flood insurance
requirements in the event of the sale or
transfer of a designated loan and/or its
servicing rights
The heading to proposed section IX
has been modified to provide greater
clarity with no intended change in
substance or meaning. The current
questions 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6 under
current section IX would be renumbered
as proposed questions 42, 43, 44, 45, 46,
and 47, respectively, with minor
revisions to questions and answers 42
and 46 to provide greater clarity, with
no intended change in substance or
meaning. Proposed section IX would
also incorporate and expand current
question 6 under section II as proposed
question and answer 41. Proposed
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question 41 would expound on the two
scenarios from current question 6 to
provide greater clarity, with no intended
change in substance or meaning.
Section X. Escrow requirements
Current section IV on escrow
requirements would be moved to
proposed section X but would remain
largely unchanged. Question 1 under
current section IV, relating to the date
loan originations were subject to the
escrow requirement, would be deleted,
as it is now obsolete. Questions 2
through 7 under current section IV
would be renumbered as proposed
questions 48 through 53, respectively,
with minor changes for greater clarity
with no intended change in substance or
meaning.
Section XI. Forced placement of flood
insurance
For organizational purposes, the
Agencies are proposing to move existing
questions 1, 2, and 3 in Part VI to
questions 54, 55, and 56 in section XI
of the proposed document, respectively.
The Agencies are proposing minor
revisions to proposed question and
answer 54 to provide greater clarity,
with no intended change in substance or
meaning.
Section XII. Gap insurance policies
The Agencies are proposing to add a
new section and question and answer
on the appropriateness of gap or blanket
insurance policies, often purchased by
lenders to ensure adequate life-of-loan
flood insurance coverage for designated
loans, as a result of questions received
by the Agencies on such policies. Gap
or blanket insurance policies are lenderpaid private policies that are meant to
cover a lender’s entire portfolio of loans
for insurance shortfalls or expired
policies.
The proposed answer to question 57
of section XII would explain that,
generally, gap or blanket insurance is
not an adequate substitute for NFIP
insurance, as a gap or blanket policy
typically protects only the lender’s, not
the borrower’s interest, and cannot be
transferred when a loan is sold. The
question and answer would
acknowledge, however, that in limited
circumstances, a gap or blanket policy
may satisfy flood insurance obligations
in instances where NFIP and private
insurance for the borrower are otherwise
unavailable.
Section XIII: Required use of the
Standard Flood Hazard Determination
Form (SFHDF)
Current section V would be moved to
proposed section XIII, and questions 1,
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2, 3, and 4 of current section V would
be renumbered as proposed questions
58, 59, 60, and 61, respectively. The
Agencies are proposing some minor
changes to the answers for these
questions to provide additional clarity
with no intended change in substance or
meaning. For organizational purposes,
the guidance found in question 5 of
current section V would be moved to
proposed questions 32 and 33 under
proposed section VII, as discussed
above.
Section XIV. Flood determination fees
Current section VII would be moved
to proposed section XIV. Questions 1
and 2 in current section VII would be
renumbered as questions 62 and 63,
respectively, with only minor language
modifications, with no intended change
in substance or meaning.
Section XV. Flood zone discrepancies
The Agencies are proposing a new
section and two new questions
concerning issues where there is a
discrepancy between the flood hazard
zone designation on a flood hazard
determination form and the flood
hazard zone designation on the flood
insurance policy. Proposed new
question 64 would address how lenders
should respond when confronted with a
discrepancy between the flood hazard
zone designations on the flood hazard
determination form and the flood
insurance policy. The question
discusses the legitimate reasons why
such discrepancies may exist and
describes how to resolve differences if
there is no legitimate reason for them.
Proposed question 65 discusses when
such flood zone discrepancies in a loan
portfolio will result in a finding that the
lender violated federal flood insurance
requirements. If there are repeated
instances in the lender’s loan portfolio
of discrepancies between the flood
hazard zone listed on a flood hazard
determination and the flood hazard
zone listed on a flood insurance policy,
and the lender has not taken steps to
resolve such discrepancies, then an
agency may find that the lender has
violated the mandatory purchase
requirements.
Section XVI. Notice of special flood
hazards and availability of Federal
disaster relief
The Agencies propose to move
current section VIII to proposed section
XVI. Therefore, questions 1, 2, 3, 4, 5,
and 6 under current section VIII would
be renumbered as proposed questions
66, 67, 68, 69, 70, and 71, respectively,
with nonsubstantive changes made to
provide additional clarity to the
answers. For organizational purposes,
question 1 under current section X
would be consolidated under this new
section XVI and renumbered as question
73. Furthermore, a new question 72 is
proposed to be added to clarify that the
Notice of Special Flood Hazards must be
provided to the borrower each time a
loan is made, increased, extended, or
renewed, even when a new
determination is not required.
Section XVII. Mandatory civil money
penalties
The Agencies are proposing a new
section and two new questions
concerning the imposition of mandatory
civil money penalties for violations of
the flood insurance requirements.
Proposed new question 74 would list
the sections of the Act that trigger
mandatory civil money penalties when
examiners find a pattern or practice of
violations of those sections. The
question would also include
information about statutory limits on
the amount of such penalties. Proposed
new question 75 would discuss the
general standards the Agencies consider
when determining whether violations
constitute a pattern or practice for
which civil money penalties are
mandatory. These considerations are not
dispositive of individual cases, but
serve as a reference point for reviewing
the particular facts and circumstances.
Redesignation Table
The following redesignation table is
provided as an aide to assist the public
in reviewing the proposed revisions to
the 1997 Interagency Questions and
Answers.
Current
Section I. Definitions:
Section I, Question
Section I, Question
Section I, Question
Section I, Question
Section I, Question
Section I, Question
1
2
3
4
5
6
Proposed
......................................................................................................................................
......................................................................................................................................
......................................................................................................................................
......................................................................................................................................
......................................................................................................................................
......................................................................................................................................
Section I, Question 7 ......................................................................................................................................
Section I, Question 8 ......................................................................................................................................
Section I, Question 9 ......................................................................................................................................
Section I, Question 10 ....................................................................................................................................
Section II. Requirement to Purchase Flood Insurance Where Available:
Section II, Question 1 .....................................................................................................................................
Section II, Question 2 .....................................................................................................................................
Section II, Question 3 .....................................................................................................................................
Section II, Question 4 .....................................................................................................................................
Section II, Question 5 .....................................................................................................................................
Section II, Question 6 .....................................................................................................................................
Section II, Question 7 .....................................................................................................................................
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Section II, Question 8 .....................................................................................................................................
Section II, Question 9 .....................................................................................................................................
Section III. Exemptions ..........................................................................................................................................
Section III, Question 1 ....................................................................................................................................
Section IV. Escrow Requirements .........................................................................................................................
Section IV, Question 1 ...................................................................................................................................
Section IV, Question 2 ...................................................................................................................................
Section IV, Question 3 ...................................................................................................................................
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Section IV, Question 17.
Section IV, Question 16.
Section VII, Question 30.
Section VII, Question 31.
Section VII, Question 34.
Section VII, Question 35; and
Section VII, Question 36.
Section VII, Question 37.
Section VII, Question 38.
Section I, Question 4.
Section VII, Question 39.
Section I, Question 1.
Section I, Question 3.
Section I, Question 5.
Deleted as obsolete.
Section II, Question 12.
Section IX, Question 41.
Section II, Question 11; and Section V, Question 22.
Section VI, Question 24.
Section VI, Question 27.
Section III. Exemptions from the
mandatory flood insurance requirements.
Section III, Question 15.
Section X. Escrow requirements.
Deleted as obsolete.
Section X, Question 48.
Section X, Question 49.
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Current
Section IV, Question 4
Section IV, Question 5
Section IV, Question 6
Section IV, Question 7
Section V. Required Use of
Section
Section
Section
Section
Section
V,
V,
V,
V,
V,
Question
Question
Question
Question
Question
1
2
3
4
5
Proposed
...................................................................................................................................
...................................................................................................................................
...................................................................................................................................
...................................................................................................................................
Standard Flood Hazard Determination Form (SFHDF) ...........................................
....................................................................................................................................
....................................................................................................................................
....................................................................................................................................
....................................................................................................................................
....................................................................................................................................
Section VI. Forced Placement of Flood Insurance ...............................................................................................
Section VI, Question 1 ...................................................................................................................................
Section VI, Question 2 ...................................................................................................................................
Section VI, Question 3 ...................................................................................................................................
Section VII. Determination Fees ............................................................................................................................
Section VII, Question 1 ..................................................................................................................................
Section VII, Question 2 ..................................................................................................................................
Section VIII. Notice of Special Flood Hazards and Availability of Federal Disaster Relief ..................................
Section VIII, Question 1 .................................................................................................................................
Section VIII, Question 2 .................................................................................................................................
Section VIII, Question 3 .................................................................................................................................
Section VIII, Question 4 .................................................................................................................................
Section VIII, Question 5 .................................................................................................................................
Section VIII, Question 6 .................................................................................................................................
Section IX. Notice of Servicer’s Identity ................................................................................................................
Section IX, Question 1 ...................................................................................................................................
Section IX, Question 2 ...................................................................................................................................
Section IX, Question 3 ...................................................................................................................................
Section IX, Question 4 ...................................................................................................................................
Section IX, Question 5 ...................................................................................................................................
Section IX, Question 6 ...................................................................................................................................
Section X Appendix A to the Regulation-Sample Form of Notice of Special Flood Hazards and Availability of
Federal Disaster Relief Assistance.
Section X, Question 1 ....................................................................................................................................
Public Comments
The Agencies invite public comment
on the proposed new and revised
Interagency Questions and Answers. If
financial institutions, bank examiners,
community groups, or other interested
parties have unanswered questions or
comments about the Agencies’ flood
insurance regulations, they should
submit them to the Agencies. The
Agencies will consider including these
questions and answers in the final
guidance.
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Solicitation of Comments Regarding the
Use of ‘‘Plain Language’’
Section 722 of the Gramm-LeachBliley Act of 1999, 12 U.S.C. 4809,
requires the federal banking Agencies to
use ‘‘plain language’’ in all proposed
and final rules published after January
1, 2000. Although this proposed
guidance is not a proposed rule,
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comments are nevertheless invited on
whether the proposed interagency
questions and answers are stated clearly
and effectively organized, and how the
guidance might be revised to make it
easier to read.
The text of the proposed Interagency
Questions and Answers follows:
Interagency Questions and Answers
Regarding Flood Insurance
The Interagency Questions and
Answers are organized by topic. Each
topic addresses a major area of the
revised flood insurance law and
regulations. For ease of reference, the
following terms are used throughout
this document: ‘‘Act’’ refers to the
National Flood Insurance Act of 1968
and the Flood Disaster Protection Act of
1973, as revised by the National Flood
Insurance Reform Act of 1994 (codified
at 42 U.S.C. 4001 et seq.). ‘‘Regulation’’
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Section X, Question 50.
Section X, Question 51.
Section X, Question 52.
Section X, Question 53.
Section XIII. Required use of
Standard Flood Hazard Determination Form (SFHDF).
Section XIII, Question 58.
Section XIII, Question 59.
Section XIII, Question 60.
Section XIII, Question 61.
Section VII, Question 32; and
Section VII, Question 33.
Section XI. Forced placement of
flood insurance.
Section XI, Question 54.
Section XI, Question 55.
Section XI, Question 56.
Section XIV. Flood determination
fees.
Section XIV, Question 62.
Section XIV, Question 63.
Section XVI. Notice of special
flood hazards and availability
of Federal disaster relief.
Section XVI, Question 66.
Section XVI, Question 67.
Section XVI, Question 68.
Section XVI, Question 69.
Section XVI, Question 70.
Section XVI, Question 71.
Section IX. Flood insurance requirements in the event of the
sale or transfer of a designated
loan and/or its servicing rights.
Section IX, Question 42.
Section IX, Question 43.
Section IX, Question 44.
Section IX, Question 45.
Section IX, Question 46.
Section IX, Question 47.
Section XVI. Notice of special
flood hazards and availability
of Federal disaster relief.
Section XVI, Question 73.
refers to each agency’s current final
rule.7 The OCC, Board, FDIC, OTS,
NCUA, and FCA (collectively, ‘‘the
Agencies’’) are providing answers to
questions pertaining to the following
topics:
I. Determining when certain loans are
designated loans for which flood
insurance is required under the Act and
Regulation.
II. Determining the appropriate amount of
flood insurance required under the Act
and Regulation.
III. Exemptions from the mandatory flood
insurance requirements.
IV. Flood insurance requirements for
construction loans.
V. Flood insurance requirements for
agricultural buildings.
VI. Flood insurance requirements for
7 The Agencies’ rules are codified at 12 CFR part
22 (OCC), 12 CFR part 208 (Board), 12 CFR part 339
(FDIC), 12 CFR part 572 (OTS), 12 CFR part 614
(FCA), and 12 CFR part 760 (NCUA).
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residential condominiums.
VII. Flood insurance requirements for home
equity loans, lines of credit, subordinate
liens, and other security interests in
collateral located in an SFHA.
VIII. Flood insurance requirements for loan
syndications/participations.
IX. Flood insurance requirements in the
event of the sale or transfer of a
designated loan and/or its servicing
rights.
X. Escrow requirements.
XI. Forced placement of flood insurance.
XII. Gap insurance policies.
XIII. Required use of Standard Flood Hazard
Determination Form (SFHDF).
XIV. Flood determination fees.
XV. Flood zone discrepancies.
XVI. Notice of special flood hazards and
availability of Federal disaster relief.
XVII. Mandatory civil money penalties.
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I. Determining When Certain Loans Are
Designated Loans for Which Flood
Insurance is Required Under the Act
and Regulation
1. Does the Regulation apply to a loan
where the building or mobile home
securing such loan is located in a
community that does not participate in
the National Flood Insurance Program
(NFIP)?
Answer: Yes. The Regulation does
apply; however, a lender need not
require borrowers to obtain flood
insurance for a building or mobile home
located in a community that does not
participate in the NFIP, even if the
building or mobile home securing the
loan is located in a Special Flood
Hazard Area (SFHA). Nonetheless, a
lender, using the standard Special Flood
Hazard Determination Form (SFHDF),
must still determine whether the
building or mobile home is located in an
SFHA. If the building or mobile home
is determined to be located in an SFHA,
a lender is required to notify the
borrower. In this case, a lender,
generally, may make a conventional
loan without requiring flood insurance,
if it chooses to do so. However, a lender
may not make a Government-guaranteed
or insured loan, such as an SBA, VA, or
FHA, loan secured by a building or
mobile home located in an SFHA in a
community that does not participate in
the NFIP. See 42 U.S.C. 4106(a). Also,
a lender is responsible for exercising
sound risk management practices to
ensure that it does not make a loan
secured by a building or mobile home
located in an SFHA where no flood
insurance is available, if doing so would
be an unacceptable risk.
2. What is a lender’s responsibility if
a particular building or mobile home
that secures a loan, due to a map
change, is no longer located within an
SFHA?
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Answer: The lender is no longer
obligated to require mandatory flood
insurance; however, the borrower can
elect to convert the existing NFIP policy
to a Preferred Risk Policy. For risk
management purposes, the lender may,
by contract, continue to require flood
insurance coverage.
3. Does a lender’s purchase of a loan,
secured by a building or mobile home
located in an SFHA in which flood
insurance is available under the Act,
from another lender trigger any
requirements under the Regulation?
Answer: No. A lender’s purchase of a
loan, secured by a building or mobile
home located in an SFHA in which
flood insurance is available under the
Act, alone, is not an event that triggers
the Regulation’s requirements, such as
making a new flood determination or
requiring a borrower to purchase flood
insurance. Requirements under the
Regulation, generally, are triggered
when a lender makes, increases,
extends, or renews a designated loan. A
lender’s purchase of a loan does not fall
within any of those categories.
However, if a lender becomes aware at
any point during the life of a designated
loan that flood insurance is required,
the lender must comply with the
Regulation, including force placing
insurance, if necessary. Depending upon
the circumstances, safety and soundness
considerations may sometimes
necessitate such due diligence upon
purchase of a loan as to put the lender
on notice of lack of adequate flood
insurance. If the purchasing lender
subsequently extends, increases, or
renews a designated loan, it must also
comply with the Regulation.
4. Does the Regulation apply to loans
that are being restructured because of
the borrower’s default on the original
loan?
Answer: Yes, if the loan otherwise
meets the definition of a designated loan
and if the lender increases the amount
of the loan, or extends or renews the
terms of the original loan.
