Lawrence project gets $400K

The Community Economic Development Assistance Corporation (CEDAC) recently approved $400,000 in loans to Lawrence Community Works, Inc. (LCW) for affordable housing developments, one of which will be focused on ownership.
LCW received $400,000 in predevelopment lending for their Duck Mill project. The project is a redevelopment of the former mill building and is across from another affordable housing project that Lawrence Community Works developed. Construction is expected to begin in October of this year, and will result in 73 affordable rental units, and 16,000 square feet of commercial space.
“Lawrence Community Works is providing tremendous leadership to the City of Lawrence in developing the city’s historic mill buildings into affordable housing,” said Roger Herzog, CEDAC’s executive director. “Both the additional housing units and the commercial space this project will provide will help that community significantly.”
Somerville Community Corporation (SCC) landed $2 milllion in loans
“The City of Somerville is witnessing a tremendous amount of change, especially with the expansion of transit opportunities there,” said Herzog. “It is encouraging to see that the Somerville Community Corporation is not only continuing its commitment to provide quality affordable rental housing but is looking to develop affordable housing for ownership, as well.”

SourceEagle Tribune

CEDAC Provides $2.4M for Affordable Housing in Somerville, Lawrence

The Community Economic Development Assistance Corp. (CEDAC) recently approved more than $2.4 million in loans to Somerville Community Corp. (SCC) and Lawrence Community Works Inc. (LCW) for three affordable housing developments.
SCC received $600,000 in predevelopment lending to develop Washington Street Apartments, which will be built at the location of a vacant former Boys and Girls Club. The four-story development will include 35 units of affordable rental housing and 5,600 square feet of commercial space. Eight of these units will be reserved for extremely low income families with special needs, including homeless families. SCC has partnered with Somerville Homeless Coalition to provide supportive services for the formerly homeless families.
CEDAC has also approved $1.4 million in acquisition and predevelopment lending for SCC’s second project, 163 Glen St., a property formerly used as an American Legion Post. The project is a mixed-income residential development that will create 11 units in its first phase by adaptively reusing the building. Approximately one third of the units created will be restricted to moderate income households, one third will be restricted to middle income households and one third targeted to households at market rate.
“The city of Somerville is witnessing a tremendous amount of change, especially with the expansion of transit opportunities there,” Roger Herzog, CEDAC’s executive director, said in a statement. “It is encouraging to see that the SCC is not only continuing its commitment to provide quality affordable rental housing but is looking to develop affordable housing for ownership, as well.”
Both of the Somerville units will near the proposed Washington Street stop on the MBTA’s Green Line Extension project, which will expand service to Medford.
In Lawrence, LCW received $400,000 in predevelopment lending for its Duck Mill project. The project is a redevelopment of the former cloth mill building and is across from another affordable housing project developed by LCW. Construction is expected to begin in October of this year, creating 73 affordable rental units, and 16,000 square feet of commercial space.
“Lawrence Community Works is providing tremendous leadership to the city of Lawrence in developing the city’s historic mill buildings into affordable housing,” Herzog said in a statement. “Both the additional housing units and the commercial space this project will provide will help that community significantly.

SourceBanker & Tradesman

Viet-Aid secures funds for Four Corners project

A $14.5 million Four Corners project put together under the auspices of the Vietnamese American Initiative for Development Inc. (Viet-AID) is moving ahead. The project recently picked up $600,000 predevelopment loan.

The Community Economic Development Assistance Corporation, which works on community development projects with state agencies, provided the loan. CEDAC also provided $450,000 to Viet-AID to purchase a part of the site.

The project includes two buildings that will replace a former auto body shop and nine vacant publicly owned lots. Viet-AID, which is based in Fields Corner, plans to build 35 affordable rental units. Nine of the units will be specifically for former homeless families.
One building will have three stories at 331-337 Washington Street and another building will have four stories at 322-336 Washington Street. There will also be 3,000 square feet of commercial space on the first floors and 23 parking spaces.

Construction is expected to start late this year and finish up at the beginning of 2016. The Boston Redevelopment Authority signed off on the project in October 2013.

“We are excited to see underutilized land in the Fairmount Corridor converted into sustainable, affordable housing,” Mayor Martin Walsh said in a statement.

