Equal Credit Opportunity Act (Regulation B) Ethnicity and Race Information Collection, 45680-45697 [2017-20417]
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Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 189 / Monday, October 2, 2017 / Rules and Regulations
rule published on December 27, 2016, at
81 FR 94934, as final with the following
change:
PART 271—RULES REGARDING
AVAILABILITY OF INFORMATION
1. The authority citation for part 271
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552; 12 U.S.C. 263.
2. In § 271.6, paragraph (h)(3) is
revised to read as follows:
■
§ 271.6
Processing requests.
*
*
*
*
*
(h) * * *
(3) The Committee, or such member of
the Committee as is delegated the
authority, shall make a determination
regarding any appeal within 20 working
days of actual receipt of the appeal by
the Secretary. If an adverse
determination is upheld on appeal, in
whole or in part, the determination
letter shall notify the appealing party of
the right to seek judicial review and of
the availability of dispute resolution
services from the Office of Government
Information Services as a nonexclusive
alternative to litigation.
By order of the Federal Open Market
Committee, September 19, 2017.
Brian F. Madigan,
Secretary, Federal Open Market Committee.
[FR Doc. 2017–21071 Filed 9–29–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6210–01–P
BUREAU OF CONSUMER FINANCIAL
PROTECTION
12 CFR Part 1002
[Docket No. CFPB–2017–0009]
RIN 3170–AA65
Equal Credit Opportunity Act
(Regulation B) Ethnicity and Race
Information Collection
Bureau of Consumer Financial
Protection.
ACTION: Final rule; official
interpretation.
AGENCY:
The Bureau of Consumer
Financial Protection (Bureau) is issuing
a final rule that amends Regulation B to
permit creditors additional flexibility in
complying with Regulation B in order to
facilitate compliance with Regulation C,
adds certain model forms and removes
others from Regulation B, and makes
various other amendments to Regulation
B and its commentary to facilitate the
collection and retention of information
about the ethnicity, sex, and race of
certain mortgage applicants.
jstallworth on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES
SUMMARY:
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The rule is effective on January
1, 2018, except that the amendment to
Appendix B to Part 1002 revising
paragraph 1 and removing the existing
‘‘Uniform Residential Loan
Application’’ form in amendatory
instruction 6 is effective January 1,
2022.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Shaakira Gold-Ramirez, Paralegal
Specialist, Kathryn Lazarev, Counsel, or
James Wylie, Senior Counsel, Office of
Regulations, at 202–435–7700 or https://
www.consumerfinance.gov/policycompliance/guidance/.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
DATES:
I. Summary of the Final Rule
Regulation B implements the Equal
Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA) 1 and, in
part, prohibits a creditor from inquiring
about the race, color, religion, national
origin, or sex of a credit applicant
except under certain circumstances.2
Two of these circumstances are a
requirement for creditors to collect and
retain certain information about
applicants for certain dwelling-secured
loans under Regulation B § 1002.13 and
the similar applicant information that
financial institutions are required to
collect and report under Regulation C,
12 CFR part 1003, which implements
the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act
(HMDA).3 Regulation B also includes
certain optional model forms for use in
complying with certain Regulation B
requirements, including a model form
for complying with § 1002.13 that is a
2004 version of the Uniform Residential
Loan Application (URLA) issued by the
Federal National Mortgage Association
(Fannie Mae) and the Federal Home
Loan Mortgage Corporation (Freddie
Mac) (collectively, the Enterprises).4
The HMDA requirement to collect and
report applicant information was
recently updated through a final rule
amending Regulation C, published in
October of 2015 (2015 HMDA Final
Rule).5 In 2016, the Enterprises issued a
new version of the URLA that complies
with the 2015 HMDA Final Rule (2016
URLA).6 These changes to Regulation C
and the URLA require updates to
Regulation B to ensure consistency
1 15
U.S.C. 1691 et seq., 12 CFR part 1002.
CFR 1002.5(b).
3 12 CFR 1002.5(a)(2).
4 Appendix B to 12 CFR part 1003.
5 Home Mortgage Disclosure (Regulation C), 80 FR
66128 (Oct. 28, 2015).
6 See Fannie Mae, Guide Forms, available at
https://www.fanniemae.com/singlefamily/sellingservicing-guide-forms (last visited Sept. 6, 2017)
(listing all selling and servicing guide forms);
Freddie Mac, ‘‘Forms and Documents,’’ available at
https://www.freddiemac.com/singlefamily/guide/
(last visited Sept. 6, 2017) (same).
2 12
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among regulations and facilitate
compliance with Regulation B and
Regulation C by financial institutions.
To address these issues, the Bureau
issued a proposal on March 24, 2017,
which was published in the Federal
Register on April 4, 2017 (the 2017
ECOA Proposal).7
The Bureau is now publishing final
amendments to Regulation B. The final
rule will provide creditors flexibility in
complying with Regulation B in order to
facilitate compliance with Regulation C
and transition to the 2016 URLA. The
changes to Regulation B in this rule are
summarized briefly in this section and
discussed in detail below.
A. Scope
The final rule amends parts of
Regulation B, its commentary, and its
appendices, and affects when and how
a creditor may collect information
regarding the applicant’s ethnicity, race,
and sex. The Regulation B creditors
affected by this rule are primarily those
creditors making mortgage loans subject
to § 1002.13, which applies to purchase
and refinance transactions involving an
applicant’s primary residence. Financial
institutions that report under Regulation
C, have reported in the prior five years,
or may report in the near future may
also be affected by this rule. Creditors
that utilize model forms from appendix
B to Regulation B (the Regulation B
appendix) for mortgage loans are also
affected by the rule.
B. Changes to Applicant Information
Collection for Regulation B Creditors
For Regulation B creditors making
mortgage loans subject to § 1002.13, the
rule will allow creditors to collect the
applicant’s information using either the
aggregate ethnicity and race categories
or disaggregated ethnicity and race
categories and subcategories, as set forth
in appendix B to Regulation C (the
Regulation C appendix) as amended by
the 2015 HMDA Final Rule. The rule
change therefore will not require
Regulation B creditors that are not
HMDA reporters (Regulation B-only
creditors) to change their § 1002.13
compliance practices, but would allow
them to adopt voluntarily new practices
for collecting applicant information,
including practices that would permit
such creditors to transition to the 2016
URLA. Regulation B creditors will also
be able to collect voluntarily certain
information about applicants for certain
mortgage loan scenarios as provided for
in § 1002.5(a)(4). These scenarios
7 Amendments to Equal Credit Opportunity Act
(Regulation B) Ethnicity and Race Information
Collection, 82 FR 16307 (Apr. 4, 2017).
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generally involve types of loans subject
to Regulation C where a creditor
voluntarily reports information under
Regulation C, reported such information
in the past five years, or may report
such information in the near future.
C. Changes to Applicant Information
Collection for HMDA Reporters
Many HMDA reporters are also
subject to the collection requirements of
§ 1002.13. For those HMDA reporters,
the rule provides clarity that
compliance with applicant information
collection under Regulation C generally
satisfies similar requirements under
Regulation B. HMDA reporters who at
some point no longer are required to
comply with HMDA can continue to
collect certain applicant information as
provided for in § 1002.5(a)(4).
D. Changes to Regulation B Model
Forms
The rule makes certain changes to the
Regulation B appendix. The rule
amends the Regulation B appendix to
provide two options: A model form for
collecting aggregate applicant race and
ethnicity information and a crossreference to the Regulation C appendix
model form for collecting disaggregated
applicant race and ethnicity
information. The rule also removes as
outdated the existing version of the
URLA contained in the Regulation B
appendix, effective January 1, 2022. The
rule does not add the 2016 URLA to the
Regulation B appendix; that form is
subject to a separate Federal Register
notice issued by the Bureau
acknowledging its compliance with
certain provisions of Regulation B.8
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II. Background
A. Regulation B and Ethnicity and Race
Information Collection
With some exceptions, Regulation B
§ 1002.5(b) prohibits a creditor from
inquiring about the race, color, religion,
national origin, or sex of an applicant or
any other person (protected applicantcharacteristic information) in
connection with a credit transaction.
Section 1002.5(a)(2) provides several
exceptions to that prohibition for
information that creditors are required
to request for certain dwelling-secured
loans under § 1002.13, and for
information required by a regulation,
order, or agreement issued by or entered
into with a court or an enforcement
agency to monitor or enforce
compliance with ECOA, Regulation B or
8 Status of New Uniform Loan Application and
Collection of Expanded Home Mortgage Information
About Ethnicity and Race in 2017, 81 FR 66930
(Sept. 29, 2016).
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other Federal or State statutes or
regulations, including Regulation C.
Section 1002.13 sets forth rules for
collecting information about an
applicant’s ethnicity, race, sex, marital
status, and age under Regulation B. (In
this document, ‘‘applicant demographic
information’’ refers to information about
an applicant’s ethnicity, race, or sex
information, while ‘‘certain protected
applicant-characteristic information’’
refers to all information collected under
§ 1002.13, including age and marital
status.) Under § 1002.13(a)(1), creditors
that receive an application for credit
primarily for the purchase or
refinancing of a dwelling occupied (or
to be occupied) by the applicant as a
principal residence, where the
extension of credit will be secured by
the dwelling, must collect certain
protected applicant-characteristic
information, including specified race
and ethnicity categories. These race and
ethnicity categories correspond to the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) minimum standards for the
classification of Federal data on
ethnicity and race.9 Certain of these
categories include several more specific
race, heritage, nationality, or country of
origin groups. For example, Hispanic or
Latino as defined by OMB for the 2010
Census refers to a person of Cuban,
Mexican, Puerto Rican, South or Central
American, or other Spanish culture or
origin.10 Section 1002.13(b) through (c)
provides instructions on the manner of
collection. Unlike financial institutions
covered by Regulation C, creditors
subject to § 1002.13 but not to
Regulation C are required only to collect
and retain, but not to report, the
required protected applicantcharacteristic information.
B. 2015 HMDA Final Rule
Regulation C implements HMDA and
sets out specific requirements for the
collection, recording, reporting, and
disclosure of mortgage lending
information, including a requirement to
collect and report applicant
demographic information. In July 2014,
the Bureau proposed amendments to
Regulation C to implement the DoddFrank Act changes to require collection,
recording, and reporting of additional
information to further HMDA’s
purposes, and to modernize the manner
in which covered institutions report
9 Revision of the Standards for the Classification
of Federal Data on Race and Ethnicity, 62 FR 58782,
5878–90 (Oct. 30, 1997).
10 See U.S. Census Bureau, Overview of Race and
Hispanic Origin: 2010,’’ at 2 (Mar. 2011), available
at https://www.census.gov/prod/cen2010/briefs/
c2010br-02.pdf.
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HMDA data.11 The Bureau published a
final rule on October 28, 2015,
amending Regulation C, with many of
the amendments taking effect January 1,
2018.12 (In this document, ‘‘current
Regulation C’’ refers to Regulation C
prior to January 1, 2018, and ‘‘revised
Regulation C’’ refers to Regulation C as
it will be in effect on or after January 1,
2018, as amended by the 2015 HMDA
Final Rule.) For data collected in or after
2018, the 2015 HMDA Final Rule
amends the requirement for collection
and reporting of applicant demographic
information. Specifically, covered
institutions must permit applicants to
self-identify their ethnicity and race
using certain disaggregated ethnic and
racial subcategories such as Mexican,
Puerto Rican, or Cuban under the
aggregate category Hispanic or Latino.
Covered institutions will report the
disaggregated information provided by
applicants. However, revised Regulation
C will not require or permit covered
institutions to use the disaggregated
subcategories when collecting and
reporting the applicant’s ethnicity and
race based on visual observation or
surname.13
Revised Regulation C § 1003.2(g)(1)(v)
and 1003.2(g)(2)(ii) also introduces an
exclusion from the definition of
financial institution, from which the
duty to report HMDA data flows, for
entities that, among other criteria,
originated fewer than 25 closed-end
mortgage loans or fewer than 100 openend lines of credit in either of the two
preceding calendar years.14 The Bureau
recently adopted amendments to
Regulation C that will temporarily
increase the threshold for collecting and
reporting data on certain loans.
Financial institutions originating fewer
than 500 open-end lines of credit in
either of the preceding two years will
not be required to begin collecting such
data until January 1, 2020.15 As a result,
when revised Regulation C takes effect,
an institution’s obligation to collect and
report information under Regulation C
may change over time based on its prior
loan volume.
11 Home Mortgage Disclosure (Regulation C), 79
FR 51731 (Aug. 29, 2014).
12 80 FR 66128 (Oct. 28, 2015).
13 Id. at 66314 (amendments to appendix B to
Regulation C, effective January 1, 2018).
14 Id. at 66148.
15 82 FR 43088, 43093–43096 (Sept. 13, 2017); see
also id. at 43132, 43145 (§§ 1003.2(g)(1)(v)(B),
(g)(2)(ii)(B), and 1003.3(c)(12)). This temporary
increase in the open-end threshold will provide
time for the Bureau to consider whether to initiate
another rulemaking to address the appropriate level
for the open-end threshold for data collected
beginning January 1, 2020.
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C. Uniform Residential Loan
Application
The Enterprises, currently under the
conservatorship of the Federal Housing
Finance Agency (FHFA), prepare and
periodically revise the URLA used by
many lenders for certain dwellingrelated loans. A mortgage loan
application must be documented using
the URLA in the mortgage loan file for
the loan to be eligible for sale to the
Enterprises.16 A version of the URLA
dated January 2004 (2004 URLA) is
included in the Regulation B appendix
as a model form for use in complying
with § 1002.13. The appendix provides
that the use of its model forms is
optional under Regulation B but that, if
a creditor uses an appropriate appendix
B model form, or modifies a form in
accordance with instructions provided
in appendix B, that creditor shall be
deemed to be acting in compliance with
§ 1002.5(b) through (d).17 The
Enterprises, under the conservatorship
of the FHFA, issued a revised and
redesigned URLA on August 23, 2016
(2016 URLA).18 Among other changes,
the 2016 URLA includes a Demographic
Information section (section 7) that
addresses the requirements in revised
Regulation C for collecting applicant
demographic information, including the
requirement that financial institutions
permit applicants to self-identify using
disaggregated ethnicity and race
categories beginning January 1, 2018.
16 Fannie Mae, ‘‘Selling Guide: Single Family
Seller Servicer,’’ at § B1–1–01 (Dec. 16, 2014),
available at https://www.fanniemae.com/content/
guide/selling/b1/1/01.html; Freddie Mac, ‘‘SingleFamily Seller/Servicer Guide’’ (Sep. 21, 2016),
§ 3401.7, available at https://www.freddiemac.com/
singlefamily/guide/bulletins/snapshot.html.
17 Comment appendix B–1 provides that a
previous version of the URLA, dated October 1992,
may be used by creditors without violating
Regulation B. In addition, comment appendix B–2
provides that the home-improvement and energy
loan application form prepared by the Enterprises,
dated October 1986, complies with the
requirements of Regulation B for some creditors but
not others, depending on whether the creditor is
governed by § 1002.13(a) or subject to a substitute
monitoring program under § 1002.13(d). The
Enterprises no longer offer the home-improvement
and energy loan application form identified in
comment app. B–2. See Fannie Mae, ‘‘Guide
Forms,’’ available at https://www.fanniemae.com/
singlefamily/selling-servicing-guide-forms (last
visited Sept. 6, 2017) (listing all current selling and
servicing guide forms); see also Freddie Mac,
‘‘Forms and Documents,’’ available at https://
www.freddiemac.com/singlefamily/guide/ (last
visited Sept. 6, 2017) (same).
18 See Fannie Mae, ‘‘Uniform Residential Loan
Application,’’ https://www.fanniemae.com/
singlefamily/uniform-residential-loan-application#
(last visited Sept. 6, 2017); see also Press Release,
Uniform Mortgage Data Program, Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac at the direction of the FHFA, ‘‘The
Redesigned URLA and ULAD Mapping Document
Are Here!,’’ (Aug. 23, 2016), available at https://
www.fanniemae.com/content/news/urlaannouncement-august-2016.pdf.
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The Enterprises also made available a
Demographic Information Addendum,
which is identical in form to section 7
of the 2016 URLA.19 The Enterprises
have advised that the Demographic
Information Addendum may be used by
lenders at any time on or after January
1, 2017, as a replacement for section X
(Information for Government
Monitoring Purposes) in the current
URLA, dated July 2005 (revised June
2009). The Enterprises have not yet
provided a date when lenders may begin
using the 2016 URLA or the date lenders
are required to use the 2016 URLA (the
cutover date), but have stated their
intention to collaborate with industry
stakeholders to help shape the
implementation timeline for the 2016
URLA, with a goal to provide lenders
with more precise information in 2017
regarding the cutover date.20
D. Bureau Approval Notice
On September 23, 2016, the Bureau
issued a notice concerning the
collection of expanded information
about ethnicity and race in 2017
(Bureau Approval Notice).21 Before the
January 1, 2018, effective date of most
provisions of the 2015 HMDA Final
Rule, inquiries to collect applicant
demographic information using
disaggregated ethnic and racial
categories are not required by current
Regulation C and would not have been
allowed under Regulation B
§ 1002.5(a)(2), and therefore creditors
would have been prohibited by
Regulation B § 1002.5(b) from requesting
applicants to self-identify using
disaggregated ethnic and racial
categories before January 1, 2018. The
Bureau Approval Notice provided that,
anytime from January 1, 2017 through
December 31, 2017, a creditor may, at its
option, permit applicants to self-identify
using disaggregated ethnic and racial
categories as instructed in the revised
Regulation C appendix. During this
period, a creditor adopting the practice
of permitting applicants to self-identify
19 Fannie Mae, Form 1003 and Freddie Mac Form
65, ‘‘Demographic Information Addendum,’’ (Aug.
2016), available at https://www.fanniemae.com/
content/guide_form/urla-demographicaddendum.pdf.
20 Press Release, Uniform Mortgage Data Program,
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac at the direction of the
FHFA, ‘‘URLA Implementation Guidance and
Update,’’ (Nov. 1, 2016), available at https://
www.fanniemae.com/content/news/urlaannouncement-november-2016.pdf; Uniform
Mortgage Data Program, Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac at the direction of the FHFA, ‘‘Uniform
Residential Loan Application (URLA)/Uniform
Loan Application Dataset (ULAD) FAQs,’’ at ¶ 6
(Nov. 1, 2016), available at https://
www.fanniemae.com/content/faq/urla-uladfaqs.pdf.
21 81 FR 66930 (Sept. 29, 2016).
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using disaggregated ethnic and racial
categories as instructed in the revised
Regulation C appendix shall be deemed
to be in compliance with Regulation B
§ 1002.13(a)(i). In the same notice, the
Bureau also determined that the
relevant language in the 2016 URLA is
in compliance with the regulatory
provisions of Regulation B § 1002.5(b)
through (d), regarding requests for
protected applicant-characteristic
information and certain other
information. The notice provides that,
although the use of the 2016 URLA by
creditors is not required under
Regulation B, a creditor that uses the
2016 URLA without any modification
that would violate § 1002.5(b) through
(d) acts in compliance with § 1002.5(b)
through (d).
III. Summary of the Rulemaking
Process
A. Pre-Proposal Outreach
As part of the Bureau’s outreach to
financial institutions, vendors, and
other mortgage industry participants to
prepare for the implementation of the
2015 HMDA Final Rule, the Bureau
received questions about the
requirement to permit applicants to selfidentify using disaggregated ethnicity
and race categories. The Bureau also
received questions as to how that
requirement intersected with
compliance obligations under
Regulation B. The Bureau further
received questions related to the Bureau
Approval Notice about whether the
approval for collecting disaggregated
ethnicity and race categories under
Regulation B in 2017 would be extended
to 2018. In light of these inquiries, the
Bureau determined that it would be
beneficial to establish through
rulemaking appropriate standards in
Regulation B concerning the collection
of an applicant’s ethnicity and race
information similar to those in revised
Regulation C.
Because many of the financial
institutions most affected by this
proposed rule are supervised by the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
(FDIC), the Office of the Comptroller of
the Currency (OCC), the Federal Reserve
Board (Board), and the National Credit
Union Administration (NCUA), the
Bureau conducted outreach to these
agencies. The Bureau specifically sought
input from these agencies concerning
their use of applicant ethnicity and race
information collected under § 1002.13
but not reported or anticipated to be
reported under Regulation C and their
views on appropriate standards for
collection and retention of this
information. The Bureau also conducted
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outreach with other Federal agencies,
including the Securities and Exchange
Commission, the Department of Justice,
the Department of Housing and Urban
Development, the Federal Housing
Finance Agency, the Federal Trade
Commission, the Department of
Veterans Affairs, the Department of
Agriculture, the Department of the
Treasury, and the Federal Financial
Institutions Examination Counsel
(FFIEC) concerning the proposed rule.
B. The Bureau’s Proposal
On March 24, 2017, the Bureau issued
the 2017 ECOA Proposal on its Web site.
The proposal was published in the
Federal Register on April 4, 2017.22
Specifically, the Bureau proposed an
amendment to § 1002.13 to permit a
creditor additional flexibility in how it
collects applicant ethnicity and race
information by allowing use of either
aggregate or disaggregate ethnicity and
race categories on an application-byapplication basis. In addition, the
Bureau proposed amendments adding
§ 1002.5(a)(4) to permit creditors to
collect applicant demographic
information when they would not
otherwise be required to do so in certain
scenarios where creditors may benefit
from being able to adopt Regulation C
compliance practices before they
become required or maintain them
when they are no longer required. The
Bureau also proposed to remove the
outdated 2004 URLA from the
Regulation B appendix, add generic
model forms for compliance with
§ 1002.13, and maintain approval of the
2016 URLA through a freestanding
approval notice.
jstallworth on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES
C. Feedback Provided to the Bureau
The Bureau received approximately
36 comments on the 2017 ECOA
Proposal during the comment period
from consumer advocacy groups,
national and State trade associations,
banks, individuals, and industry service
providers. Comments are publicly
available at https://www.regulations.gov.
This information is discussed below in
the section-by-section analysis and
subsequent parts of the notice, as
applicable. The Bureau considered the
comments, and adopts a modified final
rule as described below in the sectionby-section analysis.
Comments Related to 2015 HMDA Final
Rule
The Bureau received several
comments on the proposal concerning
the 2015 HMDA Final Rule. These
comments were primarily from small
22 82
FR 16307 (Apr. 4, 2017).
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financial institutions. Commenters
expressed concern that the data points
added to Regulation C in the 2015
HMDA Final Rule burdened financial
institutions and, because of this burden,
the commenters encouraged the Bureau
to reduce the HMDA data fields to only
statutorily required fields. Commenters
also requested that the Bureau increase
the thresholds for being a HMDA
reporter to a higher limit that would
exempt more creditors from HMDA. The
Bureau did not propose changes to
Regulation C in this rulemaking. The
Bureau considered these comments but
does not believe that the comments are
relevant to the 2017 ECOA Proposal and
do not provide a basis to change the
approach proposed by the Bureau in the
2017 ECOA Proposal. The issues raised
by these comments were considered as
part of the rulemaking to revise
Regulation C and addressed in the 2015
HMDA Final Rule, and the Bureau has
not reassessed those issues as part of
this rulemaking, which concerns only
issues relating to the alignment of
collection of certain information about
applicants under Regulation B and
Regulation C and the status and use of
the URLA. With respect to the open-end
line of credit threshold for HMDA
reporting, the Bureau adopted
amendments to Regulation C that
temporarily increases the open-end line
of credit threshold to 500 until January
1, 2020.23 This temporary increase in
the open-end threshold will provide
time for the Bureau to consider whether
to initiate another rulemaking to address
the appropriate level for the open-end
threshold for data collected beginning
January 1, 2020.
Comments Related to Other Changes to
Regulation B
Some commenters proposed other
changes to Regulation B unrelated to
alignment with Regulation C or
applicant demographic information
collection for mortgage applicants.
These proposed changes included
establishing applicant demographic
information collection, reporting, and
public disclosure requirements for
automobile creditors similar to HMDA,
requiring adverse action notices in
certain situations involving
counteroffers, and adding recordkeeping and applicant demographic
information collection requirements for
brokers and arrangers of credit. The
Bureau did not propose these changes to
Regulation B. The Bureau does not
believe that these comments are relevant
23 82 FR 43088, 43093–43096 (Sept. 13, 2017); see
also id. at 43132, 43145 (§§ 1003.2(g)(1)(v)(B),
(g)(2)(ii)(B), and 1003.3(c)(12)).
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45683
to the 2017 ECOA Proposal and do not
provide a basis to change the approach
proposed by the Bureau in the 2017
ECOA Proposal.
IV. Legal Authority
The Bureau is issuing this final rule
pursuant to its authority under section
703 of ECOA, as amended by section
1085 of the Dodd-Frank Act.24 ECOA
authorizes the Bureau to issue
regulations to carry out the purposes of
ECOA.25 These regulations may contain
but are not limited to such
classifications, differentiations, or other
provisions, and may provide for such
adjustments and exceptions for any
class of transactions, as in the judgment
of the Bureau are necessary or proper to
effectuate the purposes of ECOA, to
prevent circumvention or evasion of
ECOA, or to facilitate or substantiate
compliance with ECOA.26 A purpose of
ECOA is to promote the availability of
credit to all creditworthy applicants
without regard to race, color, religion,
national origin, sex, marital status, or
age (provided the applicant has the
capacity to contract) or other protected
characteristics.27 ECOA section 703
serves as a source of authority to
establish rules concerning the taking
and evaluation of credit applications,
collection and retention of applicant
demographic information concerning
the applicant or co-applicant, use of
designated model forms, and
substantive requirements to carry out
the purposes of ECOA.
The Bureau is also issuing this final
rule pursuant to its authority under
sections 1022 and 1061 of the DoddFrank Act. Under Dodd-Frank Act
section 1022(b)(1), the Bureau has
authority to prescribe rules as may be
necessary or appropriate to enable the
Bureau to administer and carry out the
purposes and objectives of the Federal
consumer financial laws and to prevent
evasions thereof.28 Section 1061 of the
Dodd-Frank Act transferred to the
Bureau consumer financial protection
functions previously vested in certain
other Federal agencies, including the
authority to prescribe rules or issue
orders or guidelines pursuant to any
Federal consumer financial law and
perform appropriate functions to
promulgate and review such rules,
24 15 U.S.C. 1691b; Public Law 111–203, 124 Stat.
1376, 2083–84 (2010).