5. Are table funded loans treated as
new loan originations?
Answer: Yes. Table funding, as
defined under HUD’s Real Estate
Settlement Procedure Act (RESPA) rule,
24 CFR 3500.2, is a settlement at which
a loan is funded by a contemporaneous
advance of loan funds and the
assignment of the loan to the person
advancing the funds. A loan made
through a table funding process is
treated as though the party advancing
the funds has originated the loan. The
funding party is required to comply
with the Regulation. The table funding
lender can meet the administrative
requirements of the Regulation by
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requiring the party processing and
underwriting the application to perform
those functions on its behalf.
6. Is a lender required to perform a
review of its, or its servicer’s, existing
loan portfolio for compliance with the
flood insurance requirements under the
Act and Regulation?
Answer: No. Apart from the
requirements mandated when a loan is
made, increased, extended, or renewed,
a regulated lender need only review and
take action on any part of its existing
portfolio for safety and soundness
purposes, or if it knows or has reason
to know of the need for NFIP coverage.
Regardless of the lack of such
requirement in the Act and Regulation,
however, sound risk management
practices may lead a lender to conduct
scheduled periodic reviews that track
the need for flood insurance on a loan
portfolio.
II. Determining the Appropriate
Amount of Flood Insurance Required
Under the Act and Regulation
7. The Regulation states that the
amount of flood insurance required
‘‘must be at least equal to the lesser of
the outstanding principal balance of the
designated loan or the maximum limit
of coverage available for the particular
type of property under the Act.’’ What
is meant by the ‘‘maximum limit of
coverage available for the particular
type of property under the Act’’?
Answer: ‘‘The maximum limit of
coverage available for the particular
type of property under the Act’’
depends on the value of the secured
collateral. First, under the NFIP, there
are maximum caps on the amount of
insurance available. For single-family
and two-to-four family dwellings and
other residential buildings located in a
participating community under the
regular program, the maximum cap is
$250,000. For nonresidential structures
located in a participating community
under the regular program, the
maximum cap is $500,000. (In
participating communities that are
under the emergency program phase,
the caps are $35,000 for single-family
and two-to-four family dwellings and
other residential structures, and
$100,000 for nonresidential structures).
In addition to the maximum caps
under the NFIP, the Regulation also
provides that ‘‘flood insurance coverage
under the Act is limited to the overall
value of the property securing the
designated loan minus the value of the
land on which the property is located,’’
which is commonly referred to as the
‘‘insurable value’’ of a structure. The
NFIP does not insure land; therefore,
land values should not be included in
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the calculation. An NFIP policy will not
cover an amount exceeding the
‘‘insurable value’’ of the structure. In
determining coverage amounts for flood
insurance, lenders often follow the same
practice used to establish other hazard
insurance coverage amounts. However,
unlike the insurable valuation used to
underwrite most other hazard insurance
policies, the insurable value of
improved real property for flood
insurance purposes also includes the
repair or replacement cost of the
foundation and supporting structures. It
is very important to calculate the correct
insurable value of the property;
otherwise, the lender might
inadvertently require the borrower to
purchase too much or too little flood
insurance coverage. For example, if the
lender fails to exclude the value of the
land when determining the insurable
value of the improved real property, the
borrower will be asked to purchase
coverage that exceeds the amount the
NFIP will pay in the event of a loss.
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(Please note, however, when taking a
security interest in improved real property
where the value of the land, excluding the
value of the improvements, is sufficient
collateral for the debt, the lender must
nonetheless require flood insurance to cover
the value of the structure if it is located in
a participating community’s SFHA).
8. What are examples of residential
buildings?
Answer: Residential buildings include
one-to-four family dwellings; apartment
or other residential buildings containing
more than four dwelling units;
condominiums and cooperatives in
which at least 75 percent of the square
footage is residential; hotels or motels
where the normal occupancy of a guest
is six months or more; and rooming
houses that have more than four
roomers. A residential building may
have incidental non-residential use,
such as an office or studio, as long as
the total area of such incidental
occupancy is limited to less than 25
percent of the square footage of the
building.
9. What are examples of
nonresidential buildings?
Answer: Nonresidential buildings
include small business concerns,
churches, schools, farm buildings
(including grain bins and silos), pool
houses, clubhouses, recreational
buildings, mercantile structures,
agricultural and industrial structures,
warehouses, hotels and motels with
normal room rentals for less than six
months’ duration, nursing homes, and
mixed-use buildings with less than 75
percent residential square footage.
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10. How much insurance is required
on a building located in an SFHA in a
participating community?
Answer: The amount of insurance
required by the Act and Regulation is
the lesser of:
• The outstanding principal balance
of the loan(s) or
• The maximum amount of insurance
available under the NFIP, which is the
lesser of:
Æ The maximum limit available for
the type of structure or
Æ The ‘‘insurable value’’ of the
structure (see Question 7).
Example: (calculating insurance
required on a non-residential building):
Loan security includes one equipment
shed located in an SFHA in a
participating community under the
regular program.
• Outstanding loan principal is
$300,000
• Maximum amount of insurance
available under the NFIP:
Æ Maximum limit available for type
of structure is $500,000 per building
(non-residential building)
Æ Insurable value of the equipment
shed is $30,000
The minimum amount of insurance
required by the Regulation for the
equipment shed is $30,000.
11. Is flood insurance required for
each building when the real estate secu
rity contains more than one building
located in an SFHA in a participating
community? If so, how much coverage is
required?
Answer: Yes. The lender must
determine the amount of insurance
required on each building and add these
individual amounts together. The total
amount of required flood insurance is
the lesser of:
• the outstanding principal balance of
the loan(s) or
• the maximum amount of insurance
available under the NFIP, which is the
lesser of:
Æ the maximum limit available for the
type of structures or
Æ the ‘‘insurable value’’ of the
structures (see Question 7).
The amount of total required flood
insurance can be allocated among the
secured buildings in varying amounts,
but all buildings in an SFHA must have
some coverage.
Example: Lender makes a loan in the
principal amount of $150,000 secured
by five nonresidential buildings, only
three of which are located in SFHAs
within participating communities.
• Outstanding loan principal is
$150,000
• Maximum amount of insurance
available under the NFIP
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Æ Maximum limit available for the
type of structure is $500,000 per
building (non-residential buildings); or
Æ Insurable value (for each nonresidential building for which insurance
is required, which is $100,000, or
$300,000 total)
Amount of insurance required for the
three buildings is $150,000. This
amount of required flood insurance
could be allocated among the three
buildings in varying amounts, so long as
each is covered by flood insurance.
12. If the insurable value of a building
or mobile home, located in an SFHA in
which flood insurance is available
under the Act, securing a designated
loan is less than the outstanding
principal balance of the loan, must a
lender require the borrower to obtain
flood insurance up to the balance of the
loan?
Answer: No. The Regulation provides
that the amount of flood insurance must
be at least equal to the lesser of the
outstanding principal balance of the
designated loan or the maximum limit
of coverage available for a particular
type of property under the Act. The
Regulation also provides that flood
insurance coverage under the Act is
limited to the overall value of the
property securing the designated loan
minus the value of the land on which
the building or mobile home is located.
Since the NFIP policy does not cover
land value, lenders should determine
the amount of insurance necessary
based on the insurable value of the
improvements.
13. Can a lender require more flood
insurance than the minimum required
by the Regulation?
Answer: Yes. Lenders are permitted to
require more flood insurance coverage
than required by the Regulation. The
borrower or lender may have to seek
such coverage outside the NFIP. Each
lender has the responsibility to tailor its
own flood insurance policies and
procedures to suit its business needs
and protect its ongoing interest in the
collateral. Lenders should avoid
creating situations where a building is
being ‘‘over-insured’’.
14. Can a lender allow the borrower
to use the maximum deductible to
reduce the cost of flood insurance?
Answer: Yes. However, it is not a
sound business practice for a lender to
allow the borrower to use the maximum
deductible amount in every situation. A
lender should determine the
reasonableness of the deductible on a
case-by-case basis, taking into account
the risk that such a deductible would
pose to the borrower and lender. A
lender may not allow the borrower to
use a deductible amount equal to the
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insurable value of the property to avoid
the mandatory purchase requirement for
flood insurance.
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III. Exemptions From the Mandatory
Flood Insurance Requirements
15. What are the exemptions from
coverage?
Answer: There are only two
exemptions from the purchase
requirements. The first applies to stateowned property covered under a policy
of self-insurance satisfactory to the
Director of FEMA. The second applies if
both the original principal balance of
the loan is $5,000 or less, and the
original repayment term is one year or
less.
IV. Flood Insurance Requirements for
Construction Loans
16. Is a loan secured by raw land that
is located in an SFHA in which flood
insurance is available under the Act and
that will be developed into buildable
lot(s) a designated loan that requires
flood insurance?
Answer: No. A designated loan is
defined as a loan secured by a building
or mobile home that is located or to be
located in an SFHA in which flood
insurance is available under the Act.
Any loan secured by only raw land that
is located in an SFHA in which flood
insurance is available is not a
designated loan since it is not secured
by a building or mobile home.
17. Is a loan secured or to be secured
by a building in the course of
construction that is located or to be
located in an SFHA in which flood
insurance is available under the Act a
designated loan?
Answer: Yes. Therefore, a lender must
always make a flood determination prior
to loan origination to determine whether
a building to be constructed that is
security for the loan is located or will
be located in an SFHA in which flood
insurance is available under the Act. If
so, then the loan is a designated loan
and the lender must provide the
requisite notice to the borrower prior to
loan origination that mandatory flood
insurance is required. The lender must
then comply with the mandatory
purchase requirement under the Act and
Regulation.
18. Is a building in the course of
construction that is located in an SFHA
in which flood insurance is available
under the Act eligible for coverage
under an NFIP policy?
Answer: Yes. FEMA’s Flood
Insurance Manual, under general rules,
states: buildings in the course of
construction that have yet to be walled
and roofed are eligible for coverage
except when construction has been
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halted for more than 90 days and/or if
the lowest floor used for rating purposes
is below the Base Flood Elevation (BFE).
Materials or supplies intended for use in
such construction, alteration, or repair
are not insurable unless they are
contained within an enclosed building
on the premises or adjacent to the
premises.
Flood Insurance Manual at p. GR 4
(October 2006). The definition section of
the Flood Insurance Manual defines
‘‘start of construction’’ in the case of
new construction as ‘‘either the first
placement of permanent construction of
a building on site, such as the pouring
of a slab or footing, the installation of
piles, the construction of columns, or
any work beyond the stage of
excavation; or the placement of a
manufactured (mobile) home on a
foundation.’’ Flood Insurance Manual at
p. DEF 9. While an NFIP policy may be
purchased prior to the start of
construction, as a practical matter,
coverage under an NFIP policy is not
effective until actual construction
commences or when materials or
supplies intended for use in such
construction, alteration, or repair are
contained in an enclosed building on
the premises or adjacent to the
premises.
19. When must a lender require the
purchase of flood insurance for a loan
secured by a building in the course of
construction that is located in an SFHA
in which flood insurance is available?
Answer: Under the Act, as
implemented by the Regulation, a
lender may not make, increase, extend,
or renew any loan secured by a building
or a mobile home, located or to be
located in an SFHA in which flood
insurance is available, unless the
property is covered by adequate flood
insurance for the term of the loan. One
way for lenders to comply with the
mandatory purchase requirement for a
loan secured by a building in the course
of construction that is located in an
SFHA is to require borrowers to have a
flood insurance policy in place at the
time of loan origination.
Alternatively, a lender may allow a
borrower to defer the purchase of flood
insurance until a foundation slab has
been poured and/or an elevation
certificate has been issued, provided
that the lender requires the borrower to
have flood insurance in place before the
lender disburses funds to pay for
building construction (except as
necessary to pour the slab or perform
preliminary site work, such as laying
utilities, clearing brush, or the purchase
and/or delivery of building materials)
on the property securing the loan. If the
lender elects this approach and does not
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require flood insurance to be obtained at
loan origination, then it must have
adequate internal controls in place at
origination to ensure that the borrower
obtains flood insurance no later than
when the foundation slab has been
poured and/or an elevation certificate
has been issued.
20. Does the 30-day waiting period
apply when the purchase of the flood
insurance policy is deferred in
connection with a construction loan?
Answer: No. The NFIP will rely on an
insurance agent’s representation on the
application for flood insurance that the
purchase of insurance has been properly
deferred unless there is a loss during the
first 30 days of the policy period. In that
case, the NFIP will require
documentation of the loan transaction,
such as settlement papers, before
adjusting the loss.
V. Flood Insurance Requirements for
Agricultural Buildings
21. Some agricultural operations have
buildings on their farms with limited
utility to the farming operation and, in
many cases, the farmer would not
replace such buildings if lost in a flood.
Is a lender required to mandate flood
insurance for such buildings?
Answer: Yes. Under the Regulation,
lenders must require flood insurance on
real estate improvements when those
improvements are part of the property
securing the loan and are located in an
SFHA in a participating community.
The Act does not differentiate
agricultural lending from other types of
lending.
The lender may consider ‘‘carving
out’’ buildings from the security it takes
on the loan. However, the lender should
fully analyze the risks of this option. In
particular, a lender should consider
whether it would be able to market the
property securing its loan in the event
of foreclosure. Additionally, the lender
should consider any local zoning issues
or other issues that would affect its
collateral.
22. What are a lender’s requirements
under the Regulation for a loan secured
by multiple agricultural buildings
located throughout a large geographic
area where some of the buildings are
located in an SFHA in which flood
insurance is available and other
buildings are not? What if the buildings
are located in several jurisdictions or
counties where some of the
communities participate in the NFIP,
and others do not?
Answer: A lender is required to make
a determination as to whether the
property securing the loan is in an
SFHA. If secured property is located in
an SFHA, but not in a participating
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community, no flood insurance is
required, although a lender can require
the purchase of flood insurance (from a
private insurer) as a matter of safety and
soundness. Conversely, where a secured
property is located in a participating
community but not in an SFHA, no
insurance is required. A lender must
provide appropriate notice and require
the purchase of flood insurance for
designated loans located in an SFHA in
a participating community. Agricultural
buildings that are part of the loan’s
security and are located in an SFHA in
a participating community are required
to have flood insurance.
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VI. Flood Insurance Requirements for
Residential Condominiums
23. Are residential condominiums,
including multi-story condominium
complexes, subject to the statutory and
regulatory requirements for flood
insurance?
Answer: Yes. The mandatory flood
insurance purchase requirements under
the Act and Regulation apply to loans
secured by individual residential
condominium units, including those
located in multi-story condominium
complexes, located in an SFHA in
which flood insurance is available
under the Act. The mandatory purchase
requirements also apply to loans
secured by other condominium
property, such as loans to a developer
for construction of the condominium or
loans to a condominium association.
24. What is the amount of flood
insurance coverage that a lender must
require with respect to residential
condominium units, including those
located in multi-story condominium
complexes, to comply with the
mandatory purchase requirements
under the Act and the Regulation?
Answer: To comply with the
Regulation, the lender must ensure that
the minimum amount of flood insurance
covering the condominium unit is the
lesser of:
• The outstanding principal balance
of the loan(s) or
• The maximum amount of insurance
available under the NFIP, which is the
lesser of:
Æ The maximum limit available for
the residential condominium unit or
Æ The ‘‘insurable value’’ allocated to
the residential condominium unit,
which is the replacement cost value of
the condominium building divided by
the number of units.
Assuming that the outstanding
principal balance of the loan is greater
than the maximum amount of coverage
available under the NFIP, the lender
must require a borrower whose loan is
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secured by a residential condominium
unit to either:
• Ensure the condominium owners
association has purchased an NFIP
Residential Condominium Building
Association Policy (RCBAP) covering
either 100 percent of the insurable value
(replacement cost) of the building,
including amounts to repair or replace
the foundation and its supporting
structures, or the total number of units
in the condominium building times
$250,000, whichever is less; or
• Obtain a dwelling policy if there is
no RCBAP, as explained in Question 25,
or if the RCBAP coverage is less than
100 percent of the replacement cost
value of the building or the total number
of units in the condominium building
times $250,000, whichever is less, as
explained in Question 26.
The RCBAP, which is a master policy
for condominiums issued by FEMA,
may only be purchased by the
condominium owners association. The
RCBAP covers both the common and
individually owned building elements
within the units, improvements within
the units, and contents owned in
common. The maximum amount of
building coverage that can be purchased
under an RCBAP is either 100 percent
of the replacement cost value of the
building, including amounts to repair or
replace the foundation and its
supporting structures, or the total
number of units in the condominium
building times $250,000, whichever is
less.