Nam Pham, Viet-AID executive director, said the project is part of his organization’s transit oriented design strategy. The project is a 10 to 15 minute walk from the Four Corners/Geneva commuter rail station.

Viet-AID has also received support for the project from the city’s Department of Neighborhood Development and the Federal Home Loan Bank of Boston.

SourceDorchester Reporter

$3.9 million from state to fund affordable housing upgrade, construction in Berkshires

A regional housing agency has received nearly $3.9 million in state funding toward the purchase – and eventual upgrade – of an affordable housing complex in Pittsfield and the construction of senior housing in Wlliamstown.

Berkshire Housing Development Corp. has secured a $3.6 million loan from the Community Economic Development Assistance Corp. to buy the Dalton Apartments on April Lane in the city.

Once the funds are in hand, BHDC plans a $5 million upgrade of the 44-year-old, 100-unit housing complex, according to Executive Director Elton Ogden.

“In partnership with Rees-Larkin, we plan significant capital investment,” Ogden said. Rees-Larkin was the Boston development firm that created the 45-unit Rice Silk Mill Apartments that opened in Pittsfield in September 2012.

Rees-Larkin’s principal developer, Jon Rudzinski, looks forward to the joint venture with BHDC, which manages the Rice Silk Mill Apartments.

“I came back to Pittsfield because of the great working relationship with [BHDC] and, personally, I like the fact of having another project in the city,” he said. “It’s also a win-win situation when you show up with resources for rehab.”

The $3.6 million loan is actually a bridge to allow the development team to obtain $6.2 million in federal and state low-income housing tax credits, with the balance of the financing coming from permanent loans.

The 11-building Dalton Apartments complex, currently owned by the Dalton Apartments Limited Partnership of Eastern Massachusetts, was built in 1970 and currently has 15 vacancies, according Ogden. He noted of the 100 apartments, 20 are set aside for tenants who qualify for state housing subsidies known as Section 8. BHDC plans to seek permission to increase the number of Section 8 units among the 100 apartments.

The remaining $305,500 from CEDAC is a pre-development loan for the design of a 40-unit senior housing project on land being donated by Williams College, near the Williamstown Elementary School.

Highland Woods is primarily aimed to help residents being forced to leave the Spruces Mobile Home Park, which was heavily damaged by Tropical Storm Irene in August 2011.

“This brings us one step closer for people who haven’t left the park or others who want to return to Williamstown,” said Catherine Yamamoto, chairwoman of the local Affordable Housing Committee.

Yamamoto noted the remaining 90 tenants have until early 2016 to vacate the complex, which catered to people 55 and older. In all, 300 residents occupied Spruces prior to Irene, with some already moved into housing elsewhere in town or outside the community.

BHDC’s development of Highland Woods is being assisted by a pair of nonprofits: Williamstown Elder Housing Corp. and Higher Ground Inc. Ogden says the planning has been well underway since October – and if construction money is secured this spring – work can begin this summer.