25 15 U.S.C. 1691b(a).
26 Id.
27 12 CFR 1002.1(b).
28 Public Law 111–203, 124 Stat. 1375, 1980
(2010) (codified at 12 U.S.C. 5512(b)(1)).
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orders, and guidelines.29 Both ECOA
and title X of the Dodd-Frank Act are
consumer financial laws.30 Accordingly,
the Bureau has authority to issue
regulations to administer ECOA.
V. Section-by-Section Analysis
Section 1002.5 Rules Concerning
Requests for Information
jstallworth on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES
5(a) General Rules
Section 1002.5 provides rules
concerning requests for information. In
general, § 1002.5(b) prohibits a creditor
from inquiring about protected
applicant-characteristic information in
connection with a credit transaction,
except under certain circumstances. The
Bureau proposed to amend
§ 1002.5(a)(4) to authorize creditors to
collect such information under certain
additional circumstances. In addition,
the Bureau proposed to add
commentary for § 1002.5(a)(4) to
provide guidance and proposed
amendments to comment 5(a)(2)–2 to
make conforming changes and further
align Regulation B and revised
Regulation C.
5(a)(4) Other Permissible Collection of
Information
Section 1002.5(a)(2) provides that,
notwithstanding the limitations in
§ 1002.5(b) through (d) on collecting
protected applicant-characteristic
information and other applicant
information, a creditor shall request
information for monitoring purposes as
required by § 1002.13. Section
1002.5(a)(2) further provides that a
creditor may obtain information
required by a regulation, order, or
agreement issued by, or entered into
with, a court or an enforcement agency
to monitor or enforce compliance with
ECOA, Regulation B, or other Federal or
State statutes and regulations. However,
§ 1002.5(a)(2) does not authorize
collection of information beyond what
is required by law. The Bureau
proposed to add § 1002.5(a)(4) to
authorize a creditor to obtain
information in certain additional
specified circumstances other than as
described in § 1002.5(a)(2). Proposed
§ 1002.5(a)(4)(i) and (ii) would permit a
creditor that is a financial institution
under revised Regulation C § 1003.2(g)
to collect demographic information of
an applicant for a closed-end mortgage
loan or an open-end line of credit that
is an excluded transaction under revised
Regulation C § 1003.3(c)(11) or
§ 1003.3(c)(12) if it submits HMDA data
29 Public Law 111–203, 124 Stat. 1375, 2035–39
(2010) (codified at 12 U.S.C. 5581).
30 12 U.S.C. 5481(12), (14).
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concerning those applications and loans
or if it submitted HMDA data
concerning closed-end mortgage loans
or open-end lines of credit in any of the
preceding five calendar years.31
Proposed § 1002.5(a)(4)(iii) would
permit a creditor that falls below both
of the revised Regulation C loan-volume
thresholds to continue to collect
applicant demographic information for
five calendar years after first becoming
exempt from HMDA reporting. Proposed
§ 1002.5(a)(4)(iv) would permit a
creditor that exceeds a revised
Regulation C loan-volume threshold in
the first year of a two-year threshold
period to collect, in the second year,
applicant demographic information for a
loan that would otherwise be a covered
loan under Regulation C. For the
reasons provided below, the Bureau is
adopting § 1002.5(a)(4)(i) through (iv) as
proposed. In addition, the Bureau is
adopting new § 1002.5(a)(4)(v) and (vi)
in response to comments, as discussed
below.
The Bureau solicited comment on
permitting the collection of applicant
demographic information in the
circumstances described in proposed
§ 1002.5(a)(4), and, in particular,
regarding the proposed five-year time
frame, and whether there are other
specific, narrowly tailored
circumstances not described in
§ 1002.5(a)(2) or proposed § 1002.5(a)(4)
under which a creditor would benefit
from being able to collect applicant
demographic information for mortgage
loan applicants. A large number of
industry commenters supported
proposed § 1002.5(a)(4) and the fiveyear timeframe for § 1002.5(a)(4)(i), (ii),
and (iii). Commenters noted that being
able to collect applicant demographic
data when not required by HMDA
would facilitate better data collection
procedures, aid in retaining system and
organizational knowledge, help prepare
for reporting data in subsequent years,
and help creditors transition to the 2016
URLA. Commenters noted that the fiveyear timeframe for § 1002.5(a)(4)(i), (ii),
and (iii) was realistic and would
provide enough time to allow
31 The Bureau recently amended Regulation C to
explicitly permit optional reporting of closed-end
mortgage loans and open-end lines of credit even
if a financial institution does not meet the
applicable loan volume threshold. 82 FR 43088,
43100–43102 (Sept. 13, 2017); see also id. at 43132
(§ 1003.3(c)(11) and (12)). Regulation B
§ 1002.5(a)(4)(i) and (ii) as finalized in this rule
correspond to those provisions in revised
Regulation C and permit the collection of applicant
demographic information necessary to facilitate that
optional reporting. Other circumstances permitting
voluntary collection of applicant demographic
information finalized in this rule do not correspond
to provisions in Regulation C addressing optional
reporting.
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institutions to keep their systems
updated, but not so long that it would
be unlikely the institution would
become a HMDA reporter again.
One commenter requested
clarification that the voluntary
collection under proposed § 1002.5(a)(4)
was truly voluntary and not a new
compliance requirement. Proposed
§ 1002.5(a)(4) provides authorization to
collect applicant demographic
information, but does not require
collection in the circumstances
described. As discussed below, though,
a creditor must comply with the record
retention requirements of § 1002.12 if it
chooses to take advantage of the
authorization in § 1002.5(a)(4). The
Bureau also proposed comment 5(a)(4)–
1 to provide guidance on proposed
§ 1002.5(a)(4) and to highlight the
voluntary nature of the rule. The Bureau
is finalizing this comment as proposed.
Comment 5(a)(4)–1 provides that
information regarding ethnicity, race,
and sex that is not required to be
collected pursuant to Regulation C may
nevertheless be collected under the
circumstances set forth in § 1002.5(a)(4)
without violating § 1002.5(b). It also
provides that the information must be
retained pursuant to the requirements of
§ 1002.12.
Two industry commenters proposed
two alternative voluntary collection
authorizations that would replace
proposed § 1002.5(a)(4). One alternative
would permit collection of applicant
demographic information for any loan
secured by an applicant’s dwelling with
no timeframe restriction. The other
alternative would permit collection of
applicant demographic information for
any covered loan under Regulation C
with no timeframe restriction, even if
the creditor was not a financial
institution under Regulation C. The
Bureau is not adopting these proposed
alternatives. The primary difference
between these proposals and the
collection permitted by final
§ 1002.5(a)(4)(i), (ii), and (iii) would be
the removal of the five-year timeframe.
As the Bureau noted in the 2017 ECOA
Proposal, without a time limit such
voluntary collection would permit a
creditor to collect protected applicantcharacteristic information for a period of
time that is too attenuated from any past
Regulation C legal requirement and
associated compliance process. While
final § 1002.5(a)(4) provides a narrow
exception to the general limitations in
§ 1002.5(b) through (d), these alternative
proposals would create a much broader
exception to the general limitations on
collecting such information in
Regulation B. The Bureau believes that
such a broad exception could
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significantly alter the limitations and
would not be appropriate without
further rulemaking and consideration.
Industry commenters proposed two
additional, narrowly tailored exceptions
that the Bureau is substantially
adopting. One industry commenter
proposed permitting collection for
dwelling-secured loans made primarily
for a business or commercial purpose
that might be covered loans, regardless
of whether or not they are for the
purpose of home purchase, refinancing,
or home improvement and therefore
reportable under revised Regulation C.
Under revised Regulation C, dwellingsecured loans made primarily for a
business or commercial purpose are
only required to be reported if they meet
the definition of a home purchase,
refinancing, or home improvement
loan.32 In contrast, dwelling-secured
loans that are not made primarily for a
business or commercial purpose are
generally required to be reported even if
they do not meet the definition of a
home purchase, refinancing, or home
improvement loan.33 The Bureau
believes that permitting collection of
applicant demographic information in
this narrowly tailored circumstance may
be beneficial for some financial
institutions because it would allow
them to collect applicant demographic
information early in the collection
process, when they have determined
that the loan would be dwelling secured
and primarily for a business or
commercial purpose but may not yet
have determined whether it meets the
definition of a home purchase loan,
refinancing, or home improvement loan
under revised Regulation C. Collection
of applicant demographic information at
that point in the application process
may allow for more consistent
collection and may be easier to integrate
into the application process when
compared with collection after HMDA
coverage has been determined. The
permitted collection may also alleviate
concerns about violating § 1002.5(b) if a
financial institution collects applicant
demographic information for a
particular dwelling-secured loan made
primarily for a business or commercial
purpose, based on the financial
institution’s belief that it is a home
purchase loan, a refinancing, or a home
improvement loan, but the financial
institution later discovers that this belief
was mistaken, and therefore collection
of applicant demographic information
was not required under Regulation C.
The Bureau is adopting § 1002.5(a)(4)(v)
to address the commenter’s suggestion.
Section 1002.5(a)(4)(v) permits a
creditor that is a financial institution
under revised Regulation C § 1003.2(g)
or that submitted HMDA data for any of
the preceding five calendar years but is
not currently a financial institution
under revised Regulation C § 1003.2(g)
to collect information regarding the
ethnicity, race, and sex of an applicant
for a loan that would otherwise be a
covered loan under revised Regulation C
§ 1003.2(e) if not excluded by revised
Regulation C § 1003.3(c)(10).
One industry commenter also noted
that the 2016 URLA includes a form for
the collection of applicant demographic
information for additional borrowers
and does not necessarily limit the
collection to the applicant and the first
co-applicant, even though Regulation C
requires financial institutions to provide
the ethnicity, race and sex information
only for the applicant and first coapplicant.34 The commenter suggested
that the Bureau revise § 1002.5(b) to
permit collection of demographic
information for any additional coapplicants using the 2016 URLA. As
discussed below in the section-bysection analysis for § 1002.13, the
Bureau is amending § 1002.13(b) to
permit, but not require, creditors to
collect the information set forth in
§ 1002.13(a) from a second or additional
co-applicant. With the introduction of
the 2016 URLA the Bureau believes that
permitting collection of applicant
demographic information in this
narrowly tailored circumstance may be
beneficial for some financial institutions
because it would allow them to use
more easily standard forms for
collection of applicant demographic
information without identifying at the
time of collection which applicants are
the primary and first co-applicant. The
Bureau is adopting § 1002.5(a)(4)(vi) to
address the commenter’s suggestion by
clarifying that the collection of
applicant demographic information for
additional borrowers is permitted.
Accordingly, § 1002.5(a)(4)(vi) permits a
creditor that is collecting information
regarding the ethnicity, race, and sex of
an applicant or first co-applicant to
collect information regarding the
ethnicity, race, and sex of a second or
additional co-applicant for a covered
loan under Regulation C § 1003.2(e), or
for a loan described in paragraphs
(a)(4)(i) through (v). Authorization for
this collection, consistent with the other
32 See revised Regulation C § 1003.3(c)(10). 80 FR
66128, 66139, and 66169 (Oct. 28, 2015).
33 See revised Regulation C § 1003.2(e). 80 FR
66128, 80 FR 66140, and 66144 (Oct. 28, 2015).
34 Fannie Mae, ‘‘Uniform Residential Loan
Application,’’ https://www.fanniemae.com/
singlefamily/uniform-residential-loan-application#
(last visited Sept. 6, 2017).
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45685
provisions of § 1002.5(a)(4), is not
limited to collection using the 2016
URLA.
Having considered the comments
received and for the reasons discussed
above, the Bureau is finalizing
§ 1002.5(a)(4)(i) through (iv) generally as
proposed with minor wording changes
for clarity, finalizing new
§ 1002.5(a)(4)(v) and (vi), and finalizing
the conforming amendments to
comment 5(a)(2)–2 and new comment
5(a)(4)–1 as proposed. The Bureau
believes that these provisions further
the purposes of ECOA by easing overall
burden on creditors and improving the
quality of the data that is used to
promote the availability of credit to all
creditworthy applicants. The Bureau
also believes that permitting creditors to
collect certain protected applicantcharacteristic information in these
circumstances provides a narrow
exception to the general limitations in
§ 1002.5(b) through (d) respects the
purposes of those prohibitions.
Section 1002.12 Record Retention
Section 1002.12 provides rules
concerning permissible and required
record retention. In light of proposed
§ 1002.5(a)(4), the Bureau also proposed
to amend § 1002.12(b)(1)(i) to require
retention of certain protected applicantcharacteristic information obtained
pursuant to proposed § 1002.5(a)(4).
12(b) Preservation of Records
12(b)(1) Applications
12(b)(1)(i)
Section 1002.12(b)(1) provides that a
creditor must retain certain records for
25 months, or 12 months for business
credit.35 Regulation B § 1002.2(g)
defines business credit to mean, with
certain exceptions, extensions of credit
primarily for business or commercial
purposes. Under § 1002.12(b)(1)(i), these
records include any information
required to be obtained concerning
characteristics of credit applicants to
monitor compliance with ECOA and
Regulation B or other similar law. The
Bureau proposed to amend
§ 1002.12(b)(1)(i) to include within its
preservation requirements any
information obtained pursuant to
§ 1002.5(a)(4). The Bureau also
proposed to amend comment 12(b)–2 to
require retention of applicant
demographic information obtained
pursuant to § 1002.5(a)(4).
Two commenters supported the
proposal regarding record retention,
noting that it would facilitate
35 Section 1002.12(b)(1) provides that creditors
must retain records for 12 months for business
credit, except as provided in § 1002.12(b)(5).
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monitoring of fair lending laws and
serve ECOA’s purposes and that it
seemed appropriate given the proposed
amendments to § 1002.5(a)(4). One
commenter noted that Regulation B
§ 1002.12(b)(1) provides a 25-month
record retention period for most
transactions, but a 12-month period for
business credit transactions, and that
the Bureau’s proposal would create a
longer retention period for business
credit for which a creditor voluntarily
collected applicant demographic
information under proposed
§ 1002.5(a)(4). The Bureau
acknowledges that the preamble to the
proposed rule stated that § 1002.12(b)(1)
required retention of certain records for
25 months and did not acknowledge the
different 12 month period for business
credit provided for in § 1002.12(b)(1).
The Bureau did not intend to extend the
record retention period under
Regulation B for business credit
transactions through the proposal and
this final rule does not do so. The
Bureau is finalizing the amendments to
§ 1002.12(b)(1)(i) and comment 12(b)–2
as proposed.
The Bureau believes that, if a creditor
voluntarily collects applicant
demographic information pursuant to
§ 1002.5(a)(4), the creditor should be
required to maintain those records in
the same manner as it does for protected
applicant-characteristic information it is
required to collect. This will allow the
information to be available for
monitoring and enforcing compliance
with ECOA, Regulation B, and other
Federal or State statutes or regulations.
Without a corresponding record
retention requirement, a creditor might
collect but not retain the information,
thus preventing the use of the
information for these purposes.
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Section 1002.13 Information for
Monitoring Purposes
Section 1002.13 sets forth the scope,
required information, and manner for
the mandatory collection of certain
protected applicant-characteristic
information under Regulation B. The
Bureau proposed to amend
§ 1002.13(a)(1)(i) to provide a creditor
flexibility to collect applicant ethnicity
and race information using either
aggregate or disaggregated categories,
thereby furthering the purposes of
ECOA, reducing compliance burden,
and facilitating use of the 2016 URLA.
In addition, the Bureau proposed
several revisions to § 1002.13(b) and (c)
and its commentary to align further the
collection requirements of Regulation B
with revised Regulation C.
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13(a) Information To Be Requested
13(a)(1)
13(a)(1)(i)
Section 1002.13(a) sets forth certain
protected applicant-characteristic
information a creditor must collect for
applications on certain dwellingsecured loans. Current § 1002.13(a)(1)
requires that creditors collect
information regarding the applicant’s
ethnicity and race using two aggregate
ethnicity categories (Hispanic or Latino
and Not Hispanic or Latino) and five
aggregate race categories (American
Indian or Alaska Native, Asian, Black or
African American, Native Hawaiian or
Other Pacific Islander, and White).
Proposed § 1002.13(a)(1)(i) provided
that a creditor must collect the
applicant’s information using either the
aggregate ethnicity and race categories
currently required or the ethnicity and
race categories and subcategories set
forth in the revised Regulation C
appendix, which provide disaggregated
ethnicity and race categories. Through
this proposed change, creditors taking
applications for loans subject to
§ 1002.13(a)(1) but not required to
submit HMDA data under Regulation C
would have the option of either
maintaining their current collection
practices or transitioning to the revised
Regulation C collection practices and
the 2016 URLA. The Bureau also
proposed comments 13(a)–7 and 13(a)–
8 to provide that a creditor that collects
applicant information in compliance
with the revised Regulation C appendix
will be acting in compliance with
§ 1002.13 concerning the collection of
an applicant’s ethnicity, race, and sex
information and to clarify that a creditor
may choose on an application-byapplication basis whether to collect
aggregate or disaggregated information.
For the reasons provided below, the
Bureau is adopting § 1002.13(a) and
comments 13(a)–7 and 13(a)–8 as
proposed.
The Bureau solicited comment on its
proposal to allow creditors to collect
applicant race and ethnicity information
using, at the creditor’s option, either
aggregate or disaggregated categories. A
large number of industry commenters
supported the proposed amendments to
§ 1002.13(a)(1)(i). Many of these
commenters stated that the proposal
would simplify the collection process
and reduce regulatory burden by
ensuring that creditors are not subject to
differing collection requirements under
Regulation B and Regulation C.
Commenters also expressed the view
that the proposal would ease
compliance burden because it would
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provide creditors the flexibility to use
the method most suitable for them.
Commenters also noted that it would
facilitate use of the 2016 URLA. One
industry commenter supporting the
proposal stated that mandating
disaggregated collection for all creditors
would be unduly burdensome.
A number of commenters
recommended alternative approaches to
proposed § 1002.13(a)(1)(i). Two
industry groups suggested that the
Bureau remove § 1002.13 altogether.
One of these commenters stated that the
collection of applicant demographic
information is duplicative of Regulation
C and that removing this requirement in
Regulation B would reduce burden. The
other commenter asserted that
collection of applicant demographic
information requires significant time
and resources for Regulation B-only
creditors and that the information is
virtually never used.
On the other hand, consumer
advocacy groups and an industry
service provider suggested that creditors
be required to collect disaggregated
ethnicity and race information after a
multi-year phase in period. The
consumer advocacy groups stated that
mandatory disaggregated collection
would ensure uniform data collection
practices and facilitate fair lending
analysis, including identifying potential
discrimination against racial and ethnic
subgroups. The consumer advocacy
groups further expressed the view that
mandatory disaggregated collection
would prepare lenders to submit HMDA
data in the future should they cross a
reporting threshold and that the burden
of mandatory disaggregated collection
would not be significant because the
2016 URLA makes it easy to record
these categories. An industry service
provider also supported a uniform
standard based on the requirements in
revised Regulation C in order to reduce
the costs of supporting dual collection
methods. Similarly, an industry
commenter stated that the collection
methods used in Regulation B and
Regulation C should match.
The Bureau is not adopting any of the
alternatives suggested by commenters.
Although the information collected
under § 1002.13 and Regulation C
overlap, in part, as discussed in the
2017 ECOA Proposal, regulators will
rely on applicant demographic
information collected under § 1002.13 to
supervise and enforce fair lending laws,
including for a substantial number of
creditors that will not be required to
report under revised Regulation C.36
36 82 FR 16307, 16313, and 16317–18 (Apr. 4,
2017).
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Thus, the Bureau concludes that
retaining § 1002.13 serves the purposes
of ECOA to promote the availability of
credit to all creditworthy applicants
without regard to protected
characteristics.
On the other hand, the Bureau
believes that requiring disaggregated
collection for Regulation B-only
creditors would impose additional
burden on creditors without significant
benefits. Requiring disaggregated
collection, even after a multi-year phase
in period, would add complexity and
burden to an already complex timeline
that includes implementation of the
2015 HMDA Final Rule and transition to
the 2016 URLA. As further discussed in
the Section 1022(b) analysis below, the
Bureau believes that the additional
burden would have few benefits. The
incremental benefits of this alternative
are also likely to be low because many
creditors will collect disaggregated
categories under Regulation B in any
case, either because they are required to
do so under revised Regulation C or as
part of the transition to the 2016 URLA.
The Bureau is therefore not requiring
the collection of disaggregated
categories for Regulation B-only
creditors. The Bureau may reevaluate
the need for mandatory disaggregated
collection under § 1002.13 after
implementation of the 2015 HMDA
Final Rule and transition to the 2016
URLA, when more information is
available on creditor collection
practices. If it appears that action is
warranted, the Bureau will engage in
further rulemaking as appropriate.
Two industry commenters, while
supportive of the flexibility provided in
the 2017 ECOA Proposal, sought
clarification on how aggregate and
disaggregated data will be evaluated
against one another, including how
aggregate information collected under
Regulation B would be compared to
disaggregated information collected
under revised Regulation C. The
commenters expressed concern that the
optionality could result in dissimilar
demographic reporting and potentially
greater compliance burden for creditors
who choose to continue to collect
aggregate information. The Bureau does
not believe that flexibility will result in
additional burden and reiterates that
§ 1002.13(a)(1)(i) would permit a
Regulation B-only creditor to maintain
its existing practices and collect
aggregate race and ethnicity categories.
Moreover, because both methods use the
same aggregate categories, a creditor can
compare information collected under
either method by rolling up the
disaggregated subcategories into their
corresponding aggregate categories. The
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Bureau, however, declines to set forth
specific instructions on how a data user
should evaluate the information
collected pursuant to § 1002.13 or
Regulation C as the Bureau only sought
comment on data collection practices
under § 1002.13. Having considered the
comments received and for the reasons
discussed above, the Bureau is
finalizing § 1002.13(a)(1)(i) as proposed.
An industry service provider asked
the Bureau to provide guidance
regarding whether the term ‘‘natural
person’’ as used in Regulation B and
Regulation C includes living trusts or
sole proprietorships. Because
Regulation B and Regulation C do not
provide inconsistent instructions on the
scope of the term ‘‘natural person,’’ the
Bureau declines to provide additional
guidance on this issue within this final
rule, which, as related to § 1002.13, is
limited to modifications that harmonize
the collection requirements of
Regulation B and Regulation C.
The Bureau proposed revised
comment 13(a)–7 to provide that, for
applications subject to § 1002.13(a)(1), a
creditor that collects information about
the ethnicity, race, and sex of an
applicant in compliance with the
requirements of the revised Regulation
C appendix will be acting in compliance
§ 1002.13 concerning the collection of
an applicant’s ethnicity, race, and sex
information. The Bureau received one
industry comment supporting alignment
of the instructions in § 1002.13 with the
revised Regulation C appendix. The
commenter noted that differing
instructions may lead to uncertainty and
that Regulation B-only creditors would
benefit from the additional instructions
provided in revised Regulation C. No
commenters opposed the proposed
comment, and so the Bureau is
finalizing comment 13(a)–7 as proposed.
As proposed, comment 13(a)–8
permitted a creditor to choose on an
application-by-application basis
whether to collect aggregate information
pursuant to § 1002.13(a)(1)(i)(A) or
disaggregated information pursuant to
§ 1002.13(a)(1)(i)(B). One industry
commenter generally supported the
proposal, noting the flexibility would
reduce compliance burden. Another
industry commenter was concerned
about how a creditor would decide
which collection method to use and
whether the instruction could have a
discriminatory impact. Various
consumer advocacy groups also
opposed proposed comment 13(a)–8,
arguing that the instruction could
encourage creditors to develop and
maintain haphazard, inaccurate, and
inconsistent data collection methods.
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45687
The Bureau is adopting comment
13(a)–8 as proposed. The Bureau
believes that most creditors will
voluntarily adopt a consistent collection
method because uniform practices are
generally easier and less costly for
creditors to implement. If the Bureau
were to require creditors to adopt a
consistent collection method across
applications, the Bureau would also
need to issue additional guidance in the
official commentary concerning how
often and under what circumstances a
creditor may change its collection
method, among other implementation
issues. The Bureau believes that such
guidance would add complexity and
compliance burden on creditors without
furthering the purposes of ECOA, and so
declines to do so as part of this
rulemaking.
The Bureau received several
additional comments about topics other
than those raised by the Bureau in the
2017 ECOA Proposal. These included,
for example, a comment supporting the
collection of loan officers’ demographic
information, a request to collect
information on whether the applicant is
divorced, a request for guidance on
when previously gathered applicant
demographic information can be used
for new applications, and a request that
the Bureau provide a safe harbor for
information collected in 2017. The
Bureau did not propose these changes in
the 2017 ECOA Proposal. The Bureau
does not believe that these comments
are relevant to the 2017 ECOA Proposal
and do not provide a basis to change the
approach proposed by the Bureau in the
2017 ECOA Proposal, which, as related
to § 1002.13, is limited to modifications
that harmonize the collection
requirements of Regulation B and
Regulation C.
For the reasons discussed above, the
Bureau is adopting § 1002.13(a)(1)(i) and
comments 13(a)–7 and 13(a)–8 as
proposed. The Bureau believes that
creditors should not be subject to
differing collection requirements, and
that aligning the requirements of
§ 1002.13 and revised Regulation C
furthers the purposes of ECOA by
facilitating practices that promote the
availability of credit to all creditworthy
applicants.
13(b) Obtaining Information
Section 1002.13(b) discusses how
creditors may obtain applicant
information required under § 1002.13(a).
Among other instructions, current
§ 1002.13(b) provides that, if an
applicant chooses not to provide some
or all of the requested applicant
demographic information, the creditor
must, in certain circumstances, collect
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the information on the basis of visual
observation or surname. If a creditor
collects disaggregated race and ethnicity
information pursuant to
§ 1002.13(a)(1)(i)(B), proposed
§ 1002.13(b) provided that a creditor
must comply with the restrictions on
the collection of an applicant’s ethnicity
and race on the basis of visual
observation or surname set forth in the
revised Regulation C appendix, which
limits such collection to the aggregate
race and ethnicity categories. For the
reasons provided below, the Bureau is
adopting the revisions to § 1002.13(b)
concerning the collection of ethnicity
and race information on the basis of
visual observation or surname as
proposed. To further align the collection
requirements of Regulation B and
Regulation C, the Bureau is further
amending § 1002.13(b) to permit, but
not require, creditors to collect the
information set forth in § 1002.13(a)
from a second or additional coapplicant.
