
10 U.S. ORGANIZATIONS NAMED AS SEMI-FINALISTS
FOR $8.25 MILLION “WACHOVIA NEXT AWARDS FOR OPPORTUNITY
FINANCE”
Community-Based
Groups Eyed for “Transformational” Award Offered
by The
Wachovia Foundation, MacArthur Foundation and Opportunity
Finance
Network; Organizations Range from NH to CA.
CHARLOTTE,
N.C., CHICAGO, IL., AND PHILADELPHIA, PA.///October 2, 2007///The
Wachovia NEXT Awards for Opportunity Finance in partnership
with the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation today
named 10 U.S. community development financial institutions
(CDFIs) as semi-finalists for $8.25 million in grants and
awards under an unprecedented new awards program offered by
the Opportunity Finance Network and sponsored by The Wachovia
Foundation and the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation.
$8.25
million in grants and investments will be divided between
two organizations. The winners will be selected by a distinguished
national committee from among the following semi-finalists:
ACCION Texas, San Antonio, TX; Boston Community Capital,Boston,
MA; Clearinghouse CDFI, Lake Forest, CA; Community First Fund,
Lancaster PA; Community Loan Fund, Concord, NH; Corporation
for Supportive Housing, New York, NY; Housing Development
Fund, Inc., Stamford, CT; IFF, Chicago, IL; Latino Community
Credit Union, Durham, NC; and Southern Bancorp, Arkadelphia,
AR.
The recipients
of the Wachovia NEXT Awards for Opportunity Finance will be
named in December 2007 in Miami.
Financing
provided by community-based CDFIs allows nonprofits and entrepreneurs
to build and preserve affordable housing, help small businesses
grow, and develop new community facilities, such as schools,
health clinics and centers for child care, recreation and
culture.
Mark Pinsky,
president and CEO of the Philadelphia-based Opportunity Finance
Network, said: “The semi finalists that we are honoring
today are precisely the type of high-potential CDFI that the
Wachovia NEXT Awards for Opportunity Finance was designed
to propel to a next level of growth, success, and staying
power with a major one-time infusion of capital.”
"At
The Wachovia Foundation, we're committed to supporting the
community development financial institutions that are creating
positive change in their communities,” said Mike Rizer,
executive vice president for The Wachovia Foundation.
“We're proud to continue our long-standing support for
the opportunity finance industry with our investment in the
Wachovia NEXT Awards for Opportunity Finance, which will help
innovative, up-and-coming CDFIs grow and create even more
economic opportunity for families and communities."
“These
awards celebrate the impressive achievements of CDFIs and
the creative way they use capital, business acumen, and community-oriented
solutions to bring greater economic security and opportunity
to people of modest means,” said Debra Schwartz, director
of program-related investments for the MacArthur Foundation.
“Our $25-million commitment to these new awards marks
a turning point. It is a capstone investment to help launch
the next era of achievement, growth and impact for the entire
opportunity finance industry.”
Over the
course of five years, The Wachovia Foundation is making a
$16.75 million grant and the MacArthur Foundation is making
a $25 million low-cost, long-term loan called a program-related
investment to fund the Wachovia NEXT Awards for Opportunity
Finance.
ABOUT
OPPORTUNITY FINANCE & CDFIs
The
Wachovia Foundation, MacArthur and the Opportunity Finance
Network created this awards program to spotlight and reinforce
the growing – but underappreciated – role of CDFIs
in the U.S. economy. Ultimately, the three partners expect
more investors, policymakers, and talented young leaders will
discover the innovative field of opportunity finance and help
raise its scale and impact significantly.
More than 700 mission-driven banks, loan funds, credit unions,
and venture funds currently serve low-income and low-wealth
people and communities that some mainstream investors consider
too risky or difficult to reach. CDFI financing allows entrepreneurs
and nonprofits to build and preserve affordable housing, to
help small businesses grow, and to develop new sites for recreation,
cultural programs, schools, health clinics, child care centers
and more. Many CDFIs provide mortgages, banking accounts,
car loans, money transfers, and other services that help customers
gain financial literacy, build savings and avoid expensive
or predatory financial products.
During 2005 alone, CDFIs provided $4.3 billion in new financing
which yielded: 39,151 jobs in 9,074 businesses; 55,242 units
of affordable housing; 613 community facilities such as charter
schools, child care and health care centers; and 138,045 low-income
people opening their first bank accounts, according to the
CDFI Data Project.