The dwelling policy provides
individual unit owners with
supplemental building coverage to the
RCBAP. The policies are coordinated
such that the dwelling policy purchased
by the unit owner responds to shortfalls
on building coverages pertaining either
to improvements owned by the insured
unit owner or to assessments. However,
the dwelling policy does not extend the
RCBAP limits, nor does it enable the
condominium association to fill in gaps
in coverage.
Example: Lender makes a loan in the
principal amount of $300,000 secured
by a condominium unit in a 50-unit
condominium building, which is
located in an SFHA within a
participating community, with a
replacement cost of $15 million and
insured by an RCBAP with $12.5
million of coverage.
• Outstanding principal balance of
loan is $300,000;
• Maximum amount of coverage
available under the NFIP, which is the
lesser of:
Æ Maximum limit available for the
residential condominium unit is
$250,000; or
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Æ Insurable value of the unit based on
100 percent of the building’s
replacement cost value ($15 million ÷
50 = $300,000).
The lender does not need to require
additional flood insurance since the
RCBAP’s $250,000 per unit coverage
($12.5 million ÷ 50 = $250,000) satisfies
the Regulation’s mandatory flood
insurance requirement. (This is the
lesser of the outstanding principal
balance ($300,000), the maximum
coverage available under the NFIP
($250,000), or the insurable value
($300,000).)
The guidance in question and answer
24 will apply to any loan that is made,
increased, extended, or renewed after
the effective date of the revised
guidance. Further, the guidance will
apply to any loan made prior to the
effective date of the guidance, which a
lender determines to be covered by
flood insurance in an amount less than
required by the Regulation, and as set
forth in proposed question and answer
24, at the first flood insurance policy
renewal period following the effective
date of the revised guidance.
25. What action must a lender take if
there is no RCBAP coverage?
Answer: If there is no RCBAP, either
because the condominium association
will not obtain a policy or because
individual unit owners are responsible
for obtaining their own insurance, then
the lender must require the individual
unit owner/borrower to obtain a
dwelling policy in an amount sufficient
to meet the requirements outlined in
Question 24.
Example: The lender makes a loan in
the principal amount of $175,000
secured by a condominium unit in a 50unit condominium building, which is
located in an SFHA within a
participating community, with a
replacement cost value of $10 million;
however, there is no RCBAP.
• Outstanding principal balance of
loan is $175,000.
• Maximum amount of coverage
available under the NFIP, which is the
lesser of:
Æ Maximum limit available for the
residential condominium unit is
$250,000; or
Æ Insurable value of the unit based on
100 percent of the building’s
replacement cost value ($10 million ÷
50 = $200,000).
The lender must require the
individual unit owner/borrower to
purchase a flood insurance dwelling
policy in the amount of $175,000, since
there is no RCBAP, to satisfy the
Regulation’s mandatory flood insurance
requirement. (This is the lesser of the
outstanding principal balance
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($175,000), the maximum coverage
available under the NFIP ($250,000), or
the insurable value ($200,000).)
26. What action must a lender take if
the RCBAP coverage is insufficient to
meet the Regulation’s mandatory
purchase requirements for a loan
secured by an individual residential
condominium unit?
Answer: If the lender determines that
flood insurance coverage purchased
under the RCBAP is insufficient to meet
the Regulation’s mandatory purchase
requirements, then the lender should
request the individual unit owner/
borrower to ask the condominium
association to obtain additional
coverage that would be sufficient to
meet the Regulation’s requirements (see
Question 24). If the condominium
association does not obtain sufficient
coverage, then the lender must require
the individual unit owner/borrower to
purchase a dwelling policy in an
amount sufficient to meet the
Regulation’s flood insurance
requirements. The amount of coverage
under the dwelling policy required to be
purchased by the individual unit owner
would be the difference between the
RCBAP’s coverage allocated to that unit
and the Regulation’s mandatory flood
insurance requirements (see Question
24).
Example: Lender makes a loan in the
principal amount of $300,000 secured
by a condominium unit in a 50-unit
condominium building, which is
located in an SFHA within a
participating community, with a
replacement cost value of $10 million;
however, the RCBAP is at 80 percent of
replacement cost value ($8 million or
$160,000 per unit).
• Outstanding principal balance of
loan is $300,000
• Maximum amount of coverage
available under the NFIP, which is the
lesser of:
Æ Maximum limit available for the
residential condominium unit is
$250,000; or
Æ Insurable value of the unit based on
100 percent of the building’s
replacement value ($10 million ÷ 50 =
$200,000).
The lender must require the
individual unit owner/borrower to
purchase a flood insurance dwelling
policy in the amount of $40,000 to
satisfy the Regulation’s mandatory flood
insurance requirement of $200,000.
(This is the lesser of the outstanding
principal balance ($300,000), the
maximum coverage available under the
NFIP ($250,000), or the insurable value
($200,000).) The RCBAP fulfills only
$160,000 of the Regulation’s flood
insurance requirement.
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While the individual unit owner’s
purchase of a separate dwelling policy
that provides for adequate flood
insurance coverage under the
Regulation will satisfy the Regulation’s
mandatory flood insurance
requirements, the lender and the
individual unit owner/borrower may
still be exposed to additional risk of
loss. Lenders are encouraged to apprise
borrowers of this risk. The dwelling
policy provides individual unit owners
with supplemental building coverage to
the RCBAP. The policies are
coordinated such that the dwelling
policy purchased by the unit owner
responds to shortfalls on building
coverages pertaining either to
improvements owned by the insured
unit owner or to assessments. However,
the dwelling policy does not extend the
RCBAP limits, nor does it enable the
condominium association to fill in gaps
in coverage.
The risk arises because the individual
unit owner’s dwelling policy may
contain claim limitations that prevent
the dwelling policy from covering the
individual unit owner’s share of the coinsurance penalty, which is triggered
when the amount of insurance under
the RCBAP is less than 80 percent of the
building’s replacement cost value at the
time of loss. In addition, following a
major flood loss, the insured unit owner
may have to rely upon the
condominium association’s and other
unit owners’ financial ability to make
the necessary repairs to common
elements in the building, such as
electricity, heating, plumbing, elevators,
etc. It is incumbent on the lender to
understand these limitations.
27. What must a lender do when a
loan secured by a residential
condominium unit is in a complex
whose condominium association allows
its existing RCBAP to lapse?
Answer: If a lender determines at any
time during the term of a designated
loan that the loan is not covered by
flood insurance or is covered by such
insurance in an amount less than that
required under the Act and the
Regulation, the lender must notify the
individual unit owner/borrower of the
requirement to maintain flood insurance
coverage sufficient to meet the
Regulation’s mandatory requirements.
The lender should encourage the
individual unit owner/borrower to work
with the condominium association to
acquire a new RCBAP in an amount
sufficient to meet the Regulation’s
mandatory flood insurance requirement
(see Question 24). Failing that, the
lender must require the individual unit
owner/borrower to obtain a flood
insurance dwelling policy in an amount
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sufficient to meet the Regulation’s
mandatory flood insurance requirement
(see Questions 25 and 26). If the
borrower/unit owner or the
condominium association fails to
purchase flood insurance sufficient to
meet the Regulation’s mandatory
requirements within 45 days of the
lender’s notification to the individual
unit owner/borrower of inadequate
insurance coverage, the lender must
force place the necessary flood
insurance.
28. How does the RCBAP’s coinsurance penalty apply in the case of
residential condominiums, including
those located in multi-story
condominium complexes?
Answer: In the event the RCBAP’s
coverage on a condominium building at
the time of loss is less than 80 percent
of either the building’s replacement cost
or the maximum amount of insurance
available for that building under the
NFIP (whichever is less), then the loss
payment, which is subject to a coinsurance penalty, is determined as
follows (subject to all other relevant
conditions in this policy, including
those pertaining to valuation,
adjustment, settlement, and payment of
loss):
A. Divide the actual amount of flood
insurance carried on the condominium
building at the time of loss by 80
percent of either its replacement cost or
the maximum amount of insurance
available for the building under the
NFIP, whichever is less.
B. Multiply the amount of loss, before
application of the deductible, by the
figure determined in A above.
C. Subtract the deductible from the
figure determined in B above.
The policy will pay the amount
determined in C above, or the amount
of insurance carried, whichever is less.
Example 1: (inadequate insurance
amount to avoid penalty)
Replacement value of the building—
$250,000
80% of replacement value of the
building—$200,000
Actual amount of insurance carried—
$180,000
Amount of the loss—$150,000
Deductible—$500
Step A: 180,000 ÷ 200,000 = .90
(90% of what should be carried to avoid
co-insurance penalty)
Step B: 150,000 × .90 = 135,000
Step C: 135,000 ¥ 500 = 134,500
The policy will pay no more than
$134,500. The remaining $15,500 is not
covered due to the co-insurance penalty
($15,000) and application of the
deductible ($500). Unit owners’
dwelling policies will not cover any
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assessment that may be imposed to
cover the costs of repair that are not
covered by the RCBAP.
Example 2: (adequate insurance
amount to avoid penalty)
Replacement value of the building—
$250,000
80% of replacement value of the
building—$200,000
Actual amount of insurance carried—
$200,000
Amount of the loss—$150,000
Deductible—$500
Step A: 200,000 ÷ 200,000 = 1.00
(100% of what should be carried to
avoid co-insurance penalty)
Step B: 150,000 × 1.00 = 150,000
Step C: 150,000 ¥ 500 = 149,500
In this example there is no coinsurance penalty, because the actual
amount of insurance carried meets the
80 percent requirement to avoid the coinsurance penalty. The policy will pay
no more than $149,500 ($150,000
amount of loss minus the $500
deductible). This example also assumes
a $150,000 outstanding principal loan
balance.
29. What are the major factors
involved with the individual unit
owner’s dwelling policy’s coverage
limitations with respect to the
condominium association’s RCBAP
coverage?
Answer: The following examples
demonstrate how the unit owner’s
dwelling policy may cover in certain
loss situations:
Example 1: (RCBAP insured to at least
80 percent of building replacement cost)
• If the unit owner purchases
building coverage under the dwelling
policy and if there is an RCBAP
covering at least 80 percent of the
building replacement cost value, the
loss assessment coverage under the
dwelling policy will pay that part of a
loss that exceeds 80 percent of the
association’s building replacement cost
allocated to that unit.
• The loss assessment coverage under
the dwelling policy will not cover the
association’s policy deductible
purchased by the condominium
association.
• If building elements within units
have also been damaged, the dwelling
policy pays to repair building elements
after the RCBAP limits that apply to the
unit have been exhausted. Coverage
combinations cannot exceed the total
limit of $250,000 per unit.
Example 2: (RCBAP insured to less
than 80 percent of building replacement
cost)
• If the unit owner purchases
building coverage under the dwelling
policy and there is an RCBAP that was
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insured to less than 80 percent of the
building replacement cost value at the
time of loss, the loss assessment
coverage cannot be used to reimburse
the association for its co-insurance
penalty.
• Loss assessment is available only to
cover the building damages in excess of
the 80-percent required amount at the
time of loss. Thus, the covered damages
to the condominium association
building must be greater than 80 percent
of the building replacement cost value
at the time of loss before the loss
assessment coverage under the dwelling
policy becomes available. Under the
dwelling policy, covered repairs to the
unit, if applicable, would have priority
in payment over loss assessments
against the unit owner.
Example 3: (No RCBAP)
• If the unit owner purchases
building coverage under the dwelling
policy and there is no RCBAP, the
dwelling policy covers assessments
against unit owners for damages to
common areas up to the dwelling policy
limit.
• However, if there is damage to the
building elements of the unit as well,
the combined payment of unit building
damages, which would apply first, and
the loss assessment may not exceed the
building coverage limit under the
dwelling policy.
VII. Flood Insurance Requirements for
Home Equity Loans, Lines of Credit,
Subordinate Liens, and Other Security
Interests in Collateral Located in an
SFHA
30. Is a home equity loan considered
a designated loan that requires flood
insurance?
Answer: Yes. A home equity loan is
a designated loan, regardless of the lien
priority, if the loan is secured by a
building or a mobile home located in an
SFHA in which flood insurance is
available under the Act.
31. Does a draw against an approved
line of credit secured by a building or
mobile home, which is located in an
SFHA in which flood insurance is
available under the Act, require a flood
determination under the Regulation?
Answer: No. While a line of credit,
secured by a building or mobile home
located in an SFHA in which flood
insurance is available under the Act, is
a designated loan and, therefore,
requires a flood determination when
application is made for the loan, draws
against an approved line do not require
further determinations. However, a
request made for an increase in an
approved line of credit may require a
new determination, depending upon
whether a previous determination was
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done. (See the response to Question 61
in Section XIII. Required use of
Standard Flood Hazard Determination
Form).
32. When a lender makes a second
mortgage secured by a building or
mobile home located in an SFHA, how
much flood insurance must the lender
require?
Answer: A lender must ensure that
adequate flood insurance is in place or
require that additional flood insurance
coverage be added to the flood
insurance policy in the amount of the
lesser of either the combined total
outstanding principal balance of the
first and second loan, the maximum
amount available under the Act
(currently $250,000 for a residential
building and $500,000 for a
nonresidential building), or the
insurable value of the building or
mobile home. The lender on the second
mortgage cannot comply with the Act
and Regulation by requiring flood
insurance only in the amount of the
outstanding principal balance of the
second mortgage without regard to the
amount of flood insurance coverage on
a first mortgage.
Example 1: Lender A makes a first
mortgage with a principal balance of
$100,000, but improperly requires only
$75,000 of flood insurance coverage.
Lender B issues a second mortgage with
a principal balance of $50,000. The
insurable value of the residential
building securing the loans is $200,000.
Lender B must ensure that flood
insurance in the amount of $150,000 is
purchased and maintained. If Lender B
were to require flood insurance only in
an amount equal to the principal
balance of the second mortgage
($50,000), its interest in the secured
property would not be fully protected in
the event of a flood loss because Lender
A would have prior claim on the entire
$100,000 of the loss payment towards
its principal balance of $100,000, while
Lender B would receive only $25,000 of
the loss payment toward its principal
balance of $50,000.
Example 2: Lender A, who is not
directly covered by the Act or
Regulation, makes a first mortgage with
a principal balance of $100,000 and
does not require flood insurance. Lender
B, who is directly covered by the Act
and Regulation, issues a second
mortgage with a principal balance of
$50,000. The insurable value of the
residential building securing the loans
is $200,000. Lender B must ensure that
flood insurance in the amount of
$150,000 is purchased and maintained.
If Lender B were to require flood
insurance only in an amount equal to
the principal balance of the second
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mortgage ($50,000), its interest in the
secured property would not be
protected in the event of a flood loss
because Lender A would have prior
claim on the entire $50,000 loss
payment towards its principal balance
of $100,000.
Example 3: Lender A made a first
mortgage with a principal balance of
$100,000 on real property with a fair
market value of $150,000. The insurable
value of the residential building on the
real property is $90,000; however,
Lender A improperly required only
$70,000 of flood insurance coverage.
Lender B later takes a second mortgage
on the property with a principal balance
of $10,000. Lender B must ensure that
flood insurance in the amount of
$90,000 is purchased and maintained on
the secured property to comply with the
Act and Regulation.
33. If a borrower requesting a home
equity loan secured by a junior lien
provides evidence that flood insurance
coverage is in place, does the lender
have to make a new determination?
Does the lender have to adjust the
insurance coverage?
Answer: It depends. Assuming the
requirements in Section 528 of the Act
(42 U.S.C. 4104b) are met and the same
lender made the first mortgage, then a
new determination may not be
necessary, when the existing
determination is not more than seven
years old, there have been no map
changes, and the determination was
recorded on an SFHDF. If, however, a
lender other than the one that made the
first mortgage loan is making the home
equity loan, a new determination would
be required because this lender would
be deemed to be ‘‘making’’ a new loan.
In either situation, the lender will need
to determine whether the amount of
insurance in force is sufficient to cover
the lesser of the combined outstanding
principal balance of all loans (including
the home equity loan), the insurable
value, or the maximum amount of
coverage available on the improved real
estate.
34. If the loan request is to finance
inventory stored in a building located
within an SFHA, but the building is not
security for the loan, is flood insurance
required?
