Community Bankers Pushing Anti-Credit Union Agenda in Virtual D.C. Conference

Beyond the anti-credit union language, the ICBA appears to have similar policy priorities as CUNA and NAFCU.

Independent Community Bankers of America’s website. (Source: Adobe Stock)

Community bankers are virtually flooding Capitol Hill this week, pushing plans to eliminate the credit union tax exemption, include credit unions in the Community Reinvestment Act and  toughen oversight by the NCUA.

But beyond the usual anti-credit union rhetoric, the policy agenda being circulated during the Independent Community Bankers of America’s “2021 Capital Summit” is not that much different than proposals from CUNA and NAFCU.

“Community banks have been the economic foundation of the U.S. response to the COVID-19 pandemic in local communities,” ICBA Chairman Robert Fisher, who is president/CEO of Tioga State Bank in Spencer, N.Y., said. “With community banks continuing to account for 60% of Paycheck Protection Program lending, ICBA’s policy resolutions will guide us as we continue working to help local communities thrive.”

As with CUNA’s Governmental Affairs Conference earlier this year, the ICBA is urging bankers to hold virtual meetings with members of Congress and their staffs. And ICBA officials are asking bankers to implore Congress “to address the abuses of the credit union industry’s federal tax subsidy and investigate the NCUA’s failure to properly regulate and oversee the industry.”

In its policy agenda, the ICBA said the NCUA “stands in stark contrast to the other banking agencies” in the quality of its oversight of credit unions. The trade group went in to state it opposes expanded powers for credit unions, including “acquisitions of community banks, commercial lending, field of membership and supplemental capital powers.”

The ICBA said it also is urging states to prohibit the placement of public funds in tax exempt credit unions.

The ICBA’s policy agenda looked almost identical to those developed by credit union trade groups. For instance, the ICBA is similarly calling for: