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Permanent Bank Holiday
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Old San Francisco, long
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gaseous with self-regard (self-esteem is for Oakland), suffered a grievous
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deflating April 13 when Bank of America--banker to entrepreneurs and
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immigrants; builder of new industries; capitalizer of the California Dream;
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financier, indeed, gallant financier of the Golden Gate Bridge--announced its
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merger with NationsBank to form BankAmerica and its plans to move bank
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headquarters from San Francisco to Charlotte, N.C.
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There
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is a loss of face in the move of the bank's home office, as well as a blow to
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San Francisco's economy. To many San Franciscans, the rejection of the city is
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regarded as an insult to BofA founder A.P. Giannini. Old-timers recall that
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Giannini, who kept his desk on the banking floor itself, made loans to working
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people after inspecting their hands: If the loan applicant had callused hands
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that meant he was working, and he got the loan.
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In the 49 years since Giannini's death, the
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94-year-old BofA has discarded much of the old way, but even today the bank
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supports urbanity high and low. Last year it donated nearly $5 million to
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greater San Francisco, including $178,000 to the San Francisco Opera. Its San
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Francisco branches cash-at-par public benefits checks without requiring
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recipients to have bank accounts there.
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While
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there was no run on the bank in the wake of the news, so great was the shock
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that the bank made grief counselors available to the stricken city. Hugh
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McColl, No. 1 at NationsBank and chairman of the combined operation, sought to
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reassure the city, koaning at a San Francisco meeting, "The headquarters is
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where we are. Now we're in San Francisco. This afternoon we'll be in Los
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Angeles."
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Charlotte was bad enough, but by suggesting
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that the HQ is now also in much despised L.A., where San Franciscans say the
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definition of Old Money is someone whose checks clear the bank the first time,
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was a very bitter pill.
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San
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Francisco Mayor Willie Brown spoke for the city when he said, "They're stealing
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our bank!" And while it may not be an actual defalcation, it certainly is an
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abscondment. The deal talks, worked out in only three weeks in the city's
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appropriately named Mandarin Hotel, were carried out in utter secrecy. "Bank of
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America is an important institution in our city--it has been so throughout the
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city's history," Brown said. "It'll be a shock to our economy, an economic
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crisis."
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The most wired man in a wired city, the mayor
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first learned of the merger at 5 a.m. April 13, when a San Francisco
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Examiner reporter called to tell him the deal was being announced then in
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Manhattan.
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To old
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San Franciscans, people whose hands have shaken the hands of those who came in
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the Gold Rush, the move is an act of lèse-majesté, an impertinence rivaling
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only that of Billy Ralston, who chose to go for a refreshing swim in the harbor
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one day in 1875 when his mighty Bank of California was crashing, rather than
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stay at the office. Ralston drowned. Of course, in financial circles, McColl,
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who constructed the deal, is believed to be able to walk on water.
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The deal is colossal. The new institution, which might as
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well have been named TitanicBank, will be the United States' largest, with $570
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billion in assets. It will:
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be the No. 1 bank in loans,
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deposits, business lending (large and small), and ATMs (15,000);
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be the United States' first
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coast-to-coast bank, operating in 22 contiguous states from Washington, D.C.,
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to Washington state;
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process
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one out of every four checks in the country.
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Currently the bank has
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about 5,000 branches and 180,000 employees. While the branches are largely
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noncompeting, some will be closed, and about 15,000 jobs are expected to be
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eliminated. Staffers at the redundant former headquarters of BofA are believed
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to be the most vulnerable. Lifeboats have been constructed for the top dozen
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employees. BofA executive H. Eugene Lockhart, barely on the job for a year,
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left his job three days after the merger with a severance package including $22
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million and stock grants cashable for an additional $17 million.
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Although layoffs violate the Giannini ethos--in the bank's first 80 years there
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were none--the new masters were quick to invoke the founder's blessing on the
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deal. "This is a transaction I know A.P. would have done," wrote BofA head
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David Coulter to staffers.
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Indeed, Giannini dreamed of creating the first
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nationwide U.S. bank. He started his bank in a former saloon in San Francisco's
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Italian North Beach under the name "Bank of Italy." It had no connection with
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any official bank of Italy, though a large part of its business, naturally
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enough, involved transfers to and from that country. In the 1920s, he bought
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banks in New York to establish a beachhead, but he was beaten back, in a
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three-decade struggle, by banking laws, regulators, and in-house perfidy. In
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1928, he bought a small New York bank whose twin claims to fame were that it
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had been founded in 1812 and was named "Bank of America." Giannini quickly
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renamed his establishment.
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McColl's
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insistence that the new bank's headquarters are in perpetual motion, swirling
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around him, didn't satisfy many natives, who wondered why one of the deal's few
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specific stipulations was moving HQ out of San Francisco.
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That no compelling or even cant-ridden
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explanation for the move came forth made some wonder if it is a billion-dollar
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slight, born of City Attorney Louise Renne's long-running feud with the bank.
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Renne had said that BofA should place warning labels on its advertising. "No
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accurate records kept" was one she suggested. Last December, Mayor Brown told
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California government officials that he looked forward to a newspaper article
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headlined "Local Jurisdictions Prevail Over BofA."
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Behind
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the tirades are a set of lawsuits on behalf of San Francisco and 300 other
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California government agencies charging BofA with mismanaging billions of
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dollars from 11,788 California municipal bond issues. Actual and punitive
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damages could top $1 billion.
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BofA says it has acted in good faith, having
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already returned $41 million in unclaimed funds and nearly $5 million in
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accidental overcharges to the cities and state. It maintains it continues to
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review its handling of the bond issues, many of which it inherited when it
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merged with Security Pacific Bank.
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City officials were stunned
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to think a multimillion-dollar bank might have been stung by million-dollar
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darts. But local investment banker Warren Hellman thought otherwise.
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"Corporations are run by people, and people have feelings," Hellman told the
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San Francisco Chronicle . "I'm sure Coulter doesn't appreciate public
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officials delivering diatribes against BofA."
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How is it, asked San Franciscans on considering
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the news, that it requires more public scrutiny to cut down a redwood than it
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does to uproot a bank?
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It's a curiosity of our age
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that just as the press, unable to find ideological or philosophical concerns in
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public life, is obsessed instead with the puny private lives of the powerful,
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so also business, freed of the obligation to consider the public interest in
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its deal-making, gives play to the purely personal.
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Of course, this works both
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ways. Shortly after BofA left, the Knight-Ridder Co., long established in
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Miami, announced it is relocating its home office to Silicon Valley or, as we
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in the city like to say, "the Bay Area."
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The news was greeted with
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half-hosannas, since it further establishes the fact that the real power in
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Northern California is in Silicon Valley, not San Francisco. San Francisco
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continues to attract thousands of new residents, however, from the Valley.
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Four-million dollar Victorians sell in a day.
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The real story of San
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Francisco may not be that it loses local headquarters--almost every city in
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America outside New York is a branch manager's town now--but that it may be the
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first major American city to be primarily a bedroom community. You can buy
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sheets, linens, and furniture now in the great granite temple on Grant Avenue
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that was once the headquarters of Security Pacific National Bank.
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