Answer: No. The Act and the
Regulation provide that a lender shall
not make, increase, extend, or renew a
designated loan, that is a loan secured
by a building or mobile home located or
to be located in an SFHA, ‘‘unless the
building or mobile home and any
personal property securing such loan’’ is
covered by flood insurance for the term
of the loan. In this example, the
collateral is not the type that could
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secure a designated loan because it does
not include a building or mobile home;
rather, the collateral is the inventory
alone.
35. Is flood insurance required if a
building and its contents both secure a
loan, and the building is located in an
SFHA in which flood insurance is
available?
Answer: Yes. Flood insurance is
required for the building located in the
SFHA and any contents stored in that
building.
36. If a loan is secured by Building A,
which is located in an SFHA, and
contents, which are located in Building
B, is flood insurance required on the
contents securing a loan?
Answer: No. If collateral securing the
loan is stored in Building B, which does
not secure the loan, then flood
insurance is not required on those
contents whether or not Building B is
located in an SFHA.
37. Does the Regulation apply where
the lender takes a security interest in a
building or mobile home located in an
SFHA only as an ‘‘abundance of
caution’’?
Answer: Yes. The Act and Regulation
look to the collateral securing the loan.
If the lender takes a security interest in
improved real estate located in an
SFHA, then flood insurance is required.
38. If a borrower offers a note on a
single-family dwelling as collateral for a
loan but the lender does not take a
security interest in the dwelling itself, is
this a designated loan that requires
flood insurance?
Answer: No. A designated loan is a
loan secured by a building or mobile
home. In this example, the lender did
not take a security interest in the
building; therefore, the loan is not a
designated loan.
39. If a lender makes a loan that is not
secured by real estate, but is made on
the condition of a personal guarantee by
a third party who gives the lender a
security interest in improved real estate
owned by the third party that is located
in an SFHA in which flood insurance is
available, is it a designated loan that
requires flood insurance?
Answer: Yes. The making of a loan on
condition of a personal guarantee by a
third party and further secured by
improved real estate, which is located in
an SFHA, owned by that third party is
so closely tied to the making of the loan
that it is considered a designated loan
that requires flood insurance.
VIII. Flood Insurance Requirements for
Loan Syndications/Participations
40. How do the Agencies enforce the
mandatory purchase requirements
under the Act and Regulation when a
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lender participates in a loan
syndication/participation?
Answer: Although a syndication/
participation agreement may assign
compliance duties to the lead lender or
agent, and include clauses in which the
lead lender or agent indemnifies
participating lenders against flood
losses, each participating lender
remains individually responsible for
ensuring compliance with the Act and
Regulation.
Therefore, the Agencies will examine
whether the regulated institution/
participating lender has performed
upfront due diligence to ensure both
that the lead lender or agent has
undertaken the necessary activities to
ensure that the borrower obtains
appropriate flood insurance and that the
lead lender or agent has adequate
controls to monitor the loan(s) on an ongoing basis for compliance with the
flood insurance requirements. Further,
the Agencies expect the participating
lender to have adequate controls to
monitor the activities of the lead lender
or agent to ensure compliance with
flood insurance requirements over the
term of the loan.
IX. Flood Insurance Requirements in
the Event of the Sale or Transfer of a
Designated Loan and/or its Servicing
Rights
41. How do the flood insurance
requirements under the Regulation
apply to lenders under the following
scenarios involving loan servicing?
Scenario 1: A regulated lender
originates a designated loan secured by
a building or mobile home located in an
SFHA in which flood insurance is
available under the Act. The lender
makes the initial flood determination,
provides the borrower with appropriate
notice, and flood insurance is obtained.
The lender initially services the loan;
however, the lender subsequently sells
both the loan and the servicing rights to
a non-regulated party. What are the
regulated lender’s requirements under
the Regulation? What are the regulated
lender’s requirements under the
Regulation if it only transfers or sells the
servicing rights, but retains ownership of
the loan?
Answer: The lender must comply
with all requirements of the Regulation,
including making the initial flood
determination, providing appropriate
notice to the borrower, and ensuring
that the proper amount of insurance is
obtained. In the event the lender sells or
transfers the loan and servicing rights,
the lender must provide notice of the
identity of the new servicer to FEMA or
its designee.
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If the lender retains ownership of the
loan and only transfers or sells the
servicing rights to a non-regulated party,
the lender must notify FEMA or its
designee of the identity of the new
servicer. The servicing contract should
require the servicer to comply with all
the requirements that are imposed on
the lender as owner of the loan,
including escrow of insurance
premiums and forced placement of
insurance, if necessary.
Generally, the Regulation does not
impose obligations on a loan servicer
independent from the obligations it
imposes on the owner of a loan. Loan
servicers are covered by the escrow,
forced placement, and flood hazard
determination fee provisions of the Act
and Regulation primarily so that they
may perform the administrative tasks for
the lender, without fear of liability to
the borrower for the imposition of
unauthorized charges. In addition, the
preamble to the Regulation emphasizes
that the obligation of a loan servicer to
fulfill administrative duties with respect
to the flood insurance requirements
arises from the contractual relationship
between the loan servicer and the lender
or from other commonly accepted
standards for performance of servicing
obligations. The lender remains
ultimately liable for fulfillment of those
responsibilities, and must take adequate
steps to ensure that the loan servicer
will maintain compliance with the flood
insurance requirements.
Scenario 2: A non-regulated lender
originates a designated loan, secured by
a building or mobile home located in an
SFHA in which flood insurance is
available under the Act. The nonregulated lender does not make an
initial flood determination or notify the
borrower of the need to obtain
insurance. The non-regulated lender
sells the loan and servicing rights to a
regulated lender. What are the regulated
lender’s requirements under the
Regulation? What are the regulated
lender’s requirements if it only
purchases the servicing rights?
Answer: A regulated lender’s
purchase of a loan and servicing rights,
secured by a building or mobile home
located in an SFHA in which flood
insurance is available under the Act, is
not an event that triggers any
requirements under the Regulation,
such as making a new flood
determination or requiring a borrower to
purchase flood insurance. The
Regulation’s requirements are triggered
when a lender makes, increases,
extends, or renews a designated loan. A
lender’s purchase of a loan does not fall
within any of those categories. However,
if a regulated lender becomes aware at
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any point during the life of a designated
loan that flood insurance is required,
then the lender must comply with the
Regulation, including force placing
insurance, if necessary. Similarly, if the
lender subsequently extends, increases,
or renews a designated loan, the lender
must also comply with the Regulation.
Where a regulated lender purchases
only the servicing rights to a loan
originated by a non-regulated lender,
the regulated lender is obligated only to
follow the terms of its servicing contract
with the owner of the loan. In the event
the regulated lender subsequently sells
or transfers the servicing rights on that
loan, the lender must notify FEMA or its
designee of the identity of the new
servicer, if required to do so by the
servicing contract with the owner of the
loan.
42. When a lender makes a designated
loan and will be servicing that loan,
what are the requirements for notifying
the Director of FEMA or the Director’s
designee?
Answer: FEMA stated in a June 4,
1996, letter that the Director’s designee
is the insurance company issuing the
flood insurance policy. The borrower’s
purchase of a policy (or the lender’s
forced placement of a policy) will
constitute notice to FEMA when the
lender is servicing that loan.
In the event the servicing is
subsequently transferred to a new
servicer, the lender must provide notice
to the insurance company of the identity
of the new servicer no later than 60 days
after the effective date of such a change.
43. Would a RESPA Notice of Transfer
sent to the Director of FEMA (or the
Director’s designee) satisfy the
regulatory provisions of the Act?
Answer: Yes. The delivery of a copy
of the Notice of Transfer or any other
form of notice is sufficient if the sender
includes, on or with the notice, the
following information that FEMA has
indicated is needed by its designee:
• Borrower’s full name;
• Flood insurance policy number;
• Property address (including city
and state);
• Name of lender or servicer making
notification;
• Name and address of new servicer;
and
• Name and telephone number of
contact person at new servicer.
44. Can delivery of the notice be made
electronically, including batch
transmissions?
Answer: Yes. The Regulation
specifically permits transmission by
electronic means. A timely batch
transmission of the notice would also be
permissible, if it is acceptable to the
Director’s designee.
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45. If the loan and its servicing rights
are sold by the lender, is the lender
required to provide notice to the
Director or the Director’s designee?
Answer: Yes. Failure to provide such
notice would defeat the purpose of the
notice requirement because FEMA
would have no record of the identity of
either the owner or servicer of the loan.
46. Is a lender required to provide
notice when the servicer, not the lender,
sells or transfers the servicing rights to
another servicer?
Answer: No. After servicing rights are
sold or transferred, subsequent
notification obligations are the
responsibility of the new servicer. The
obligation of the lender to notify the
Director or the Director’s designee of the
identity of the servicer transfers to the
new servicer. The duty to notify the
Director or the Director’s designee of
any subsequent sale or transfer of the
servicing rights and responsibilities
belongs to that servicer. For example, a
financial institution makes and services
the loan. It then sells the loan in the
secondary market and also sells the
servicing rights to a mortgage company.
The financial institution notifies the
Director’s designee of the identity of the
new servicer and the other information
requested by FEMA so that flood
insurance transactions can be properly
administered by the Director’s designee.
If the mortgage company later sells the
servicing rights to another firm, the
mortgage company, not the financial
institution, is responsible for notifying
the Director’s designee of the identity of
the new servicer.
47. In the event of a merger of one
lending institution with another, what
are the responsibilities of the parties for
notifying the Director’s designee?
Answer: If an institution is acquired
by or merges with another institution,
the duty to provide notice for the loans
being serviced by the acquired
institution will fall to the successor
institution in the event that notification
is not provided by the acquired
institution prior to the effective date of
the acquisition or merger.
X. Escrow Requirements
48. Are multi-family buildings or
mixed-use properties included in the
definition of ‘‘residential improved real
estate’’ under the Regulation for which
escrows are required?
Answer: ‘‘Residential improved real
estate’’ is defined under the Regulation
as ‘‘real estate upon which a home or
other residential building is located or
to be located.’’ A loan secured by
residential improved real estate located
or to be located in an SFHA in which
flood insurance is available is a
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designated loan. Lenders are required to
escrow flood insurance premiums and
fees for any mandatory flood insurance
for such loans if the lender requires the
escrow of taxes, hazard insurance
premiums or other loan charges for
loans secured by residential improved
real estate.
Multi-family buildings. For the
purposes of the Act and the Regulation,
the definition of residential improved
real estate does not make a distinction
between whether a building is single- or
multi-family, or whether a building is
owner- or renter-occupied. The
preamble to the Regulation indicates
that single-family dwellings (including
mobile homes), two-to-four family
dwellings, and multi-family properties
containing five or more residential units
are covered under the Act’s escrow
provisions. If the building securing the
loan meets the Regulation’s definition of
residential improved real estate, and the
lender requires the escrow of other
items, such as taxes or hazard insurance
premiums, then the lender is required to
also escrow premiums and fees for flood
insurance.
Mixed-use properties. The lender
should look to the primary use of a
building to determine whether it meets
the definition of ‘‘residential improved
real estate.’’ For example, a building
having a retail store on the ground level
with a small upstairs apartment used by
the store’s owner generally is
considered a commercial enterprise and
consequently would not constitute a
residential building under the
definition. If the primary use of a
mixed-use property is for residential
purposes, the Regulation’s escrow
requirements apply. (See Questions 8
and 9 for examples of residential and
nonresidential buildings.)
49. When must escrow accounts be
established for flood insurance
purposes?
Answer: Lenders should look to the
definition of ‘‘federally related mortgage
loan’’ contained in the Real Estate
Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA) to
see whether a particular loan is subject
to Section 10. Generally, for flood
insurance purposes, only loans on oneto-four family dwellings will be subject
to the escrow requirements of RESPA.
(This includes individual units of
condominiums. Individual units of
cooperatives, although covered by
Section 10 of RESPA, are not insured for
flood insurance purposes.)
Loans on multi-family dwellings with
five or more units are not covered by
RESPA requirements. Pursuant to the
Regulation, however, lenders must
escrow premiums and fees for any
required flood insurance if the lender
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requires escrows for other purposes,
such as hazard insurance or taxes. This
requirement pertains to any loan,
including those subject to RESPA. The
preceding paragraph addresses the
requirement for administering loans
covered by RESPA. The preamble to the
Regulation contains a more detailed
discussion of the escrow requirements.
50. Do voluntary escrow accounts
established at the request of the
borrower trigger a requirement for the
lender to escrow premiums for required
flood insurance?
Answer: No. If escrow accounts for
other purposes are established at the
voluntary request of the borrower, the
lender is not required to establish
escrow accounts for flood insurance
premiums. Examiners should review the
loan policies of the lender and the
underlying legal obligation between the
parties to the loan to determine whether
the accounts are, in fact, voluntary. For
example, when a lender’s loan policies
require borrowers to establish escrow
accounts for other purposes and the
contractual obligation permits the
lender to establish escrow accounts for
those other purposes, the lender will
have the burden of demonstrating that
an existing escrow was made pursuant
to a voluntary request by the borrower.
51. Will premiums paid for credit life
insurance, disability insurance, or
similar insurance programs be viewed
as escrow accounts requiring the escrow
of flood insurance premiums?
Answer: No. Premiums paid for these
types of insurance policies will not
trigger the escrow requirement for flood
insurance premiums.
52. Will escrow-type accounts for
commercial loans, secured by multifamily residential buildings, trigger the
escrow requirement for flood insurance
premiums?
Answer: It depends. Escrow-type
accounts established in connection with
the underlying agreement between the
buyer and seller, or that relate to the
commercial venture itself, such as
‘‘interest reserve accounts,’’
‘‘compensating balance accounts,’’
‘‘marketing accounts,’’ and similar
accounts are not the type of accounts
that constitute escrow accounts for the
purpose of the Regulation. However,
escrow accounts established for the
protection of the property, such as
escrows for hazard insurance premiums
or local real estate taxes, are the types
of escrow accounts that trigger the
requirement to escrow flood insurance
premiums.
53. What requirements for escrow
accounts apply to properties covered by
RCBAPs?
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Answer: RCBAPs are policies
purchased by the condominium
association on behalf of itself and the
individual unit owners in the
condominium. A portion of the periodic
dues paid to the association by the
condominium owners applies to the
premiums on the policy. When a lender
makes a loan for the purchase of a
condominium unit and when dues to
the condominium association apply to
the RCBAP premiums, an escrow
account is not required. Lenders should
exercise due diligence with respect to
continuing compliance with the
insurance requirements on the part of
the condominium association.
XI. Forced Placement of Flood
Insurance
54. What is the requirement for the
forced placement of flood insurance
under the Act and Regulation?
Answer: The Act and Regulation
require a lender to force place flood
insurance, if all of the following
circumstances occur:
• The lender determines at any time
during the life of the loan that the
property securing the loan is located in
an SFHA;
• The community in which the
property is located participates in the
NFIP;
• The lender determines that flood
insurance coverage is inadequate or
does not exist; and
• After required notice, the borrower
fails to purchase the appropriate amount
of coverage.
A lender must notify the borrower of
the required amount of flood insurance
that must be obtained within 45 days
after notification. The notice to the
borrower must also state that if the
borrower does not obtain the insurance
within the 45-day period, the lender
will purchase the insurance on behalf of
the borrower and may charge the
borrower the cost of premiums and fees
to obtain the coverage. If adequate
insurance is not obtained within the 45day period, then the insurance must be
force placed. Standard Fannie Mae/
Freddie Mac documents permit the
servicer or lender to add those charges
to the principal amount of the loan.
FEMA developed the Mortgage
Portfolio Protection Program (MPPP) to
assist lenders in connection with forced
placement procedures. FEMA published
these procedures in the Federal Register
on August 29, 1995 (60 FR 44881).
Appendix A of the FEMA publication
contains examples of notification letters
to be used in connection with the
MPPP.
55. Can a servicer force place on
behalf of a lender?
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Answer: Yes. Assuming the statutory
prerequisites for forced placement are
met, and subject to the servicing
contract between the lender and the
servicer, the Act clearly authorizes
servicers to force place flood insurance
on behalf of the lender, following the
procedures set forth in the Regulation.
56. When forced placement occurs,
what is the amount of insurance
required to be placed?
Answer: The amount of flood
insurance coverage required is the same
regardless of how the insurance is
placed. (See Section II. Determining the
appropriate amount of flood insurance
required under the Act and Regulation.)
XII. Gap Insurance Policies
57. May a lender rely on a gap or
blanket insurance policy to meet its
obligation to ensure that its designated
loans are covered by an adequate
amount of flood insurance over the life
of the loans?