ABOUT
THE AWARDS
Each year the Wachovia NEXT Awards for Opportunity Finance
will include:
A $5.5 million program-related investment and unrestricted
grant award to an outstanding, high-potential CDFI with over
$50 million in assets dedicated to lending or investing;
A $2.75 million program-related investment and unrestricted
grant award to anoutstanding, high-potential CDFI with $10-$50
million in assets dedicated to lending or investing; and
Four $25,000 unrestricted grant awards to CDFIs of any size
that have demonstrated excellence in Innovation, Advocacy,
Financing, and Community Impact.
CDFIs
seeking to apply for a Wachovia NEXT Award for Opportunity
Finance had to meet all of the eligibility requirements detailed
at the Wachovia NEXT Awards Web site: http://www.nextawards.org.
These include: a primary mission of community development;
demonstrated financial discipline and programmatic performance;
and an increasing volume of lending or investing activity
and positive net revenue. The winning organizations will be
CDFIs with a history of outstanding accomplishment, a bold
and compelling vision, extraordinary future potential for
growth, innovation and impact, and a high degree of readiness
to successfully use and leverage a large, flexible investment.
ABOUT
THE SEMI-FINALISTS
1.
ACCION Texas, a non-profit community loan fund, provides credit
to small businesses that do not have access to loans from
commercial sources. They make business loans from $500 to
$50,000 for working capital, equipment purchase, inventory
and other business needs. ACCION Texas has distributed over
$58 million in over 8,100 loans to clients in Texas, helping
micro-entrepreneurs strengthen their businesses, stabilize
their incomes, create additional employment and contribute
to the economic revitalization of their communities. ACCION
Texas has 12 offices in 10 cities and serves clients in over
80 counties through out Texas.
2. Boston Community Capital (BCC) is a community development
financial intermediary whose mission is to create and preserve
healthy communities where low-income people live and work.
We do this by investing in projects that provide affordable
housing, good jobs, needed goods and services, and new opportunities
for people who have been locked out of the economic mainstream.
The capital that Boston Community Capital invests comes from
socially concerned investors and donors --individuals, religious
organizations, banks, foundations and corporations. BCC recognizes
that economic, social, and civic isolation are barriers to
healthy communities, economic independence, and wealth creation.
Boston Community Capital creates a financial intermediary
system that serves the needs of low-income and disadvantaged
people and communities and connects them to the mainstream
economy. It meets these needs by providing a range of financial
vehicles, services and products and by acting as investment
bankers in those communities.
3. Clearinghouse CDFI is a for-profit community development
financial institution serving low-income, distressed communities
throughout California. They specialize in making loans to
non-profit organizations for affordable housing, community
development and other unmet credit needs. Clearinghouse CDFI
originates single family loans to first-time homebuyers and
is a leading innovator in New Markets Tax Credits. With over
$160 million in combined total assets, Clearinghouse CDFI
is one of the fastest growing CDFIs in the nation.
4. Community First Fund is central Pennsylvania’s premiere
economic development organization. Serving thirteen counties
through five regional offices, Community First Fund provides
business counseling and training and loans to new and emerging
small businesses, and loans to community organizations for
affordable housing and other community development activities..
Founded in 1992, its mission is to create lasting economic
growth for its communities by providing equitable financial
services, technical knowledge, and advocacy for its customers.
Community First Fund is a nationally certified and top rated
Community Development Financial Institution (CDFI) that disburses
more than 100 loans annually and currently has a loan fund
of nearly $8 million.
5. The non-profit Corporation for Supportive Housing (CSH)
is a national Community Development Financial Institution
helping to create permanent affordable housing with support
services to prevent and end homelessness. CSH serves as a
leader and advocate across the country for supportive housing.
We bring together people, skills and resources to design innovative
programs and policies, create models, and educate the public,
private and non-profit sectors. From our inception in 1991,
CSH has committed nearly $125 million in loans and grants,
and leveraged over a billion dollars to support the creation
of more than 27,000 units of supportive housing that are operational
or in the pipeline. In addition, through our federal, state
and local policy reform efforts, CSH has helped secure funding
to support the creation of another 70,000 supportive housing
units.