SourceThe Berkshire Eagle

Gov. announces $25M in housing for veterans, others

Vietnam War veteran Richard Yarde listened intently to Gov. Deval Patrick as he announced millions of dollars in funding to create affordable housing for veterans in communities across the state and in Haverhill.
Yarde’s thoughts soon turned to a time 15 years ago when he was in need of an apartment he could afford and was referred to Veterans Northeast Outreach Center in Haverhill. He also thought about the many veterans he’s met in recent times who’ve told him they need the same kind of helpful hand in finding safe and affordable housing as he did so many years ago.
“It’s absolutely wonderful,” Yarde said about Patrick’s announcement yesterday at Veterans Northeast Outreach Center on Reed Street.
“This will give veterans what they deserve for their service to their country,” Yarde said. “For many, it will be a start as a lot of returning veterans come home and live with family as a lot of them can’t afford the cost of market-rate housing. And in addition to housing, they’ll have opportunities for job training, retraining and other services that Veterans Northeast can provide.”
Yarde, house manager for the Veterans Mansion on Cedar Street, a program of VNOC, said the 27 new units planned for the Mount Washington neighborhood should fill up as quickly as they are built.
“Most housing is not affordable for a lot of veterans and trying to find a job that will support them in the current economy is almost impossible,” Yarde said.
Patrick was in Haverhill yesterday to announce more than $25 million in funding to create over 335 new units of supportive housing for veterans, homeless and very low income households across the state. He said the funding is part of an aggressive plan by his administration to end chronic homelessness of veterans.
The governor also announced that with these units, his administration has reached its goal of creating 1,000 units of permanent, supportive housing in Massachusetts a year early. Patrick made the announcement at the Reed Street campus of Veterans Northeast Outreach Center, which will receive funding assistance in creating 27 new units of housing for veterans.
“Government’s role is to help people help themselves, and I am extremely pleased that we have reached out ambitious housing goal early, ensuring that more of our families have the resources to get back on the feet,” Patrick said to a crowd of people that included other state officials along with city officials and members of Veterans Northeast Outreach. “Helping our most vulnerable families transition into stable housing is vital to supporting our economy and creating a stronger Commonwealth for the next generation.”
The local organization that provides a range of services to veterans and their families plans to begin construction this summer of 27 additional units of affordable rental housing in the Mount Washington neighborhood, where it is based.
John Ratka, executive director of Veterans Northeast Outreach, said that nationally, there is no larger single demographic that has a greater need for affordable housing than veterans and their families.
He said his organization works with veterans in their early 20s to those in their 80s who have a need for affordable housing as some are low-income and some are living on disability compensation.
Mayor James Fiorentini addressed the crowd as well saying this new housing project is part of the city’s ongoing efforts to revitalize the Mount Washington neighborhood.
Fiorentini told The Eagle-Tribune that police have instituted additional patrols in the area to combat crime, while other quality of life initiatives include the revitalization of Swasey Field, which has a new water park that is expected to open this summer with more improvements planned.
“We’re also instituting more street sweeping and inspections of vacant housing,” Fiorentini said.
On Jan. 15, the city’s Zoning Board of Appeals unanimously approved the application for a Comprehensive Permit submitted by the Veterans Northeast Outreach Center to create more housing for veterans.
Ratka said the $5.7 million project involves creating 27 affordable rental units on three sites in the Mount Washington neighborhood. The largest, a two-story building with 18 enhanced studio apartments, will be built along the Reed Street side of the parking lot for VNOC, which is located in the former St. Rita’s Church at 10 Reed St.
Ratka said a three-story building is planned for 74 Temple St. and will provide six, one-bedroom units with six off-street parking spaces, while a three-story three-unit building is planned for 17 to 19 Tremont St. and will provide one two-bedroom apartment and two three-bedroom apartments with five off-street parking spaces.
The two smaller buildings will be located within a hop, skip and a jump from Veterans Northeast Outreach Center so that veterans don’t have to travel far to receive any of the many support services this agency provides.
The architect for the project, Davis Square Architects of Somerville, designed the buildings to blend in with neighboring homes, many of which are flat-roofed multi-family homes.
“We want them to look like part of the neighborhood,” said Michelle Granick, a project architect with Davis Square Architects.
The project’s engineer, Joe Peznola of Hancock Associates in Danvers, said the homes will have many green energy-saving features such as high levels of insulation, high efficiency heating and cooling systems and light reflecting roofs.
Peznola said construction contracts will be going out to bid and that he expects construction to begin as early as this summer, with a possible opening next spring.
Ratka said a lot of careful planning went into the size of the project and how it would affect the neighborhood while maintaining the history of the St. Rita’s property for those who have lived in the community for a long time.
The project is a collaboration between Veterans Northeast and the Coalition for a Better Acre (CBA), based in Lowell, Ratka said.
The non-profit community development corporation has developed 425 affordable rental units, 33 commercial units, and more than 50 units for first-time home-buyers in Lowell, Ratka said. The Haverhill initiative is CBA’s first residential development project outside of Lowell.
Madeline Nash, CBA’s director of real estate, said the CBA will be seeking funding through the Low Income Housing Tax Credit Program and other state affordable housing development sources. Pre-development financing has been provided by the Community Economic Development Assistance Corporation (CEDAC). Funding for this project is from The North Shore HOME Consortium, the city of Haverhill and the state’s Housing and Preservation Stabilization Trust Fund.