Answer: Generally no. Gap or blanket
insurance typically is not an adequate
substitute for NFIP insurance. Among
other things, a gap or blanket policy
typically protects only the lender’s, not
the borrower’s, interest and, therefore,
may not be transferred when a loan is
sold. The presence of a gap or blanket
policy may serve as a disincentive for
the lender or its servicer to perform its
due diligence and ensure that there is
adequate coverage for a designated loan.
Finally, a lender that substitutes a gap
or blanket policy for an individual flood
insurance policy would be unable to sell
the loan in the secondary market, since
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will not
accept loans that are covered solely by
a gap or blanket policy.
In limited circumstances, a gap or
blanket policy may satisfy a lender’s
flood insurance obligations, when NFIP
and private insurance is otherwise
unavailable. For example, when a
designated loan does not have sufficient
coverage, but the borrower refuses to
increase coverage under his NFIP
insurance, a gap or blanket policy may
be appropriate when the lender is
unable to force-place private insurance
for some reason. Similarly, when a
policy has expired, and the borrower
has failed to renew coverage, gap or
blanket coverage may be adequate
protection for the lender for the 15-day
gap in coverage between the end of the
30-day ‘‘grace’’ period after the NFIP
policy expiration and the end of the 45day force placement notice period.
However, the lender must force place
adequate coverage in a timely manner,
as required, and may not rely on the gap
or blanket coverage on an on-going
basis.
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XIII. Required Use of Standard Flood
Hazard Determination Form (SFHDF)
58. Does the SFHDF replace the
borrower notification form?
Answer: No. The notification form is
used to notify the borrower(s) that he or
she is purchasing improved property
located in an SFHA. The financial
regulatory Agencies, in consultation
with FEMA, included a revised version
of the sample borrower notification form
in Appendix A to the Regulation. The
SFHDF is used by the lender to
determine whether the property
securing the loan is located in an SFHA.
59. Is the lender required to provide
the SFHDF to the borrower?
Answer: No. While it may be a
common practice in some areas for
lenders to provide a copy of the SFHDF
to the borrower to give to the insurance
agent, lenders are neither required nor
prohibited from providing the borrower
with a copy of the form. In the event a
lender does provide the SFHDF to the
borrower, the signature of the borrower
is not required to acknowledge receipt
of the form.
60. May the SFHDF be used in
electronic format?
Answer: Yes. FEMA, in the final rule
adopting the SFHDF stated: ‘‘If an
electronic format is used, the format and
exact layout of the Standard Flood
Hazard Determination Form is not
required, but the fields and elements
listed on the form are required. Any
electronic format used by lenders must
contain all mandatory fields indicated
on the form.’’ It should be noted,
however, that the lender must be able to
reproduce the form upon receiving a
document request by its federal
supervisory agency.
61. Section 528 of the Act, 42 U.S.C.
4104b(e), permits a lender to rely on a
previous flood determination using the
SFHDF when it is increasing, extending,
renewing or purchasing a loan secured
by a building or a mobile home. Under
the Act, the ‘‘making’’ of a loan is not
listed as a permissible event that
permits a lender to rely on a previous
determination. May a lender rely on a
previous determination for a refinancing
or assumption of a loan?
Answer: It depends. When the loan
involves a refinancing or assumption by
the same lender who obtained the
original flood determination on the
same property, the lender may rely on
the previous determination only if the
original determination was made not
more than seven years before the date of
the transaction, the basis for the
determination was set forth on the
SFHDF, and there were no map
revisions or updates affecting the
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security property since the original
determination was made. A loan
refinancing or assumption made by a
lender different from the one who
obtained the original determination
constitutes a new loan, thereby
requiring a new determination.
XIV. Flood Determination Fees
62. When can lenders or servicers
charge the borrower a fee for making a
determination?
Answer: There are four instances
under the Act and Regulation when the
borrower can be charged a specific fee
for a flood determination:
• When the determination is made in
connection with the making, increasing,
extending, or renewing of a loan that is
initiated by the borrower;
• When the determination is
prompted by a revision or updating by
FEMA of floodplain areas or flood-risk
zones;
• When the determination is
prompted by FEMA’s publication of
notices or compendia that affect the area
in which the security property is
located; or
• When the determination results in
forced placement of insurance.
Loan or other contractual documents
between the parties may also permit the
imposition of fees.
63. May charges made for life of loan
reviews by flood determination firms be
passed along to the borrower?
Answer: Yes. In addition to the initial
determination at the time a loan is
made, increased, renewed, or extended,
many flood determination firms provide
a service to the lender to review and
report changes in the flood status of a
dwelling for the entire term of the loan.
The fee charged for the service at loan
closing is a composite one for
conducting both the original and
subsequent reviews. Charging a fee for
the original determination is clearly
within the permissible purpose
envisioned by the Act. The Agencies
agree that a determination fee may
include, among other things, reasonable
fees for a lender, servicer, or third party
to monitor the flood hazard status of
property securing a loan in order to
make determinations on an ongoing
basis.
However, the life-of-loan fee is based
on the authority to charge a
determination fee and, therefore, the
monitoring fee may be charged only if
the events specified in the answer to
Question 62 occur.
XV. Flood Zone Discrepancies
64. What should a lender do when
there is a discrepancy between the flood
hazard zone designation on the flood
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determination form and the flood
insurance policy?
Answer: Lenders should have a
process in place to identify and resolve
such discrepancies. In attempting to
resolve a particular discrepancy, a
lender should determine whether there
may be a legitimate reason for a
discrepancy.
The flood determination form
designates a flood hazard zone where
the building or mobile home is actually
located based on the latest FEMA
information; the flood insurance policy
designates the flood hazard zone for
purposes of rating the degree of flood
hazard risk. The two respective flood
hazard zone designations may
legitimately differ by virtue of the
NFIP’s ‘‘Grandfather Rule,’’ which
provides for the continued use of a
rating on an insured property when the
initial flood insurance policy was issued
prior to changes in the hazard rating for
the particular flood zone where the
property is located. The Grandfather
Rule allows policyholders who have
maintained continuous coverage and/or
who have built in compliance with the
Flood Insurance Rate Map to continue
to benefit from the prior, more favorable
rating for particular pieces of improved
property. A discrepancy caused as a
result of the application of the NFIP’s
Grandfather Rule is reasonable and
acceptable. In such an event where the
lender determines that there is a
legitimate reason for the discrepancy, it
should document its findings.
If the lender is unable to reconcile a
discrepancy between the flood hazard
zone designation on the flood
determination form and the flood
insurance policy and there is no
legitimate reason for the discrepancy,
the lender and borrower may jointly
request that FEMA review the
determination. This procedure is
intended to confirm or disprove the
accuracy of the original determination.
The procedures for initiating a FEMA
review are found at 44 CFR 65.17. This
request must be submitted within 45
days of the lender’s notification to the
borrower of the requirement to obtain
flood insurance.
65. Can a lender be found in violation
of the requirements of federal flood
insurance regulations if, despite the
lender’s diligence in making the flood
hazard determination, notifying the
borrower of the risk of flood and the
need to obtain flood insurance, and
requiring mandatory flood insurance,
there is a discrepancy between the flood
hazard zone designation on the flood
determination form and the flood
insurance policy?
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Jkt 214001
Answer: Yes. As noted in Question 64
above, lenders should have a process in
place to identify and resolve such
discrepancies. If a lender is able to
resolve a discrepancy—either by finding
a legitimate reason for such discrepancy
or by attempting to resolve the
discrepancy by contacting FEMA to
review the determination, then no
violation will be cited. However, if more
than occasional, isolated instances of
unresolved discrepancies are found in a
lender’s loan portfolio, the Agencies
may cite the lender for a violation of the
mandatory purchase requirements.
Failure to resolve such discrepancies
could result in the lender’s collateral
not being covered by the amount of
legally required flood insurance.
XVI. Notice of Special Flood Hazards
and Availability of Federal Disaster
Relief
66. Does the notice have to be
provided to each borrower for a real
estate related loan?
Answer: No. In a transaction
involving multiple borrowers, the
lender need only provide the notice to
any one of the borrowers in the
transaction. Lenders may provide
multiple notices if they choose. The
lender and borrower(s) typically
designate the borrower to whom the
notice will be provided. The notice
must be provided to a borrower when
the lender determines that the property
securing the loan is or will be located
in an SFHA.
67. Lenders making loans on mobile
homes may not always know where the
home is to be located until just prior to,
or sometimes after, the time of loan
closing. How is the notice requirement
applied in these situations?
Answer: When it is not reasonably
feasible to give notice before the
completion of the transaction, the notice
requirement can be met by lenders in
mobile home loan transactions if notice
is provided to the borrower as soon as
practicable after determination that the
mobile home will be located in an
SFHA. Whenever time constraints can
be anticipated, regulated lenders should
use their best efforts to provide adequate
notice of flood hazards to borrowers at
the earliest possible time. In the case of
loan transactions secured by mobile
homes not located on a permanent
foundation, the Agencies note that such
‘‘home only’’ transactions are excluded
from the definition of mobile home and
the notice requirements would not
apply to these transactions.
However, as indicated in the
preamble to the Regulation, the
Agencies encourage a lender to advise
the borrower that if the mobile home is
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15277
later located on a permanent foundation
in an SFHA, flood insurance will be
required. If the lender, when notified of
the location of the mobile home
subsequent to the loan closing,
determines that it has been placed on a
permanent foundation and is located in
an SFHA in which flood insurance is
available under the Act, flood insurance
coverage becomes mandatory and
appropriate notice must be given to the
borrower under those provisions. If the
borrower fails to purchase flood
insurance coverage within 45 days after
notification, the lender must force place
the insurance.
68. When is the lender required to
provide notice to the servicer of a loan
that flood insurance is required?
Answer: Because the servicer of a loan
is often not identified prior to the
closing of a loan, the Regulation
requires that notice be provided no later
than the time the lender transmits other
loan data, such as information
concerning hazard insurance and taxes,
to the servicer.
69. What will constitute appropriate
form of notice to the servicer?
Answer: Delivery to the servicer of a
copy of the notice given to the borrower
is appropriate notice. The Regulation
also provides that the notice can be
made either electronically or by a
written copy.
70. In the case of a servicer affiliated
with the lender, is it necessary to
provide the notice?
Answer: Yes. The Act requires the
lender to notify the servicer of special
flood hazards and the Regulation
reflects this requirement. Neither
contains an exception for affiliates.
71. How long does the lender have to
maintain the record of receipt by the
borrower of the notice?
Answer: The record of receipt
provided by the borrower must be
maintained for the time that the lender
owns the loan. Lenders may keep the
record in the form that best suits the
lender’s business practices. Lenders
may retain the record electronically, but
they must be able to retrieve the record
within a reasonable time pursuant to a
document request from their federal
supervisory agency.
72. Can a lender rely on a previous
notice if it is less than seven years old
and it is the same property, same
borrower, and same lender?
Answer: No. The preamble to the
Regulation states that subsequent
transactions by the same lender with
respect to the same property will be
treated as a renewal and will require no
new determination. However, neither
the Regulation nor the preamble
addresses waiving the requirement to
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provide the notice to the borrower.
Therefore, the lender must provide a
new notice to the borrower, even if a
new determination is not required.
73. Is use of the sample form of notice
mandatory?
Answer: No. Although lenders are
required to provide a notice to a
borrower when it makes, increases,
extends, or renews a loan secured by an
improved structure located in an SFHA,
use of the sample form of notice
provided in Appendix A is not
mandatory. It should be noted that the
sample form includes other information
in addition to what is required by the
Act and the Regulation. Lenders may
personalize, change the format of, and
add information to the sample form of
notice, if they choose. However, a
lender-revised notice must provide the
borrower with at least the minimum
information required by the Act and
Regulation. Therefore, lenders should
consult the Act and Regulation to
determine the information needed.
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with NOTICES
XVII. Mandatory Civil Money Penalties
74. What violations of the Act can
result in a mandatory civil money
penalty?
Answer: A pattern or practice of
violations of any of the following
requirements of the Act and their
implementing Regulations triggers a
mandatory civil money penalty:
(i) Purchase of flood insurance where
available (42 U.S.C. 4012a(b));
(ii) Escrow of flood insurance
premiums (42 U.S.C. 4012a(d));
(iii) Forced placement of flood
insurance (42 U.S.C. 4012a(e));
(iv) Notice of special flood hazards
and the availability of Federal disaster
relief assistance (42 U.S.C. 4104a(a));
and
(v) Notice of servicer and any change
of servicer (42 U.S.C. 4101a(b)).
The Act states that any regulated
lending institution found to have a
pattern or practice of certain violations
‘‘shall be assessed a civil penalty’’ by its
Federal supervisor in an amount not to
exceed $350 per violation, with a ceiling
per institution of $100,000 during any
calendar year (42 U.S.C. 4012a(f)(5)).
This limit has since been raised to $385
per violation, and the annual ceiling to
$125,000 pursuant to the Federal Civil
Penalties Inflation Adjustment Act of
1990, as amended by the Debt
Collection Improvement Act of 1996, 28
U.S.C. 2461 note. Lenders pay the
penalties into the National Flood
Mitigation Fund held by the Department
of the Treasury for the benefit of FEMA.
75. What constitutes a ‘‘pattern or
practice’’ of violations for which civil
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money penalties must be imposed under
the Act?
Answer: The Act does not define
‘‘pattern or practice.’’ The Agencies
make a determination of whether one
exists by weighing the individual facts
and circumstances of each case. In
making the determination, the Agencies
look both to guidance and experience
with determinations of pattern or
practice under other regulations (such
as Regulation B (Equal Credit
Opportunity) and Regulation Z (Truth in
Lending)), as well as Agencies’
precedents in assessing civil money
penalties for flood insurance violations.
The Policy Statement on
Discrimination in Lending (Policy
Statement) provided the following
guidance on what constitutes a pattern
or practice:
deficiencies in its flood insurance
compliance; and
• Whether the financial institution
lacks generally effective flood insurance
compliance policies and procedures
and/or a training program for its
employees.
Although these guidelines and
considerations are not dispositive of a
final resolution, they do serve as a
reference point in assessing whether
there may be a pattern or practice of
violations of the Act and Regulation in
a particular case. As previously stated,
the presence or absence of one or more
of these considerations may not
eliminate a finding that a pattern or
practice exists.
End of text of the Interagency
Questions and Answers Regarding
Flood Insurance.
Isolated, unrelated, or accidental
occurrences will not constitute a pattern or
practice. However, repeated, intentional,
regular, usual, deliberate, or institutionalized
practices will almost always constitute a
pattern or practice. The totality of the
circumstances must be considered when
assessing whether a pattern or practice is
present.
Dated: March 5, 2008.
John C. Dugan,
Comptroller of the Currency.
In determining whether a financial
institution has engaged in a pattern or
practice of flood insurance violations,
the Agencies’ considerations may
include, but are not limited to, the
presence of one or more of the following
factors:
• Whether the conduct resulted from
a common cause or source within the
financial institution’s control;
• Whether the conduct appears to be
grounded in a written or unwritten
policy or established practice;
• Whether the noncompliance
occurred over an extended period of
time;
• The relationship of the instances of
noncompliance to one another (for
example, whether the instances of
noncompliance occurred in the same
area of a financial institution’s
operations);
• Whether the number of instances of
noncompliance is significant relative to
the total number of applicable
transactions. (Depending on the
circumstances, however, violations that
involve only a small percentage of an
institution’s total activity could
constitute a pattern or practice);
• Whether a financial institution was
cited for violations of the Act and
Regulation at prior examinations and
the steps taken by the financial
institution to correct the identified
deficiencies;
• Whether a financial institution’s
internal and/or external audit process
had not identified and addressed
Dated at Washington, DC, this 14th day of
March, 2008. Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation.
Valerie J. Best,
Assistant Executive Secretary.
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By order of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, March 12, 2008.
Jennifer J. Johnson,
Secretary of the Board.
Dated: February 5, 2008.
By the Office of Thrift Supervision.
John M. Reich,
Director.
Dated: March 13, 2008.
Roland E Smith,
Secretary, Farm Credit Administration Board.
By the National Credit Union
Administration Board, on March 13, 2008.
Mary F. Rupp,
Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. E8–5787 Filed 3–20–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODES 4810–33–P; 6210–01–P; 6714–01–P;
6720–01–P; 6705–01–P; 7535–01–P
UTAH RECLAMATION MITIGATION
AND CONSERVATION COMMISSION
Notice of Availability of the Final
Environmental Assessment and
Finding of No Significant Impact for
Fort Field Diversion Dam
Reconstruction, Utah County, UT
Utah Reclamation Mitigation
and Conservation Commission.
