The Citi Foundation today announced a $2.75 million commitment to the
Housing Partnership Network (HPN) to support the Innovations in
Neighborhood Stabilization and Foreclosure Prevention Initiative, an
effort to develop new and innovative solutions to neighborhood
stabilization challenges in 10 metropolitan areas across the country.
The initiative will provide leading community based housing
organizations with grants and other resources to support high-impact
neighborhood revitalization projects that can yield important lessons
and be replicated in communities across the country.
The grant awards will fund 10 different neighborhood stabilization
initiatives over a two-year period, and will be managed by 12 HPN member
organizations. Two of the grants have a national focus, while the others
target specific communities that have been heavily impacted by mortgage
delinquency and foreclosure. Additional funds from the Citi Foundation
will support HPN’s efforts to provide technical assistance and
facilitate peer information sharing.
"Years after the financial crisis, communities are still reeling from
the destabilization of neighborhoods, rising foreclosure rates, and
stalled regional development,” said Thomas Bledsoe, President and CEO of
the Housing Partnership Network. "These grants support projects that
promise innovation, success and replicable results. As experienced and
key players in regional neighborhood stabilization activities, our
members are finding new approaches that have a positive impact on their
communities.”
Investing in innovation is a core component of the Citi Foundation’s
investment strategy, and this program is directly aligned with its goal
of increasing the supply of capital for efforts that strengthen
low-income communities through the development and preservation of high
quality affordable housing, and efforts to enable consumers to build and
preserve financial assets.
"Making our communities more livable is essential to helping underserved
populations get on a path to long-term stability,” said Pam Flaherty,
President & CEO of the Citi Foundation. "HPN and its member
organizations have deep roots in communities around the country, and the
Citi Foundation is proud to provide resources that will help these
groups to further bolster and enhance at-risk neighborhoods.”
As part of this initiative, HPN and the Citi Foundation announced the
award of a total of $2 million in grants to the following organizations:
Atlanta Neighborhood Development Partnership, Inc.; Boston Community
Capital; Cleveland Housing Network; HAP Housing; Housing Development
Fund; Mercy Housing Lakefront; Neighborhood Housing Services of Chicago;
Neighborhood Housing Services of New York in partnership with the Long
Island Housing Partnership and the New York Mortgage Coalition;
NHT/Enterprise Preservation Corporation ; and Project for Pride in
Living. Information about each of the projects is included in this
release.
Grant awards for the initiative were determined through a competitive
RFP process that drew 31 applications. An advisory committee composed of
internal and external experts from the housing field (full list below)
evaluated the applications based on their potential for transformative
community impact, ability to inform policy discussions around
neighborhood stabilization, and the level to which they break new ground
in developing solutions that can be replicated or scaled to have
widespread impact in communities across the country. As part of the
grant program, HPN will convene key thought leaders, policy makers,
business partners, and Network members to share learnings from the
initiative with a goal of shaping new policy responses with the power to
achieve long-term neighborhood stabilization.
Advisory Committee Members include:
Eric Belsky, Joint Center for Housing Studies; Pat Gamble-Moore, Indianapolis
Neighborhood Housing Partnership; Patricia Garrett, The Housing
Partnership (Charlotte-Mecklenburg); Bill Gilmartin, National
Association of Realtors; Catherine Godschalk, Calvert Foundation ;
Bob Kantor, Fannie Mae; Alan Mallach, Center for Community
Progress; Mike Mullin, Nevada HAND, Inc.; Craig Nickerson, National
Community Stabilization Trust; Becky Regan, Housing Partnership
Network; Carolina Reid, Center for Responsible Lending; Laura
Sparks, Citi Foundation.
About The Housing Partnership Network
The Housing Partnership Network brings together senior executives from
the nation’s leading housing and community development nonprofits to
collaborate on entrepreneurial programs and businesses which ensure that
families have access to affordable homes in thriving communities across
the country. Members share best practices, pool resources, launch
cooperative businesses, and collaborate on practitioner-driven policy
advocacy to achieve innovation and results.
About The Citi Foundation
The Citi Foundation is committed to the economic empowerment and
financial inclusion of low- to moderate-income individuals and families
in the communities where we work so that they can improve their standard
of living. Globally, the Citi Foundation targets its strategic giving to
priority focus areas: Microfinance, Enterprise Development, College
Success, and Financial Capability and Asset Building. In the United
States, the Citi Foundation also supports Neighborhood Revitalization
programs. The Citi Foundation works with its partners in Microfinance,
Enterprise Development, and Neighborhood Revitalization to support
environmental programs and innovations. Additional information can be
found at www.citifoundation.com.
Innovations in Neighborhood Stabilization and Foreclosure Prevention
Initiative Grantee Projects
Atlanta Neighborhood Development Partnership,
Inc. will scale up its capacity to stabilize 20 neighborhoods
across Metro Atlanta through the acquisition, rehabilitation and
repopulation of vacant, foreclosed homes.
Boston Community Capital will
conduct strategic communications, research and fieldwork to influence
foreclosure policy discourse on a national level, and lay the groundwork
for expansion of the Stabilizing Urban Neighborhoods (SUN) program to
keep homeowners in their homes.
Cleveland Housing Network will add
substantially to its neighborhood stabilization efforts by testing new
markets and models for helping priority neighborhoods recover from the
foreclosure crisis, in alignment with Cleveland’s collaborative vision
of a smaller, more vibrant city.
HAP Housing will advance strategic
neighborhood approaches for the stabilization of three low-income
Springfield, Massachusetts neighborhoods hit hard first by the effects
of foreclosures and abandonment, and then by a devastating F-3
tornado on June 1, 2011.
Housing Development Fund will work
to stabilize Connecticut cities with high rates of foreclosure by
developing a cohort of "landlord entrepreneurs” who will play a
significant role as owner-occupants in a new, coordinated financing and
training model for the purchase, rehabilitation and responsible
management of owner-occupied small multi-family properties.
Mercy Housing: 180° Properties, an
innovative social enterprise created through a partnership of Mercy
Housing Lakefront and The Cara Program, will expand geographically,
develop new services, and create jobs for disadvantaged job seekers who
board up and protect vacant homes.
NHS of Chicago will implement a new
model for advising homeowners through a network of Resolution
Specialists who will work in partnership with the homeowner, lender, and
servicer to modify mortgages through a new national distressed note
purchase initiative aiming to benefit low- and moderate-income
neighborhoods.
Neighborhood Housing Services of New York City,
Inc. (NHSNYC) in collaboration with the New York Mortgage Coalition
(NYMC) and the Long Island Housing Partnership (LIDP) will
create a foreclosure intervention program for existing homeowners who
may qualify to own or rent their homes if prices were reset to current
market valuations.
NHT Enterprise will advance a
financing model for HPN members and other affordable housing owners to
preserve and green multifamily rental properties in at-risk
neighborhoods using a nontraditional and growing source of capital –
energy efficiency grants and loans from the nation’s utilities.
Project for Pride in Living, Inc. (PPL) will
return small, foreclosed, scattered site rental properties to effective
use as positive community assets by refining its approach to the
redevelopment and subsequent management of small properties.
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