The few commenters who specifically
addressed the Bureau’s proposed
amendment to § 1002.13(b) generally
supported the modification, noting that
it aligned with revised Regulation C and
would facilitate consistent data
collection. One commenter argued that
the proposed rule would add
complexity, however, as creditors
would be required to report
disaggregated information under revised
Regulation C, permitted to collect such
information under revised § 1002.13,
but prohibited from collecting
disaggregated information if the
applicant does not provide it.
Two commenters opposed the
collection of applicant demographic
information on the basis of visual
observation or surname under any
circumstances. One commenter stated
that extending the requirement to
collect applicant demographic
information on the basis of visual
observation or surname to Regulation
B-only creditors is outside the scope of
ECOA. The commenters also argued that
such collection is often inaccurate,
cannot be relied upon for fair lending
analysis, and is contrary to the purposes
of ECOA. In support, one of the
commenters cited a report finding that
10 million Americans change their
racial and ethnic identifications
between U.S. Census surveys. The same
commenter also cited a report by health
researchers discussing, among other
topics, that observer-selected race, often
used for death certificates, may not
match self-selected race. The
commenters proposed that the
requirement to collect applicant
demographic information on the basis of
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visual observation or surname should be
eliminated or that the Bureau provide
additional instructions to aid creditors
to identify an applicant’s ethnicity and
race based on visual observation or
surname.
The Bureau will finalize as proposed
the revisions to § 1002.13(b) concerning
the collection of an applicant’s ethnicity
and race information on the basis of
visual observation or surname. The
requirement to collect, in certain
circumstances, applicant demographic
information on the basis of visual
observation or surname where the
applicant does not provide this
information has been a longstanding
requirement of § 1002.13(b). The
amendment to § 1002.13(b) in the 2017
ECOA Proposal would not impose any
new obligation on creditors to collect an
applicant’s ethnicity and race on the
basis of visual observation or surname
but, rather, would limit such collection
to the aggregate ethnicity and race
categories, even if the creditor permits
an applicant to self-identify using the
disaggregated categories. The proposed
amendment would align § 1002.13
collection of disaggregated information
with the collection requirements of
Regulation C. While the Bureau
acknowledges that this limitation on the
collection of applicant demographic
information involves some complexity,
the Bureau believes that, on balance,
aligning § 1002.13 collection methods
with Regulation C will be less complex
than introducing different rules for
§ 1002.13(b) alone.
The Bureau declines to consider the
proposals to eliminate altogether the
requirement to collect applicant
demographic information on the basis of
visual observation or surname in
§ 1002.13 or to provide further
instructions on how to collect such
information as both proposals go
beyond the issues on which the Bureau
solicited comment. Indeed, given that
Regulation C requires collection of
certain applicant demographic
information on the basis of visual
observation or surname, adopting either
proposal would undermine the purpose
of this rulemaking by imposing different
requirements in Regulation B and
Regulation C.37 Moreover, the cited
studies conclude only that some
applicants may self-identify as different
races over time and that visual
observation of race is not always
accurate. Thus, even if the Bureau were
reconsidering its approach to visual
observation or surname collection,
which it is not, the Bureau does not
believe the evidence submitted by the
37 80
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commenters demonstrate that collection
based on visual observation or surname
do not serve the purposes of ECOA.
An industry service provider
suggested the Bureau standardize the
treatment of co-applicants between
§ 1002.13 and Regulation C. The
commenter noted that the two rules
imposed different requirements where
there are multiple ‘‘applicants,’’ stating
that while § 1002.13 requires a financial
institution to collect information from
any applicant who is a natural person,
the revised Regulation C appendix
instructs a financial institution to
provide applicant demographic
information for only the applicant and
the first co-applicant listed on the
collection form. The industry service
provider commented that this
distinction makes data collection more
complex and burdensome, and
requested that the Bureau clarify the
collection requirements for coapplicants under Regulation B.
The Bureau acknowledges that the
requirement to collect or provide
applicant demographic information
from co-applicants differs between
§ 1002.13 and revised Regulation C. The
Bureau concludes that these differences
may create additional burden and
complexity for creditors, who may need
to modify their practices concerning coapplicant collection depending on
whether collection is required under
both Regulation B and revised
Regulation C or only under revised
Regulation C. The Bureau is therefore
revising § 1002.13(b) to clarify that a
creditor is permitted, but is not
required, to collect the information set
forth in § 1002.13(a) from a second or
additional co-applicant. The Bureau
believes this clarification will simplify
collection practices and reduce
compliance burden by aligning
Regulation B and Regulation C. The
clarification will also allow Regulation
B-only creditors to maintain their
existing practices under § 1002.13 if so
desired. By providing flexibility and
reducing burden, the Bureau believes
this modification will further the
purposes of ECOA by facilitating
practices that promote the availability of
credit to all creditworthy applicants. As
discussed above in the section-bysection analysis for § 1002.5(a)(4), the
Bureau is also adopting new
§ 1002.5(a)(4)(vi) to permit collection of
applicant demographic information for
second or additional co-applicants in
certain circumstances, thereby
providing additional optionality for
creditors to maintain consistent
collection practices under Regulation B
and Regulation C.
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For the reasons discussed above, the
Bureau is finalizing as proposed the
revisions to § 1002.13(b) concerning the
collection of ethnicity and race
information on the basis of visual
observation or surname. To facilitate
compliance with Regulation B and
further align the collection requirements
of Regulations B and Regulation C, the
Bureau is also amending § 1002.13(b) to
permit, but not require, creditors to
collect the information set forth in
§ 1002.13(a) from a second or additional
co-applicant.
Current comment 13(b)–1 provides
guidance on the forms and collection
methods a creditor may use to collect
applicant information under
§ 1002.13(a). In the 2017 ECOA
Proposal, the Bureau proposed to amend
comment 13(b)–1 to reference the data
collection model forms the Bureau
proposed to provide in the Regulation B
appendix. The Bureau also proposed to
revise comment 13(b)–1 to reiterate that
when a creditor collects only aggregate
ethnicity and race information pursuant
to § 1002.13(a)(1)(i)(A), the applicant
must be offered the option to select
more than one racial designation. If a
creditor collects applicant information
pursuant to § 1002.13(a)(1)(i)(B), the
applicant must be offered the option to
select more than one ethnicity and more
than one racial designation. The Bureau
received no comments specifically
addressing the revisions to proposed
comment 13(b)–1, and so is finalizing it
as proposed. Comments related to the
data collection model forms are
addressed in the section-by-section
analysis of the Regulation B appendix.
13(c) Disclosure to Applicant(s)
Section 1002.13(c) sets forth
disclosures a creditor must provide to
an applicant when collecting the
information set forth in § 1002.13(a).
Current comment 13(c)–1 provides,
among other information, that the
Regulation B appendix contains a
sample disclosure. The Bureau
proposed to amend comment 13(c)–1 to
reference two data collection model
forms the Bureau proposed to provide in
the Regulation B appendix. The Bureau
received no comments on proposed
comment 13(c)–1, and so is finalizing
comment 13(c)–1 as proposed.
Comments related to the data collection
model forms and the 2016 URLA are
addressed in the section-by-section
analysis of the Regulation B appendix.
Appendix B to Part 1002—Model
Application Forms
Regulations B and C both contain an
appendix B that provides model forms
for use when collecting applicant
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demographic information required
under the regulations. The current
Regulation B appendix includes the
2004 URLA as a model form. The
current and revised Regulation C
appendix include instructions and a
data collection model form for
collecting applicant demographic
information.
The current Regulation B appendix
includes five model forms, each
designated for use in a particular type
of consumer credit transaction. The fifth
model form, the 2004 URLA, is
described in the Regulation B appendix
as appropriate for residential mortgage
transactions and contains a model
disclosure for use in complying with
current § 1002.13. While use of the
model forms is optional, if a creditor
uses the appropriate model form, or
modifies a form in accordance with the
instructions provided in the Regulation
B appendix, that creditor is deemed to
be acting in compliance with § 1002.5(b)
through (d).38
As discussed above, on September 23,
2016, the Bureau issued the Bureau
Approval Notice, pursuant to section
706(e) of ECOA.39 In the Bureau
Approval Notice, the Bureau
determined that, while a creditor is not
required to use the 2016 URLA, a
creditor that uses the form without any
modification that would violate
§ 1002.5(b) through (d) would act in
compliance with § 1002.5(b) through
(d).40 Unlike prior versions of the
URLA, the 2016 URLA permits an
applicant to select disaggregated
ethnicity and race categories, as
required under revised Regulation C.
Given the issuance of the Bureau
Approval Notice and the modifications
to § 1002.13, the Bureau proposed
several revisions to the Regulation B
appendix as discussed below.
Model Forms for Complying With
Section 1002.13(a)(1)(i)
The Bureau proposed to revise the
Regulation B appendix to provide two
additional model forms for use in
complying with § 1002.13. First, for
creditors collecting disaggregated
applicant demographic information
pursuant to § 1002.13(a)(1)(i)(B) and (ii),
the Bureau proposed to amend the
Regulation B appendix to crossreference the data collection model form
included in the revised Regulation C
appendix. Second, for creditors
collecting aggregate applicant
demographic information pursuant to
§ 1002.13(a)(1)(i)(A) and (ii), the Bureau
B to part 1002, at paragraphs 1, 3.
FR 66930 (Sept. 23, 2016).
proposed to amend the Regulation B
appendix to add a model form. The
proposed model form substantially
mirrors section X in the 2004 URLA and
the data collection model form
contained in the current Regulation C
appendix. The Bureau received no
comments opposing and one comment
supporting the proposed amendments
and so is finalizing the Regulation B
appendix to provide alternative model
forms as proposed.
In the 2017 ECOA Proposal, the
Bureau also considered but did not
propose the alternative of including the
2016 URLA as a model form in the
Regulation B appendix.41 No
commenters opposed the decision not to
include the 2016 URLA as a model form
in the Regulation B appendix, and
several commenters noted that the
proposed rule would encourage use and
transition to the 2016 URLA.
Accordingly, the Bureau is finalizing the
Regulation B appendix as proposed,
without including the 2016 URLA.
One industry commenter requested
clarification that use of the 2016 URLA
complies with Regulation B. The Bureau
believes that no additional approval is
necessary: The Bureau Approval Notice
provides that a creditor that uses the
2016 URLA without any modification
that would violate § 1002.5(b) through
(d) acts in compliance with § 1002.5(b)
through (d).42 Similarly, because the
substance and form of section 7 of the
2016 URLA is substantially similar to
the form the Bureau provides as a model
form in Regulation C, the 2016 URLA
may be used in complying with
§ 1002.13.
Removal of the 2004 URLA as a Model
Form
The current Regulation B appendix
includes the 2004 URLA as a model
form for use in complying with
§ 1002.13. In light of the revisions to
§ 1002.13(a)(1)(i), the amendment to the
Regulation B appendix to provide two
additional model forms, and the fact
that the Bureau separately approved use
of the 2016 URLA in the Bureau
Approval Notice, the Bureau proposed
to remove the 2004 URLA as a model
form in Regulation B. The Bureau
proposed that the 2004 URLA be
removed on the cutover date the
Enterprises designate for use of the 2016
URLA or January 1, 2022, whichever
comes first. The Bureau received no
comments on the proposal to remove
the 2004 URLA or the timing of the
removal and so is finalizing removal of
the 2004 URLA as proposed. The date
38 Appendix
39 81
40 Id.
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42 81
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for removal of the 2004 URLA from the
Regulation B appendix is discussed
further in the Effective Date section
below.
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Removal of the Official Commentary to
Appendix B
Commentary to the Regulation B
appendix includes a discussion of two
forms created by the Enterprises that are
no longer in use: A 1992 version of the
URLA and a 1986 home-improvement
and energy loan application form. Given
that neither of these forms is currently
used by the Enterprises, the Bureau
proposed to remove in its entirety the
commentary to the Regulation B
appendix. The Bureau received no
comments on its proposal and so is
removing the commentary to the
Regulation B appendix in this final rule.
VI. Effective Date
The Bureau proposed an effective date
of January 1, 2018, which aligns with
the effective date for the bulk of the
revisions to Regulation C in the 2015
HMDA Final Rule. The effective date of
the 2015 HMDA Final Rule applies to
covered loans and applications with
respect to which final action is taken
beginning on January 1, 2018, even if
the application is received in 2017. One
commenter indicated that the Bureau’s
proposed effective date for this rule
creates concerns that it does not
indicate that the collection of
disaggregated applicant demographic
information is permitted for
applications received in 2017 for which
final action is taken in 2018. The
commenter noted that the Bureau
Approval Notice applied to all
applications taken in 2017 and
suggested that the proposed effective
date for this rule sends a mixed
message. The Bureau Approval Notice
provides that, at any time from January
1, 2017, through December 31, 2017, a
creditor may, at its option, permit
applicants to self-identify using
disaggregated ethnic and racial
categories as instructed in revised
Regulation C. During this period, a
creditor adopting the practice of
permitting applicants to self-identify
using disaggregated ethnic and racial
categories as instructed in the
Regulation C appendix is not deemed to
violate Regulation B § 1002.5(b). During
this period, a creditor adopting the
practice of permitting applicants to selfidentify using disaggregated ethnic and
racial categories as instructed in the
Regulation C appendix is also deemed
to be in compliance with Regulation B
§ 1002.13(a)(1)(i) even though
applicants are asked to self-identify
using categories other than those
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explicitly provided in that section.
Because the Bureau Approval Notice
remains in effect for all of 2017, the
amendments in this rule are not
necessary to permit Regulation B-only
creditors or HMDA reporters to collect
disaggregated applicant demographic
information for applications taken in
2017; they are already permitted to do
so by the Bureau Approval Notice for
any application for a covered loan under
revised Regulation C § 1003.2(g) or any
application subject to § 1002.13 for all of
2017.
The Bureau proposed as an effective
date for the removal of the 2004 URLA
from Regulation B appendix either the
cutover date designated by the
Enterprises for the mandatory use of the
2016 URLA or January 1, 2022. The
Bureau did not receive any comments
on the proposed effective date for this
provision. Because the Enterprises have
not announced a cutover date for the
mandatory use of the 2016 URLA, the
Bureau is finalizing January 1, 2022, as
the effective date for the removal of the
2004 URLA from the Regulation B
appendix.
The rule is effective on January 1,
2018, except that the amendment to the
Regulation B appendix removing the
existing ‘‘Uniform Residential Loan
Application’’ form is effective January 1,
2022.
VII. Dodd-Frank Act Section 1022(b)
Analysis
A. Overview
In developing the final rule, the
Bureau has considered the potential
benefits, costs, and impacts.43 In the
2017 ECOA Proposal, the Bureau set
forth a preliminary analysis of these
effects, and the Bureau requested
comment and submissions of additional
data that could inform the Bureau’s
analysis of the benefits, costs, and
impacts of the proposal. The Bureau
received some comments on the topic.
Comments on the benefits and costs of
the rule are also discussed above in the
section-by-section analysis of the
preamble. The Bureau has consulted, or
offered to consult with, the prudential
regulators (the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation, the
National Credit Union Administration,
43 Specifically, section 1022(b)(2)(A) of the DoddFrank Act calls for the Bureau to consider the
potential costs of a regulation to consumers and
covered persons, including the potential reduction
of access by consumers to consumer financial
products or services; the impact on depository
institutions and credit unions with $10 billion or
less in total assets as described in section 1026 of
the Dodd-Frank Act; and the impact on consumers
in rural areas.
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and the Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency), the Securities and Exchange
Commission, the Department of Justice,
the Department of Housing and Urban
Development, the Federal Housing
Finance Agency, the Federal Trade
Commission, the Department of
Veterans Affairs, the Department of
Agriculture, and the Department of the
Treasury, including regarding
consistency with any prudential, market
or systematic objectives administered by
such agencies.
A purpose of ECOA, as implemented
by Regulation B, is to promote the
availability of credit to all creditworthy
applicants without regard to protected
characteristics. The final rule will make
three substantive changes to Regulation
B, along with other clarifications, minor
changes, and technical corrections to
align the language of Regulation B with
Regulation C as amended by the 2015
HMDA Final Rule. The first will give
persons who collect and retain race and
ethnicity information in compliance
with Regulation B the option of
permitting applicants to self-identify
using the disaggregated race and
ethnicity categories required by revised
Regulation C. In practice, this will allow
entities that report race and ethnicity in
accordance with revised Regulation C to
comply with Regulation B without
further action, while entities that do not
report under Regulation C but record
and retain race and ethnicity data under
Regulation B will have the option of
recording data either using the existing
aggregated categories or the new
disaggregated categories.
The Bureau believes that, absent this
change, entities that currently report
race and ethnicity data under
Regulation C could conclude that they
have different obligations under
Regulation B and Regulation C once the
2015 HMDA Final Rule goes into effect
on January 1, 2018. This would lead to
unnecessary burden from collecting
both aggregate and disaggregated data.
Industry commenters noted this
potential conflict and expressed their
support for the proposal. By making
disaggregated collection an option
under Regulation B, entities who will
report race and ethnicity information
under revised Regulation C will also be
in compliance with Regulation B with
certainty. The Bureau believes that
making collection of disaggregated race
and ethnicity an option for all entities
covered by Regulation B will pose little
or no additional burden on those
entities who are not HMDA reporters.
The final rule may have some benefits
to Regulation B-only creditors, as the
current language of Regulation B would
not allow these entities to use the 2016
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URLA for the purpose of collecting race
and ethnicity data, as the 2016 URLA
uses the disaggregated race and
ethnicity categories set forth in revised
Regulation C and not the specific
categories required by current
Regulation B. Thus, the final rule has
the added benefit that it will allow
Regulation B-only creditors to use the
2016 URLA as an instrument to collect
race and ethnicity information.
The second substantive change will
remove the outdated 2004 URLA as a
model form. The Bureau issued the
Bureau Approval Notice under its
authority in section 706(e) of ECOA on
September 23, 2016, which provides
that a creditor that uses the 2016 URLA
without any modification that would
violate § 1002.5(b) through (d) would act
in compliance with § 1002.5(b) through
(d). The Bureau is not adding the 2016
URLA as a model form in place of the
2004 version. Instead, the Bureau is
providing for two alternative data
collection model forms for the purpose
of collecting ethnicity and race
information. The Bureau believes this
practice of acknowledging future
versions of the URLA via a Bureau
Approval Notice rather than a revision
to Regulation B will reduce the risk that
the model form included in Regulation
B will become outdated in the future.
Finally, the Bureau is amending
Regulation B and the associated
commentary to allow creditors to collect
ethnicity, race, and sex from mortgage
applicants in certain cases where the
creditor is not required to report under
HMDA and Regulation C. These
circumstances include when: (1) A
creditor that is a financial institution
under revised Regulation C § 1003.2(g),
originates a closed-end mortgage loan or
an open-end line of credit that is an
excluded transaction under revised
Regulation C § 1003.3(c)(11) or
§ 1003.3(c)(12), if it submits HMDA data
concerning those applications and loans
or if it submitted HMDA data
concerning closed-end mortgage loans
or open-end lines of credit in any of the
preceding five calendar years; (2) a
creditor that submitted HMDA data in
any of the preceding five calendar years
but is not currently a financial
institution under Regulation C
§ 1003.2(g), collects demographic
information of an applicant for a loan
that would otherwise be a covered loan
under Regulation C § 1003.2(e), if not
excluded by Regulation C
§ 1003.3(c)(11) or § 1003.3(c)(12); (3) a
creditor that exceeded an applicable
loan volume threshold in the first year
of the two-year threshold period
provided in Regulation C § 1003.2(g),
§ 1003.3(c)(11), or § 1003.3(c)(12),
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collects, in the second year,
demographic information of an
applicant for a loan that would
otherwise be a covered loan under
Regulation C § 12 CFR 1003.2(e), if the
loan were not excluded by Regulation C
§ 1003.3(c)(11) or § 1003.3(c)(12); (4) a
creditor that is a financial institution
under Regulation C § 1003.2(g), or that
submitted HMDA data for any of the
preceding five calendar years but is not
currently a financial institution under
Regulation C § 1003.2(g), collects
demographic information of an
applicant for a loan that would
otherwise be a covered loan under
Regulation C § 1003.2(e) if the loan were
not excluded by Regulation C
§ 1003.3(c)(10); and (5) a creditor that
collects demographic information of a
second or additional co-applicant for a
covered loan under Regulation C
§ 1003.2(e), or for a second or additional
co-applicant for a loan described in
amended § 1002.5(a)(4)(i) through (v).
These changes will primarily benefit
institutions that may be near the loan
volume reporting threshold, such that
they may be required to report under
HMDA and Regulation C in some years
and not others, or may be uncertain
about their reporting status. The Bureau
believes that allowing voluntary
collection will reduce the burden of
compliance with Regulation C on some
entities and provide certainty regarding
Regulation B compliance over time.
B. Potential Benefits and Costs to
Consumers and Covered Persons
Providing an Option To Collect
Disaggregated Race and Ethnicity for
Regulation B
Relative to current Regulation B
following the effective date of the 2015
HMDA Final Rule, the final rule
provides clear benefits to entities that
will be required to collect and report
race and ethnicity data under HMDA.
Currently the disaggregated race and
ethnicity categories required by the
amendments to Regulation C in the 2015
HMDA Final Rule, effective January 1,
2018, do not match the categories
specified in current Regulation B.
Because of the differences between the
categories, some creditors required to
collect and report race and ethnicity
using the disaggregated categories set
forth in revised Regulation C may be
uncertain whether additional collection
using aggregated categories would also
be required to satisfy current Regulation
B. Complying with both Regulations B
and C would require burdensome and
duplicative collection of race and
ethnicity data at both the aggregated and
disaggregated level. In practice, the final
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rule simply makes clear that the existing
collection required under revised
Regulation C is sufficient for
compliance with Regulation B.
The final rule may have benefits to
consumers, to the extent that lending
entities voluntarily choose to collect
disaggregated race and ethnicity
information. As discussed in the Section
1022(b) analysis for the 2015 HMDA
Final Rule, collection of disaggregated
race and ethnicity data can enhance the
ability of regulators, researchers and
community groups to conduct fair
lending analysis. There are three
reasons, however, that this rule will
likely have a limited effect on fair
lending analysis. First, Regulation Bonly creditors will not be required to
permit applicants to self-identify using
disaggregated ethnicity and race
categories, likely resulting in few
creditors adopting disaggregated
ethnicity and race categories. Second,
many Regulation B-only creditors will
be exempt from reporting under revised
Regulation C because they originate
fewer than 25 closed-end mortgage
loans in each of the two preceding
calendar years, which means both that
few consumers would be affected and
any disaggregated data would likely be
too sparse for statistical analysis.
Finally, demographic data retained by
Regulation B-only creditors is not
reported under Regulation C.
Consequently, most oversight and
analysis of demographic data retained
by Regulation B-only creditors will be
done only by regulators, whereas
researchers and community groups also
conduct analysis of HMDA data
reported under Regulation C. The
Bureau believes the final rule will not
impose any costs on consumers.
The final rule may have benefits to
some Regulation B-only creditors.
Although these entities need not make
any changes to their race and ethnicity
collection procedures, they may desire
to do so in the future by adopting the
2016 URLA. The Enterprises have
announced that they will cease
accepting older versions of the URLA at
a date to be determined and require
firms that sell to the Enterprises to use
the 2016 URLA form. Some Regulation
B-only creditors sell mortgages to the
Enterprises, and would benefit from
being able to use the 2016 URLA. The
Enterprises, not the Bureau, mandate
the adoption of the 2016 URLA.
Therefore, the Bureau believes any
operational costs from adopting the
2016 URLA are part of the normal
course of business and are not a cost of
the final rule.
In addition to the amendment to
Regulation B in the proposal, the Bureau
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considered two alternatives to address
the differing race and ethnicity
requirements of Regulation B and
revised Regulation C. The Bureau
considered requiring all creditors
subject to the collection and retention
requirement of Regulation B to permit
applicants to self-identify using
disaggregated race and ethnicity
categories. To the extent that consumers
would benefit from disaggregated race
and ethnicity collection, this alternative
would provide greater benefits than the
Bureau’s proposal. However, of the
three limitations to consumer benefits
listed above, only the first (that
disaggregated categories would be
optional) is alleviated by requiring the
use of disaggregated race and ethnicity
categories under Regulation B. It is still
the case that due to the low volume of
mortgages by many affected entities and
the lack of reporting, disaggregated race
and ethnicity data may have limited
benefits. Finally, the Bureau believes
many entities will adopt the 2016 URLA
as part of the course of business and
thus permit applicants to self-identify
using disaggregated race and ethnicity
categories.
At the same time, mandatory use of
disaggregated collection of race and
ethnicity categories would impose
greater costs on creditors than the
Bureau’s proposal, particularly on
smaller entities. These costs include
greater operational costs and one-time
database upgrades. Unlike the costs
associated with the adoption of the 2016
URLA, these costs would not otherwise
be incurred in the normal course of
business. The Bureau requested
comments on both the costs and benefits
associated with this alternative
approach.
A consumer advocacy group
commenter argued that the Bureau
should adopt the alternative of requiring
all persons subject to the collection and
retention requirement of Regulation B to
permit applicants to self-identify using
disaggregated race and ethnicity
categories. The commenter disputed the
Bureau’s assessment that the potential
alternative would impose substantial
costs on Regulation B-only creditors.
The commenter argued that the
availability of the 2016 URLA would
reduce the cost of collecting
disaggregated race and ethnicity
information, and advocated for a twoyear implementation period for
mandatory disaggregated collection to
further reduce the costs. However, the
commenter did not address the Bureau’s
conclusion, mentioned in the proposal
and again above, that the benefits of
mandatory disaggregated collection are
quite limited. A credit union trade
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association explicitly opposed the
alternative, asserting that its members
would be unduly burdened by
mandatory collection of disaggregated
race and ethnicity information. Other
commenters did not directly address
this alternative, but several industry
commenters supported the flexibility of
the proposal with respect to collection
of disaggregated race and ethnicity
information, implicitly opposing
making this collection mandatory.