ACTION: Notice of availability.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The Utah Reclamation
Mitigation and Conservation
Commission (Mitigation Commission),
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 56 (Friday, March 21, 2008)]
[Notices]
[Pages 15259-15278]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-5787]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
[Docket ID OCC-2008-0002]
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
[Docket No. OP-1311]
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
RIN 3064-ZA00
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of Thrift Supervision
[Docket ID OTS-2008-0001]
FARM CREDIT ADMINISTRATION
RIN 3052-AC46
NATIONAL CREDIT UNION ADMINISTRATION
RIN 3133-AD41
Loans in Areas Having Special Flood Hazards; Interagency
Questions and Answers Regarding Flood Insurance
AGENCIES: Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Treasury (OCC);
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Board); Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC); Office of Thrift Supervision,
Treasury (OTS); Farm Credit Administration (FCA); National Credit Union
Administration (NCUA).
ACTION: Notice and request for comment.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The OCC, Board, FDIC, OTS, FCA, and NCUA (collectively, the
Agencies) are soliciting comment on proposed revisions to the
Interagency Questions and Answers Regarding Flood Insurance
(Interagency Questions and Answers). To help financial institutions
meet their responsibilities under Federal flood insurance legislation
and to increase public understanding of their flood insurance
regulations, the staffs of the Agencies have prepared proposed new and
revised guidance addressing the most frequently asked questions and
answers about flood insurance. The proposed revised Interagency
Questions and Answers contain staff guidance for agency personnel,
financial institutions, and the public.
DATE: Comments must be submitted on or before May 20, 2008.
ADDRESSES: OCC: Because paper mail in the Washington, DC area and at
the Agencies is subject to delay, commenters are encouraged to submit
comments by e-mail, if possible. Please use the title ``Loans in Areas
Having Special Flood Hazards; Interagency Questions and Answers
Regarding Flood Insurance'' to facilitate the organization and
distribution of the comments. You may submit comments by any of the
following methods:
E-mail: regs.comments@occ.treas.gov.
Mail: Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, 250 E
Street, SW., Mail Stop 1-5, Washington, DC 20219.
Fax: (202) 874-4448.
Hand Delivery/Courier: 250 E Street, SW., Attn: Public
Information Room, Mail Stop 1-5, Washington, DC 20219.
Instructions: You must include ``OCC'' as the agency name and
``Docket ID OCC-2008-0002'' in your comment. Comments received,
including attachments and other supporting materials, are part of the
public record and subject to public disclosure. Do not enclose any
information in your comment or supporting materials that you consider
confidential or inappropriate for public disclosure.
You may review comments and other related materials that pertain to
this notice by any of the following methods:
Viewing Comments Personally: You may personally inspect
and photocopy comments at the OCC's Public Information Room, 250 E
Street, SW., Washington, DC. For security reasons, the OCC requires
that visitors make an appointment to inspect comments. You may do so by
calling (202) 874-5043. Upon arrival, visitors will be required to
present valid government-issued photo identification and submit to
security screening in order to inspect and photocopy comments.
Docket: You may also view or request available background
documents and project summaries using the methods described above.
Board: You may submit comments, identified by Docket No. OP-1311,
by any of the following methods:
Agency Web Site: https://www.federalreserve.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments at https://www.federalreserve.gov/
generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm.
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
E-mail: regs.comments@federalreserve.gov. Include docket
number in the subject line of the message.
Fax: (202) 452-3819 or (202) 452-3102.
Mail: Jennifer J. Johnson, Secretary, Board of Governors
of the Federal Reserve System, 20th Street and Constitution Avenue,
NW., Washington, DC 20551.
All public comments are available from the Board's Web site at
https://www.federalreserve.gov/generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm as
submitted, unless modified for technical reasons. Accordingly, your
comments will not be edited to remove any identifying or contact
information.
Public comments may also be viewed electronically or in paper in
Room MP-500 of the Board's Martin Building (20th and C Streets, NW.)
between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. on weekdays.
FDIC: You may submit comments, identified by RIN number 3064-ZA00
by any of the following methods:
Agency Web site: https://www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/
federal/propose.html. Follow instructions for submitting comments on
the Agency Web Site.
E-mail: Comments@FDIC.gov. Include the RIN number in the
subject line of the message.
Mail: Robert E. Feldman, Executive Secretary, Attention:
Comments, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, 550 17th Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20429.
Hand Delivery/Courier: Guard station at the rear of the
550 17th Street Building (located on F Street) on business days between
7 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Instructions: All submissions received must include the agency name
and RIN number. All comments received will be posted without change to
https://www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/federal/propose.html including any
personal information provided.
OTS: You may submit comments, identified by OTS-2007-0001, by any
of the following methods:
E-mail: regs.comments@ots.treas.gov. Please include ID
OTS-2008-0001 in the subject line of the message and include your name
and telephone number in the message.
Fax: (202) 906-6518.
Mail: Regulation Comments, Chief Counsel's Office, Office
of Thrift Supervision, 1700 G Street, NW., Washington, DC 20552,
Attention: OTS-2008-0001.
Hand Delivery/Courier: Guard's Desk, East Lobby Entrance,
1700 G Street, NW., from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on business days, Attention:
Regulation
[[Page 15260]]
Comments, Chief Counsel's Office, Attention: OTS-2008-0001.
Instructions: All submissions received must include the
agency name and docket number for this rulemaking. All comments
received will be entered into the docket and posted on Regulations.gov
without change, including any personal information provided. Comments,
including attachments and other supporting materials received are part
of the public record and subject to public disclosure. Do not enclose
any information in your comment or supporting materials that you
consider confidential or inappropriate for public disclosure.
Viewing Comments Electronically: OTS will post comments on the OTS
Internet Site at https://www.ots.treas.gov/
pagehtml.cfm?catNumber=67&an=1.
Viewing Comments On-Site: You may inspect comments at the Public
Reading Room, 1700 G Street, NW., by appointment. To make an
appointment for access, call (202) 906-5922, send an e-mail to
public.info@ots.treas.gov, or send a facsimile transmission to (202)
906-6518. (Prior notice identifying the materials you will be
requesting will assist us in serving you.) We schedule appointments on
business days between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. In most cases, appointments
will be available the next business day following the date we receive a
request.
FCA: We offer a variety of methods for you to submit comments. For
accuracy and efficiency reasons, we encourage commenters to submit
comments by e-mail or through the Agency's Web site or the Federal
eRulemaking Portal. You may also send comments by mail or by facsimile
transmission. Regardless of the method you use, please do not submit
your comment multiple times via different methods. You may submit
comments by any of the following methods:
E-mail: Send us an e-mail at regcomm@fca.gov.
Agency Web Site: https://www.fca.gov. Once you are at the
Web site, select ``Legal Info,'' then ``Pending Regulations and
Notices.''
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
Mail: Gary K. Van Meter, Deputy Director, Office of
Regulatory Policy, Farm Credit Administration, 1501 Farm Credit Drive,
McLean, VA 22102-5090.
Fax: (703) 883-4477. Posting and processing of faxes may
be delayed. Please consider another means to comment, if possible.
You may review copies of comments we receive at our office in
McLean, Virginia, or from our Web site at https://www.fca.gov. Once you
are in the Web site, select ``Legal Info,'' and then select ``Public
Comments.'' We will show your comments as submitted, but for technical
reasons we may omit items such as logos and special characters.
Identifying information that you provide, such as phone numbers and
addresses, will be publicly available. However, we will attempt to
remove e-mail addresses to help reduce Internet spam.
NCUA: You may submit comments by any of the following methods
(Please send comments by one method only):
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments,
NCUA Web Site: https://www.ncua.gov/
RegulationsOpinionsLaws/proposed_regs/proposed_regs.html. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
E-mail: Address to regcomments@ncua.gov. Include ``[Your
name] Comments on Flood Insurance, Interagency Questions & Answers'' in
the e-mail subject line.
Fax: (703) 518-6319. Use the subject line described above
for e-mail.
Mail: Address to Mary Rupp, Secretary of the Board,
National Credit Union Administration, 1775 Duke Street, Alexandria,
Virginia 22314-3428.
Hand Delivery/Courier: Same as mail address.
Public Inspection: All public comments are available on the
agency's Web site at https://www.ncua.gov/RegulationsOpinionsLaws/
comments as submitted, except as may not be possible for technical
reasons. Public comments will not be edited to remove any identifying
or contact information. Paper copies of comments may be inspected in
NCUA's law library at 1775 Duke Street, Alexandria, Virginia 22314, by
appointment weekdays between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. To make an appointment,
call (703) 518-6546 or send an e-mail to OGCMail@ncua.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: OCC: Pamela Mount, National Bank
Examiner, Compliance Policy, (202) 874-4428; or Margaret Hesse, Special
Counsel, Community and Consumer Law Division, (202) 874-5750, Office of
the Comptroller of the Currency, 250 E Street, SW., Washington, DC
20219.
Board: Vivian Wong, Senior Attorney, Division of Consumer and
Community Affairs, (202) 452-2412; Anjanette Kichline, Senior
Supervisory Consumer Financial Services Analyst, (202) 785-6054; or
Brad Fleetwood, Senior Counsel, Legal Division, (202) 452-3721, Board
of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 20th Street and
Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20551. For the deaf, hard of
hearing, and speech impaired only, teletypewriter (TTY), (202) 263-
4869.
FDIC: Mira N. Marshall, Senior Policy Analyst (Compliance),
Division of Supervision and Consumer Protection, (202) 898-3912; or
Mark Mellon, Counsel, Legal Division, (202) 898-3884, Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation, 550 17th Street, NW., Washington, DC 20429. For
the hearing impaired only, telecommunications device for the deaf
(TDD): 800-925-4618.
OTS: Ekita Mitchell, Consumer Regulations Analyst, (202) 906-6451;
Glenn Gimble, Senior Project Manager, (202) 906-7158; or Richard S.
Bennett, Senior Compliance Counsel, (202) 906-7409, Office of Thrift
Supervision, 1700 G Street, NW., Washington, DC 20552.
FCA: Mark L. Johansen, Senior Policy Analyst, Office of Regulatory
Policy, (703) 993-4498; or Mary Alice Donner, Attorney Advisor, Office
of General Counsel, (703) 883-4033, Farm Credit Administration, 1501
Farm Credit Drive, McLean, VA 22102-5090. For the hearing impaired
only, TDD: (703) 883-4444.
NCUA: Moisette I. Green, Staff Attorney, Office of General Counsel,
(703) 518-6540, National Credit Union Administration, 1775 Duke Street,
Alexandria, VA 22314-3428.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The National Flood Insurance Reform Act of 1994 (the Reform Act)
(Title V of the Riegle Community Development and Regulatory Improvement
Act of 1994) comprehensively revised the two federal flood insurance
statutes, the National Flood Insurance Act of 1968 and the Flood
Disaster Protection Act of 1973. The Reform Act required the OCC,
Board, FDIC, OTS, and NCUA to revise their flood insurance regulations
and required the FCA to promulgate flood insurance regulations for the
first time. The OCC, Board, FDIC, OTS, NCUA, and FCA (collectively,
``the Agencies'') fulfilled these requirements by issuing a joint final
rule in the summer of 1996. See 61 FR 45684 (August 29, 1996).
In connection with the 1996 joint rulemaking process, the Agencies
received a number of requests to clarify specific issues covering a
wide spectrum of the proposed rule's provisions. Many of these requests
were addressed in the preamble to the joint final rule. The Agencies
concluded, however, that given the number, level of detail, and
diversity of subject matter of
[[Page 15261]]
the requests for additional information, guidance addressing the more
technical compliance issues would be helpful and appropriate.
Consequently, the Agencies decided to issue guidance to address these
technical issues subsequent to the promulgation of the final rule (61
FR at 45685-86). That objective was fulfilled by the initial release of
the Interagency Questions and Answers in 1997 (1997 Interagency
Questions and Answers) by the Federal Financial Institution Examination
Council (FFIEC). 62 FR 39523 (July 23, 1997).
In response to issues that have been brought to the attention of
the Agencies in coordination with the Federal Emergency Management
Agency (FEMA), the Agencies are releasing for public comment proposed
revisions to the 1997 Interagency Questions and Answers.\1\ Among the
changes the Agencies are proposing are the introduction of new
questions and answers in a number of areas, including second lien
mortgages, the imposition of civil money penalties, and loan
syndications/participations. The Agencies are also proposing
substantive modifications to questions and answers previously adopted
in the 1997 Interagency Questions and Answers pertaining to
construction loans and condominiums. Finally, the Agencies are
proposing to revise and reorganize certain of the existing questions
and answers to clarify areas of potential misunderstanding and to
provide clearer guidance to users. It is the intention of the Agencies
that after public comment has been received and considered, and the
Interagency Questions and Answers have been adopted in final form, they
will supersede the 1997 Interagency Questions and Answers and
supplement other guidance or interpretations issued by the Agencies and
FEMA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The proposed Interagency Questions and Answers have been
prepared by staff from the OCC, Board, FDIC, OTS, NCUA and FCA in
consultation with and with the assistance of the FFIEC pursuant to
12 U.S.C. 3305(g).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For ease of reference, the following terms are used throughout this
document: ``Act'' refers to the National Flood Insurance Act of 1968
and the Flood Disaster Protection Act of 1973, as revised by the
National Flood Insurance Reform Act of 1994 (codified at 42 U.S.C. 4001
et seq.). ``Regulation'' refers to each agency's current final rule.\2\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ The Agencies' rules are codified at 2 CFR part 22 (OCC), 12
CFR part 208 (Board), 12 CFR part 339 (FDIC), 12 CFR part 572 (OTS),
12 CFR part 614 (FCA), and 12 CFR part 760 (NCUA).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section-by-Section Analysis
Section I. Determining When Certain Loans Are Designated Loans for
Which Flood Insurance Is Required Under the Act and Regulation
The Agencies propose to eliminate current section I entitled
``Definitions'' and replace it with new proposed section I to address
more specific circumstances a lender may encounter when deciding
whether a loan should be a designated loan for purposes of flood
insurance. The Agencies are proposing to move the questions and answers
currently in section I into subsequent sections for better
organization. Meanwhile, questions and answers currently in other
sections of the 1997 Interagency Questions and Answers that deal with
determining when a loan is a designated loan under the Act and
Regulation would be included in new section I.
Specifically, proposed question 1, which covers the applicability
of the Regulation to a loan in a nonparticipating community, would be
moved from current question 1 of section II. Further, the Agencies
propose to move current question 2 of section II, discussing whether a
loan is a designated loan when a lender purchases a whole loan, to
question 3 of new section I. Current question 9 of section I,
discussing whether a loan is a designated loan when a lender
restructures a loan, would be moved to question 4 of this new section
I, and proposed question 5, which addresses table funded loans, would
be moved from question 3 of current section II. In addition, minor
nonsubstantive changes have been made to these moved questions and
answers to provide additional clarity.
The Agencies are also proposing to add two new questions and
answers to this section in response to questions the Agencies have
received from lenders. Proposed new question 2 explains that, upon a
FEMA map change that results in a building or mobile home securing a
loan being removed from a special flood hazard area (SFHA), the lender
no longer must require mandatory flood insurance; however, the lender
may choose to continue to require flood insurance for risk management
purposes.
Proposed new question 6 explains that portfolio reviews of existing
loans are not required by the Act or Regulation; however, sound risk
management practices may lead a lender to conduct periodic reviews.
These two new questions and answers are based on current guidance the
Agencies have provided to lenders.
Section II. Determining the Appropriate Amount of Flood Insurance
Required Under the Act and Regulation
Proposed section II would provide guidance on how lenders should
determine the appropriate amount of flood insurance to require the
borrower to purchase. The Agencies are proposing to retain existing
questions 5 and 7 of section II in new section II and renumbering them
as proposed questions 12 and 11, respectively. Although minor changes
have been made to these two questions and answers for purposes of
clarity, the changes are not substantive. Furthermore, part of the
guidance currently provided in existing question 7 would be moved to
proposed question 22 in section V, as discussed below.
Proposed new question 7 would discuss what is meant by the
``maximum limit of coverage available for the particular type of
property under the Act.'' This concept is important because the
Regulation states that the amount of flood insurance required ``must be
at least equal to the lesser of the outstanding principal balance of
the designated loan or the maximum limit of coverage available for the
particular type of property under the Act.'' Proposed question 7 would
introduce and define the insurance term, ``insurable value,'' as it
relates to the determination of the maximum limit of coverage available
under the Act. Proposed question 7 would also introduce the terms,
``residential building'' and ``nonresidential building.'' These terms
would be more fully defined in proposed new questions 8 and 9 of this
section, respectively.