SourceEagle Tribune

Worcester, Oxford ‘supportive housing’ projects get state funds

Projects in Worcester and Oxford are among housing units for veterans, the homeless, and low-income families and individuals across the state that will receive a share of $25 million in state funds approved Tuesday by Gov. Deval L. Patrick.

The distribution of the money follows efforts launched in 2012 to add 1,000 units of so-called supportive housing by December 2015, the governor said. Administration officials said with the new grant awards, the state is reaching that goal one year ahead of that timetable.

Both of the Worcester County projects are being undertaken by the South Middlesex Opportunity Council.

A project at 16 Cottage St. in Worcester involves the upgrade of an existing 15 single-room occupancy building for $474,000. The other project is at 266 Main St. in Oxford and will provide 16 single-room occupancy units with supportive services for residents, for $350,000.

Charles Gagnon, chief operating officer at SMOC, said the agency is already running the single room occupancy program at the Cottage Street building, which is a former rest home. He said the group will use the new state funding to enhance handicapped accessibility features, install more efficient building systems and upgrade the facility. The funds also will help pay for supportive services to residents.

Mr. Gagnon said the Oxford development is a new project in the final stages of renovation of a historic Main Street building. He said the state funding will be used to complete the project, provide long-term financing and support services for residents. He said it will open this summer.

“Government’s role is to help people help themselves, and I am extremely pleased that we have reached our ambitious housing goal early, ensuring that more of our families have the resources to get back on their feet,” Mr. Patrick said in a press release. “Helping our most vulnerable families transition into stable housing is vital to supporting our economy and creating a stronger commonwealth for the next generation.”

The state’s supportive housing program is operated in conjunction with a network of nonprofit agencies to provide assistance, including child care, access to job training and mental health care.

The program “will provide a clear pathway for participants from homelessness and emergency shelters towards stabilization and growth in permanently affordable housing,” said Aaron Gornstein, undersecretary for the Department of Housing and Community Development.

Roger Herzog, executive director of the Community Economic Development Assistance Corp., who chaired a working group that developed the initiative, said 18 state agencies cooperated on the program.

“The supportive housing will help seniors, veterans, homeless individuals and families, and persons with disabilities, among others, all of whom will benefit from the services connected with this affordable housing,” he said in a prepared statement.

Mr. Patrick also awarded 208 project-based vouchers from the Massachusetts Rental Voucher Program. The vouchers are available to owners of existing affordable rental properties that provide services or partner with an agency that has experience with successfully stabilizing homeless or low-income households.

Those vouchers allow homeless families to move into existing housing developments with long-term affordability restrictions. The nonprofit agencies that own the properties provide participating families with comprehensive services to help ensure that they do not fall back into the cycle of homelessness and emergency shelter.

Support services funding of $2,500 per unit will be used for job search and training, financial literacy and planning, self-sufficiency training and coaching, counseling, parenting, early education and child care, mental health and addiction treatment, adult education and skills training.

SourceWorcester Telegram & Gazette

Community Development Bond Bill a Big Win for Children, Families

Last November, Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick signed a five-year housing and community development bond bill, which authorized $45 million to create a new Early Education and Out of School Capital Fund to improve the quality of center-based facilities.
Earlier this month Children’s Investment Fund and their parent agency CEDAC held a celebration at Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts to celebrate the passage of the facilities legislation.
A core tenet of United Way’s vision for a thriving community is quality early childhood education. Agencies need the infrastructure to provide that quality to the children they serve. While it may be easy to overlook the needs of a brick and mortar building when compared against curriculum or nutrition or staffing, having peace of mind when it comes to property management is paramount for Executive Directors, statewide.
Our friends at the Children’s Investment Fund put it this way:
The successful bond legislation affirms the positive impact that high quality education makes in children’s lives. It also acknowledges that all children, regardless of family income or circumstances, should be educated in physical environments that support healthy development and learning.
This bond bill, which United Way supported, helps take another important step to ensure our kids are growing and developing in high-end venues. And that means they’re given a great path towards long-term future success. Currently, United Way is working with it partners to determine funding criteria and timing.
“All children need learning environments where they can explore materials and interact with their peers and teachers,” said Mav Pardee, Program Manager for the Children’s Investment Fund. ”But they also need to be in space that has daylight, comfortable temperatures, suitable acoustics, and good indoor air quality. Research confirms that those elements support concentration, positive behavior and better overall performance.”
At the celebration, lawmakers honored were Housing Committee Chairs Sen. James Eldridge and Rep. Kevin Honan, and the original bill sponsors, Sen. Sal DiDomenico and Rep. Jeffrey Sanchez. Also honored was Citizens’ Housing and Planning Association, a United Way partner agency. Mike Durkin, President and CEO of United Way of Massachusetts Bay and Merrimack Valley received an award on behalf of our efforts in passing the legislation.
Sign up for United Way action alerts on other bills related to our work with children, youth and families here.

