Effect of Flood Disaster Prevention Act on Executive Order 11988

CourtDepartment of Justice Office of Legal Counsel
DecidedFebruary 23, 1978
StatusPublished

This text of Effect of Flood Disaster Prevention Act on Executive Order 11988 (Effect of Flood Disaster Prevention Act on Executive Order 11988) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Department of Justice Office of Legal Counsel primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Effect of Flood Disaster Prevention Act on Executive Order 11988, (olc 1978).

Opinion

February 23, 1978

78-10 MEMORANDUM OPINION FOR THE DEPUTY GENERAL COUNSEL, DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT

Flood Disaster Prevention Act (42 U.S.C. § 4106)— Mortgage Loans— Effect of Statute on Executive Order

This is our response to your request for our opinion on the relationship between Executive Order No. 11988 and § 703(a) of the Housing and Community Development Act of 1977 (Pub. L. No. 95-128; 91 Stat. 1111). Section 703(a) has replaced § 202(b) of the Flood Disaster Prevention Act of 1973 (87 Stat. 975). Your General C ounsel’s opinion reaches the following five conclusions: (1) Executive Order No. 11988 applies to the Federal agencies regulating financial institutions; (2) it requires them to minimize harmful results o f their activities in flood plains; (3) this result is not contrary to the intent of § 703(a); (4) this result is consistent with the Flood Disaster Protection Act o f 1973 and other statutes; and (5) the order is therefore valid and has the force o f law. More specifically, the opinion concludes that Executive Order No. 11988, 42 F. R. 26951 (1977), requires the agencies regulating banking to minimize flood damage by prohibiting regulated institutions from making loans secured by real property within a flood plain unless flood insurance is available. After a careful examination o f § 703(a), the Flood Disaster Prevention Act, and their legislative histories, we conclude that § 703(a) was intended to deny the Federal Government authority to prohibit federally regulated private lenders from making mortgage loans in a flood plain. The statute takes precedence over Executive Order No. 11988 to the extent of any conflict. Thus, the Executive order may not require regulatory agencies to prohibit those lenders from making such loans.

41 As enacted in 1973, § 202(b) o f the Flood Disaster Prevention Act (Act) (42 U .S.C . § 4106(b)), provided as follows: (b) Each Federal instrumentality responsible for the supervision, approval, regulation, or insuring of banks, savings and loan associations, or similar institutions shall by regulation prohibit such institutions on and after July 1, 1975, from m aking, increasing, extending, or renewing any loan secured by improved real estate or a mobile home located or to be located in an area that has been identified by the Secretary as an area having special flood hazards, unless the community in which such area is situated is then participating in the national flood insurance program .' This section was part o f a comprehensive scheme to utilize the Federal flood insurance program as a means o f limiting flood losses by controlling housing development in flood plains. Thus, in addition to the provision set forth above, the Act barred Federal financial assistance for construction in flood plains in communities where flood insurance was riot available.2 It also prohibited Federal assistance or private loans for real property not covered by available flood insurance.3 For a community to be eligible for flood insurance, it must have a land use code that restricts development in areas vulnerable to flooding.4 By limiting the availability o f Federal or private funds for construction in communities ineligible for flood insurance, these provisions served the statu­ tory purpose o f inducing States and localities “ to participate in the flood insurance program and to adopt adequate flood plain ordinances with effective enforcement provisions consistent with Federal standards to reduce or avoid future flood losses.” 5 In October 1977, § 703(a) o f the Housing and Community Development Act amended § 202(b) o f the Flood Disaster and Prevention Act to read as follows: (b) In addition to the requirements o f section 1364 o f the National Flood Insurance Act o f 1968, each Federal instrumentality described in such section shall by regulation require the institutions described in such section to notify (as a condition of making, increasing, extending, or renewing any loan secured by property described in such section) the purchaser or lessee of such property of whether, in the event of a disaster caused by flood to such property. Federal disaster relief assistance will be available to such property.

'Subsequently enacted exceptions are im m aterial for the purpose o f this opinion. Section 3(a)(5) o f the Act. 42 U .S .C . § 4003(a)(5), defines "federal instrum entality responsible for the supervision, approval, regulation, or insuring o f banks, saving and loan associations, or sim ilar institu tio n s" to mean the Federal Reserve Board of G overnors, the C om ptroller of the Currency, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance C orporation, the Federal Hom e Loan Bank Board, and the National Credit Union A dm inistration. 242 U .S .C . § 4106(a). ’42 U .S .C . §§ 4 0 l2 (a)(b ). 4See National Flood Insurance Act o f 1968, as am ended, §§ 1315, 1361; 42 U .S .C . §§ 4022, 4102. 542 U .S .C . § 4002(b)(3). See also S. Rept. 93-583, 93d C ong., 1st sess. (1973), at 18-19.

42 Thus, it deleted the express requirement that bank regulatory agencies prohibit lenders from making secured loans on flood plain real estate.in communities where flood insurance is not available. Instead, the agencies were directed to require lenders to notify borrowers whether disaster relief would be available.6 It does not, however, contain an explicit requirement that agencies either permit or prohibit the making o f real estate loans by regulated lenders in flood plain areas not covered by the Federal insurance program. We think that the legislative history o f the am endm ent removes any serious question as to what was intended by the modification. Section 703(a) was introduced as a floor amendment by Senator Eagleton, who stated that its purpose was to permit localities to reject land use controls and develop flood plains with mortgage loans from private lenders.7 He clarified this point in the following colloquy with Senator Danforth:8 Mr. DANFORTH. . . . As I understand this amendment, and I ask Senator EAGLETON if he will bear me out in this, he is not objecting to the Federal Government conditioning the offering of Federal flood insurance or Federal grants or Federal loans or what amounts to land use planning. What he is objecting to, as 1 understand it, is the Federal Government purporting to tell banks with no connection at all other than, for example, FD1C coverage, banks that are located in a community, people who have lived in the community all their lives, that they are not able to make loans in flood plain areas. Mr. EAGLETON. The Senator is absolutely correct. Just permitted to fit the loan money to a business deriving in that area if they think it is a good, prudent loan, the bank is permitted to make the loan [sic]. That is all the amendment does. Mr. DANFORTH. Under the law as written now, if a Federal bureaucrat designates an area as being within a flood plain, then a bank which is FDlC-covered, or insured, is prohibited by the present law from making a loan to a business located in that flood plain. Mr. EAGLETON. The Senator is exactly correct. Mr. DANFORTH. And this is exactly the kind o f overreach by the Federal bureaucracy that we were objecting to in offering this amendment. Mr. EAGLETON. 1 thank my colleague. 1 think he has summed it up very convincingly. Even the opponents o f the measure agreed that it would remove the Federal Governm ent’s ability to prohibit such loans as a means o f compelling the

6See also National Flood Insurance Act o f 1968, § 1364 (88 Stat. 739; 42 U .S .C . § 4104(a). 7123 Cong. Rec. S. 8971-72 (June 6, 1977). 8123 Cong. Rec. S. 8972 (June 6, 1977).

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