As discussed above in Part V, the
Bureau disagrees with the consumer
advocacy group commenter that there
would be little burden to Regulation Bonly creditors from making the
collection of disaggregated race and
ethnicity categories mandatory. Even
accepting the commenter’s premise,
however, the Bureau notes again that it
believes the additional benefits of this
alternative to be quite limited because,
among other reasons, many Regulation
B-only creditors are likely to eventually
collect disaggregated race and ethnicity
data through adoption of the 2016
URLA. Moreover, the commenter did
not address the limited usefulness of
disaggregated race and ethnicity data
from lenders with a very low volume of
loan originations. The Bureau continues
to believe that the benefits of this
alternative are very low. Accordingly,
the Bureau is not making disaggregated
race and ethnicity categories mandatory
for compliance with Regulation B at this
time.
The Bureau also considered
eliminating entirely the requirement in
Regulation B to collect and retain
certain applicant information. This
alternative would reduce burden to
firms that do not report under HMDA.
However, the Bureau believes it may
impose costs on consumers. The
prudential regulators confirm that data
collected and retained by entities
subject to Regulation B but not
Regulation C may be used for fair
lending supervision and enforcement.
Institutions subject to Regulation B but
not Regulation C include, for example,
institutions that do not have a branch or
home office in a Metropolitan Statistical
Area (MSA), do not meet an applicable
asset threshold, or do not meet an
applicable loan volume threshold.
For instance, the 2015 NCUA Call
Report and the 2015 Nationwide
Mortgage Licensing System & Registry
(NMLS) Mortgage Call Report data
include 489 credit unions and 161 nondepository institutions that originated at
least 25 closed-end mortgages that are
not found in the 2015 HMDA data.44 In
44 The criteria for being a financial institution and
reporting transactions under HMDA are different in
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addition, many community banks in
rural areas are already exempt from
HMDA reporting because they do not
have a branch or home office in an
MSA.45 Demographic information
collected under Regulation B by those
institutions with larger loan volumes
may be used in statistical analysis that
supports fair lending supervision and
enforcement. Removing the Regulation
B requirement altogether would make
detection of any discrimination by these
entities more difficult, with potentially
large costs to consumers where such
discrimination exists. Even for
institutions with very small volumes of
originations that may not be subject to
HMDA reporting because they do not
meet an applicable loan volume
threshold, the retained information may
be useful for comparative file reviews.
In 2015, there were 1,178 institutions
that reported HMDA data but had fewer
than 25 originations and therefore
would likely be exempt under the 2015
HMDA Final Rule if they continue to
originate loans at a similar volume.
Although the loan volumes of most of
these institutions would be too sparse
for statistical analysis, the ability to
conduct comparative file reviews using
data retained under Regulation B has
some benefit.
A small financial institution
commenter advocated for eliminating
the Regulation B requirement to collect
and retain race and ethnicity
information. The commenter asserted
the resulting data are never used by
regulators, while the collection and
retention imposes a substantial burden.
A credit union trade association
commenter also argued that the Bureau
should remove the requirement,
asserting that removing it would reduce
the regulatory burden on its members.
The Bureau acknowledges that the
collection and retention requirement of
Regulation B imposes some burden on
financial institutions. As noted above,
the Bureau believes that consumers
could suffer substantial harm if the
requirement were removed. Although it
may be true in the particular case of the
community bank commenter, the
Bureau believes it is not the case that
some ways from the criteria for reporting under the
NMLS Mortgage Call Report and reporting
transactions under it. It is possible that the NMLS
omits some non-depository institutions that
originated at least 25 closed-end mortgages, did not
report HMDA data, and are subject to Regulation B.
Some or all of these institutions may also not have
been required to report HMDA data.
45 The Bureau does not have an estimate of the
number of rural community banks that are currently
exempt from HMDA reporting and originate at least
25 loans per year. The FFIEC call report for banks
does not report originations for depository
institutions that do not report to HMDA.
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these data are never used by regulators.
Both the Bureau’s consultations with
the prudential regulators and its own
experience in fair lending enforcement
indicate that these data are used.
Accordingly, the Bureau is not removing
the Regulation B requirement to collect
and retain race and ethnicity
information.
Model Forms for Collecting Race and
Ethnicity Data
The Bureau believes that the
provision to change the model forms for
collecting race and ethnicity data will
have modest benefits to firms collecting
these data, by providing updated model
forms, and reducing confusion regarding
the outdated 2004 URLA. The final rule
does not impose any new costs on firms,
nor does the Bureau believe that
consumers will experience any cost or
benefit from the provision. The Bureau
requested comment regarding the costs
and benefits associated with this
provision. Industry commenters
supported the change, with several
confirming the potential benefits noted
above.
jstallworth on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES
Allowing Voluntary Collection of
Applicant Information
Regarding the provision to allow
certain creditors to voluntarily collect
demographic information, the Bureau
believes the financial institutions that
will most likely exercise such options
will be low-volume, low-complexity
institutions that have made a one-time
investment in HMDA collection and
reporting and would like to utilize that
collection process already in place. The
Bureau believes the final rule will
provide modest benefits to such
institutions, by saving on one-time
adjustment costs required to shift in and
out of collection. The Bureau expects
that institutions will only exercise this
option if voluntary collection provides a
net benefit. The Bureau does not believe
that consumers will experience any
costs or benefits from this provision
except to the extent that financial
institutions achieve cost savings and
pass any such cost savings on to their
customers.
The Bureau requested comment
regarding the costs and benefits
associated with this provision. The
Bureau also requested data on the
number of firms that might be interested
in voluntary collection under this
provision. No commenters provided
such data.
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C. Impact on Depository Institutions and
Credit Unions With $10 Billion or Less
in Assets, as Described in Dodd-Frank
Section 1026
The Bureau believes that depository
institutions and credit unions with $10
billion or less in assets will not be
differentially affected by the substantive
amendments. The primary benefit to
lenders from the final rule is the
reduced uncertainty and compliance
burden from allowing the disaggregated
race and ethnicity information collected
under Regulation C to be used to
comply with Regulation B. Both certain
depository institutions and credit
unions with less than $10 billion in
assets and covered persons with more
than $10 billion in assets currently
report data under HMDA and thus will
receive these benefits. The benefits may
be somewhat larger for depository
institutions and credit unions with less
than $10 billion in assets because the
relative costs of duplicative collection
will be greater for these entities.
D. Impact on Access to Credit
The Bureau does not believe that
there will be an adverse impact on
access to credit resulting from any of the
provisions of the final rule.
E. Impact on Consumers in Rural Areas
The Bureau believes that rural areas
might benefit from the provision to
allow collection of disaggregated race
and ethnicity information more than
urban areas. One of the exceptions to
the reporting requirements under
HMDA is for entities that do not have
a branch or home office located in an
MSA. Such entities likely serve
primarily customers in rural areas. To
the extent that the provision benefits
firms and consumers, consumers in
rural areas will see the largest benefits.
VIII. Regulatory Flexibility Act
Analysis
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA),
as amended by the Small Business
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of
1996, requires each agency to consider
the potential impact of its regulations on
small entities, including small business,
small governmental units, and small
nonprofit organizations. The RFA
defines a ‘‘small business’’ as a business
that meets the size standard developed
by the Small Business Administration
pursuant to the Small Business Act.
The RFA generally requires an agency
to conduct an initial regulatory
flexibility analysis (IRFA) and a final
regulatory flexibility analysis (FRFA) of
any rule subject to notice-and-comment
rulemaking requirements, unless the
agency certifies that the rule will not
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45693
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
The Bureau also is subject to certain
additional procedures under RFA
involving the convening of a panel to
consult with small business
representatives prior to proposing a rule
for which an IRFA is required.
On March 24, 2017, the Bureau issued
the 2017 ECOA Proposal on its Web site.
The Bureau concluded that the
proposal, if adopted, would not have a
significant economic impact on any
small entities and that an IRFA was
therefore not required. The Bureau
requested comment on the analysis
under the RFA and any relevant data.
The Bureau did not receive any
comments on the analysis or data.
This final rule adopts the proposed
rule without making changes that would
affect the Bureau’s conclusion that the
rule will not have a significant
economic impact on any small entities.
All methods of compliance under
current law will remain available to
covered persons, including small
entities, when these provisions become
effective. Thus, a small entity that is in
compliance with current law need not
take any additional action, save those
already required by the 2015 HMDA
Final Rule.
Accordingly, the undersigned certifies
that this final rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
IX. Paperwork Reduction Act
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995 (PRA) (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.),
Federal agencies are generally required
to seek the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB)’s approval for
information collection requirements
prior to implementation. The collections
of information related to Regulation B
and Regulation C have been previously
reviewed and approved by OMB and
assigned OMB Control Number 3170–
0013 (Regulation B) and 3170–0008
(Regulation C). Under the PRA, the
Bureau may not conduct or sponsor and,
notwithstanding any other provision of
law, a person is not required to respond
to an information collection unless the
information collection displays a valid
control number assigned by OMB.
The Bureau has determined that this
final rule would not impose any new or
revised information collection
requirements (recordkeeping, reporting
or disclosure requirements) on covered
entities or members of the public that
would constitute collections of
information requiring OMB approval
under the PRA. Although some entities
subject to Regulation B but not
Regulation C may choose to voluntarily
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begin collecting disaggregated race and
ethnicity information, the Bureau
believes the most likely reason for this
to occur is through adoption of the 2016
URLA, which is not part of the final
rule.
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 1002
Aged, Banks, Banking, Civil rights,
Consumer protection, Credit, Credit
unions, Discrimination, Fair lending,
Marital status discrimination, National
banks, National origin discrimination,
Penalties, Race discrimination,
Religious discrimination, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Savings
associations, Sex discrimination.
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth above, the
Bureau amends Regulation B, 12 CFR
part 1002, as set forth below:
PART 1002—EQUAL CREDIT
OPPORTUNITY ACT (REGULATION B)
1. The authority citation for part 1002
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 5512, 5581; 15 U.S.C.
1691b.
2. Amend § 1002.5 by adding
paragraph (a)(4) to read as follows:
■
jstallworth on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES
§ 1002.5 Rules concerning requests for
information.
(a) * * *
(4) Other permissible collection of
information. Notwithstanding paragraph
(b) of this section, a creditor may collect
information under the following
circumstances provided that the creditor
collects the information in compliance
with appendix B to 12 CFR part 1003:
(i) A creditor that is a financial
institution under 12 CFR 1003.2(g) may
collect information regarding the
ethnicity, race, and sex of an applicant
for a closed-end mortgage loan that is an
excluded transaction under 12 CFR
1003.3(c)(11) if it submits HMDA data
concerning such closed-end mortgage
loans and applications or if it submitted
HMDA data concerning closed-end
mortgage loans for any of the preceding
five calendar years;
(ii) A creditor that is a financial
institution under 12 CFR 1003.2(g) may
collect information regarding the
ethnicity, race, and sex of an applicant
for an open-end line of credit that is an
excluded transaction under 12 CFR
1003.3(c)(12) if it submits HMDA data
concerning such open-end lines of
credit and applications or if it submitted
HMDA data concerning open-end lines
of credit for any of the preceding five
calendar years;
(iii) A creditor that submitted HMDA
data for any of the preceding five
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calendar years but is not currently a
financial institution under 12 CFR
1003.2(g) may collect information
regarding the ethnicity, race, and sex of
an applicant for a loan that would
otherwise be a covered loan under 12
CFR 1003.2(e) if not excluded by 12 CFR
1003.3(c)(11) or (12);
(iv) A creditor that exceeded an
applicable loan volume threshold in the
first year of the two-year threshold
period provided in 12 CFR 1003.2(g),
1003.3(c)(11), or 1003.3(c)(12) may, in
the second year, collect information
regarding the ethnicity, race, and sex of
an applicant for a loan that would
otherwise be a covered loan under 12
CFR 1003.2(e) if the loan were not
excluded by 12 CFR 1003.3(c)(11) or
(12);
(v) A creditor that is a financial
institution under 12 CFR 1003.2(g), or
that submitted HMDA data for any of
the preceding five calendar years but is
not currently a financial institution
under 12 CFR 1003.2(g), may collect
information regarding the ethnicity,
race, and sex of an applicant for a loan
that would otherwise be a covered loan
under 12 CFR 1003.2(e) if the loan were
not excluded by 12 CFR 1003.3(c)(10).
(vi) A creditor that is collecting
information regarding the ethnicity,
race, and sex of an applicant or first coapplicant may collect information
regarding the ethnicity, race, and sex of
a second or additional co-applicant for
a covered loan under 12 CFR 1003.2(e)
or for a second or additional coapplicant for a loan described in
paragraphs (a)(4)(i) through (v) of this
section.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. Amend § 1002.12 by revising
paragraph (b)(1)(i) to read as follows:
§ 1002.12
Record retention.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(1) * * *
(i) Any application that it receives,
any information required to be obtained
concerning characteristics of the
applicant to monitor compliance with
the Act and this part or other similar
law, any information obtained pursuant
to § 1002.5(a)(4), and any other written
or recorded information used in
evaluating the application and not
returned to the applicant at the
applicant’s request.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 4. Amend § 1002.13 by revising
paragraph (a)(1)(i) and paragraph (b) to
read as follows:
§ 1002.13 Information for monitoring
purposes.
(a) * * *
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(1) * * *
(i) Ethnicity and race using either:
(A) For ethnicity, the aggregate
categories Hispanic or Latino and not
Hispanic or Latino; and, for race, the
aggregate categories American Indian or
Alaska Native, Asian, Black or African
American, Native Hawaiian or Other
Pacific Islander, and White; or
(B) The categories and subcategories
for the collection of ethnicity and race
set forth in appendix B to 12 CFR part
1003.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Obtaining information. Questions
regarding ethnicity, race, sex, marital
status, and age may be listed, at the
creditor’s option, on the application
form or on a separate form that refers to
the application. The applicant(s) shall
be asked but not required to supply the
requested information. If the
applicant(s) chooses not to provide the
information or any part of it, that fact
shall be noted on the form. The creditor
shall then also note on the form, to the
extent possible, the ethnicity, race, and
sex of the applicant(s) on the basis of
visual observation or surname. When a
creditor collects ethnicity and race
information pursuant to
§ 1002.13(a)(1)(i)(B), the creditor must
comply with any restrictions on the
collection of an applicant’s ethnicity or
race on the basis of visual observation
or surname set forth in appendix B to 12
CFR part 1003. If there is more than one
co-applicant, a creditor is permitted, but
is not required, to collect the
information set forth in paragraph (a) of
this section from a second or additional
co-applicant.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 5. Effective January 1, 2018, amend
Appendix B to Part 1002 by revising
paragraph 1 and adding a Data
Collection Model Form to the end of the
Appendix to read as follows:
Appendix B to Part 1002—Model
Application Forms
1. This appendix contains five model
credit application forms, each designated for
use in a particular type of consumer credit
transaction as indicated by the bracketed
caption on each form. The first sample form
is intended for use in open-end, unsecured
transactions; the second for closed-end,
secured transactions; the third for closed-end
transactions, whether unsecured or secured;
the fourth in transactions involving
community property or occurring in
community property States; and the fifth in
residential mortgage transactions which
contains a model disclosure for use in
complying with § 1002.13 for certain
dwelling-related loans. This appendix also
contains a data collection model form for
collecting information concerning an
applicant’s ethnicity, race, and sex that
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45695
complies with the requirements of
§ 1002.13(a)(1)(i)(A) and (ii). Appendix B to
12 CFR part 1003 provides a data collection
model form for collecting information
concerning an applicant’s ethnicity, race, and
sex that complies with the requirements of
§ 1002.13(a)(1)(i)(B) and (ii). All forms
contained in this appendix are models; their
use by creditors is optional.
6. Effective January 1, 2022, amend
Appendix B to Part 1002 by revising
paragraph 1 and under paragraph 3
removing the form ‘‘Uniform Residential
Loan Application’’.
The revision reads as follows:
■
b. Under Section 1002.12—Record
retention, Paragraph 12(b) is revised.
■ c. Under Section 1002.13—
Information for monitoring purposes:
■ i. Paragraph 13(a)—Information to be
requested is revised.
■ ii. Paragraph 13(b)—Obtaining of
information is revised.
■ iii. Paragraph 13(c)—Disclosure to
applicants is revised.
■ d. Appendix B—Model Application
Forms is removed.
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
dwelling-secured loans, including some
types of loans not covered by § 1002.13.
3. Collecting information on behalf of
creditors. Persons such as loan brokers
and correspondents do not violate the
ECOA or Regulation B if they collect
information that they are otherwise
prohibited from collecting, where the
purpose of collecting the information is
to provide it to a creditor that is subject
to the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act or
another Federal or state statute or
regulation requiring data collection.
Paragraph 5(a)(4).
1. Other permissible collection of
information. Information regarding
ethnicity, race, and sex that is not
required to be collected pursuant to
Regulation C, 12 CFR part 1003, may
nevertheless be collected under the
circumstances set forth in § 1002.5(a)(4)
without violating § 1002.5(b). The
information must be retained pursuant
to the requirements of § 1002.12.
*
*
*
*
*
jstallworth on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES
Appendix B to Part 1002—Model
Application Forms
1. This appendix contains four model
credit application forms, each designated for
use in a particular type of consumer credit
transaction as indicated by the bracketed
caption on each form. The first sample form
is intended for use in open-end, unsecured
transactions; the second for closed-end,
secured transactions; the third for closed-end
transactions, whether unsecured or secured;
and the fourth in transactions involving
community property or occurring in
community property States. This appendix
also contains a data collection model form for
collecting information concerning an
applicant’s ethnicity, race, and sex that
complies with the requirements of
§ 1002.13(a)(1)(i)(A) and (ii). Appendix B to
12 CFR part 1003 provides a data collection
model form for collecting information
concerning an applicant’s ethnicity, race, and
sex that complies with the requirements of
§ 1002.13(a)(1)(i)(B) and (ii). All forms
contained in this appendix are models; their
use by creditors is optional.
*
*
*
*
*
7. Amend Supplement I to Part 1002:
a. Under Section 1002.5—Rules
concerning requests for information:
■ i. Paragraph 5(a)(2) is revised.
■ ii. Paragraph 5(a)(4) is added.
■
■
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Supplement I to Part 1002—Official
Interpretations
*
*
*
*
*
Section 1002.5—Rules Concerning
Requests for Information
5(a) General rules.
*
*
*
*
Paragraph 5(a)(2).
1. Local laws. Information that a
creditor is allowed to collect pursuant to
a ‘‘state’’ statute or regulation includes
information required by a local statute,
regulation, or ordinance.
2. Information required by Regulation
C. Regulation C, 12 CFR part 1003,
generally requires creditors covered by
the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act
(HMDA) to collect and report
information about the race, ethnicity,
and sex of applicants for certain
*
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*
*
*
*
Section 1002.12—Record Retention
*
*
*
*
*
12(b) Preservation of records.
1. Copies. Copies of the original
record include carbon copies,
photocopies, microfilm or microfiche
copies, or copies produced by any other
accurate retrieval system, such as
documents stored and reproduced by
computer. A creditor that uses a
computerized or mechanized system
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■
*
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need not keep a paper copy of a
document (for example, of an adverse
action notice) if it can regenerate all
pertinent information in a timely
manner for examination or other
purposes.
2. Computerized decisions. A creditor
that enters information items from a
written application into a computerized
or mechanized system and makes the
credit decision mechanically, based
only on the items of information entered
into the system, may comply with
§ 1002.12(b) by retaining the
information actually entered. It is not
required to store the complete written
application, nor is it required to enter
the remaining items of information into
the system. If the transaction is subject
to § 1002.13 or the creditor is collecting
information pursuant to § 1002.5(a)(4),
however, the creditor is required to
enter and retain the data on personal
characteristics in order to comply with
the requirements of that section.
*
*
*
*
*
Section 1002.13—Information for
Monitoring Purposes
13(a) Information to be requested.
1. Natural person. Section 1002.13
applies only to applications from
natural persons.
2. Principal residence. The
requirements of § 1002.13 apply only if
an application relates to a dwelling that
is or will be occupied by the applicant
as the principal residence. A credit
application related to a vacation home
or a rental unit is not covered. In the
case of a two-to four-unit dwelling, the
application is covered if the applicant
intends to occupy one of the units as a
principal residence.
3. Temporary financing. An
application for temporary financing to
construct a dwelling is not subject to
§ 1002.13. But an application for both a
temporary loan to finance construction
of a dwelling and a permanent mortgage
loan to take effect upon the completion
of construction is subject to § 1002.13.
4. New principal residence. A person
can have only one principal residence at
a time. However, if a person buys or
builds a new dwelling that will become
that person’s principal residence within
a year or upon completion of
construction, the new dwelling is
considered the principal residence for
purposes of § 1002.13.
5. Transactions not covered. The
information-collection requirements of
this section apply to applications for
credit primarily for the purchase or
refinancing of a dwelling that is or will
become the applicant’s principal
residence. Therefore, applications for
credit secured by the applicant’s
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:21 Sep 29, 2017
Jkt 244001
principal residence but made primarily
for a purpose other than the purchase or
refinancing of the principal residence
(such as loans for home improvement
and debt consolidation) are not subject
to the information-collection
requirements. An application for an
open-end home equity line of credit is
not subject to this section unless it is
readily apparent to the creditor when
the application is taken that the primary
purpose of the line is for the purchase
or refinancing of a principal dwelling.
6. Refinancings. A refinancing occurs
when an existing obligation is satisfied
and replaced by a new obligation
undertaken by the same borrower. A
creditor that receives an application to
refinance an existing extension of credit
made by that creditor for the purchase
of the applicant’s dwelling may request
the monitoring information again but is
not required to do so if it was obtained
in the earlier transaction.
7. Data collection under Regulation C.
For applications subject to
§ 1002.13(a)(1), a creditor that collects
information about the ethnicity, race,
and sex of an applicant in compliance
with the requirements of appendix B to
12 CFR part 1003 is acting in
compliance with § 1002.13 concerning
the collection of an applicant’s
ethnicity, race, and sex information. See
also comment 5(a)(2)–2.
8. Application-by-application basis.
For applications subject to
§ 1002.13(a)(1), a creditor may choose
on an application-by-application basis
whether to collect aggregate information
pursuant to § 1002.13(a)(1)(i)(A) or
disaggregated information pursuant to
§ 1002.13(a)(1)(i)(B) about the ethnicity
and race of the applicant.
13(b) Obtaining of information.
1. Forms for collecting data. A
creditor may collect the information
specified in § 1002.13(a) either on an
application form or on a separate form
referring to the application. Appendix B
to this part provides for two alternative
data collection model forms for use in
complying with the requirements of
§ 1002.13(a)(1)(i) and (ii) to collect
information concerning an applicant’s
ethnicity, race, and sex. When a creditor
collects ethnicity and race information
pursuant to § 1002.13(a)(1)(i)(A), the
applicant must be offered the option to
select more than one racial designation.
When a creditor collects ethnicity and
race information pursuant to
§ 1002.13(a)(1)(i)(B), the applicant must
be offered the option to select more than
one ethnicity designation and more than
one racial designation.
2. Written applications. The
regulation requires written applications
for the types of credit covered by
PO 00000
Frm 00018
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
§ 1002.13. A creditor can satisfy this
requirement by recording on paper or by
means of computer the information that
the applicant provides orally and that
the creditor normally considers in a
credit decision.
3. Telephone, mail applications.
i. A creditor that accepts an
application by telephone or mail must
request the monitoring information.
ii. A creditor that accepts an
application by mail need not make a
special request for the monitoring
information if the applicant has failed to
provide it on the application form
returned to the creditor.
iii. If it is not evident on the face of
an application that it was received by
mail, telephone, or via an electronic
medium, the creditor should indicate on
the form or other application record
how the application was received.
4. Video and other electronicapplication processes.
i. If a creditor takes an application
through an electronic medium that
allows the creditor to see the applicant,
the creditor must treat the application as
taken in person. The creditor must note
the monitoring information on the basis
of visual observation or surname, if the
applicant chooses not to provide the
information.
ii. If an applicant applies through an
electronic medium without video
capability, the creditor treats the
application as if it were received by
mail.
5. Applications through loanshopping services. When a creditor
receives an application through an
unaffiliated loan-shopping service, it
does not have to request the monitoring
information for purposes of the ECOA or
Regulation B. Creditors subject to the
Home Mortgage Disclosure Act should
be aware, however, that data collection
may be called for under Regulation C
(12 CFR part 1003), which generally
requires creditors to report, among other
things, the sex and race of an applicant
on brokered applications or applications
received through a correspondent.
6. Inadvertent notation. If a creditor
inadvertently obtains the monitoring
information in a dwelling-related
transaction not covered by § 1002.13,
the creditor may process and retain the
application without violating the
regulation.
13(c) Disclosure to applicants.
1. Procedures for providing
disclosures. The disclosure to an
applicant regarding the monitoring
information may be provided in writing.
Appendix B provides data collection
model forms for use in complying with
§ 1002.13 and that comply with
§ 1002.13(c). A creditor may devise its
E:\FR\FM\02OCR1.SGM
02OCR1
Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 189 / Monday, October 2, 2017 / Rules and Regulations
own disclosure so long as it is
substantially similar. The creditor need
not orally request the monitoring
information if it is requested in writing.
*
*
*
*
*
Dated: September 8, 2017.
Richard Cordray,
Director, Bureau of Consumer Financial
Protection.
[FR Doc. 2017–20417 Filed 9–29–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810–AM–P
FEDERAL FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
EXAMINATION COUNCIL
12 CFR Part 1101
[Docket No. FFIEC–2017–0003]
Description of Office, Procedures, and
Public Information
Federal Financial Institutions
Examination Council (FFIEC).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Federal Financial
Institutions Examination Council
(FFIEC or Council) is adopting as a final
rule the interim final rule published
July 3, 2017. The interim final rule
announced revisions and additions to
the Council’s information disclosure
regulations under the Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA Regulations).
The interim final rule also replaced the
interim final rule published on
December 27, 2016. The revisions in the
interim final rule implement recent
statutory amendments to the FOIA that
are mandated by the FOIA Improvement
Act of 2016, as well as update the
language of the Council’s regulations to
more closely mirror the language of the
FOIA and to reflect the Council’s
current FOIA procedures.
DATES: Effective October 2, 2017.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms.
Judith Dupre, Executive Secretary,
Federal Financial Institutions
Examination Council, via telephone:
(703) 516–5590, or via email: JDupre@
FDIC.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Council 1 is finalizing its interim rule
(82 FR 30724 (July 3, 2017)), which
revised its information disclosure
regulations under the Freedom of
Information Act 2 (FOIA Regulations).
On June 30, 2016, the Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA) was amended
jstallworth on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES
SUMMARY:
1 The
members of the Council are the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System, the
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation, the National Credit
Union Administration, the Office of the Comptroller
of the Currency, and the State Liaison Committee.
2 5 U.S.C. 552.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:58 Sep 29, 2017
Jkt 244001
by the FOIA Improvement Act of 2016 3
(FOIA Improvement Act). Among other
things, section 3 of the FOIA
Improvement Act required each Federal
agency to revise its disclosure
regulations and procedures for
processing FOIA requests in order to
conform to the substantive amendments
made by section 2 of the FOIA
Improvement Act by December 27,
2016. Accordingly, the Council
implemented the required substantive
and procedural changes necessary to
comply with the FOIA Improvement
Act’s amendments through issuance of
the interim final rule (81 FR 94937
(December 27, 2016)). In addition, the
Council made certain changes to its
FOIA Regulations to reflect revisions
brought about by prior amendments to
the FOIA that were incorporated into
the Council’s procedures and to make
the FOIA process easier for the public
to navigate. In drafting these
amendments to the FOIA Regulations,
the Council consulted the ‘‘Guidance for
Agency FOIA Regulations’’ issued by
the U.S. Department of Justice’s Office
for Information Policy. No comments
were received in response to the interim
final rule and it is being finalized
without change.
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Federal Financial
Institutions Examination Council adopts
as a final rule, without changes, the
interim final rule amending 12 CFR
1101.4, which was published at 82 FR
30724 on July 3, 2017.
Dated: September 27, 2017.
Federal Financial Institutions Examinations
Council.
Judith E. Dupre,
Executive Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2017–21050 Filed 9–29–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7535–01–P; 6714–01–P; 6210–01–P;
4810–33–P; 4810–AM–P
ACTION:
45697
Final rule.
We are superseding
Airworthiness Directive (AD) 2011–01–
15, which applied to certain The Boeing
Company Model 757–200, –200CB, and
–300 series airplanes. AD 2011–01–15
required repetitive inspections for
cracking of the fuselage skin of the
crown skin panel along the chem-milled
step at certain stringers, and repair if
necessary. This AD adds repetitive
inspections for cracking in additional
areas, and repair if necessary; removes
airplanes from the applicability; adds an
optional skin panel replacement, which
terminates all inspections; adds an
optional preventive modification, which
terminates certain inspections; and
reduces the compliance time for certain
inspections. This AD was prompted by
reports of the initiation of new fatigue
cracking in the fuselage skin of the
crown skin panel along locally thinned
channels adjacent to the chem-milled
steps. We are issuing this AD to address
the unsafe condition on these products.
SUMMARY:
This AD is effective November 6,
2017.
The Director of the Federal Register
approved the incorporation by reference
of a certain publication listed in this AD
as of November 6, 2017.
DATES:
For service information
identified in this final rule, contact
Boeing Commercial Airplanes,
Attention: Contractual & Data Services
(C&DS), 2600 Westminster Blvd., MC
110–SK57, Seal Beach, CA 90740;
telephone 562–797–1717; Internet
https://www.myboeingfleet.com. You
may view this service information at the
FAA, Transport Standards Branch, 1601
Lind Avenue SW., Renton, WA. For
information on the availability of this
material at the FAA, call 425–227–1221.
It is also available on the Internet at
https://www.regulations.gov by searching
for and locating Docket No. FAA–2016–
3697.
ADDRESSES:
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Examining the AD Docket
Federal Aviation Administration
You may examine the AD docket on
the Internet at https://
www.regulations.gov by searching for
and locating Docket No. FAA–2016–
3697; or in person at the Docket
Management Facility between 9 a.m.
and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday,
except Federal holidays. The AD docket
contains this final rule, the regulatory
evaluation, any comments received, and
other information. The address for the
Docket Office (phone: 800–647–5527) is
Docket Management Facility, U.S.
Department of Transportation, Docket
Operations, M–30, West Building
Ground Floor, Room W12–140, 1200
14 CFR Part 39
[Docket No. FAA–2016–3697; Product
Identifier 2015–NM–143–AD; Amendment
39–19062; AD 2017–20–05]
RIN 2120–AA64
Airworthiness Directives; The Boeing
Company Airplanes
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), DOT.
AGENCY:
3 Public Law 114–185, 130 Stat. 538 (June 30,
2016).
PO 00000
Frm 00019
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\02OCR1.SGM
02OCR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 82, Number 189 (Monday, October 2, 2017)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 45680-45697]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2017-20417]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
BUREAU OF CONSUMER FINANCIAL PROTECTION
12 CFR Part 1002
[Docket No. CFPB-2017-0009]
RIN 3170-AA65
Equal Credit Opportunity Act (Regulation B) Ethnicity and Race
Information Collection
AGENCY: Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection.
ACTION: Final rule; official interpretation.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection (Bureau) is
issuing a final rule that amends Regulation B to permit creditors
additional flexibility in complying with Regulation B in order to
facilitate compliance with Regulation C, adds certain model forms and
removes others from Regulation B, and makes various other amendments to
Regulation B and its commentary to facilitate the collection and
retention of information about the ethnicity, sex, and race of certain
mortgage applicants.
DATES: The rule is effective on January 1, 2018, except that the
amendment to Appendix B to Part 1002 revising paragraph 1 and removing
the existing ``Uniform Residential Loan Application'' form in
amendatory instruction 6 is effective January 1, 2022.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Shaakira Gold-Ramirez, Paralegal
Specialist, Kathryn Lazarev, Counsel, or James Wylie, Senior Counsel,
Office of Regulations, at 202-435-7700 or https://www.consumerfinance.gov/policy-compliance/guidance/.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Summary of the Final Rule
Regulation B implements the Equal Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA) \1\
and, in part, prohibits a creditor from inquiring about the race,
color, religion, national origin, or sex of a credit applicant except
under certain circumstances.\2\ Two of these circumstances are a
requirement for creditors to collect and retain certain information
about applicants for certain dwelling-secured loans under Regulation B
Sec. 1002.13 and the similar applicant information that financial
institutions are required to collect and report under Regulation C, 12
CFR part 1003, which implements the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act
(HMDA).\3\ Regulation B also includes certain optional model forms for
use in complying with certain Regulation B requirements, including a
model form for complying with Sec. 1002.13 that is a 2004 version of
the Uniform Residential Loan Application (URLA) issued by the Federal
National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae) and the Federal Home Loan
Mortgage Corporation (Freddie Mac) (collectively, the Enterprises).\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 15 U.S.C. 1691 et seq., 12 CFR part 1002.
\2\ 12 CFR 1002.5(b).
\3\ 12 CFR 1002.5(a)(2).
\4\ Appendix B to 12 CFR part 1003.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The HMDA requirement to collect and report applicant information
was recently updated through a final rule amending Regulation C,
published in October of 2015 (2015 HMDA Final Rule).\5\ In 2016, the
Enterprises issued a new version of the URLA that complies with the
2015 HMDA Final Rule (2016 URLA).\6\ These changes to Regulation C and
the URLA require updates to Regulation B to ensure consistency among
regulations and facilitate compliance with Regulation B and Regulation
C by financial institutions. To address these issues, the Bureau issued
a proposal on March 24, 2017, which was published in the Federal
Register on April 4, 2017 (the 2017 ECOA Proposal).\7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ Home Mortgage Disclosure (Regulation C), 80 FR 66128 (Oct.
28, 2015).
\6\ See Fannie Mae, Guide Forms, available at https://www.fanniemae.com/singlefamily/selling-servicing-guide-forms (last
visited Sept. 6, 2017) (listing all selling and servicing guide
forms); Freddie Mac, ``Forms and Documents,'' available at https://www.freddiemac.com/singlefamily/guide/ (last visited Sept. 6, 2017)
(same).
\7\ Amendments to Equal Credit Opportunity Act (Regulation B)
Ethnicity and Race Information Collection, 82 FR 16307 (Apr. 4,
2017).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Bureau is now publishing final amendments to Regulation B. The
final rule will provide creditors flexibility in complying with
Regulation B in order to facilitate compliance with Regulation C and
transition to the 2016 URLA. The changes to Regulation B in this rule
are summarized briefly in this section and discussed in detail below.
A. Scope
The final rule amends parts of Regulation B, its commentary, and
its appendices, and affects when and how a creditor may collect
information regarding the applicant's ethnicity, race, and sex. The
Regulation B creditors affected by this rule are primarily those
creditors making mortgage loans subject to Sec. 1002.13, which applies
to purchase and refinance transactions involving an applicant's primary
residence. Financial institutions that report under Regulation C, have
reported in the prior five years, or may report in the near future may
also be affected by this rule. Creditors that utilize model forms from
appendix B to Regulation B (the Regulation B appendix) for mortgage
loans are also affected by the rule.
B. Changes to Applicant Information Collection for Regulation B
Creditors
For Regulation B creditors making mortgage loans subject to Sec.
1002.13, the rule will allow creditors to collect the applicant's
information using either the aggregate ethnicity and race categories or
disaggregated ethnicity and race categories and subcategories, as set
forth in appendix B to Regulation C (the Regulation C appendix) as
amended by the 2015 HMDA Final Rule. The rule change therefore will not
require Regulation B creditors that are not HMDA reporters (Regulation
B-only creditors) to change their Sec. 1002.13 compliance practices,
but would allow them to adopt voluntarily new practices for collecting
applicant information, including practices that would permit such
creditors to transition to the 2016 URLA. Regulation B creditors will
also be able to collect voluntarily certain information about
applicants for certain mortgage loan scenarios as provided for in Sec.
1002.5(a)(4). These scenarios
[[Page 45681]]
generally involve types of loans subject to Regulation C where a
creditor voluntarily reports information under Regulation C, reported
such information in the past five years, or may report such information
in the near future.
C. Changes to Applicant Information Collection for HMDA Reporters
Many HMDA reporters are also subject to the collection requirements
of Sec. 1002.13. For those HMDA reporters, the rule provides clarity
that compliance with applicant information collection under Regulation
C generally satisfies similar requirements under Regulation B. HMDA
reporters who at some point no longer are required to comply with HMDA
can continue to collect certain applicant information as provided for
in Sec. 1002.5(a)(4).
D. Changes to Regulation B Model Forms
The rule makes certain changes to the Regulation B appendix. The
rule amends the Regulation B appendix to provide two options: A model
form for collecting aggregate applicant race and ethnicity information
and a cross-reference to the Regulation C appendix model form for
collecting disaggregated applicant race and ethnicity information. The
rule also removes as outdated the existing version of the URLA
contained in the Regulation B appendix, effective January 1, 2022. The
rule does not add the 2016 URLA to the Regulation B appendix; that form
is subject to a separate Federal Register notice issued by the Bureau
acknowledging its compliance with certain provisions of Regulation
B.\8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ Status of New Uniform Loan Application and Collection of
Expanded Home Mortgage Information About Ethnicity and Race in 2017,
81 FR 66930 (Sept. 29, 2016).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Background
A. Regulation B and Ethnicity and Race Information Collection
With some exceptions, Regulation B Sec. 1002.5(b) prohibits a
creditor from inquiring about the race, color, religion, national
origin, or sex of an applicant or any other person (protected
applicant-characteristic information) in connection with a credit
transaction. Section 1002.5(a)(2) provides several exceptions to that
prohibition for information that creditors are required to request for
certain dwelling-secured loans under Sec. 1002.13, and for information
required by a regulation, order, or agreement issued by or entered into
with a court or an enforcement agency to monitor or enforce compliance
with ECOA, Regulation B or other Federal or State statutes or
regulations, including Regulation C.
Section 1002.13 sets forth rules for collecting information about
an applicant's ethnicity, race, sex, marital status, and age under
Regulation B. (In this document, ``applicant demographic information''
refers to information about an applicant's ethnicity, race, or sex
information, while ``certain protected applicant-characteristic
information'' refers to all information collected under Sec. 1002.13,
including age and marital status.) Under Sec. 1002.13(a)(1), creditors
that receive an application for credit primarily for the purchase or
refinancing of a dwelling occupied (or to be occupied) by the applicant
as a principal residence, where the extension of credit will be secured
by the dwelling, must collect certain protected applicant-
characteristic information, including specified race and ethnicity
categories. These race and ethnicity categories correspond to the
Office of Management and Budget (OMB) minimum standards for the
classification of Federal data on ethnicity and race.\9\ Certain of
these categories include several more specific race, heritage,
nationality, or country of origin groups. For example, Hispanic or
Latino as defined by OMB for the 2010 Census refers to a person of
Cuban, Mexican, Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or other
Spanish culture or origin.\10\ Section 1002.13(b) through (c) provides
instructions on the manner of collection. Unlike financial institutions
covered by Regulation C, creditors subject to Sec. 1002.13 but not to
Regulation C are required only to collect and retain, but not to
report, the required protected applicant-characteristic information.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ Revision of the Standards for the Classification of Federal
Data on Race and Ethnicity, 62 FR 58782, 5878-90 (Oct. 30, 1997).
\10\ See U.S. Census Bureau, Overview of Race and Hispanic
Origin: 2010,'' at 2 (Mar. 2011), available at https://www.census.gov/prod/cen2010/briefs/c2010br-02.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. 2015 HMDA Final Rule
Regulation C implements HMDA and sets out specific requirements for
the collection, recording, reporting, and disclosure of mortgage
lending information, including a requirement to collect and report
applicant demographic information. In July 2014, the Bureau proposed
amendments to Regulation C to implement the Dodd-Frank Act changes to
require collection, recording, and reporting of additional information
to further HMDA's purposes, and to modernize the manner in which
covered institutions report HMDA data.\11\ The Bureau published a final
rule on October 28, 2015, amending Regulation C, with many of the
amendments taking effect January 1, 2018.\12\ (In this document,
``current Regulation C'' refers to Regulation C prior to January 1,
2018, and ``revised Regulation C'' refers to Regulation C as it will be
in effect on or after January 1, 2018, as amended by the 2015 HMDA
Final Rule.) For data collected in or after 2018, the 2015 HMDA Final
Rule amends the requirement for collection and reporting of applicant
demographic information. Specifically, covered institutions must permit
applicants to self-identify their ethnicity and race using certain
disaggregated ethnic and racial subcategories such as Mexican, Puerto
Rican, or Cuban under the aggregate category Hispanic or Latino.
Covered institutions will report the disaggregated information provided
by applicants. However, revised Regulation C will not require or permit
covered institutions to use the disaggregated subcategories when
collecting and reporting the applicant's ethnicity and race based on
visual observation or surname.\13\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ Home Mortgage Disclosure (Regulation C), 79 FR 51731 (Aug.
29, 2014).
\12\ 80 FR 66128 (Oct. 28, 2015).
\13\ Id. at 66314 (amendments to appendix B to Regulation C,
effective January 1, 2018).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Revised Regulation C Sec. 1003.2(g)(1)(v) and 1003.2(g)(2)(ii)
also introduces an exclusion from the definition of financial
institution, from which the duty to report HMDA data flows, for
entities that, among other criteria, originated fewer than 25 closed-
end mortgage loans or fewer than 100 open-end lines of credit in either
of the two preceding calendar years.\14\ The Bureau recently adopted
amendments to Regulation C that will temporarily increase the threshold
for collecting and reporting data on certain loans. Financial
institutions originating fewer than 500 open-end lines of credit in
either of the preceding two years will not be required to begin
collecting such data until January 1, 2020.\15\ As a result, when
revised Regulation C takes effect, an institution's obligation to
collect and report information under Regulation C may change over time
based on its prior loan volume.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ Id. at 66148.
\15\ 82 FR 43088, 43093-43096 (Sept. 13, 2017); see also id. at
43132, 43145 (Sec. Sec. 1003.2(g)(1)(v)(B), (g)(2)(ii)(B), and
1003.3(c)(12)). This temporary increase in the open-end threshold
will provide time for the Bureau to consider whether to initiate
another rulemaking to address the appropriate level for the open-end
threshold for data collected beginning January 1, 2020.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 45682]]
C. Uniform Residential Loan Application
The Enterprises, currently under the conservatorship of the Federal
Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), prepare and periodically revise the URLA
used by many lenders for certain dwelling-related loans. A mortgage
loan application must be documented using the URLA in the mortgage loan
file for the loan to be eligible for sale to the Enterprises.\16\ A
version of the URLA dated January 2004 (2004 URLA) is included in the
Regulation B appendix as a model form for use in complying with Sec.
1002.13. The appendix provides that the use of its model forms is
optional under Regulation B but that, if a creditor uses an appropriate
appendix B model form, or modifies a form in accordance with
instructions provided in appendix B, that creditor shall be deemed to
be acting in compliance with Sec. 1002.5(b) through (d).\17\ The
Enterprises, under the conservatorship of the FHFA, issued a revised
and redesigned URLA on August 23, 2016 (2016 URLA).\18\ Among other
changes, the 2016 URLA includes a Demographic Information section
(section 7) that addresses the requirements in revised Regulation C for
collecting applicant demographic information, including the requirement
that financial institutions permit applicants to self-identify using
disaggregated ethnicity and race categories beginning January 1, 2018.
The Enterprises also made available a Demographic Information Addendum,
which is identical in form to section 7 of the 2016 URLA.\19\ The
Enterprises have advised that the Demographic Information Addendum may
be used by lenders at any time on or after January 1, 2017, as a
replacement for section X (Information for Government Monitoring
Purposes) in the current URLA, dated July 2005 (revised June 2009). The
Enterprises have not yet provided a date when lenders may begin using
the 2016 URLA or the date lenders are required to use the 2016 URLA
(the cutover date), but have stated their intention to collaborate with
industry stakeholders to help shape the implementation timeline for the
2016 URLA, with a goal to provide lenders with more precise information
in 2017 regarding the cutover date.\20\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ Fannie Mae, ``Selling Guide: Single Family Seller
Servicer,'' at Sec. B1-1-01 (Dec. 16, 2014), available at https://www.fanniemae.com/content/guide/selling/b1/1/01.html; Freddie Mac,
``Single-Family Seller/Servicer Guide'' (Sep. 21, 2016), Sec.
3401.7, available at https://www.freddiemac.com/singlefamily/guide/bulletins/snapshot.html.
\17\ Comment appendix B-1 provides that a previous version of
the URLA, dated October 1992, may be used by creditors without
violating Regulation B. In addition, comment appendix B-2 provides
that the home-improvement and energy loan application form prepared
by the Enterprises, dated October 1986, complies with the
requirements of Regulation B for some creditors but not others,
depending on whether the creditor is governed by Sec. 1002.13(a) or
subject to a substitute monitoring program under Sec. 1002.13(d).
The Enterprises no longer offer the home-improvement and energy loan
application form identified in comment app. B-2. See Fannie Mae,
``Guide Forms,'' available at https://www.fanniemae.com/singlefamily/selling-servicing-guide-forms (last visited Sept. 6,
2017) (listing all current selling and servicing guide forms); see
also Freddie Mac, ``Forms and Documents,'' available at https://www.freddiemac.com/singlefamily/guide/ (last visited Sept. 6, 2017)
(same).
\18\ See Fannie Mae, ``Uniform Residential Loan Application,''
https://www.fanniemae.com/singlefamily/uniform-residential-loan-application# (last visited Sept. 6, 2017); see also Press Release,
Uniform Mortgage Data Program, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac at the
direction of the FHFA, ``The Redesigned URLA and ULAD Mapping
Document Are Here!,'' (Aug. 23, 2016), available at https://www.fanniemae.com/content/news/urla-announcement-august-2016.pdf.
\19\ Fannie Mae, Form 1003 and Freddie Mac Form 65,
``Demographic Information Addendum,'' (Aug. 2016), available at
https://www.fanniemae.com/content/guide_form/urla-demographic-addendum.pdf.
\20\ Press Release, Uniform Mortgage Data Program, Fannie Mae
and Freddie Mac at the direction of the FHFA, ``URLA Implementation
Guidance and Update,'' (Nov. 1, 2016), available at https://www.fanniemae.com/content/news/urla-announcement-november-2016.pdf;
Uniform Mortgage Data Program, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac at the
direction of the FHFA, ``Uniform Residential Loan Application
(URLA)/Uniform Loan Application Dataset (ULAD) FAQs,'' at ] 6 (Nov.
1, 2016), available at https://www.fanniemae.com/content/faq/urla-ulad-faqs.pdf.
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D. Bureau Approval Notice
On September 23, 2016, the Bureau issued a notice concerning the
collection of expanded information about ethnicity and race in 2017
(Bureau Approval Notice).\21\ Before the January 1, 2018, effective
date of most provisions of the 2015 HMDA Final Rule, inquiries to
collect applicant demographic information using disaggregated ethnic
and racial categories are not required by current Regulation C and
would not have been allowed under Regulation B Sec. 1002.5(a)(2), and
therefore creditors would have been prohibited by Regulation B Sec.
1002.5(b) from requesting applicants to self-identify using
disaggregated ethnic and racial categories before January 1, 2018. The
Bureau Approval Notice provided that, anytime from January 1, 2017
through December 31, 2017, a creditor may, at its option, permit
applicants to self-identify using disaggregated ethnic and racial
categories as instructed in the revised Regulation C appendix. During
this period, a creditor adopting the practice of permitting applicants
to self-identify using disaggregated ethnic and racial categories as
instructed in the revised Regulation C appendix shall be deemed to be
in compliance with Regulation B Sec. 1002.13(a)(i). In the same
notice, the Bureau also determined that the relevant language in the
2016 URLA is in compliance with the regulatory provisions of Regulation
B Sec. 1002.5(b) through (d), regarding requests for protected
applicant-characteristic information and certain other information. The
notice provides that, although the use of the 2016 URLA by creditors is
not required under Regulation B, a creditor that uses the 2016 URLA
without any modification that would violate Sec. 1002.5(b) through (d)
acts in compliance with Sec. 1002.5(b) through (d).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ 81 FR 66930 (Sept. 29, 2016).
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III. Summary of the Rulemaking Process
A. Pre-Proposal Outreach
As part of the Bureau's outreach to financial institutions,
vendors, and other mortgage industry participants to prepare for the
implementation of the 2015 HMDA Final Rule, the Bureau received
questions about the requirement to permit applicants to self-identify
using disaggregated ethnicity and race categories. The Bureau also
received questions as to how that requirement intersected with
compliance obligations under Regulation B. The Bureau further received
questions related to the Bureau Approval Notice about whether the
approval for collecting disaggregated ethnicity and race categories
under Regulation B in 2017 would be extended to 2018. In light of these
inquiries, the Bureau determined that it would be beneficial to
establish through rulemaking appropriate standards in Regulation B
concerning the collection of an applicant's ethnicity and race
information similar to those in revised Regulation C.
Because many of the financial institutions most affected by this
proposed rule are supervised by the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation (FDIC), the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
(OCC), the Federal Reserve Board (Board), and the National Credit Union
Administration (NCUA), the Bureau conducted outreach to these agencies.
The Bureau specifically sought input from these agencies concerning
their use of applicant ethnicity and race information collected under
Sec. 1002.13 but not reported or anticipated to be reported under
Regulation C and their views on appropriate standards for collection
and retention of this information. The Bureau also conducted
[[Page 45683]]
outreach with other Federal agencies, including the Securities and
Exchange Commission, the Department of Justice, the Department of
Housing and Urban Development, the Federal Housing Finance Agency, the
Federal Trade Commission, the Department of Veterans Affairs, the
Department of Agriculture, the Department of the Treasury, and the
Federal Financial Institutions Examination Counsel (FFIEC) concerning
the proposed rule.
B. The Bureau's Proposal
On March 24, 2017, the Bureau issued the 2017 ECOA Proposal on its
Web site. The proposal was published in the Federal Register on April
4, 2017.\22\
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\22\ 82 FR 16307 (Apr. 4, 2017).
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Specifically, the Bureau proposed an amendment to Sec. 1002.13 to
permit a creditor additional flexibility in how it collects applicant
ethnicity and race information by allowing use of either aggregate or
disaggregate ethnicity and race categories on an application-by-
application basis. In addition, the Bureau proposed amendments adding
Sec. 1002.5(a)(4) to permit creditors to collect applicant demographic
information when they would not otherwise be required to do so in
certain scenarios where creditors may benefit from being able to adopt
Regulation C compliance practices before they become required or
maintain them when they are no longer required. The Bureau also
proposed to remove the outdated 2004 URLA from the Regulation B
appendix, add generic model forms for compliance with Sec. 1002.13,
and maintain approval of the 2016 URLA through a freestanding approval
notice.
C. Feedback Provided to the Bureau
The Bureau received approximately 36 comments on the 2017 ECOA
Proposal during the comment period from consumer advocacy groups,
national and State trade associations, banks, individuals, and industry
service providers. Comments are publicly available at https://www.regulations.gov. This information is discussed below in the
section-by-section analysis and subsequent parts of the notice, as
applicable. The Bureau considered the comments, and adopts a modified
final rule as described below in the section-by-section analysis.
Comments Related to 2015 HMDA Final Rule
The Bureau received several comments on the proposal concerning the
2015 HMDA Final Rule. These comments were primarily from small
financial institutions. Commenters expressed concern that the data
points added to Regulation C in the 2015 HMDA Final Rule burdened
financial institutions and, because of this burden, the commenters
encouraged the Bureau to reduce the HMDA data fields to only
statutorily required fields. Commenters also requested that the Bureau
increase the thresholds for being a HMDA reporter to a higher limit
that would exempt more creditors from HMDA. The Bureau did not propose
changes to Regulation C in this rulemaking. The Bureau considered these
comments but does not believe that the comments are relevant to the
2017 ECOA Proposal and do not provide a basis to change the approach
proposed by the Bureau in the 2017 ECOA Proposal. The issues raised by
these comments were considered as part of the rulemaking to revise
Regulation C and addressed in the 2015 HMDA Final Rule, and the Bureau
has not reassessed those issues as part of this rulemaking, which
concerns only issues relating to the alignment of collection of certain
information about applicants under Regulation B and Regulation C and
the status and use of the URLA. With respect to the open-end line of
credit threshold for HMDA reporting, the Bureau adopted amendments to
Regulation C that temporarily increases the open-end line of credit
threshold to 500 until January 1, 2020.\23\ This temporary increase in
the open-end threshold will provide time for the Bureau to consider
whether to initiate another rulemaking to address the appropriate level
for the open-end threshold for data collected beginning January 1,
2020.
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\23\ 82 FR 43088, 43093-43096 (Sept. 13, 2017); see also id. at
43132, 43145 (Sec. Sec. 1003.2(g)(1)(v)(B), (g)(2)(ii)(B), and
1003.3(c)(12)).