SourceSpeak United

Senator DiDomenico honored by Children’s Investment Fund

Last week Senator Sal DiDomenico was honored by the Children’s Investment Fund and the Community Economic Development Assistance Corporation for his work with the new Early Education and Out of School Time Capital Fund. The event was held at the offices of the Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts (at the Landmark Center in Boston) on Feb 4th.

The Children’s Investment Fund provides loan and grant financing, technical assistance, and training to non-profit early childhood (ECE) and out-of-school time (OST) programs planning capital improvements.

The Fund is affiliated with CEDAC, a quasi-public, community development finance institution that provides technical assistance, pre-development lending and consulting services to non-profit organizations involved in housing development, workforce development, neighborhood economic development and capital improvement to child care facilities.

CEDAC is – active in national housing preservation policy research and development and is widely recognized as a leader in the non-profit community development industry. For additional information on CEDAC and its current projects, please visit www.cedac.org

SourceBoston Globe - Boston.com

Unique Funding Source

Education Week recently reported on a significant new early childhood funding stream in Massachusetts:

“The Massachusetts legislature recently passed a housing bond bill that includes funding for renovating child-care facilities around the state. The bill, signed by Governor Deval Patrick, a Democrat, on November 14, is a $1.4 billion package that includes $45 million in bond financing that would be used for capital improvements to daycare centers and after-school facilities serving children from low-income families…. In Massachusetts and around the country, many early childhood providers that focus on at-risk children have to make do with buildings that were not intended for the unique needs of young children. Many of those facilities lack adequate outdoor space, recommended safety measures, or accessibility for children or employees with disabilities.

“The Children’s Investment Fund, based in Boston, works statewide to provide grants, loans, and technical assistance to early childhood care providers and supported the measure. The organization released a study in 2011 that outlined some of the deficiencies of child care facilities around the state. ‘This is the first time that facilities’ financing for these service providers is part of community development legislation,’ said Mav Pardee, the program manager of Children’s Investment Fund. ‘It recognizes the vital role that education plays in children’s lives and is an investment in improving education quality, beginning early, when it is most effective.'”

SourceExchange Press, Inc.

Building Community: Neighborhoods and Nonprofits With a Mission

Building Community: Neighborhoods and Nonprofits With a Mission
Wednesday, October 24, 2012