Proposed new question 10 would discuss how much flood insurance is
required on a building located in an SFHA in a participating community.
It would also provide an example showing how to calculate the amount of
required flood insurance on a nonresidential building.
Proposed new question 13 would clarify that a lender can require
more flood insurance than the minimum required by the Regulation. The
Regulation requires a minimum amount of flood insurance; however,
lenders may require more coverage, if appropriate.
Proposed new question 14 would address lender considerations
regarding the amount of the deductible on a flood insurance policy
purchased by a borrower. Generally, the guidance advises a lender to
determine the reasonableness of the deductible on a case-by-case basis,
taking into account
[[Page 15262]]
the risk that such a deductible would pose to the borrower and lender.
Section III. Exemptions from the mandatory flood insurance requirements
As with current section III, proposed section III would contain
only one question and answer, which describes the statutory exemptions
from the mandatory flood insurance requirements. Proposed question and
answer 15 under section III would be revised to provide greater
clarity, with no intended change in substance or meaning.
Section IV. Flood insurance requirements for construction loans
The Agencies are proposing a series of new and revised questions
and answers to clarify the requirements regarding the mandatory
purchase of flood insurance for construction loans to erect buildings
that will be located in an SFHA. The Agencies believe that these
questions and answers are necessary in light of recent concerns raised
by some regulated lenders regarding borrowers' difficulties in
obtaining flood insurance for construction loans at the time of loan
origination.
Existing question 2 in section I would be revised to provide
greater clarity and would be moved to proposed question 16 under
proposed section IV. The proposed answer to question 16 would revise
the existing guidance to limit its scope and explain that a loan
secured by raw land located in an SFHA is not a designated loan that
would require flood insurance coverage. The remaining guidance
currently in the answer to existing question 2 in section I would be
discussed in subsequent questions and answers in section IV in the
proposed document, as detailed below.
Proposed question 17, derived from current question 1 in section I,
would address whether a loan secured or to be secured by a building in
the course of construction that is located or to be located in an SFHA
in which flood insurance is available under the Act is a designated
loan. The answer would provide that a lender must make a flood
determination prior to loan origination for a construction loan. If the
flood determination shows that the building securing the loan will be
located in an SFHA, the lender must provide notice to the borrower, and
must comply with the mandatory purchase requirements. Proposed question
18 would explain that, generally, a building in the course of
construction is eligible for coverage under a National Flood Insurance
Program (NFIP) policy, and that coverage may be purchased prior to the
start of construction.
Proposed question 19 would address the timing of when flood
insurance must be purchased for buildings under the course of
construction. The Act and Regulation provide that lenders may not make,
increase, extend, or renew any loan secured by improved real estate or
a mobile home that is located or to be located in an SFHA unless the
building is covered by adequate flood insurance. One way for lenders to
comply with the mandatory purchase requirement for a loan secured by a
building in the course of construction that is located in an SFHA is to
require borrowers to have a flood insurance policy in place at the time
of loan origination.
Recently, lenders have informed agency staff, however, that
borrowers have been encountering difficulties in obtaining flood
insurance for construction loans at the time of loan origination due to
insurers' refusals to write policies on undeveloped land until either
an elevation certificate has been issued for the structure or at least
two walls and a roof for the building have been erected. The Agencies
have also received reports that borrowers who are able to obtain flood
insurance for construction loans at loan origination often pay the
highest premiums possible because elevations for the insured property
have not yet been established.
To address these concerns, the Agencies, in the answer to proposed
question 19, would provide lenders with flexibility regarding the
timing of the mandatory purchase requirement for construction loans by
permitting lenders to allow borrowers to defer the purchase of flood
insurance until a foundation slab has been poured and/or an elevation
certificate has been issued. Lenders, however, must require the
borrower to have flood insurance in place before funds are disbursed to
pay for building construction on the property securing the loan (except
as necessary to pour the slab or perform preliminary site work). A
lender who elects this approach and does not require flood insurance at
loan origination must have adequate internal controls in place to
ensure compliance.
The Agencies also propose to add new question 20 to clarify whether
the 30-day waiting period for an NFIP policy applies when the purchase
of flood insurance is deferred in connection with a construction loan
since there has been confusion among lenders on this issue in the past.
Per guidance from FEMA, the answer would provide that the 30-day
waiting period would not apply in such cases.\3\ The NFIP would rely on
the insurance agent's representation that the exception applies unless
a loss has occurred during the first 30 days of the policy period.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ FEMA, Mandatory Purchase of Flood Insurance Guidelines,
(September 2007) at 30. FEMA has made available a new version of
this booklet electronically at https://www.fema.gov/library/
viewRecord.do?id=2954. Hard copies are available by calling FEMA's
Publication Warehouse at (800) 480-2520.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section V. Flood insurance requirements for agricultural buildings
The Agencies are proposing a new section V to address the flood
insurance requirements for agricultural buildings that are taken as
security for a loan, but that have limited utility to a farming
operation. The section would also address loans secured by multiple
buildings where some buildings are located in a flood hazard area and
some buildings are not.
The proposed answer to new question 21 would explain that all
buildings taken as security for a loan and located in an SFHA require
flood insurance. Lenders have the option of carving a building from the
security for a loan; however, the Agencies believe that it is typically
inappropriate for credit risk management reasons to do so.
The guidance in current question 7 under section II would be split
between question 11 under proposed section II, as discussed above, and
question 22 under proposed section V. The proposed answer to question
22 would explain that a lender is always required to determine whether
a building securing a loan is located in an SFHA, but that only those
buildings located in an SFHA and within a participating community are
required to have flood insurance. Flood insurance need not be required
on those properties that (1) are not located in a special flood hazard
area (whether or not within a participating community) or (2) are
located in a special flood hazard area that is not within a
participating community.
Section VI. Flood insurance requirements for residential condominiums
For organizational purposes, the Agencies are proposing to
consolidate questions and answers relating to the Regulation's flood
insurance requirements for residential condominiums into a new section
VI. In addition to modifying and expanding the two existing questions
in the 1997 Interagency Questions and Answers on residential
condominiums, the Agencies are proposing to add five additional
[[Page 15263]]
questions and answers to provide better clarity on the requirements.
Proposed question and answer 24 would modify and expand current
question 8 under section II to more completely address the Regulation's
flood insurance requirements for residential condominium units. The
proposed answer would first explain that the amount of flood insurance
coverage on the condominium unit required by the Regulation is the
lesser of the outstanding principal balance of the loan or the maximum
amount of coverage available under the NFIP.
The proposed answer would then explain that if the outstanding
principal balance of the loan is greater than the maximum amount of
coverage available under the NFIP, the lender must require a borrower
whose loan is secured by a residential condominium unit to either:
Ensure the condominium owners association has purchased an
NFIP Residential Condominium Building Association Policy (RCBAP)
covering either 100 percent of the insurable value (replacement cost)
of the building, including amounts to repair or replace the foundation
and its supporting structures, or an amount equal to the total number
of units in the condominium building times $250,000, whichever is less;
or
Obtain an individual unit owner's dwelling policy in an
amount sufficient to meet the Regulation's flood insurance
requirements, if there is no RCBAP or the RCBAP coverage is less than
either 100 percent of the insurable value (replacement cost) of the
building or the amount equal to the total number of units in the
condominium building times $250,000, whichever is less.
The proposed answer revises and clarifies the current answer to
question 8 under section II. The current answer provides that ``to meet
federal flood insurance requirements, an RCBAP should be purchased in
an amount of at least 80 percent of the replacement value of the
building or the maximum amount available under the NFIP (currently
$250,000 multiplied by the number of units), whichever is less.''
The proposed question and answer recognizes that neither the Act
nor the Regulation addresses explicitly the appropriate level of RCBAP
coverage; rather, they address the general purchase requirement
applicable to all types of buildings and mobile homes: The lesser of
the outstanding principal balance of the loan or the maximum amount of
insurance available under the NFIP. The proposed question and answer
acknowledges the standard set forth in the Regulation, and clarifies
that the maximum amount of insurance available under the NFIP for a
residential condominium unit is the lesser of the maximum limit
available for a residential condominium unit (currently, $250,000) or
the insurable value of the unit (the replacement value of the building
divided by the number of units).\4\ The proposed question and answer
would also reflect that where the outstanding principal balance of the
loan is greater than the maximum amount of coverage available under the
NFIP, an RCBAP written at 80 percent of the replacement cost value of
the building does not meet the Regulation's flood insurance
requirements (unless that amount were equal to the maximum amount of
insurance available under the NFIP, which is $250,000 multiplied by the
number of units), whereas the current answer suggested that such a
coverage level was adequate. While FEMA's recent guidance prescribes 80
percent replacement cost value coverage as the minimum amount necessary
to avoid imposition of a co-insurance penalty at the time of loss,\5\
proposed answer 24 clarifies that this amount of insurance is
insufficient to comply with the Act's and Regulation's minimum
requirements. The proposed answer would provide that where the
outstanding principal balance of the loan is greater than the maximum
amount of coverage available under the NFIP and the RCBAP is written at
less than 100 percent of the insurable value (replacement cost) of the
building or an amount equal to $250,000 multiplied by the number of
units, whichever is less, the lender must require the borrower to
obtain an individual unit owner's dwelling policy to meet the
Regulation's flood insurance requirements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ In recent guidance, FEMA expressly discusses the statutory
standard for determining the required amount of flood insurance for
a condominium. FEMA Mandatory Purchase of Flood Insurance
Guidelines, at 46.
\5\ FEMA's recent guidance encourages condominium associations
to obtain 100 percent coverage. Id. at 47.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Agencies are proposing the modification contained in proposed
question 24 and its answer to be in accordance with the general
mandatory purchase requirement in the Regulation. As FEMA has noted:
Although unit owners have a shared interest in the common areas
of the condominium building, as well as in their own unit, unit
owners are unable to individually protect such common areas.
Therefore, the RCBAP, insured to its full replacement cost value
(RCV) to the extent possible under the NFIP, is the correct way to
insure a residential condominium building against flood loss. A
properly placed RCBAP protects the financial interests of the
association, unit owners, and lenders and also satisfies the
statutory requirements.\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ See id. at 46.
The Agencies plan that any guidance adopted as final in question
and answer 24 would apply to any loan that is made, increased,
extended, or renewed after the effective date of the revised guidance.
The Agencies further plan that the revised guidance would apply to any
loan made prior to the effective date of the revised guidance, which a
lender determines to be covered by flood insurance in an amount less
than required by the Regulation, as set forth in proposed question and
answer 24, at the first flood insurance policy renewal period following
the effective date of the revised guidance.
Proposed question 27 would modify and expand current question 9
under section II to address lenders' options when a loan secured by a
residential condominium unit is in a multi-unit complex whose
condominium association allows its existing flood insurance policy to
lapse. Specifically, if the borrower/unit owner or the condominium
association fails to purchase adequate flood insurance within 45 days
of the lender's notification of inadequate insurance coverage, the
lender must force place flood insurance to cover the unit owner's
dwelling in an amount adequate to meet the Regulation's flood insurance
requirements.
The Agencies are also proposing five new questions and answers to
address additional issues regarding flood insurance requirements for
residential condominiums. Proposed new question 23 would be added to
specifically affirm that the mandatory flood insurance purchase
requirements under the Act and Regulation apply to loans secured by
individual residential condominium units, including those in multi-
story condominium complexes located in an SFHA in which flood insurance
is available under the Act.
Proposed new question 25 would address lenders' options when a loan
secured by a residential condominium unit is in a multi-unit complex
whose condominium association does not obtain or maintain the amount of
flood insurance coverage required under the Regulation. Specifically,
it would provide that a lender must require the borrower to purchase an
individual unit owner's dwelling policy in an amount sufficient to meet
the Regulation's flood insurance requirements. The proposed answer
would also detail what is considered an adequate amount of flood
insurance under the Regulation and provide an example.
[[Page 15264]]
Proposed new question 26 would address the steps a lender must take
if the RCBAP coverage is insufficient to meet the Regulation's
mandatory purchase requirements for a loan secured by an individual
residential condominium unit. The proposed answer would also summarize
some of the risks to which the lender and the individual unit owner/
borrower may be exposed should a loss occur where the condominium
association did not maintain adequate flood insurance coverage under an
RCBAP.
Proposed new question 28 would be added to explain how the RCBAP's
co-insurance penalty applies when, at the time of loss, the RCBAP's
coverage amount is less than 80 percent of either the building's
replacement cost or the maximum amount of flood insurance available for
that building under the NFIP (whichever is less). Examples of how to
calculate the penalty would also be provided. Proposed new question 29
would be added to explain the interplay between the individual unit
owner's dwelling policy coverage limitations and the RCBAP.
Section VII. Flood insurance requirements for home equity loans, lines
of credit, subordinate liens, and other security interests in
collateral located in an SFHA
Proposed new Section VII, which addresses flood insurance
requirements for home equity loans, lines of credit, subordinate liens,
and other security interests in collateral located in an SFHA, would
include seven questions from current section I and parts of two
questions from current section V. Specifically, current questions 3, 4,
5, 6, 7, 8, and 10 would be renumbered as questions 30, 31, 34, 35 and
36, 37, 38, and 39 respectively. Current question 5 in section V would
be split into proposed questions 32 and 33.
Proposed questions and answers 30, 31, and 39 would include minor
wording changes without any intended change in substance or meaning.
Proposed question 32 would expand on part of current section V,
question 5, but would not change the substance of the answer. New
question 34 would be revised to clarify the issue discussed in current
question 5 of section I without any change in substance or meaning. New
questions 35 and 36 would be added to clarify the issues discussed in
current question 6 of section I.
Section VIII. Flood insurance requirements for loan syndications/
participations
The Agencies are proposing to include a new section VIII and new
question 40 in response to questions from lenders. The proposed
question and answer would explain that, with respect to loan
syndications and participations, individual participating lenders are
responsible for ensuring compliance with flood insurance requirements.
The Agencies believe that the risk of flood loss can be a significant
threat to the value of improved real property securing loans,
especially in light of many recent catastrophic flood-related events
such as Hurricane Katrina. Therefore, the Agencies believe that each
lender in a loan participation/syndication arrangement that is secured
by improved real property located in a special flood hazard area should
be responsible for ensuring that the respective interest of the lender
in the collateral that secures the lender's portion of the loan is
protected against the risk of flood loss, at least to the amount
required by the Regulation. This does not mean that each lender in a
syndication or participant in a loan must individually undertake such
activities as obtaining a flood determination or monitoring whether
flood insurance premiums are paid. Rather, it means that the
participating lender should perform upfront due diligence to ensure
both that the lead lender or agent has undertaken the necessary
activities to ensure that the borrower obtains appropriate flood
insurance and that the lead lender or agent has adequate controls to
monitor the loan(s) on an on-going basis for compliance with the flood
insurance requirements. The participating lender should require as a
condition to the participation, syndication or other credit risk
sharing agreement that the lead lender or agent will provide
participating lenders with sufficient information on an ongoing basis
to monitor compliance with flood insurance requirements.
Section IX. Flood insurance requirements in the event of the sale or
transfer of a designated loan and/or its servicing rights
The heading to proposed section IX has been modified to provide
greater clarity with no intended change in substance or meaning. The
current questions 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6 under current section IX would
be renumbered as proposed questions 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, and 47,
respectively, with minor revisions to questions and answers 42 and 46
to provide greater clarity, with no intended change in substance or
meaning. Proposed section IX would also incorporate and expand current
question 6 under section II as proposed question and answer 41.
Proposed question 41 would expound on the two scenarios from current
question 6 to provide greater clarity, with no intended change in
substance or meaning.
Section X. Escrow requirements
Current section IV on escrow requirements would be moved to
proposed section X but would remain largely unchanged. Question 1 under
current section IV, relating to the date loan originations were subject
to the escrow requirement, would be deleted, as it is now obsolete.
Questions 2 through 7 under current section IV would be renumbered as
proposed questions 48 through 53, respectively, with minor changes for
greater clarity with no intended change in substance or meaning.
Section XI. Forced placement of flood insurance
For organizational purposes, the Agencies are proposing to move
existing questions 1, 2, and 3 in Part VI to questions 54, 55, and 56
in section XI of the proposed document, respectively. The Agencies are
proposing minor revisions to proposed question and answer 54 to provide
greater clarity, with no intended change in substance or meaning.