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Comments Related to Other Changes to Regulation B
Some commenters proposed other changes to Regulation B unrelated to
alignment with Regulation C or applicant demographic information
collection for mortgage applicants. These proposed changes included
establishing applicant demographic information collection, reporting,
and public disclosure requirements for automobile creditors similar to
HMDA, requiring adverse action notices in certain situations involving
counteroffers, and adding record-keeping and applicant demographic
information collection requirements for brokers and arrangers of
credit. The Bureau did not propose these changes to Regulation B. The
Bureau does not believe that these comments are relevant to the 2017
ECOA Proposal and do not provide a basis to change the approach
proposed by the Bureau in the 2017 ECOA Proposal.
IV. Legal Authority
The Bureau is issuing this final rule pursuant to its authority
under section 703 of ECOA, as amended by section 1085 of the Dodd-Frank
Act.\24\ ECOA authorizes the Bureau to issue regulations to carry out
the purposes of ECOA.\25\ These regulations may contain but are not
limited to such classifications, differentiations, or other provisions,
and may provide for such adjustments and exceptions for any class of
transactions, as in the judgment of the Bureau are necessary or proper
to effectuate the purposes of ECOA, to prevent circumvention or evasion
of ECOA, or to facilitate or substantiate compliance with ECOA.\26\ A
purpose of ECOA is to promote the availability of credit to all
creditworthy applicants without regard to race, color, religion,
national origin, sex, marital status, or age (provided the applicant
has the capacity to contract) or other protected characteristics.\27\
ECOA section 703 serves as a source of authority to establish rules
concerning the taking and evaluation of credit applications, collection
and retention of applicant demographic information concerning the
applicant or co-applicant, use of designated model forms, and
substantive requirements to carry out the purposes of ECOA.
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\24\ 15 U.S.C. 1691b; Public Law 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376, 2083-
84 (2010).
\25\ 15 U.S.C. 1691b(a).
\26\ Id.
\27\ 12 CFR 1002.1(b).
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The Bureau is also issuing this final rule pursuant to its
authority under sections 1022 and 1061 of the Dodd-Frank Act. Under
Dodd-Frank Act section 1022(b)(1), the Bureau has authority to
prescribe rules as may be necessary or appropriate to enable the Bureau
to administer and carry out the purposes and objectives of the Federal
consumer financial laws and to prevent evasions thereof.\28\ Section
1061 of the Dodd-Frank Act transferred to the Bureau consumer financial
protection functions previously vested in certain other Federal
agencies, including the authority to prescribe rules or issue orders or
guidelines pursuant to any Federal consumer financial law and perform
appropriate functions to promulgate and review such rules,
[[Page 45684]]
orders, and guidelines.\29\ Both ECOA and title X of the Dodd-Frank Act
are consumer financial laws.\30\ Accordingly, the Bureau has authority
to issue regulations to administer ECOA.
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\28\ Public Law 111-203, 124 Stat. 1375, 1980 (2010) (codified
at 12 U.S.C. 5512(b)(1)).
\29\ Public Law 111-203, 124 Stat. 1375, 2035-39 (2010)
(codified at 12 U.S.C. 5581).
\30\ 12 U.S.C. 5481(12), (14).
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V. Section-by-Section Analysis
Section 1002.5 Rules Concerning Requests for Information
5(a) General Rules
Section 1002.5 provides rules concerning requests for information.
In general, Sec. 1002.5(b) prohibits a creditor from inquiring about
protected applicant-characteristic information in connection with a
credit transaction, except under certain circumstances. The Bureau
proposed to amend Sec. 1002.5(a)(4) to authorize creditors to collect
such information under certain additional circumstances. In addition,
the Bureau proposed to add commentary for Sec. 1002.5(a)(4) to provide
guidance and proposed amendments to comment 5(a)(2)-2 to make
conforming changes and further align Regulation B and revised
Regulation C.
5(a)(4) Other Permissible Collection of Information
Section 1002.5(a)(2) provides that, notwithstanding the limitations
in Sec. 1002.5(b) through (d) on collecting protected applicant-
characteristic information and other applicant information, a creditor
shall request information for monitoring purposes as required by Sec.
1002.13. Section 1002.5(a)(2) further provides that a creditor may
obtain information required by a regulation, order, or agreement issued
by, or entered into with, a court or an enforcement agency to monitor
or enforce compliance with ECOA, Regulation B, or other Federal or
State statutes and regulations. However, Sec. 1002.5(a)(2) does not
authorize collection of information beyond what is required by law. The
Bureau proposed to add Sec. 1002.5(a)(4) to authorize a creditor to
obtain information in certain additional specified circumstances other
than as described in Sec. 1002.5(a)(2). Proposed Sec. 1002.5(a)(4)(i)
and (ii) would permit a creditor that is a financial institution under
revised Regulation C Sec. 1003.2(g) to collect demographic information
of an applicant for a closed-end mortgage loan or an open-end line of
credit that is an excluded transaction under revised Regulation C Sec.
1003.3(c)(11) or Sec. 1003.3(c)(12) if it submits HMDA data concerning
those applications and loans or if it submitted HMDA data concerning
closed-end mortgage loans or open-end lines of credit in any of the
preceding five calendar years.\31\
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\31\ The Bureau recently amended Regulation C to explicitly
permit optional reporting of closed-end mortgage loans and open-end
lines of credit even if a financial institution does not meet the
applicable loan volume threshold. 82 FR 43088, 43100-43102 (Sept.
13, 2017); see also id. at 43132 (Sec. 1003.3(c)(11) and (12)).
Regulation B Sec. 1002.5(a)(4)(i) and (ii) as finalized in this
rule correspond to those provisions in revised Regulation C and
permit the collection of applicant demographic information necessary
to facilitate that optional reporting. Other circumstances
permitting voluntary collection of applicant demographic information
finalized in this rule do not correspond to provisions in Regulation
C addressing optional reporting.
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Proposed Sec. 1002.5(a)(4)(iii) would permit a creditor that falls
below both of the revised Regulation C loan-volume thresholds to
continue to collect applicant demographic information for five calendar
years after first becoming exempt from HMDA reporting. Proposed Sec.
1002.5(a)(4)(iv) would permit a creditor that exceeds a revised
Regulation C loan-volume threshold in the first year of a two-year
threshold period to collect, in the second year, applicant demographic
information for a loan that would otherwise be a covered loan under
Regulation C. For the reasons provided below, the Bureau is adopting
Sec. 1002.5(a)(4)(i) through (iv) as proposed. In addition, the Bureau
is adopting new Sec. 1002.5(a)(4)(v) and (vi) in response to comments,
as discussed below.
The Bureau solicited comment on permitting the collection of
applicant demographic information in the circumstances described in
proposed Sec. 1002.5(a)(4), and, in particular, regarding the proposed
five-year time frame, and whether there are other specific, narrowly
tailored circumstances not described in Sec. 1002.5(a)(2) or proposed
Sec. 1002.5(a)(4) under which a creditor would benefit from being able
to collect applicant demographic information for mortgage loan
applicants. A large number of industry commenters supported proposed
Sec. 1002.5(a)(4) and the five-year timeframe for Sec.
1002.5(a)(4)(i), (ii), and (iii). Commenters noted that being able to
collect applicant demographic data when not required by HMDA would
facilitate better data collection procedures, aid in retaining system
and organizational knowledge, help prepare for reporting data in
subsequent years, and help creditors transition to the 2016 URLA.
Commenters noted that the five-year timeframe for Sec.
1002.5(a)(4)(i), (ii), and (iii) was realistic and would provide enough
time to allow institutions to keep their systems updated, but not so
long that it would be unlikely the institution would become a HMDA
reporter again.
One commenter requested clarification that the voluntary collection
under proposed Sec. 1002.5(a)(4) was truly voluntary and not a new
compliance requirement. Proposed Sec. 1002.5(a)(4) provides
authorization to collect applicant demographic information, but does
not require collection in the circumstances described. As discussed
below, though, a creditor must comply with the record retention
requirements of Sec. 1002.12 if it chooses to take advantage of the
authorization in Sec. 1002.5(a)(4). The Bureau also proposed comment
5(a)(4)-1 to provide guidance on proposed Sec. 1002.5(a)(4) and to
highlight the voluntary nature of the rule. The Bureau is finalizing
this comment as proposed. Comment 5(a)(4)-1 provides that information
regarding ethnicity, race, and sex that is not required to be collected
pursuant to Regulation C may nevertheless be collected under the
circumstances set forth in Sec. 1002.5(a)(4) without violating Sec.
1002.5(b). It also provides that the information must be retained
pursuant to the requirements of Sec. 1002.12.
Two industry commenters proposed two alternative voluntary
collection authorizations that would replace proposed Sec.
1002.5(a)(4). One alternative would permit collection of applicant
demographic information for any loan secured by an applicant's dwelling
with no timeframe restriction. The other alternative would permit
collection of applicant demographic information for any covered loan
under Regulation C with no timeframe restriction, even if the creditor
was not a financial institution under Regulation C. The Bureau is not
adopting these proposed alternatives. The primary difference between
these proposals and the collection permitted by final Sec.
1002.5(a)(4)(i), (ii), and (iii) would be the removal of the five-year
timeframe. As the Bureau noted in the 2017 ECOA Proposal, without a
time limit such voluntary collection would permit a creditor to collect
protected applicant-characteristic information for a period of time
that is too attenuated from any past Regulation C legal requirement and
associated compliance process. While final Sec. 1002.5(a)(4) provides
a narrow exception to the general limitations in Sec. 1002.5(b)
through (d), these alternative proposals would create a much broader
exception to the general limitations on collecting such information in
Regulation B. The Bureau believes that such a broad exception could
[[Page 45685]]
significantly alter the limitations and would not be appropriate
without further rulemaking and consideration.
Industry commenters proposed two additional, narrowly tailored
exceptions that the Bureau is substantially adopting. One industry
commenter proposed permitting collection for dwelling-secured loans
made primarily for a business or commercial purpose that might be
covered loans, regardless of whether or not they are for the purpose of
home purchase, refinancing, or home improvement and therefore
reportable under revised Regulation C. Under revised Regulation C,
dwelling-secured loans made primarily for a business or commercial
purpose are only required to be reported if they meet the definition of
a home purchase, refinancing, or home improvement loan.\32\ In
contrast, dwelling-secured loans that are not made primarily for a
business or commercial purpose are generally required to be reported
even if they do not meet the definition of a home purchase,
refinancing, or home improvement loan.\33\ The Bureau believes that
permitting collection of applicant demographic information in this
narrowly tailored circumstance may be beneficial for some financial
institutions because it would allow them to collect applicant
demographic information early in the collection process, when they have
determined that the loan would be dwelling secured and primarily for a
business or commercial purpose but may not yet have determined whether
it meets the definition of a home purchase loan, refinancing, or home
improvement loan under revised Regulation C. Collection of applicant
demographic information at that point in the application process may
allow for more consistent collection and may be easier to integrate
into the application process when compared with collection after HMDA
coverage has been determined. The permitted collection may also
alleviate concerns about violating Sec. 1002.5(b) if a financial
institution collects applicant demographic information for a particular
dwelling-secured loan made primarily for a business or commercial
purpose, based on the financial institution's belief that it is a home
purchase loan, a refinancing, or a home improvement loan, but the
financial institution later discovers that this belief was mistaken,
and therefore collection of applicant demographic information was not
required under Regulation C. The Bureau is adopting Sec.
1002.5(a)(4)(v) to address the commenter's suggestion. Section
1002.5(a)(4)(v) permits a creditor that is a financial institution
under revised Regulation C Sec. 1003.2(g) or that submitted HMDA data
for any of the preceding five calendar years but is not currently a
financial institution under revised Regulation C Sec. 1003.2(g) to
collect information regarding the ethnicity, race, and sex of an
applicant for a loan that would otherwise be a covered loan under
revised Regulation C Sec. 1003.2(e) if not excluded by revised
Regulation C Sec. 1003.3(c)(10).
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\32\ See revised Regulation C Sec. 1003.3(c)(10). 80 FR 66128,
66139, and 66169 (Oct. 28, 2015).
\33\ See revised Regulation C Sec. 1003.2(e). 80 FR 66128, 80
FR 66140, and 66144 (Oct. 28, 2015).
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One industry commenter also noted that the 2016 URLA includes a
form for the collection of applicant demographic information for
additional borrowers and does not necessarily limit the collection to
the applicant and the first co-applicant, even though Regulation C
requires financial institutions to provide the ethnicity, race and sex
information only for the applicant and first co-applicant.\34\ The
commenter suggested that the Bureau revise Sec. 1002.5(b) to permit
collection of demographic information for any additional co-applicants
using the 2016 URLA. As discussed below in the section-by-section
analysis for Sec. 1002.13, the Bureau is amending Sec. 1002.13(b) to
permit, but not require, creditors to collect the information set forth
in Sec. 1002.13(a) from a second or additional co-applicant. With the
introduction of the 2016 URLA the Bureau believes that permitting
collection of applicant demographic information in this narrowly
tailored circumstance may be beneficial for some financial institutions
because it would allow them to use more easily standard forms for
collection of applicant demographic information without identifying at
the time of collection which applicants are the primary and first co-
applicant. The Bureau is adopting Sec. 1002.5(a)(4)(vi) to address the
commenter's suggestion by clarifying that the collection of applicant
demographic information for additional borrowers is permitted.
Accordingly, Sec. 1002.5(a)(4)(vi) permits a creditor that is
collecting information regarding the ethnicity, race, and sex of an
applicant or first co-applicant to collect information regarding the
ethnicity, race, and sex of a second or additional co-applicant for a
covered loan under Regulation C Sec. 1003.2(e), or for a loan
described in paragraphs (a)(4)(i) through (v). Authorization for this
collection, consistent with the other provisions of Sec. 1002.5(a)(4),
is not limited to collection using the 2016 URLA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\34\ Fannie Mae, ``Uniform Residential Loan Application,''
https://www.fanniemae.com/singlefamily/uniform-residential-loan-application# (last visited Sept. 6, 2017).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Having considered the comments received and for the reasons
discussed above, the Bureau is finalizing Sec. 1002.5(a)(4)(i) through
(iv) generally as proposed with minor wording changes for clarity,
finalizing new Sec. 1002.5(a)(4)(v) and (vi), and finalizing the
conforming amendments to comment 5(a)(2)-2 and new comment 5(a)(4)-1 as
proposed. The Bureau believes that these provisions further the
purposes of ECOA by easing overall burden on creditors and improving
the quality of the data that is used to promote the availability of
credit to all creditworthy applicants. The Bureau also believes that
permitting creditors to collect certain protected applicant-
characteristic information in these circumstances provides a narrow
exception to the general limitations in Sec. 1002.5(b) through (d)
respects the purposes of those prohibitions.
Section 1002.12 Record Retention
Section 1002.12 provides rules concerning permissible and required
record retention. In light of proposed Sec. 1002.5(a)(4), the Bureau
also proposed to amend Sec. 1002.12(b)(1)(i) to require retention of
certain protected applicant-characteristic information obtained
pursuant to proposed Sec. 1002.5(a)(4).
12(b) Preservation of Records
12(b)(1) Applications
12(b)(1)(i)
Section 1002.12(b)(1) provides that a creditor must retain certain
records for 25 months, or 12 months for business credit.\35\ Regulation
B Sec. 1002.2(g) defines business credit to mean, with certain
exceptions, extensions of credit primarily for business or commercial
purposes. Under Sec. 1002.12(b)(1)(i), these records include any
information required to be obtained concerning characteristics of
credit applicants to monitor compliance with ECOA and Regulation B or
other similar law. The Bureau proposed to amend Sec. 1002.12(b)(1)(i)
to include within its preservation requirements any information
obtained pursuant to Sec. 1002.5(a)(4). The Bureau also proposed to
amend comment 12(b)-2 to require retention of applicant demographic
information obtained pursuant to Sec. 1002.5(a)(4).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\35\ Section 1002.12(b)(1) provides that creditors must retain
records for 12 months for business credit, except as provided in
Sec. 1002.12(b)(5).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Two commenters supported the proposal regarding record retention,
noting that it would facilitate
[[Page 45686]]
monitoring of fair lending laws and serve ECOA's purposes and that it
seemed appropriate given the proposed amendments to Sec. 1002.5(a)(4).
One commenter noted that Regulation B Sec. 1002.12(b)(1) provides a
25-month record retention period for most transactions, but a 12-month
period for business credit transactions, and that the Bureau's proposal
would create a longer retention period for business credit for which a
creditor voluntarily collected applicant demographic information under
proposed Sec. 1002.5(a)(4). The Bureau acknowledges that the preamble
to the proposed rule stated that Sec. 1002.12(b)(1) required retention
of certain records for 25 months and did not acknowledge the different
12 month period for business credit provided for in Sec.
1002.12(b)(1). The Bureau did not intend to extend the record retention
period under Regulation B for business credit transactions through the
proposal and this final rule does not do so. The Bureau is finalizing
the amendments to Sec. 1002.12(b)(1)(i) and comment 12(b)-2 as
proposed.
The Bureau believes that, if a creditor voluntarily collects
applicant demographic information pursuant to Sec. 1002.5(a)(4), the
creditor should be required to maintain those records in the same
manner as it does for protected applicant-characteristic information it
is required to collect. This will allow the information to be available
for monitoring and enforcing compliance with ECOA, Regulation B, and
other Federal or State statutes or regulations. Without a corresponding
record retention requirement, a creditor might collect but not retain
the information, thus preventing the use of the information for these
purposes.
Section 1002.13 Information for Monitoring Purposes
Section 1002.13 sets forth the scope, required information, and
manner for the mandatory collection of certain protected applicant-
characteristic information under Regulation B. The Bureau proposed to
amend Sec. 1002.13(a)(1)(i) to provide a creditor flexibility to
collect applicant ethnicity and race information using either aggregate
or disaggregated categories, thereby furthering the purposes of ECOA,
reducing compliance burden, and facilitating use of the 2016 URLA. In
addition, the Bureau proposed several revisions to Sec. 1002.13(b) and
(c) and its commentary to align further the collection requirements of
Regulation B with revised Regulation C.
13(a) Information To Be Requested
13(a)(1)
13(a)(1)(i)
Section 1002.13(a) sets forth certain protected applicant-
characteristic information a creditor must collect for applications on
certain dwelling-secured loans. Current Sec. 1002.13(a)(1) requires
that creditors collect information regarding the applicant's ethnicity
and race using two aggregate ethnicity categories (Hispanic or Latino
and Not Hispanic or Latino) and five aggregate race categories
(American Indian or Alaska Native, Asian, Black or African American,
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander, and White). Proposed Sec.
1002.13(a)(1)(i) provided that a creditor must collect the applicant's
information using either the aggregate ethnicity and race categories
currently required or the ethnicity and race categories and
subcategories set forth in the revised Regulation C appendix, which
provide disaggregated ethnicity and race categories. Through this
proposed change, creditors taking applications for loans subject to
Sec. 1002.13(a)(1) but not required to submit HMDA data under
Regulation C would have the option of either maintaining their current
collection practices or transitioning to the revised Regulation C
collection practices and the 2016 URLA. The Bureau also proposed
comments 13(a)-7 and 13(a)-8 to provide that a creditor that collects
applicant information in compliance with the revised Regulation C
appendix will be acting in compliance with Sec. 1002.13 concerning the
collection of an applicant's ethnicity, race, and sex information and
to clarify that a creditor may choose on an application-by-application
basis whether to collect aggregate or disaggregated information. For
the reasons provided below, the Bureau is adopting Sec. 1002.13(a) and
comments 13(a)-7 and 13(a)-8 as proposed.
The Bureau solicited comment on its proposal to allow creditors to
collect applicant race and ethnicity information using, at the
creditor's option, either aggregate or disaggregated categories. A
large number of industry commenters supported the proposed amendments
to Sec. 1002.13(a)(1)(i). Many of these commenters stated that the
proposal would simplify the collection process and reduce regulatory
burden by ensuring that creditors are not subject to differing
collection requirements under Regulation B and Regulation C. Commenters
also expressed the view that the proposal would ease compliance burden
because it would provide creditors the flexibility to use the method
most suitable for them. Commenters also noted that it would facilitate
use of the 2016 URLA. One industry commenter supporting the proposal
stated that mandating disaggregated collection for all creditors would
be unduly burdensome.
A number of commenters recommended alternative approaches to
proposed Sec. 1002.13(a)(1)(i). Two industry groups suggested that the
Bureau remove Sec. 1002.13 altogether. One of these commenters stated
that the collection of applicant demographic information is duplicative
of Regulation C and that removing this requirement in Regulation B
would reduce burden. The other commenter asserted that collection of
applicant demographic information requires significant time and
resources for Regulation B-only creditors and that the information is
virtually never used.
On the other hand, consumer advocacy groups and an industry service
provider suggested that creditors be required to collect disaggregated
ethnicity and race information after a multi-year phase in period. The
consumer advocacy groups stated that mandatory disaggregated collection
would ensure uniform data collection practices and facilitate fair
lending analysis, including identifying potential discrimination
against racial and ethnic subgroups. The consumer advocacy groups
further expressed the view that mandatory disaggregated collection
would prepare lenders to submit HMDA data in the future should they
cross a reporting threshold and that the burden of mandatory
disaggregated collection would not be significant because the 2016 URLA
makes it easy to record these categories. An industry service provider
also supported a uniform standard based on the requirements in revised
Regulation C in order to reduce the costs of supporting dual collection
methods. Similarly, an industry commenter stated that the collection
methods used in Regulation B and Regulation C should match.
The Bureau is not adopting any of the alternatives suggested by
commenters. Although the information collected under Sec. 1002.13 and
Regulation C overlap, in part, as discussed in the 2017 ECOA Proposal,
regulators will rely on applicant demographic information collected
under Sec. 1002.13 to supervise and enforce fair lending laws,
including for a substantial number of creditors that will not be
required to report under revised Regulation C.\36\
[[Page 45687]]
Thus, the Bureau concludes that retaining Sec. 1002.13 serves the
purposes of ECOA to promote the availability of credit to all
creditworthy applicants without regard to protected characteristics.
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\36\ 82 FR 16307, 16313, and 16317-18 (Apr. 4, 2017).
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On the other hand, the Bureau believes that requiring disaggregated
collection for Regulation B-only creditors would impose additional
burden on creditors without significant benefits. Requiring
disaggregated collection, even after a multi-year phase in period,
would add complexity and burden to an already complex timeline that
includes implementation of the 2015 HMDA Final Rule and transition to
the 2016 URLA. As further discussed in the Section 1022(b) analysis
below, the Bureau believes that the additional burden would have few
benefits. The incremental benefits of this alternative are also likely
to be low because many creditors will collect disaggregated categories
under Regulation B in any case, either because they are required to do
so under revised Regulation C or as part of the transition to the 2016
URLA. The Bureau is therefore not requiring the collection of
disaggregated categories for Regulation B-only creditors. The Bureau
may reevaluate the need for mandatory disaggregated collection under
Sec. 1002.13 after implementation of the 2015 HMDA Final Rule and
transition to the 2016 URLA, when more information is available on
creditor collection practices. If it appears that action is warranted,
the Bureau will engage in further rulemaking as appropriate.
Two industry commenters, while supportive of the flexibility
provided in the 2017 ECOA Proposal, sought clarification on how
aggregate and disaggregated data will be evaluated against one another,
including how aggregate information collected under Regulation B would
be compared to disaggregated information collected under revised
Regulation C. The commenters expressed concern that the optionality
could result in dissimilar demographic reporting and potentially
greater compliance burden for creditors who choose to continue to
collect aggregate information. The Bureau does not believe that
flexibility will result in additional burden and reiterates that Sec.
1002.13(a)(1)(i) would permit a Regulation B-only creditor to maintain
its existing practices and collect aggregate race and ethnicity
categories. Moreover, because both methods use the same aggregate
categories, a creditor can compare information collected under either
method by rolling up the disaggregated subcategories into their
corresponding aggregate categories. The Bureau, however, declines to
set forth specific instructions on how a data user should evaluate the
information collected pursuant to Sec. 1002.13 or Regulation C as the
Bureau only sought comment on data collection practices under Sec.
1002.13. Having considered the comments received and for the reasons
discussed above, the Bureau is finalizing Sec. 1002.13(a)(1)(i) as
proposed.
An industry service provider asked the Bureau to provide guidance
regarding whether the term ``natural person'' as used in Regulation B
and Regulation C includes living trusts or sole proprietorships.
Because Regulation B and Regulation C do not provide inconsistent
instructions on the scope of the term ``natural person,'' the Bureau
declines to provide additional guidance on this issue within this final
rule, which, as related to Sec. 1002.13, is limited to modifications
that harmonize the collection requirements of Regulation B and
Regulation C.
The Bureau proposed revised comment 13(a)-7 to provide that, for
applications subject to Sec. 1002.13(a)(1), a creditor that collects
information about the ethnicity, race, and sex of an applicant in
compliance with the requirements of the revised Regulation C appendix
will be acting in compliance Sec. 1002.13 concerning the collection of
an applicant's ethnicity, race, and sex information. The Bureau
received one industry comment supporting alignment of the instructions
in Sec. 1002.13 with the revised Regulation C appendix. The commenter
noted that differing instructions may lead to uncertainty and that
Regulation B-only creditors would benefit from the additional
instructions provided in revised Regulation C. No commenters opposed
the proposed comment, and so the Bureau is finalizing comment 13(a)-7
as proposed.
As proposed, comment 13(a)-8 permitted a creditor to choose on an
application-by-application basis whether to collect aggregate
information pursuant to Sec. 1002.13(a)(1)(i)(A) or disaggregated
information pursuant to Sec. 1002.13(a)(1)(i)(B). One industry
commenter generally supported the proposal, noting the flexibility
would reduce compliance burden. Another industry commenter was
concerned about how a creditor would decide which collection method to
use and whether the instruction could have a discriminatory impact.
Various consumer advocacy groups also opposed proposed comment 13(a)-8,
arguing that the instruction could encourage creditors to develop and
maintain haphazard, inaccurate, and inconsistent data collection
methods.
The Bureau is adopting comment 13(a)-8 as proposed. The Bureau
believes that most creditors will voluntarily adopt a consistent
collection method because uniform practices are generally easier and
less costly for creditors to implement. If the Bureau were to require
creditors to adopt a consistent collection method across applications,
the Bureau would also need to issue additional guidance in the official
commentary concerning how often and under what circumstances a creditor
may change its collection method, among other implementation issues.