6. The Housing Development Fund was founded in 1989 to provide
an array of affordable housing solutions. It has expanded
to serve all of southwestern Connecticut from its Stamford
headquarters and a Danbury office opened in 2004. The organization
manages public/private partnerships to lend funds for affordable
housing initiatives. It has the largest public/private pool
of mortgage financing for affordable housing in Connecticut
– both homeownership and multi-family development -$60
million. HDF’s multi-family lending program encourages
the development of affordable for-sale and rental units. HDF
provides nonprofits and private developers of affordable units
with a variety of finance and technical assistance options.
The organization’s First Time Homebuyers Program provides
both education and financial assistance to qualified buyers.
HDF is a HUD-certified lender and Housing Counseling agency.
7. IFF is the Midwest’s largest Community Development
Financial Institution (CDFI) exclusively serving nonprofits
in Illinois, Missouri, Iowa, Indiana and Wisconsin. CDFIs
are a designation by the U.S. Treasury, and are private-sector
entities with finance as the primary strategy for meeting
their mission. IFF strengthens the financial and organizational
capacity of nonprofits in its target market—nonprofits
that serve low-income communities and disadvantaged populations—through
loans to acquire, expand and maintain community facilities,
affordable housing and other physical infrastructure. Through
June 2007, 539 IFF loans totaling $157 million have leveraged
more than $360 million in new capital for nonprofits.
8. Latino Community Credit Union (LCCU) is a nonprofit community
development credit union that provides competitive interest
rates for deposits, affordable loans, and financial education.
Based in North Carolina, LCCU was the first bilingual, multicultural
financial institution in North Carolina to provide all of
its services to its members in Spanish and English, without
discriminating in pricing. Founded in 2000 in Durham, the
credit union has 5 branches, located in Durham, Charlotte,
Raleigh, Greensboro and Fayetteville.
9. The New Hampshire Community Loan Fund has been providing
loans and training since 1984 to help low-and moderate-income
New Hampshire residents gain economic stability and success.
The Loan Fund works in several areas, including housing, economic
opportunity, and community facilities, and it has received
national recognition for its pioneering work in helping residents
of manufactured housing parks purchase their communities and
gain control of their neighborhoods. Earlier this summer,
the Loan Fund passed the milestone of over $100 million in
cumulative loans to the community.
10. With $575 million in assets, three community banks, and
three nonprofit affiliates, Southern Bancorp is the nation’s
largest rural development bank. Southern works to transform
rural economies by stimulating new trends of investments in
people, jobs, businesses, and property. Southern has originated
over $1.7 billion in development loans in rural Arkansas and
the Mississippi River Delta since 1988.
ABOUT THE GROUPS BEHIND THE AWARDS
The Wachovia Foundation is a private foundation that provides
grants to eligible501(c)(3) tax-exempt organizations in two
primary focus areas (education and community development)
and two secondary areas (health and human services, arts and
culture). The Foundation’s mission is to build strong
and vibrant communities, improve the quality of life, and
make a positive difference.
The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation is a private,
independent grantmaking institution helping to build a more
just and sustainable world. Through the support it provides,
the Foundation fosters the development of knowledge, nurtures
individual creativity, strengthens institutions, helps improve
public policy, and provides information to the public, primarily
through support for public interest media. MacArthur has been
a leading supporter of the opportunity finance field since
the early 1980s, investing almost a quarter of a billion dollars
in approximately 100 groups nationwide. With assets of more
than $6.4 billion, the Foundation makes approximately $225
million in grants annually. More information is available
at www.macfound.org.
Opportunity Finance Network is the leading network of private
financial intermediaries identifying and investing in opportunities
to benefit low-income and low-wealth people in the U.S. The
network’s financing delivers both sound financial returns
and real changes for people and communities. CDFIs in the
Opportunity Finance Network originated more than $11 billion
in financing in unconventional urban, rural, and reservation-based
markets through 2005. This has generated or maintained 171,146
jobs; 35,451 businesses; 484,943 housing units; and, 5,153
community facility projects. With cumulative net charge-off
rates of less than 1 percent, these CDFIs have demonstrated
that it is possible to lend prudently and productively in
unconventional markets often overlooked by conventional financial
institutions. More information about Opportunity Finance Network
can be found online at http://www.opportunityfinance.net.
CONTACT: Patrick Mitchell, (703) 276-3266 or pmitchell@hastingsgroup.com.
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