By Gar Alperovitz, Democracy Collaborative Press | Serialized Book
This is part 13 of an exclusive Truthout series from political economist and author Gar Alperovitz. We will be publishing weekly installments of the new edition of “America Beyond Capitalism,” a visionary book, first published in 2005, whose time has come. Today’s excerpt is Chapter 9 of the book. Donate to Truthout and receive a free copy.
The neighborhood-based Community Development Corporation (CDC) grew out of the need to combine the community-serving mission of a nonprofit organization with the wealth-building and ownership capacities of an economic enterprise. It has been remarkably successful in many communities.
The Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood in Brooklyn, New York, was hit hard. Redlining by banks, blockbusting by real estate speculators, and extortionate rents devastated low-income housing. Between 1940 and 1960 “Bed-Stuy” went from three-quarters white to almost 85 percent African American and Latino. Nearly 30 percent of families lived on less than $3,000 a year. Infant mortality was the highest in the nation.
Was there anything that could be done? Especially given that public funds available were inevitably minimal compared to the scale of need?
Some things were obvious. First, local residents themselves would have to take the lead. Second, if public support was not going to do the job, some other source of funding would have to be found. Third, anyone who expected a quick fix was naive. The only way forward was to think long-term – and to start organizing now to solve immediate problems, step-by-step, in a manner that also laid foundations for an approach that might ultimately build to a new answer.
But this required a new institutional form – one that combined the community-serving mission of a nonprofit organization with the wealth-building and ownership capacities of an economic enterprise.
The neighborhood-based Community Development Corporation (CDC) grew out of such circumstances – a hybrid self-help entity that operates at both the community-building level and the economic level, and that exhibits micro-level applications of Pluralist Commonwealth principles. The Bedford-Stuyvesant Restoration Corporation – a CDC developed in the 1960s with the bipartisan support of then senators Robert F. Kennedy and Jacob Javits – helped set the terms of reference for an institution that can now be found in thousands of communities.
In its initial ten years of operation, the Bedford Stuyvesant Restoration Corporation provided start-up capital and other assistance to 116 new businesses, helped create 3,300 jobs, arranged training programs or new jobs for 7,000 local residents, and renovated or built some 650 new housing units. It also launched and still owns a major commercial development (Restoration Plaza), a property management company, and a construction firm. It receives two-thirds of the profits of a Pathmark supermarket that had over $28 million in annual sales by 2001. The Bedford Stuyvesant Restoration Corporation also operates a two-hundred-seat theater and a revolving loan fund for local start-up businesses. As of 2002, the CDC had roughly $26 million in assets. Its 2002 budget was $10.5 million, $7 million of which was funded by income from rental and other commercial ventures.
Another leading example is the New Community Corporation in Newark, New Jersey, a CDC established after urban riots during the 1960s left many dead and over a thousand injured. New Community now owns an estimated $500 million in real estate and other ventures, including a shopping center and three thousand units of housing. New Community Corporation enterprises employ 2,000 neighborhood residents and create roughly $200 million in economic activity each year. Profits help operate day care and after-school programs, a nursing home, and two medical day care centers for seniors. Proceeds from business activities help support job-training, educational, health, and other programs. The New Community Corporation also runs a Youth Automotive Training Center; young people who complete its courses are guaranteed jobs offering $20,000-plus starting salaries.
A well-known rural example is the Kentucky Highlands Investment Corporation. This CDC provides both venture capital and small-business loans to assist rural firms. Over the last several decades Kentucky Highlands has made or helped generate more than $175 million in investments in 140 companies, creating some 7,900 jobs in rural southeast Kentucky. It has assets of roughly $30 million.
Since the 1960s almost four thousand neighborhood-based CDCs have come into existence in U.S. communities. The majority are not nearly as large and sophisticated as the leaders, but all employ wealth-related principles to serve “small publics” in geographically defined areas. The assets that the far more numerous smaller CDCs commonly develop center, above all, on housing, but many also own retail firms and, in several cases, larger businesses.
The more than thirty-five-year developmental trend that has produced the modern CDC is intimately related to the U.S. political economy ‘ s declining capacity to address problems of inequality and poverty directly through redistribution or through major job-creation strategies. Fiscal considerations have set the terms of reference from the beginning. At the time of the 1960s “War on Poverty,” which gave the institution its first major backing, the Johnson administration explicitly rejected as financially and politically infeasible a large-scale public jobs program to deal with poverty in a more explicit and comprehensive manner.8
The trajectory of development has also been instructive. The first generation of CDCs began with a broad strategic conception that directly echoed Pluralist Commonwealth themes. The initial goal involved a community-building vision and included the provision of services, the ownership of productive enterprise, and advocacy on behalf of local residents. As the political scientist Rita Mae Kelly observes, institutional development, community control, and community ownership of property and other resources were “expected to foster, support, and sustain the development of managerial and entrepreneurial leadership within the community – and to keep it there.”