The Bureau believes that such guidance would add complexity and
compliance burden on creditors without furthering the purposes of ECOA,
and so declines to do so as part of this rulemaking.
The Bureau received several additional comments about topics other
than those raised by the Bureau in the 2017 ECOA Proposal. These
included, for example, a comment supporting the collection of loan
officers' demographic information, a request to collect information on
whether the applicant is divorced, a request for guidance on when
previously gathered applicant demographic information can be used for
new applications, and a request that the Bureau provide a safe harbor
for information collected in 2017. The Bureau did not propose these
changes in the 2017 ECOA Proposal. The Bureau does not believe that
these comments are relevant to the 2017 ECOA Proposal and do not
provide a basis to change the approach proposed by the Bureau in the
2017 ECOA Proposal, which, as related to Sec. 1002.13, is limited to
modifications that harmonize the collection requirements of Regulation
B and Regulation C.
For the reasons discussed above, the Bureau is adopting Sec.
1002.13(a)(1)(i) and comments 13(a)-7 and 13(a)-8 as proposed. The
Bureau believes that creditors should not be subject to differing
collection requirements, and that aligning the requirements of Sec.
1002.13 and revised Regulation C furthers the purposes of ECOA by
facilitating practices that promote the availability of credit to all
creditworthy applicants.
13(b) Obtaining Information
Section 1002.13(b) discusses how creditors may obtain applicant
information required under Sec. 1002.13(a). Among other instructions,
current Sec. 1002.13(b) provides that, if an applicant chooses not to
provide some or all of the requested applicant demographic information,
the creditor must, in certain circumstances, collect
[[Page 45688]]
the information on the basis of visual observation or surname. If a
creditor collects disaggregated race and ethnicity information pursuant
to Sec. 1002.13(a)(1)(i)(B), proposed Sec. 1002.13(b) provided that a
creditor must comply with the restrictions on the collection of an
applicant's ethnicity and race on the basis of visual observation or
surname set forth in the revised Regulation C appendix, which limits
such collection to the aggregate race and ethnicity categories. For the
reasons provided below, the Bureau is adopting the revisions to Sec.
1002.13(b) concerning the collection of ethnicity and race information
on the basis of visual observation or surname as proposed. To further
align the collection requirements of Regulation B and Regulation C, the
Bureau is further amending Sec. 1002.13(b) to permit, but not require,
creditors to collect the information set forth in Sec. 1002.13(a) from
a second or additional co-applicant.
The few commenters who specifically addressed the Bureau's proposed
amendment to Sec. 1002.13(b) generally supported the modification,
noting that it aligned with revised Regulation C and would facilitate
consistent data collection. One commenter argued that the proposed rule
would add complexity, however, as creditors would be required to report
disaggregated information under revised Regulation C, permitted to
collect such information under revised Sec. 1002.13, but prohibited
from collecting disaggregated information if the applicant does not
provide it.
Two commenters opposed the collection of applicant demographic
information on the basis of visual observation or surname under any
circumstances. One commenter stated that extending the requirement to
collect applicant demographic information on the basis of visual
observation or surname to Regulation B-only creditors is outside the
scope of ECOA. The commenters also argued that such collection is often
inaccurate, cannot be relied upon for fair lending analysis, and is
contrary to the purposes of ECOA. In support, one of the commenters
cited a report finding that 10 million Americans change their racial
and ethnic identifications between U.S. Census surveys. The same
commenter also cited a report by health researchers discussing, among
other topics, that observer-selected race, often used for death
certificates, may not match self-selected race. The commenters proposed
that the requirement to collect applicant demographic information on
the basis of visual observation or surname should be eliminated or that
the Bureau provide additional instructions to aid creditors to identify
an applicant's ethnicity and race based on visual observation or
surname.
The Bureau will finalize as proposed the revisions to Sec.
1002.13(b) concerning the collection of an applicant's ethnicity and
race information on the basis of visual observation or surname. The
requirement to collect, in certain circumstances, applicant demographic
information on the basis of visual observation or surname where the
applicant does not provide this information has been a longstanding
requirement of Sec. 1002.13(b). The amendment to Sec. 1002.13(b) in
the 2017 ECOA Proposal would not impose any new obligation on creditors
to collect an applicant's ethnicity and race on the basis of visual
observation or surname but, rather, would limit such collection to the
aggregate ethnicity and race categories, even if the creditor permits
an applicant to self-identify using the disaggregated categories. The
proposed amendment would align Sec. 1002.13 collection of
disaggregated information with the collection requirements of
Regulation C. While the Bureau acknowledges that this limitation on the
collection of applicant demographic information involves some
complexity, the Bureau believes that, on balance, aligning Sec.
1002.13 collection methods with Regulation C will be less complex than
introducing different rules for Sec. 1002.13(b) alone.
The Bureau declines to consider the proposals to eliminate
altogether the requirement to collect applicant demographic information
on the basis of visual observation or surname in Sec. 1002.13 or to
provide further instructions on how to collect such information as both
proposals go beyond the issues on which the Bureau solicited comment.
Indeed, given that Regulation C requires collection of certain
applicant demographic information on the basis of visual observation or
surname, adopting either proposal would undermine the purpose of this
rulemaking by imposing different requirements in Regulation B and
Regulation C.\37\ Moreover, the cited studies conclude only that some
applicants may self-identify as different races over time and that
visual observation of race is not always accurate. Thus, even if the
Bureau were reconsidering its approach to visual observation or surname
collection, which it is not, the Bureau does not believe the evidence
submitted by the commenters demonstrate that collection based on visual
observation or surname do not serve the purposes of ECOA.
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\37\ 80 FR 66128, 66187-88 (Oct. 28, 2015).
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An industry service provider suggested the Bureau standardize the
treatment of co-applicants between Sec. 1002.13 and Regulation C. The
commenter noted that the two rules imposed different requirements where
there are multiple ``applicants,'' stating that while Sec. 1002.13
requires a financial institution to collect information from any
applicant who is a natural person, the revised Regulation C appendix
instructs a financial institution to provide applicant demographic
information for only the applicant and the first co-applicant listed on
the collection form. The industry service provider commented that this
distinction makes data collection more complex and burdensome, and
requested that the Bureau clarify the collection requirements for co-
applicants under Regulation B.
The Bureau acknowledges that the requirement to collect or provide
applicant demographic information from co-applicants differs between
Sec. 1002.13 and revised Regulation C. The Bureau concludes that these
differences may create additional burden and complexity for creditors,
who may need to modify their practices concerning co-applicant
collection depending on whether collection is required under both
Regulation B and revised Regulation C or only under revised Regulation
C. The Bureau is therefore revising Sec. 1002.13(b) to clarify that a
creditor is permitted, but is not required, to collect the information
set forth in Sec. 1002.13(a) from a second or additional co-applicant.
The Bureau believes this clarification will simplify collection
practices and reduce compliance burden by aligning Regulation B and
Regulation C. The clarification will also allow Regulation B-only
creditors to maintain their existing practices under Sec. 1002.13 if
so desired. By providing flexibility and reducing burden, the Bureau
believes this modification will further the purposes of ECOA by
facilitating practices that promote the availability of credit to all
creditworthy applicants. As discussed above in the section-by-section
analysis for Sec. 1002.5(a)(4), the Bureau is also adopting new Sec.
1002.5(a)(4)(vi) to permit collection of applicant demographic
information for second or additional co-applicants in certain
circumstances, thereby providing additional optionality for creditors
to maintain consistent collection practices under Regulation B and
Regulation C.
[[Page 45689]]
For the reasons discussed above, the Bureau is finalizing as
proposed the revisions to Sec. 1002.13(b) concerning the collection of
ethnicity and race information on the basis of visual observation or
surname. To facilitate compliance with Regulation B and further align
the collection requirements of Regulations B and Regulation C, the
Bureau is also amending Sec. 1002.13(b) to permit, but not require,
creditors to collect the information set forth in Sec. 1002.13(a) from
a second or additional co-applicant.
Current comment 13(b)-1 provides guidance on the forms and
collection methods a creditor may use to collect applicant information
under Sec. 1002.13(a). In the 2017 ECOA Proposal, the Bureau proposed
to amend comment 13(b)-1 to reference the data collection model forms
the Bureau proposed to provide in the Regulation B appendix. The Bureau
also proposed to revise comment 13(b)-1 to reiterate that when a
creditor collects only aggregate ethnicity and race information
pursuant to Sec. 1002.13(a)(1)(i)(A), the applicant must be offered
the option to select more than one racial designation. If a creditor
collects applicant information pursuant to Sec. 1002.13(a)(1)(i)(B),
the applicant must be offered the option to select more than one
ethnicity and more than one racial designation. The Bureau received no
comments specifically addressing the revisions to proposed comment
13(b)-1, and so is finalizing it as proposed. Comments related to the
data collection model forms are addressed in the section-by-section
analysis of the Regulation B appendix.
13(c) Disclosure to Applicant(s)
Section 1002.13(c) sets forth disclosures a creditor must provide
to an applicant when collecting the information set forth in Sec.
1002.13(a). Current comment 13(c)-1 provides, among other information,
that the Regulation B appendix contains a sample disclosure. The Bureau
proposed to amend comment 13(c)-1 to reference two data collection
model forms the Bureau proposed to provide in the Regulation B
appendix. The Bureau received no comments on proposed comment 13(c)-1,
and so is finalizing comment 13(c)-1 as proposed. Comments related to
the data collection model forms and the 2016 URLA are addressed in the
section-by-section analysis of the Regulation B appendix.
Appendix B to Part 1002--Model Application Forms
Regulations B and C both contain an appendix B that provides model
forms for use when collecting applicant demographic information
required under the regulations. The current Regulation B appendix
includes the 2004 URLA as a model form. The current and revised
Regulation C appendix include instructions and a data collection model
form for collecting applicant demographic information.
The current Regulation B appendix includes five model forms, each
designated for use in a particular type of consumer credit transaction.
The fifth model form, the 2004 URLA, is described in the Regulation B
appendix as appropriate for residential mortgage transactions and
contains a model disclosure for use in complying with current Sec.
1002.13. While use of the model forms is optional, if a creditor uses
the appropriate model form, or modifies a form in accordance with the
instructions provided in the Regulation B appendix, that creditor is
deemed to be acting in compliance with Sec. 1002.5(b) through (d).\38\
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\38\ Appendix B to part 1002, at paragraphs 1, 3.
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As discussed above, on September 23, 2016, the Bureau issued the
Bureau Approval Notice, pursuant to section 706(e) of ECOA.\39\ In the
Bureau Approval Notice, the Bureau determined that, while a creditor is
not required to use the 2016 URLA, a creditor that uses the form
without any modification that would violate Sec. 1002.5(b) through (d)
would act in compliance with Sec. 1002.5(b) through (d).\40\ Unlike
prior versions of the URLA, the 2016 URLA permits an applicant to
select disaggregated ethnicity and race categories, as required under
revised Regulation C.
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\39\ 81 FR 66930 (Sept. 23, 2016).
\40\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Given the issuance of the Bureau Approval Notice and the
modifications to Sec. 1002.13, the Bureau proposed several revisions
to the Regulation B appendix as discussed below.
Model Forms for Complying With Section 1002.13(a)(1)(i)
The Bureau proposed to revise the Regulation B appendix to provide
two additional model forms for use in complying with Sec. 1002.13.
First, for creditors collecting disaggregated applicant demographic
information pursuant to Sec. 1002.13(a)(1)(i)(B) and (ii), the Bureau
proposed to amend the Regulation B appendix to cross-reference the data
collection model form included in the revised Regulation C appendix.
Second, for creditors collecting aggregate applicant demographic
information pursuant to Sec. 1002.13(a)(1)(i)(A) and (ii), the Bureau
proposed to amend the Regulation B appendix to add a model form. The
proposed model form substantially mirrors section X in the 2004 URLA
and the data collection model form contained in the current Regulation
C appendix. The Bureau received no comments opposing and one comment
supporting the proposed amendments and so is finalizing the Regulation
B appendix to provide alternative model forms as proposed.
In the 2017 ECOA Proposal, the Bureau also considered but did not
propose the alternative of including the 2016 URLA as a model form in
the Regulation B appendix.\41\ No commenters opposed the decision not
to include the 2016 URLA as a model form in the Regulation B appendix,
and several commenters noted that the proposed rule would encourage use
and transition to the 2016 URLA. Accordingly, the Bureau is finalizing
the Regulation B appendix as proposed, without including the 2016 URLA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\41\ 82 FR 16307, 16315 (Apr. 4, 2017).
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One industry commenter requested clarification that use of the 2016
URLA complies with Regulation B. The Bureau believes that no additional
approval is necessary: The Bureau Approval Notice provides that a
creditor that uses the 2016 URLA without any modification that would
violate Sec. 1002.5(b) through (d) acts in compliance with Sec.
1002.5(b) through (d).\42\ Similarly, because the substance and form of
section 7 of the 2016 URLA is substantially similar to the form the
Bureau provides as a model form in Regulation C, the 2016 URLA may be
used in complying with Sec. 1002.13.
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\42\ 81 FR 66930 (Sept. 23, 2016).
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Removal of the 2004 URLA as a Model Form
The current Regulation B appendix includes the 2004 URLA as a model
form for use in complying with Sec. 1002.13. In light of the revisions
to Sec. 1002.13(a)(1)(i), the amendment to the Regulation B appendix
to provide two additional model forms, and the fact that the Bureau
separately approved use of the 2016 URLA in the Bureau Approval Notice,
the Bureau proposed to remove the 2004 URLA as a model form in
Regulation B. The Bureau proposed that the 2004 URLA be removed on the
cutover date the Enterprises designate for use of the 2016 URLA or
January 1, 2022, whichever comes first. The Bureau received no comments
on the proposal to remove the 2004 URLA or the timing of the removal
and so is finalizing removal of the 2004 URLA as proposed. The date
[[Page 45690]]
for removal of the 2004 URLA from the Regulation B appendix is
discussed further in the Effective Date section below.
Removal of the Official Commentary to Appendix B
Commentary to the Regulation B appendix includes a discussion of
two forms created by the Enterprises that are no longer in use: A 1992
version of the URLA and a 1986 home-improvement and energy loan
application form. Given that neither of these forms is currently used
by the Enterprises, the Bureau proposed to remove in its entirety the
commentary to the Regulation B appendix. The Bureau received no
comments on its proposal and so is removing the commentary to the
Regulation B appendix in this final rule.
VI. Effective Date
The Bureau proposed an effective date of January 1, 2018, which
aligns with the effective date for the bulk of the revisions to
Regulation C in the 2015 HMDA Final Rule. The effective date of the
2015 HMDA Final Rule applies to covered loans and applications with
respect to which final action is taken beginning on January 1, 2018,
even if the application is received in 2017. One commenter indicated
that the Bureau's proposed effective date for this rule creates
concerns that it does not indicate that the collection of disaggregated
applicant demographic information is permitted for applications
received in 2017 for which final action is taken in 2018. The commenter
noted that the Bureau Approval Notice applied to all applications taken
in 2017 and suggested that the proposed effective date for this rule
sends a mixed message. The Bureau Approval Notice provides that, at any
time from January 1, 2017, through December 31, 2017, a creditor may,
at its option, permit applicants to self-identify using disaggregated
ethnic and racial categories as instructed in revised Regulation C.
During this period, a creditor adopting the practice of permitting
applicants to self-identify using disaggregated ethnic and racial
categories as instructed in the Regulation C appendix is not deemed to
violate Regulation B Sec. 1002.5(b). During this period, a creditor
adopting the practice of permitting applicants to self-identify using
disaggregated ethnic and racial categories as instructed in the
Regulation C appendix is also deemed to be in compliance with
Regulation B Sec. 1002.13(a)(1)(i) even though applicants are asked to
self-identify using categories other than those explicitly provided in
that section. Because the Bureau Approval Notice remains in effect for
all of 2017, the amendments in this rule are not necessary to permit
Regulation B-only creditors or HMDA reporters to collect disaggregated
applicant demographic information for applications taken in 2017; they
are already permitted to do so by the Bureau Approval Notice for any
application for a covered loan under revised Regulation C Sec.
1003.2(g) or any application subject to Sec. 1002.13 for all of 2017.
The Bureau proposed as an effective date for the removal of the
2004 URLA from Regulation B appendix either the cutover date designated
by the Enterprises for the mandatory use of the 2016 URLA or January 1,
2022. The Bureau did not receive any comments on the proposed effective
date for this provision. Because the Enterprises have not announced a
cutover date for the mandatory use of the 2016 URLA, the Bureau is
finalizing January 1, 2022, as the effective date for the removal of
the 2004 URLA from the Regulation B appendix.
The rule is effective on January 1, 2018, except that the amendment
to the Regulation B appendix removing the existing ``Uniform
Residential Loan Application'' form is effective January 1, 2022.
VII. Dodd-Frank Act Section 1022(b) Analysis
A. Overview
In developing the final rule, the Bureau has considered the
potential benefits, costs, and impacts.\43\ In the 2017 ECOA Proposal,
the Bureau set forth a preliminary analysis of these effects, and the
Bureau requested comment and submissions of additional data that could
inform the Bureau's analysis of the benefits, costs, and impacts of the
proposal. The Bureau received some comments on the topic. Comments on
the benefits and costs of the rule are also discussed above in the
section-by-section analysis of the preamble. The Bureau has consulted,
or offered to consult with, the prudential regulators (the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System, the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, the National Credit Union Administration, and the Office
of the Comptroller of the Currency), the Securities and Exchange
Commission, the Department of Justice, the Department of Housing and
Urban Development, the Federal Housing Finance Agency, the Federal
Trade Commission, the Department of Veterans Affairs, the Department of
Agriculture, and the Department of the Treasury, including regarding
consistency with any prudential, market or systematic objectives
administered by such agencies.
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\43\ Specifically, section 1022(b)(2)(A) of the Dodd-Frank Act
calls for the Bureau to consider the potential costs of a regulation
to consumers and covered persons, including the potential reduction
of access by consumers to consumer financial products or services;
the impact on depository institutions and credit unions with $10
billion or less in total assets as described in section 1026 of the
Dodd-Frank Act; and the impact on consumers in rural areas.
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A purpose of ECOA, as implemented by Regulation B, is to promote
the availability of credit to all creditworthy applicants without
regard to protected characteristics. The final rule will make three
substantive changes to Regulation B, along with other clarifications,
minor changes, and technical corrections to align the language of
Regulation B with Regulation C as amended by the 2015 HMDA Final Rule.
The first will give persons who collect and retain race and ethnicity
information in compliance with Regulation B the option of permitting
applicants to self-identify using the disaggregated race and ethnicity
categories required by revised Regulation C. In practice, this will
allow entities that report race and ethnicity in accordance with
revised Regulation C to comply with Regulation B without further
action, while entities that do not report under Regulation C but record
and retain race and ethnicity data under Regulation B will have the
option of recording data either using the existing aggregated
categories or the new disaggregated categories.
The Bureau believes that, absent this change, entities that
currently report race and ethnicity data under Regulation C could
conclude that they have different obligations under Regulation B and
Regulation C once the 2015 HMDA Final Rule goes into effect on January
1, 2018. This would lead to unnecessary burden from collecting both
aggregate and disaggregated data. Industry commenters noted this
potential conflict and expressed their support for the proposal. By
making disaggregated collection an option under Regulation B, entities
who will report race and ethnicity information under revised Regulation
C will also be in compliance with Regulation B with certainty. The
Bureau believes that making collection of disaggregated race and
ethnicity an option for all entities covered by Regulation B will pose
little or no additional burden on those entities who are not HMDA
reporters. The final rule may have some benefits to Regulation B-only
creditors, as the current language of Regulation B would not allow
these entities to use the 2016
[[Page 45691]]
URLA for the purpose of collecting race and ethnicity data, as the 2016
URLA uses the disaggregated race and ethnicity categories set forth in
revised Regulation C and not the specific categories required by
current Regulation B. Thus, the final rule has the added benefit that
it will allow Regulation B-only creditors to use the 2016 URLA as an
instrument to collect race and ethnicity information.
The second substantive change will remove the outdated 2004 URLA as
a model form. The Bureau issued the Bureau Approval Notice under its
authority in section 706(e) of ECOA on September 23, 2016, which
provides that a creditor that uses the 2016 URLA without any
modification that would violate Sec. 1002.5(b) through (d) would act
in compliance with Sec. 1002.5(b) through (d). The Bureau is not
adding the 2016 URLA as a model form in place of the 2004 version.
Instead, the Bureau is providing for two alternative data collection
model forms for the purpose of collecting ethnicity and race
information. The Bureau believes this practice of acknowledging future
versions of the URLA via a Bureau Approval Notice rather than a
revision to Regulation B will reduce the risk that the model form
included in Regulation B will become outdated in the future.
Finally, the Bureau is amending Regulation B and the associated
commentary to allow creditors to collect ethnicity, race, and sex from
mortgage applicants in certain cases where the creditor is not required
to report under HMDA and Regulation C. These circumstances include
when: (1) A creditor that is a financial institution under revised
Regulation C Sec. 1003.2(g), originates a closed-end mortgage loan or
an open-end line of credit that is an excluded transaction under
revised Regulation C Sec. 1003.3(c)(11) or Sec. 1003.3(c)(12), if it
submits HMDA data concerning those applications and loans or if it
submitted HMDA data concerning closed-end mortgage loans or open-end
lines of credit in any of the preceding five calendar years; (2) a
creditor that submitted HMDA data in any of the preceding five calendar
years but is not currently a financial institution under Regulation C
Sec. 1003.2(g), collects demographic information of an applicant for a
loan that would otherwise be a covered loan under Regulation C Sec.
1003.2(e), if not excluded by Regulation C Sec. 1003.3(c)(11) or Sec.
1003.3(c)(12); (3) a creditor that exceeded an applicable loan volume
threshold in the first year of the two-year threshold period provided
in Regulation C Sec. 1003.2(g), Sec. 1003.3(c)(11), or Sec.
1003.3(c)(12), collects, in the second year, demographic information of
an applicant for a loan that would otherwise be a covered loan under
Regulation C Sec. 12 CFR 1003.2(e), if the loan were not excluded by
Regulation C Sec. 1003.3(c)(11) or Sec. 1003.3(c)(12); (4) a creditor
that is a financial institution under Regulation C Sec. 1003.2(g), or
that submitted HMDA data for any of the preceding five calendar years
but is not currently a financial institution under Regulation C Sec.
1003.2(g), collects demographic information of an applicant for a loan
that would otherwise be a covered loan under Regulation C Sec.
1003.2(e) if the loan were not excluded by Regulation C Sec.
1003.3(c)(10); and (5) a creditor that collects demographic information
of a second or additional co-applicant for a covered loan under
Regulation C Sec. 1003.2(e), or for a second or additional co-
applicant for a loan described in amended Sec. 1002.5(a)(4)(i) through
(v). These changes will primarily benefit institutions that may be near
the loan volume reporting threshold, such that they may be required to
report under HMDA and Regulation C in some years and not others, or may
be uncertain about their reporting status. The Bureau believes that
allowing voluntary collection will reduce the burden of compliance with
Regulation C on some entities and provide certainty regarding
Regulation B compliance over time.
B. Potential Benefits and Costs to Consumers and Covered Persons
Providing an Option To Collect Disaggregated Race and Ethnicity for
Regulation B
Relative to current Regulation B following the effective date of
the 2015 HMDA Final Rule, the final rule provides clear benefits to
entities that will be required to collect and report race and ethnicity
data under HMDA. Currently the disaggregated race and ethnicity
categories required by the amendments to Regulation C in the 2015 HMDA
Final Rule, effective January 1, 2018, do not match the categories
specified in current Regulation B. Because of the differences between
the categories, some creditors required to collect and report race and
ethnicity using the disaggregated categories set forth in revised
Regulation C may be uncertain whether additional collection using
aggregated categories would also be required to satisfy current
Regulation B. Complying with both Regulations B and C would require
burdensome and duplicative collection of race and ethnicity data at
both the aggregated and disaggregated level. In practice, the final
rule simply makes clear that the existing collection required under
revised Regulation C is sufficient for compliance with Regulation B.
The final rule may have benefits to consumers, to the extent that
lending entities voluntarily choose to collect disaggregated race and
ethnicity information. As discussed in the Section 1022(b) analysis for
the 2015 HMDA Final Rule, collection of disaggregated race and
ethnicity data can enhance the ability of regulators, researchers and
community groups to conduct fair lending analysis. There are three
reasons, however, that this rule will likely have a limited effect on
fair lending analysis. First, Regulation B-only creditors will not be
required to permit applicants to self-identify using disaggregated
ethnicity and race categories, likely resulting in few creditors
adopting disaggregated ethnicity and race categories. Second, many
Regulation B-only creditors will be exempt from reporting under revised
Regulation C because they originate fewer than 25 closed-end mortgage
loans in each of the two preceding calendar years, which means both
that few consumers would be affected and any disaggregated data would
likely be too sparse for statistical analysis. Finally, demographic
data retained by Regulation B-only creditors is not reported under
Regulation C. Consequently, most oversight and analysis of demographic
data retained by Regulation B-only creditors will be done only by
regulators, whereas researchers and community groups also conduct
analysis of HMDA data reported under Regulation C. The Bureau believes
the final rule will not impose any costs on consumers.
The final rule may have benefits to some Regulation B-only
creditors. Although these entities need not make any changes to their
race and ethnicity collection procedures, they may desire to do so in
the future by adopting the 2016 URLA. The Enterprises have announced
that they will cease accepting older versions of the URLA at a date to
be determined and require firms that sell to the Enterprises to use the
2016 URLA form. Some Regulation B-only creditors sell mortgages to the
Enterprises, and would benefit from being able to use the 2016 URLA.
The Enterprises, not the Bureau, mandate the adoption of the 2016 URLA.
Therefore, the Bureau believes any operational costs from adopting the
2016 URLA are part of the normal course of business and are not a cost
of the final rule.
In addition to the amendment to Regulation B in the proposal, the
Bureau
[[Page 45692]]
considered two alternatives to address the differing race and ethnicity
requirements of Regulation B and revised Regulation C. The Bureau
considered requiring all creditors subject to the collection and
retention requirement of Regulation B to permit applicants to self-
identify using disaggregated race and ethnicity categories. To the
extent that consumers would benefit from disaggregated race and
ethnicity collection, this alternative would provide greater benefits
than the Bureau's proposal. However, of the three limitations to
consumer benefits listed above, only the first (that disaggregated
categories would be optional) is alleviated by requiring the use of
disaggregated race and ethnicity categories under Regulation B. It is
still the case that due to the low volume of mortgages by many affected
entities and the lack of reporting, disaggregated race and ethnicity
data may have limited benefits. Finally, the Bureau believes many
entities will adopt the 2016 URLA as part of the course of business and
thus permit applicants to self-identify using disaggregated race and
ethnicity categories.