Section XII. Gap insurance policies
The Agencies are proposing to add a new section and question and
answer on the appropriateness of gap or blanket insurance policies,
often purchased by lenders to ensure adequate life-of-loan flood
insurance coverage for designated loans, as a result of questions
received by the Agencies on such policies. Gap or blanket insurance
policies are lender-paid private policies that are meant to cover a
lender's entire portfolio of loans for insurance shortfalls or expired
policies.
The proposed answer to question 57 of section XII would explain
that, generally, gap or blanket insurance is not an adequate substitute
for NFIP insurance, as a gap or blanket policy typically protects only
the lender's, not the borrower's interest, and cannot be transferred
when a loan is sold. The question and answer would acknowledge,
however, that in limited circumstances, a gap or blanket policy may
satisfy flood insurance obligations in instances where NFIP and private
insurance for the borrower are otherwise unavailable.
Section XIII: Required use of the Standard Flood Hazard Determination
Form (SFHDF)
Current section V would be moved to proposed section XIII, and
questions 1,
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2, 3, and 4 of current section V would be renumbered as proposed
questions 58, 59, 60, and 61, respectively. The Agencies are proposing
some minor changes to the answers for these questions to provide
additional clarity with no intended change in substance or meaning. For
organizational purposes, the guidance found in question 5 of current
section V would be moved to proposed questions 32 and 33 under proposed
section VII, as discussed above.
Section XIV. Flood determination fees
Current section VII would be moved to proposed section XIV.
Questions 1 and 2 in current section VII would be renumbered as
questions 62 and 63, respectively, with only minor language
modifications, with no intended change in substance or meaning.
Section XV. Flood zone discrepancies
The Agencies are proposing a new section and two new questions
concerning issues where there is a discrepancy between the flood hazard
zone designation on a flood hazard determination form and the flood
hazard zone designation on the flood insurance policy. Proposed new
question 64 would address how lenders should respond when confronted
with a discrepancy between the flood hazard zone designations on the
flood hazard determination form and the flood insurance policy. The
question discusses the legitimate reasons why such discrepancies may
exist and describes how to resolve differences if there is no
legitimate reason for them. Proposed question 65 discusses when such
flood zone discrepancies in a loan portfolio will result in a finding
that the lender violated federal flood insurance requirements. If there
are repeated instances in the lender's loan portfolio of discrepancies
between the flood hazard zone listed on a flood hazard determination
and the flood hazard zone listed on a flood insurance policy, and the
lender has not taken steps to resolve such discrepancies, then an
agency may find that the lender has violated the mandatory purchase
requirements.
Section XVI. Notice of special flood hazards and availability of
Federal disaster relief
The Agencies propose to move current section VIII to proposed
section XVI. Therefore, questions 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6 under current
section VIII would be renumbered as proposed questions 66, 67, 68, 69,
70, and 71, respectively, with nonsubstantive changes made to provide
additional clarity to the answers. For organizational purposes,
question 1 under current section X would be consolidated under this new
section XVI and renumbered as question 73. Furthermore, a new question
72 is proposed to be added to clarify that the Notice of Special Flood
Hazards must be provided to the borrower each time a loan is made,
increased, extended, or renewed, even when a new determination is not
required.
Section XVII. Mandatory civil money penalties
The Agencies are proposing a new section and two new questions
concerning the imposition of mandatory civil money penalties for
violations of the flood insurance requirements. Proposed new question
74 would list the sections of the Act that trigger mandatory civil
money penalties when examiners find a pattern or practice of violations
of those sections. The question would also include information about
statutory limits on the amount of such penalties. Proposed new question
75 would discuss the general standards the Agencies consider when
determining whether violations constitute a pattern or practice for
which civil money penalties are mandatory. These considerations are not
dispositive of individual cases, but serve as a reference point for
reviewing the particular facts and circumstances.
Redesignation Table
The following redesignation table is provided as an aide to assist
the public in reviewing the proposed revisions to the 1997 Interagency
Questions and Answers.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Current Proposed
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section I. Definitions:
Section I, Question 1..... Section IV, Question 17.
Section I, Question 2..... Section IV, Question 16.
Section I, Question 3..... Section VII, Question 30.
Section I, Question 4..... Section VII, Question 31.
Section I, Question 5..... Section VII, Question 34.
Section I, Question 6..... Section VII, Question 35; and Section
VII, Question 36.
Section I, Question 7..... Section VII, Question 37.
Section I, Question 8..... Section VII, Question 38.
Section I, Question 9..... Section I, Question 4.
Section I, Question 10.... Section VII, Question 39.
Section II. Requirement to
Purchase Flood Insurance
Where Available:
Section II, Question 1.... Section I, Question 1.
Section II, Question 2.... Section I, Question 3.
Section II, Question 3.... Section I, Question 5.
Section II, Question 4.... Deleted as obsolete.
Section II, Question 5.... Section II, Question 12.
Section II, Question 6.... Section IX, Question 41.
Section II, Question 7.... Section II, Question 11; and Section V,
Question 22.
Section II, Question 8.... Section VI, Question 24.
Section II, Question 9.... Section VI, Question 27.
Section III. Exemptions....... Section III. Exemptions from the
mandatory flood insurance requirements.
Section III, Question 1... Section III, Question 15.
Section IV. Escrow Section X. Escrow requirements.
Requirements.
Section IV, Question 1.... Deleted as obsolete.
Section IV, Question 2.... Section X, Question 48.
Section IV, Question 3.... Section X, Question 49.
[[Page 15266]]
Section IV, Question 4.... Section X, Question 50.
Section IV, Question 5.... Section X, Question 51.
Section IV, Question 6.... Section X, Question 52.
Section IV, Question 7.... Section X, Question 53.
Section V. Required Use of Section XIII. Required use of Standard
Standard Flood Hazard Flood Hazard Determination Form
Determination Form (SFHDF). (SFHDF).
Section V, Question 1..... Section XIII, Question 58.
Section V, Question 2..... Section XIII, Question 59.
Section V, Question 3..... Section XIII, Question 60.
Section V, Question 4..... Section XIII, Question 61.
Section V, Question 5..... Section VII, Question 32; and Section
VII, Question 33.
Section VI. Forced Placement Section XI. Forced placement of flood
of Flood Insurance. insurance.
Section VI, Question 1.... Section XI, Question 54.
Section VI, Question 2.... Section XI, Question 55.
Section VI, Question 3.... Section XI, Question 56.
Section VII. Determination Section XIV. Flood determination fees.
Fees.
Section VII, Question 1... Section XIV, Question 62.
Section VII, Question 2... Section XIV, Question 63.
Section VIII. Notice of Section XVI. Notice of special flood
Special Flood Hazards and hazards and availability of Federal
Availability of Federal disaster relief.
Disaster Relief.
Section VIII, Question 1.. Section XVI, Question 66.
Section VIII, Question 2.. Section XVI, Question 67.
Section VIII, Question 3.. Section XVI, Question 68.
Section VIII, Question 4.. Section XVI, Question 69.
Section VIII, Question 5.. Section XVI, Question 70.
Section VIII, Question 6.. Section XVI, Question 71.
Section IX. Notice of Section IX. Flood insurance requirements
Servicer's Identity. in the event of the sale or transfer of
a designated loan and/or its servicing
rights.
Section IX, Question 1.... Section IX, Question 42.
Section IX, Question 2.... Section IX, Question 43.
Section IX, Question 3.... Section IX, Question 44.
Section IX, Question 4.... Section IX, Question 45.
Section IX, Question 5.... Section IX, Question 46.
Section IX, Question 6.... Section IX, Question 47.
Section X Appendix A to the Section XVI. Notice of special flood
Regulation-Sample Form of hazards and availability of Federal
Notice of Special Flood disaster relief.
Hazards and Availability of
Federal Disaster Relief
Assistance.
Section X, Question 1..... Section XVI, Question 73.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Public Comments
The Agencies invite public comment on the proposed new and revised
Interagency Questions and Answers. If financial institutions, bank
examiners, community groups, or other interested parties have
unanswered questions or comments about the Agencies' flood insurance
regulations, they should submit them to the Agencies. The Agencies will
consider including these questions and answers in the final guidance.
Solicitation of Comments Regarding the Use of ``Plain Language''
Section 722 of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act of 1999, 12 U.S.C. 4809,
requires the federal banking Agencies to use ``plain language'' in all
proposed and final rules published after January 1, 2000. Although this
proposed guidance is not a proposed rule, comments are nevertheless
invited on whether the proposed interagency questions and answers are
stated clearly and effectively organized, and how the guidance might be
revised to make it easier to read.
The text of the proposed Interagency Questions and Answers follows:
Interagency Questions and Answers Regarding Flood Insurance
The Interagency Questions and Answers are organized by topic. Each
topic addresses a major area of the revised flood insurance law and
regulations. For ease of reference, the following terms are used
throughout this document: ``Act'' refers to the National Flood
Insurance Act of 1968 and the Flood Disaster Protection Act of 1973, as
revised by the National Flood Insurance Reform Act of 1994 (codified at
42 U.S.C. 4001 et seq.). ``Regulation'' refers to each agency's current
final rule.\7\ The OCC, Board, FDIC, OTS, NCUA, and FCA (collectively,
``the Agencies'') are providing answers to questions pertaining to the
following topics:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ The Agencies' rules are codified at 12 CFR part 22 (OCC), 12
CFR part 208 (Board), 12 CFR part 339 (FDIC), 12 CFR part 572 (OTS),
12 CFR part 614 (FCA), and 12 CFR part 760 (NCUA).
I. Determining when certain loans are designated loans for which
flood insurance is required under the Act and Regulation.
II. Determining the appropriate amount of flood insurance required
under the Act and Regulation.
III. Exemptions from the mandatory flood insurance requirements.
IV. Flood insurance requirements for construction loans.
V. Flood insurance requirements for agricultural buildings.
VI. Flood insurance requirements for
[[Page 15267]]
residential condominiums.
VII. Flood insurance requirements for home equity loans, lines of
credit, subordinate liens, and other security interests in
collateral located in an SFHA.
VIII. Flood insurance requirements for loan syndications/
participations.
IX. Flood insurance requirements in the event of the sale or
transfer of a designated loan and/or its servicing rights.
X. Escrow requirements.
XI. Forced placement of flood insurance.
XII. Gap insurance policies.
XIII. Required use of Standard Flood Hazard Determination Form
(SFHDF).
XIV. Flood determination fees.
XV. Flood zone discrepancies.
XVI. Notice of special flood hazards and availability of Federal
disaster relief.
XVII. Mandatory civil money penalties.
I. Determining When Certain Loans Are Designated Loans for Which Flood
Insurance is Required Under the Act and Regulation
1. Does the Regulation apply to a loan where the building or mobile
home securing such loan is located in a community that does not
participate in the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP)?
Answer: Yes. The Regulation does apply; however, a lender need not
require borrowers to obtain flood insurance for a building or mobile
home located in a community that does not participate in the NFIP, even
if the building or mobile home securing the loan is located in a
Special Flood Hazard Area (SFHA). Nonetheless, a lender, using the
standard Special Flood Hazard Determination Form (SFHDF), must still
determine whether the building or mobile home is located in an SFHA. If
the building or mobile home is determined to be located in an SFHA, a
lender is required to notify the borrower. In this case, a lender,
generally, may make a conventional loan without requiring flood
insurance, if it chooses to do so. However, a lender may not make a
Government-guaranteed or insured loan, such as an SBA, VA, or FHA, loan
secured by a building or mobile home located in an SFHA in a community
that does not participate in the NFIP. See 42 U.S.C. 4106(a). Also, a
lender is responsible for exercising sound risk management practices to
ensure that it does not make a loan secured by a building or mobile
home located in an SFHA where no flood insurance is available, if doing
so would be an unacceptable risk.
2. What is a lender's responsibility if a particular building or
mobile home that secures a loan, due to a map change, is no longer
located within an SFHA?
Answer: The lender is no longer obligated to require mandatory
flood insurance; however, the borrower can elect to convert the
existing NFIP policy to a Preferred Risk Policy. For risk management
purposes, the lender may, by contract, continue to require flood
insurance coverage.
3. Does a lender's purchase of a loan, secured by a building or
mobile home located in an SFHA in which flood insurance is available
under the Act, from another lender trigger any requirements under the
Regulation?
Answer: No. A lender's purchase of a loan, secured by a building or
mobile home located in an SFHA in which flood insurance is available
under the Act, alone, is not an event that triggers the Regulation's
requirements, such as making a new flood determination or requiring a
borrower to purchase flood insurance. Requirements under the
Regulation, generally, are triggered when a lender makes, increases,
extends, or renews a designated loan. A lender's purchase of a loan
does not fall within any of those categories.
However, if a lender becomes aware at any point during the life of
a designated loan that flood insurance is required, the lender must
comply with the Regulation, including force placing insurance, if
necessary. Depending upon the circumstances, safety and soundness
considerations may sometimes necessitate such due diligence upon
purchase of a loan as to put the lender on notice of lack of adequate
flood insurance. If the purchasing lender subsequently extends,
increases, or renews a designated loan, it must also comply with the
Regulation.
4. Does the Regulation apply to loans that are being restructured
because of the borrower's default on the original loan?
Answer: Yes, if the loan otherwise meets the definition of a
designated loan and if the lender increases the amount of the loan, or
extends or renews the terms of the original loan.
5. Are table funded loans treated as new loan originations?
Answer: Yes. Table funding, as defined under HUD's Real Estate
Settlement Procedure Act (RESPA) rule, 24 CFR 3500.2, is a settlement
at which a loan is funded by a contemporaneous advance of loan funds
and the assignment of the loan to the person advancing the funds. A
loan made through a table funding process is treated as though the
party advancing the funds has originated the loan. The funding party is
required to comply with the Regulation. The table funding lender can
meet the administrative requirements of the Regulation by requiring the
party processing and underwriting the application to perform those
functions on its behalf.
6. Is a lender required to perform a review of its, or its
servicer's, existing loan portfolio for compliance with the flood
insurance requirements under the Act and Regulation?
Answer: No. Apart from the requirements mandated when a loan is
made, increased, extended, or renewed, a regulated lender need only
review and take action on any part of its existing portfolio for safety
and soundness purposes, or if it knows or has reason to know of the
need for NFIP coverage. Regardless of the lack of such requirement in
the Act and Regulation, however, sound risk management practices may
lead a lender to conduct scheduled periodic reviews that track the need
for flood insurance on a loan portfolio.
II. Determining the Appropriate Amount of Flood Insurance Required
Under the Act and Regulation
7. The Regulation states that the amount of flood insurance
required ``must be at least equal to the lesser of the outstanding
principal balance of the designated loan or the maximum limit of
coverage available for the particular type of property under the Act.''
What is meant by the ``maximum limit of coverage available for the
particular type of property under the Act''?
Answer: ``The maximum limit of coverage available for the
particular type of property under the Act'' depends on the value of the
secured collateral. First, under the NFIP, there are maximum caps on
the amount of insurance available. For single-family and two-to-four
family dwellings and other residential buildings located in a
participating community under the regular program, the maximum cap is
$250,000. For nonresidential structures located in a participating
community under the regular program, the maximum cap is $500,000. (In
participating communities that are under the emergency program phase,
the caps are $35,000 for single-family and two-to-four family dwellings
and other residential structures, and $100,000 for nonresidential
structures).
In addition to the maximum caps under the NFIP, the Regulation also
provides that ``flood insurance coverage under the Act is limited to
the overall value of the property securing the designated loan minus
the value of the land on which the property is located,'' which is
commonly referred to as the ``insurable value'' of a structure. The
NFIP does not insure land; therefore, land values should not be
included in
[[Page 15268]]
the calculation. An NFIP policy will not cover an amount exceeding the
``insurable value'' of the structure. In determining coverage amounts
for flood insurance, lenders often follow the same practice used to
establish other hazard insurance coverage amounts. However, unlike the
insurable valuation used to underwrite most other hazard insurance
policies, the insurable value of improved real property for flood
insurance purposes also includes the repair or replacement cost of the
foundation and supporting structures. It is very important to calculate
the correct insurable value of the property; otherwise, the lender
might inadvertently require the borrower to purchase too much or too
little flood insurance coverage. For example, if the lender fails to
exclude the value of the land when determining the insurable value of
the improved real property, the borrower will be asked to purchase
coverage that exceeds the amount the NFIP will pay in the event of a
loss.
(Please note, however, when taking a security interest in
improved real property where the value of the land, excluding the
value of the improvements, is sufficient collateral for the debt,
the lender must nonetheless