The advent of the Nixon administration, decisions by the Ford Foundation, and generally reduced funding in the Reagan years forced many CDCs to alter their initial approach. Two important ideas of the early period – direct ownership of assets beyond housing and community organizing and advocacy – were often abandoned or reduced to minor functions. Instead, most CDCs concentrated primarily on an important but narrow form of wealth ownership (the development of low-income housing); and secondarily on technical assistance and small-business loans to individual entrepreneurs.
The basic concept, however, proved to be resilient. The number of CDCs expanded steadily; more than a thousand new CDCs emerged during the Reagan era alone. CDC housing development was strongly assisted by special tax incentives for investors who helped CDCs and others build low-income housing. (Numerous financial intermediaries now develop and market tax-based packages to facilitate the financing of a broad range of efforts.)11 Although CDCs encountered financial difficulties, and some were victims of poor and occasionally corrupt leadership, the overall trial and error learning curve was impressive.
Community Development Corporations also developed a number of new strategies that added to their strength during this period. “The lack of federal support,” former Local Initiatives Support Corporation (LISC) president Paul Grogan and his coauthor Tony Proscio point out, “meant there was no federal bureaucracy prescribing what was supposed to happen.” They go on:
“CDCs were free to develop and pursue their local agendas. And as they scrounged for dollars and technical help, they were building a web of relationships and a diversified funding base that would be with them for the long term, not for the short cycle of the latest federal program. . . . CDCs in city after city are now raising capital both for projects and for overhead from a wide range of charities, banks and other financial institutions, private corporations, city governments, and increasingly, state governments.”
CDC development also capitalized on the achievements of a parallel citizens movement that used the Community Reinvestment Act to fight redlining by banks – thereby helping allocate more than $60 billion to neighborhood investment by the early 1990s. The emergence of new Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFIs) also provided new support for neighborhood development. During the Clinton years federal legislation gave CDFIs – and thus also CDCs – a further significant boost.
A number of organized support efforts have also been critical. One of the most important, the Local Initiatives Support Corporation was established with broad foundation and corporate backing. Since 1979 LISC has raised over $4 billion – and leveraged almost $7 billion in additional investment – to help some 1,700 CDCs. In a development that acknowledged both the CDCs ‘ important role and the -coming-of-age of the movement in general, former Clinton treasury secretary Robert Rubin accepted chairmanship of the Local Initiatives board in 1999.
Some critics charge that in turning primarily to housing production during the second phase of development, many CDCs lost touch with their local communities. Urban Studies professor Robert Fisher writes that most “avoided political controversy, were dominated by professionals with a technical orientation, had narrow membership bases, and rejected social action activity.” On the other hand, another close observer – Andy Mott (at the time executive director of the Center for Community Change) – concluded in 2000 that an “increasing number of CDC coalitions are offering community organizing training to their members, and CDC associations . . . have taken on – and won – major policy battles on jobs, housing and reinvestment.”
In general, housing production remains central to Community Development Corporation efforts – along with the principle of public-benefiting ownership. Roughly three-quarters of new or rehabbed housing units are owned directly by the CDC that produces them. In addition, by 1998 CDCs had developed 71 million square feet of commercial and industrial space.
The experience of Dudley Street Neighborhood Initiative in Boston – a nonprofit community-based institution similar to a traditional CDC – suggests additional possibilities for future change. The Initiative has won the right of eminent domain to acquire abandoned parcels of land, a unique development in modern urban policy. The Initiative also manages residential properties as part of a community land trust and has established several village commons, a series of “Tot Lots,” two community centers, and commercial developments at key points in the neighborhood.
In general, a 1998 survey found 40 percent of urban CDCs reported owning and/or operating a business (34 percent of rural CDCs did so). Over half also reported some form of business-lending activity with a total of nearly $2 billion in outstanding loans.
Substantial economic projects continue to be exceptional. However, given the level of experience developed over the past several decades – and the example being set by the leaders – increasing numbers of CDCs appear likely to slowly broaden their ownership focus beyond housing and commercial real estate development in coming years.
Louis Winnick of the Institute for Public Administration suggests that the “meteoric growth of CDCs and related grassroots initiatives owes much to their appeal across the political spectrum.” As he observes: “The anti-statist Right saluted community development as a proxy for government, which might shield the succored poor from the dead hand of bureaucracy. . . . On the opposite end of the ideological spectrum, radical activists envisioned community-based organizations as weapons of political empowerment, instruments to liberate the poor from chronic neglect.”