At the same time, mandatory use of disaggregated collection of race
and ethnicity categories would impose greater costs on creditors than
the Bureau's proposal, particularly on smaller entities. These costs
include greater operational costs and one-time database upgrades.
Unlike the costs associated with the adoption of the 2016 URLA, these
costs would not otherwise be incurred in the normal course of business.
The Bureau requested comments on both the costs and benefits associated
with this alternative approach.
A consumer advocacy group commenter argued that the Bureau should
adopt the alternative of requiring all persons subject to the
collection and retention requirement of Regulation B to permit
applicants to self-identify using disaggregated race and ethnicity
categories. The commenter disputed the Bureau's assessment that the
potential alternative would impose substantial costs on Regulation B-
only creditors. The commenter argued that the availability of the 2016
URLA would reduce the cost of collecting disaggregated race and
ethnicity information, and advocated for a two-year implementation
period for mandatory disaggregated collection to further reduce the
costs. However, the commenter did not address the Bureau's conclusion,
mentioned in the proposal and again above, that the benefits of
mandatory disaggregated collection are quite limited. A credit union
trade association explicitly opposed the alternative, asserting that
its members would be unduly burdened by mandatory collection of
disaggregated race and ethnicity information. Other commenters did not
directly address this alternative, but several industry commenters
supported the flexibility of the proposal with respect to collection of
disaggregated race and ethnicity information, implicitly opposing
making this collection mandatory.
As discussed above in Part V, the Bureau disagrees with the
consumer advocacy group commenter that there would be little burden to
Regulation B-only creditors from making the collection of disaggregated
race and ethnicity categories mandatory. Even accepting the commenter's
premise, however, the Bureau notes again that it believes the
additional benefits of this alternative to be quite limited because,
among other reasons, many Regulation B-only creditors are likely to
eventually collect disaggregated race and ethnicity data through
adoption of the 2016 URLA. Moreover, the commenter did not address the
limited usefulness of disaggregated race and ethnicity data from
lenders with a very low volume of loan originations. The Bureau
continues to believe that the benefits of this alternative are very
low. Accordingly, the Bureau is not making disaggregated race and
ethnicity categories mandatory for compliance with Regulation B at this
time.
The Bureau also considered eliminating entirely the requirement in
Regulation B to collect and retain certain applicant information. This
alternative would reduce burden to firms that do not report under HMDA.
However, the Bureau believes it may impose costs on consumers. The
prudential regulators confirm that data collected and retained by
entities subject to Regulation B but not Regulation C may be used for
fair lending supervision and enforcement. Institutions subject to
Regulation B but not Regulation C include, for example, institutions
that do not have a branch or home office in a Metropolitan Statistical
Area (MSA), do not meet an applicable asset threshold, or do not meet
an applicable loan volume threshold.
For instance, the 2015 NCUA Call Report and the 2015 Nationwide
Mortgage Licensing System & Registry (NMLS) Mortgage Call Report data
include 489 credit unions and 161 non-depository institutions that
originated at least 25 closed-end mortgages that are not found in the
2015 HMDA data.\44\ In addition, many community banks in rural areas
are already exempt from HMDA reporting because they do not have a
branch or home office in an MSA.\45\ Demographic information collected
under Regulation B by those institutions with larger loan volumes may
be used in statistical analysis that supports fair lending supervision
and enforcement. Removing the Regulation B requirement altogether would
make detection of any discrimination by these entities more difficult,
with potentially large costs to consumers where such discrimination
exists. Even for institutions with very small volumes of originations
that may not be subject to HMDA reporting because they do not meet an
applicable loan volume threshold, the retained information may be
useful for comparative file reviews. In 2015, there were 1,178
institutions that reported HMDA data but had fewer than 25 originations
and therefore would likely be exempt under the 2015 HMDA Final Rule if
they continue to originate loans at a similar volume. Although the loan
volumes of most of these institutions would be too sparse for
statistical analysis, the ability to conduct comparative file reviews
using data retained under Regulation B has some benefit.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\44\ The criteria for being a financial institution and
reporting transactions under HMDA are different in some ways from
the criteria for reporting under the NMLS Mortgage Call Report and
reporting transactions under it. It is possible that the NMLS omits
some non-depository institutions that originated at least 25 closed-
end mortgages, did not report HMDA data, and are subject to
Regulation B. Some or all of these institutions may also not have
been required to report HMDA data.
\45\ The Bureau does not have an estimate of the number of rural
community banks that are currently exempt from HMDA reporting and
originate at least 25 loans per year. The FFIEC call report for
banks does not report originations for depository institutions that
do not report to HMDA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A small financial institution commenter advocated for eliminating
the Regulation B requirement to collect and retain race and ethnicity
information. The commenter asserted the resulting data are never used
by regulators, while the collection and retention imposes a substantial
burden. A credit union trade association commenter also argued that the
Bureau should remove the requirement, asserting that removing it would
reduce the regulatory burden on its members.
The Bureau acknowledges that the collection and retention
requirement of Regulation B imposes some burden on financial
institutions. As noted above, the Bureau believes that consumers could
suffer substantial harm if the requirement were removed. Although it
may be true in the particular case of the community bank commenter, the
Bureau believes it is not the case that
[[Page 45693]]
these data are never used by regulators. Both the Bureau's
consultations with the prudential regulators and its own experience in
fair lending enforcement indicate that these data are used.
Accordingly, the Bureau is not removing the Regulation B requirement to
collect and retain race and ethnicity information.
Model Forms for Collecting Race and Ethnicity Data
The Bureau believes that the provision to change the model forms
for collecting race and ethnicity data will have modest benefits to
firms collecting these data, by providing updated model forms, and
reducing confusion regarding the outdated 2004 URLA. The final rule
does not impose any new costs on firms, nor does the Bureau believe
that consumers will experience any cost or benefit from the provision.
The Bureau requested comment regarding the costs and benefits
associated with this provision. Industry commenters supported the
change, with several confirming the potential benefits noted above.
Allowing Voluntary Collection of Applicant Information
Regarding the provision to allow certain creditors to voluntarily
collect demographic information, the Bureau believes the financial
institutions that will most likely exercise such options will be low-
volume, low-complexity institutions that have made a one-time
investment in HMDA collection and reporting and would like to utilize
that collection process already in place. The Bureau believes the final
rule will provide modest benefits to such institutions, by saving on
one-time adjustment costs required to shift in and out of collection.
The Bureau expects that institutions will only exercise this option if
voluntary collection provides a net benefit. The Bureau does not
believe that consumers will experience any costs or benefits from this
provision except to the extent that financial institutions achieve cost
savings and pass any such cost savings on to their customers.
The Bureau requested comment regarding the costs and benefits
associated with this provision. The Bureau also requested data on the
number of firms that might be interested in voluntary collection under
this provision. No commenters provided such data.
C. Impact on Depository Institutions and Credit Unions With $10 Billion
or Less in Assets, as Described in Dodd-Frank Section 1026
The Bureau believes that depository institutions and credit unions
with $10 billion or less in assets will not be differentially affected
by the substantive amendments. The primary benefit to lenders from the
final rule is the reduced uncertainty and compliance burden from
allowing the disaggregated race and ethnicity information collected
under Regulation C to be used to comply with Regulation B. Both certain
depository institutions and credit unions with less than $10 billion in
assets and covered persons with more than $10 billion in assets
currently report data under HMDA and thus will receive these benefits.
The benefits may be somewhat larger for depository institutions and
credit unions with less than $10 billion in assets because the relative
costs of duplicative collection will be greater for these entities.
D. Impact on Access to Credit
The Bureau does not believe that there will be an adverse impact on
access to credit resulting from any of the provisions of the final
rule.
E. Impact on Consumers in Rural Areas
The Bureau believes that rural areas might benefit from the
provision to allow collection of disaggregated race and ethnicity
information more than urban areas. One of the exceptions to the
reporting requirements under HMDA is for entities that do not have a
branch or home office located in an MSA. Such entities likely serve
primarily customers in rural areas. To the extent that the provision
benefits firms and consumers, consumers in rural areas will see the
largest benefits.
VIII. Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), as amended by the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996, requires each
agency to consider the potential impact of its regulations on small
entities, including small business, small governmental units, and small
nonprofit organizations. The RFA defines a ``small business'' as a
business that meets the size standard developed by the Small Business
Administration pursuant to the Small Business Act.
The RFA generally requires an agency to conduct an initial
regulatory flexibility analysis (IRFA) and a final regulatory
flexibility analysis (FRFA) of any rule subject to notice-and-comment
rulemaking requirements, unless the agency certifies that the rule will
not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities. The Bureau also is subject to certain additional procedures
under RFA involving the convening of a panel to consult with small
business representatives prior to proposing a rule for which an IRFA is
required.
On March 24, 2017, the Bureau issued the 2017 ECOA Proposal on its
Web site. The Bureau concluded that the proposal, if adopted, would not
have a significant economic impact on any small entities and that an
IRFA was therefore not required. The Bureau requested comment on the
analysis under the RFA and any relevant data. The Bureau did not
receive any comments on the analysis or data.
This final rule adopts the proposed rule without making changes
that would affect the Bureau's conclusion that the rule will not have a
significant economic impact on any small entities. All methods of
compliance under current law will remain available to covered persons,
including small entities, when these provisions become effective. Thus,
a small entity that is in compliance with current law need not take any
additional action, save those already required by the 2015 HMDA Final
Rule.
Accordingly, the undersigned certifies that this final rule will
not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities.
IX. Paperwork Reduction Act
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA) (44 U.S.C. 3501 et
seq.), Federal agencies are generally required to seek the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB)'s approval for information collection
requirements prior to implementation. The collections of information
related to Regulation B and Regulation C have been previously reviewed
and approved by OMB and assigned OMB Control Number 3170-0013
(Regulation B) and 3170-0008 (Regulation C). Under the PRA, the Bureau
may not conduct or sponsor and, notwithstanding any other provision of
law, a person is not required to respond to an information collection
unless the information collection displays a valid control number
assigned by OMB.
The Bureau has determined that this final rule would not impose any
new or revised information collection requirements (recordkeeping,
reporting or disclosure requirements) on covered entities or members of
the public that would constitute collections of information requiring
OMB approval under the PRA. Although some entities subject to
Regulation B but not Regulation C may choose to voluntarily
[[Page 45694]]
begin collecting disaggregated race and ethnicity information, the
Bureau believes the most likely reason for this to occur is through
adoption of the 2016 URLA, which is not part of the final rule.
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 1002
Aged, Banks, Banking, Civil rights, Consumer protection, Credit,
Credit unions, Discrimination, Fair lending, Marital status
discrimination, National banks, National origin discrimination,
Penalties, Race discrimination, Religious discrimination, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Savings associations, Sex discrimination.
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth above, the Bureau amends Regulation B, 12
CFR part 1002, as set forth below:
PART 1002--EQUAL CREDIT OPPORTUNITY ACT (REGULATION B)
0
1. The authority citation for part 1002 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 5512, 5581; 15 U.S.C. 1691b.
0
2. Amend Sec. 1002.5 by adding paragraph (a)(4) to read as follows:
Sec. 1002.5 Rules concerning requests for information.
(a) * * *
(4) Other permissible collection of information. Notwithstanding
paragraph (b) of this section, a creditor may collect information under
the following circumstances provided that the creditor collects the
information in compliance with appendix B to 12 CFR part 1003:
(i) A creditor that is a financial institution under 12 CFR
1003.2(g) may collect information regarding the ethnicity, race, and
sex of an applicant for a closed-end mortgage loan that is an excluded
transaction under 12 CFR 1003.3(c)(11) if it submits HMDA data
concerning such closed-end mortgage loans and applications or if it
submitted HMDA data concerning closed-end mortgage loans for any of the
preceding five calendar years;
(ii) A creditor that is a financial institution under 12 CFR
1003.2(g) may collect information regarding the ethnicity, race, and
sex of an applicant for an open-end line of credit that is an excluded
transaction under 12 CFR 1003.3(c)(12) if it submits HMDA data
concerning such open-end lines of credit and applications or if it
submitted HMDA data concerning open-end lines of credit for any of the
preceding five calendar years;
(iii) A creditor that submitted HMDA data for any of the preceding
five calendar years but is not currently a financial institution under
12 CFR 1003.2(g) may collect information regarding the ethnicity, race,
and sex of an applicant for a loan that would otherwise be a covered
loan under 12 CFR 1003.2(e) if not excluded by 12 CFR 1003.3(c)(11) or
(12);
(iv) A creditor that exceeded an applicable loan volume threshold
in the first year of the two-year threshold period provided in 12 CFR
1003.2(g), 1003.3(c)(11), or 1003.3(c)(12) may, in the second year,
collect information regarding the ethnicity, race, and sex of an
applicant for a loan that would otherwise be a covered loan under 12
CFR 1003.2(e) if the loan were not excluded by 12 CFR 1003.3(c)(11) or
(12);
(v) A creditor that is a financial institution under 12 CFR
1003.2(g), or that submitted HMDA data for any of the preceding five
calendar years but is not currently a financial institution under 12
CFR 1003.2(g), may collect information regarding the ethnicity, race,
and sex of an applicant for a loan that would otherwise be a covered
loan under 12 CFR 1003.2(e) if the loan were not excluded by 12 CFR
1003.3(c)(10).
(vi) A creditor that is collecting information regarding the
ethnicity, race, and sex of an applicant or first co-applicant may
collect information regarding the ethnicity, race, and sex of a second
or additional co-applicant for a covered loan under 12 CFR 1003.2(e) or
for a second or additional co-applicant for a loan described in
paragraphs (a)(4)(i) through (v) of this section.
* * * * *
0
3. Amend Sec. 1002.12 by revising paragraph (b)(1)(i) to read as
follows:
Sec. 1002.12 Record retention.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(1) * * *
(i) Any application that it receives, any information required to
be obtained concerning characteristics of the applicant to monitor
compliance with the Act and this part or other similar law, any
information obtained pursuant to Sec. 1002.5(a)(4), and any other
written or recorded information used in evaluating the application and
not returned to the applicant at the applicant's request.
* * * * *
0
4. Amend Sec. 1002.13 by revising paragraph (a)(1)(i) and paragraph
(b) to read as follows:
Sec. 1002.13 Information for monitoring purposes.
(a) * * *
(1) * * *
(i) Ethnicity and race using either:
(A) For ethnicity, the aggregate categories Hispanic or Latino and
not Hispanic or Latino; and, for race, the aggregate categories
American Indian or Alaska Native, Asian, Black or African American,
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander, and White; or
(B) The categories and subcategories for the collection of
ethnicity and race set forth in appendix B to 12 CFR part 1003.
* * * * *
(b) Obtaining information. Questions regarding ethnicity, race,
sex, marital status, and age may be listed, at the creditor's option,
on the application form or on a separate form that refers to the
application. The applicant(s) shall be asked but not required to supply
the requested information. If the applicant(s) chooses not to provide
the information or any part of it, that fact shall be noted on the
form. The creditor shall then also note on the form, to the extent
possible, the ethnicity, race, and sex of the applicant(s) on the basis
of visual observation or surname. When a creditor collects ethnicity
and race information pursuant to Sec. 1002.13(a)(1)(i)(B), the
creditor must comply with any restrictions on the collection of an
applicant's ethnicity or race on the basis of visual observation or
surname set forth in appendix B to 12 CFR part 1003. If there is more
than one co-applicant, a creditor is permitted, but is not required, to
collect the information set forth in paragraph (a) of this section from
a second or additional co-applicant.
* * * * *
0
5. Effective January 1, 2018, amend Appendix B to Part 1002 by revising
paragraph 1 and adding a Data Collection Model Form to the end of the
Appendix to read as follows:
Appendix B to Part 1002--Model Application Forms
1. This appendix contains five model credit application forms,
each designated for use in a particular type of consumer credit
transaction as indicated by the bracketed caption on each form. The
first sample form is intended for use in open-end, unsecured
transactions; the second for closed-end, secured transactions; the
third for closed-end transactions, whether unsecured or secured; the
fourth in transactions involving community property or occurring in
community property States; and the fifth in residential mortgage
transactions which contains a model disclosure for use in complying
with Sec. 1002.13 for certain dwelling-related loans. This appendix
also contains a data collection model form for collecting
information concerning an applicant's ethnicity, race, and sex that
[[Page 45695]]
complies with the requirements of Sec. 1002.13(a)(1)(i)(A) and
(ii). Appendix B to 12 CFR part 1003 provides a data collection
model form for collecting information concerning an applicant's
ethnicity, race, and sex that complies with the requirements of
Sec. 1002.13(a)(1)(i)(B) and (ii). All forms contained in this
appendix are models; their use by creditors is optional.
* * * * *
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR02OC17.000
0
6. Effective January 1, 2022, amend Appendix B to Part 1002 by revising
paragraph 1 and under paragraph 3 removing the form ``Uniform
Residential Loan Application''.
The revision reads as follows:
Appendix B to Part 1002--Model Application Forms
1. This appendix contains four model credit application forms,
each designated for use in a particular type of consumer credit
transaction as indicated by the bracketed caption on each form. The
first sample form is intended for use in open-end, unsecured
transactions; the second for closed-end, secured transactions; the
third for closed-end transactions, whether unsecured or secured; and
the fourth in transactions involving community property or occurring
in community property States. This appendix also contains a data
collection model form for collecting information concerning an
applicant's ethnicity, race, and sex that complies with the
requirements of Sec. 1002.13(a)(1)(i)(A) and (ii). Appendix B to 12
CFR part 1003 provides a data collection model form for collecting
information concerning an applicant's ethnicity, race, and sex that
complies with the requirements of Sec. 1002.13(a)(1)(i)(B) and
(ii). All forms contained in this appendix are models; their use by
creditors is optional.
* * * * *
0
7. Amend Supplement I to Part 1002:
0
a. Under Section 1002.5--Rules concerning requests for information:
0
i. Paragraph 5(a)(2) is revised.
0
ii. Paragraph 5(a)(4) is added.
0
b. Under Section 1002.12--Record retention, Paragraph 12(b) is revised.
0
c. Under Section 1002.13--Information for monitoring purposes:
0
i. Paragraph 13(a)--Information to be requested is revised.
0
ii. Paragraph 13(b)--Obtaining of information is revised.
0
iii. Paragraph 13(c)--Disclosure to applicants is revised.
0
d. Appendix B--Model Application Forms is removed.
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Supplement I to Part 1002--Official Interpretations
* * * * *
Section 1002.5--Rules Concerning Requests for Information
5(a) General rules.
* * * * *
Paragraph 5(a)(2).
1. Local laws. Information that a creditor is allowed to collect
pursuant to a ``state'' statute or regulation includes information
required by a local statute, regulation, or ordinance.
2. Information required by Regulation C. Regulation C, 12 CFR part
1003, generally requires creditors covered by the Home Mortgage
Disclosure Act (HMDA) to collect and report information about the race,
ethnicity, and sex of applicants for certain dwelling-secured loans,
including some types of loans not covered by Sec. 1002.13.
3. Collecting information on behalf of creditors. Persons such as
loan brokers and correspondents do not violate the ECOA or Regulation B
if they collect information that they are otherwise prohibited from
collecting, where the purpose of collecting the information is to
provide it to a creditor that is subject to the Home Mortgage
Disclosure Act or another Federal or state statute or regulation
requiring data collection.
Paragraph 5(a)(4).
1. Other permissible collection of information. Information
regarding ethnicity, race, and sex that is not required to be collected
pursuant to Regulation C, 12 CFR part 1003, may nevertheless be
collected under the circumstances set forth in Sec. 1002.5(a)(4)
without violating Sec. 1002.5(b). The information must be retained
pursuant to the requirements of Sec. 1002.12.
* * * * *
Section 1002.12--Record Retention
* * * * *
12(b) Preservation of records.
1. Copies. Copies of the original record include carbon copies,
photocopies, microfilm or microfiche copies, or copies produced by any
other accurate retrieval system, such as documents stored and
reproduced by computer. A creditor that uses a computerized or
mechanized system
[[Page 45696]]
need not keep a paper copy of a document (for example, of an adverse
action notice) if it can regenerate all pertinent information in a
timely manner for examination or other purposes.
2. Computerized decisions. A creditor that enters information items
from a written application into a computerized or mechanized system and
makes the credit decision mechanically, based only on the items of
information entered into the system, may comply with Sec. 1002.12(b)
by retaining the information actually entered. It is not required to
store the complete written application, nor is it required to enter the
remaining items of information into the system. If the transaction is
subject to Sec. 1002.13 or the creditor is collecting information
pursuant to Sec. 1002.5(a)(4), however, the creditor is required to
enter and retain the data on personal characteristics in order to
comply with the requirements of that section.
* * * * *
Section 1002.13--Information for Monitoring Purposes
13(a) Information to be requested.
1. Natural person. Section 1002.13 applies only to applications
from natural persons.
2. Principal residence. The requirements of Sec. 1002.13 apply
only if an application relates to a dwelling that is or will be
occupied by the applicant as the principal residence. A credit
application related to a vacation home or a rental unit is not covered.
In the case of a two-to four-unit dwelling, the application is covered
if the applicant intends to occupy one of the units as a principal
residence.
3. Temporary financing. An application for temporary financing to
construct a dwelling is not subject to Sec. 1002.13. But an
application for both a temporary loan to finance construction of a
dwelling and a permanent mortgage loan to take effect upon the
completion of construction is subject to Sec. 1002.13.
4. New principal residence. A person can have only one principal
residence at a time. However, if a person buys or builds a new dwelling
that will become that person's principal residence within a year or
upon completion of construction, the new dwelling is considered the
principal residence for purposes of Sec. 1002.13.
5. Transactions not covered. The information-collection
requirements of this section apply to applications for credit primarily
for the purchase or refinancing of a dwelling that is or will become
the applicant's principal residence. Therefore, applications for credit
secured by the applicant's principal residence but made primarily for a
purpose other than the purchase or refinancing of the principal
residence (such as loans for home improvement and debt consolidation)
are not subject to the information-collection requirements. An
application for an open-end home equity line of credit is not subject
to this section unless it is readily apparent to the creditor when the
application is taken that the primary purpose of the line is for the
purchase or refinancing of a principal dwelling.
6. Refinancings. A refinancing occurs when an existing obligation
is satisfied and replaced by a new obligation undertaken by the same
borrower. A creditor that receives an application to refinance an
existing extension of credit made by that creditor for the purchase of
the applicant's dwelling may request the monitoring information again
but is not required to do so if it was obtained in the earlier
transaction.
7. Data collection under Regulation C. For applications subject to
Sec. 1002.13(a)(1), a creditor that collects information about the
ethnicity, race, and sex of an applicant in compliance with the
requirements of appendix B to 12 CFR part 1003 is acting in compliance
with Sec. 1002.13 concerning the collection of an applicant's
ethnicity, race, and sex information. See also comment 5(a)(2)-2.
8. Application-by-application basis. For applications subject to
Sec. 1002.13(a)(1), a creditor may choose on an application-by-
application basis whether to collect aggregate information pursuant to
Sec. 1002.13(a)(1)(i)(A) or disaggregated information pursuant to
Sec. 1002.13(a)(1)(i)(B) about the ethnicity and race of the
applicant.
13(b) Obtaining of information.
1. Forms for collecting data. A creditor may collect the
information specified in Sec. 1002.13(a) either on an application form
or on a separate form referring to the application. Appendix B to this
part provides for two alternative data collection model forms for use
in complying with the requirements of Sec. 1002.13(a)(1)(i) and (ii)
to collect information concerning an applicant's ethnicity, race, and
sex. When a creditor collects ethnicity and race information pursuant
to Sec. 1002.13(a)(1)(i)(A), the applicant must be offered the option
to select more than one racial designation. When a creditor collects
ethnicity and race information pursuant to Sec. 1002.13(a)(1)(i)(B),
the applicant must be offered the option to select more than one
ethnicity designation and more than one racial designation.
2. Written applications. The regulation requires written
applications for the types of credit covered by Sec. 1002.13. A
creditor can satisfy this requirement by recording on paper or by means
of computer the information that the applicant provides orally and that
the creditor normally considers in a credit decision.
3. Telephone, mail applications.
i. A creditor that accepts an application by telephone or mail must
request the monitoring information.
ii. A creditor that accepts an application by mail need not make a
special request for the monitoring information if the applicant has
failed to provide it on the application form returned to the creditor.
iii. If it is not evident on the face of an application that it was
received by mail, telephone, or via an electronic medium, the creditor
should indicate on the form or other application record how the
application was received.
4. Video and other electronic-application processes.
i. If a creditor takes an application through an electronic medium
that allows the creditor to see the applicant, the creditor must treat
the application as taken in person. The creditor must note the
monitoring information on the basis of visual observation or surname,
if the applicant chooses not to provide the information.
ii. If an applicant applies through an electronic medium without
video capability, the creditor treats the application as if it were
received by mail.
5. Applications through loan-shopping services. When a creditor
receives an application through an unaffiliated loan-shopping service,
it does not have to request the monitoring information for purposes of
the ECOA or Regulation B. Creditors subject to the Home Mortgage
Disclosure Act should be aware, however, that data collection may be
called for under Regulation C (12 CFR part 1003), which generally
requires creditors to report, among other things, the sex and race of
an applicant on brokered applications or applications received through
a correspondent.
6. Inadvertent notation. If a creditor inadvertently obtains the
monitoring information in a dwelling-related transaction not covered by
Sec. 1002.13, the creditor may process and retain the application
without violating the regulation.
13(c) Disclosure to applicants.
1. Procedures for providing disclosures. The disclosure to an
applicant regarding the monitoring information may be provided in
writing. Appendix B provides data collection model forms for use in
complying with Sec. 1002.13 and that comply with Sec. 1002.13(c). A
creditor may devise its
[[Page 45697]]
own disclosure so long as it is substantially similar. The creditor
need not orally request the monitoring information if it is requested
in writing.
* * * * *
Dated: September 8, 2017.
Richard Cordray,
Director, Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection.
[FR Doc. 2017-20417 Filed 9-29-17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810-AM-P