Many states and local municipalities now back CDC activity – both directly and indirectly. In cities with a large number of cooperating CDCs, local governments have often become active development partners, making foreclosed properties available to them or earmarking Community Development Block Grant funds for housing subsidies. Particularly innovative state programs include New York ‘ s Neighborhood Preservation Companies Program, the North Carolina Community Development Initiative, and two efforts of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts: the Community Economic Development Assistance Corporation and the Community Enterprise Economic Development Program, the latter of which provides both financial and technical assistance to CDCs in economically depressed communities.
Federal programs also provide significant support to CDCs, including Community Development Block Grants, the HOME Program, and the Low Income Housing Tax Credit. One of the last pieces of legislation of the Clinton administration, the Community Renewal Tax Relief Act of 2000, provides additional “new-market” tax credits and other assistance. The 2000 Act – which enjoyed the broad backing of Republican leaders in the House of Representatives – also suggests the potential for expanding the base of political support for housing and other wealth-ownership principles at the community and neighborhood level.
There is little likelihood that the social and financial pressures that helped produce the CDC hybrid will let up – or that the steady step-by-step developmental trend will come to a halt. Indeed, given the fiscal problems facing the nation, the prospect is for more rather than less pressure to create additional forms of ownership – and of further forms of revenue-generating institutional change. Community organizing and advocacy efforts by CDCs also appear likely to increase.
Other nonprofit organizations with a service mission at the community, state, and national levels have picked up on the underlying principles exhibited by CDC development – and here, too, it is clear that the overarching fiscal crisis is producing forces that make ongoing evolutionary development all but certain. Pioneer Human Services in Seattle, Washington – an organization initially established with donations and grants – is now almost entirely self-supporting, and suggests some of the possibilities. It provides drug-and-alcohol-free housing, employment, job training, counseling, and education to recovering alcoholics and drug addicts. Its annual operating budget is $54 million – over 99 percent is earned through fees for services or sales of products.
Pioneer Human Services and its subsidiaries own and manage a light-metal fabricator that employs people traditionally thought to be unemployable and that has contracts with Boeing, Xantrex, Leviton, and others; as well as a Food Buying Service that distributes roughly 7 million pounds of food to nonprofit organizations in twenty states.
The Roberts Enterprise Development Fund [now REDF] in the San Francisco Bay Area works with nonprofit umbrella organizations. These, in turn, have operated roughly twenty businesses – from thrift stores and janitorial services to a bakery and a furniture manufacturer – that also both make money and help specific groups in the community. Revenues grew from $10 million in 1997 to $20 million in 2000, with profits increasing from $230,000 to $630,000. Enterprises target specific employee/trainee populations – including landscaping and packaging and shipping services for individuals with developmental disabilities; bike repair training for young people; and a cleaning service, a café, and a temp agency that provide jobs for individuals with psychiatric disabilities.
Educational and health institutions in many areas, of course, have also long operated as nonprofits-in-business charging fees for services. A recent study found that in the twenty largest U.S. cities, sixty-nine of the two hundred largest private enterprises (35 percent) were universities and medical institutions, most of which were nonprofit. In four cities – Washington, Philadelphia, San Diego, and Baltimore – what the study called “eds” and “meds” accounted for more than 50 percent of all jobs generated.
Some analysts who have studied hybrid nonprofits have raised serious questions about whether important service missions may be compromised by their economic activities; and several have suggested guidelines to maintain institutional integrity. Conversely, others point out that by reducing the reliance of organizations on public (often politically influenced) funding and from foundation and individual donor support, new sources of revenue can often produce offsetting advantages in terms of institutional independence.
Such questions are certain to take on increasing urgency as time goes on. Given the fiscal pressures driving change and the growing support the strategies are beginning to attract, the trend is unlikely to be reversed. The real question is how the conflict between organizational goals can be managed intelligently – and whether those concerned with critical public missions organize themselves to ensure the integrity of the various efforts.

Gar Alperovitz
Gar Alperovitz is the Lionel R. Bauman professor of political economy at the University of Maryland and co-founder of the Democracy Collaborative. He is the author of the newly released book, “America Beyond Capitalism.” Follow him on Facebook and Twitter @GarAlperovitz.

This piece was reprinted by Truthout with permission or license.
URL: http://truth-out.org/news/item/12309-building-community-neighborhoods-and-nonprofits-with-a-mission
© 2012 Truthout

SourceInternet: Truthout Book: "America Beyond Capitalism"