HUD No. 10-048 Andrea Martone (917) 929-0527 |
For Release Friday March 12, 2010 |
"NEIGHBORHOOD STABILIZATION BOOT CAMP" TO DRAW TOP OFFICIALS FROM 12 CITIES AND THE OBAMA ADMINISTRATION
As foreclosure crisis worsens, national and local leaders convene to define game-changing solutions for stabilizing hard-hit communities and leveraging Federal funding
BOSTON - Dozens of local officials from 12 of the regions hit hardest by the housing crisis are meeting at Harvard University March 14 -16 to develop new strategies for stabilizing neighborhoods that experience large numbers of foreclosures.
The Boot Camp will convene teams of government officials, nonprofits and real estate firms from Baltimore; Chicago; Cuyahoga County (OH); Denver; Los Angeles; Michigan; Massachusetts; New Orleans; Philadelphia; Phoenix; South Florida; and Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minnesota where promising approaches are taking hold, along with the largest national mortgage lenders and servicers such as Bank of America, JP Morgan Chase, Citigroup and Deutsche Bank. Senior officials from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, U.S. Department of Treasury, FHA, Fannie Mae, and Freddie Mac will also participate.
"The Neighborhood Stabilization Boot Camp" is sponsored by Living Cities together with the Ash Center for Democratic Governance and Innovation at the John F. Kennedy School at Harvard University. Living Cities, an innovative philanthropic collaborative of 22 of the world's largest foundations and financial institutions, hopes that the intensive, two-day session will result in a dramatic increase in the speed and scale of smarter, more sustainable neighborhood stabilization by:
- Helping to define new strategies that will have a material impact on targeted neighborhoods;
- Sharing "game-changing" practices that will accelerate keeping units occupied and putting property vacant units back into productive use
- Significantly leveraging the more than $6 billion in federal funds, with an emphasis on accessing larger and more flexible amounts of private capital
"Everyone, from government agencies and nonprofits to financial institutions and foundations, are frustrated by our collective inability to get stabilization efforts to scale. This Boot Camp is a direct response to that frustration," said Ben Hecht, President and CEO of Living Cities.
The neighborhood-level impacts of concentrated foreclosures can be devastating: blight, depressed property values, diminished property tax collections and a reduction in municipal services - a negative feedback loop that repeats and worsens. In 2009 alone, foreclosures have may have reduced property values of nearby homes—most owned by families paying their mortgage on time—by more than $500 billion, according to the Center for Responsible Lending.
"It's important that government at every level, along with the private sector and non-profit community, ramp up our collective effort to confront the foreclosure crisis head on," said HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan. "The scale of this challenge demands that we redouble our efforts to stabilize neighborhoods and restore a real sense of sustainability to our American Dream."
Mercedes Márquez, HUD's Assistant Secretary for Community Planning and Development added, "Boot camp is the perfect descriptive for this meeting and how we have to address the foreclosure and abandonment crisis taking place in far too many neighborhoods. All of us need to roll up our sleeves, get our hands dirty, and do the heavy lifting that's required if we're going to revitalize these communities."
About Ash Center for Democratic Governance and Innovation, Harvard Kennedy School
The Roy and Lisa Ash Center for Democratic Governance and Innovation advances excellence in governance and strengthens democratic institutions worldwide. Through its research, education, international programs and government innovations awards, the Center fosters creative and effective government problem-solving and serves as a catalyst for addressing many of the most pressing needs of the world's citizens.
About Living Cities
Founded in 1991, Living Cities is a unique philanthropic collaborative of 22 of the world's largest foundations and financial institutions. Over the past 18 years, Living Cities has invested more than $600 million in American cities-leveraged into $16 billion and making a demonstrable difference in neighborhoods throughout the nation. Our members are not simply funders. They participate at the senior management level on the Living Cities Board of Directors and contribute the time of 80+ expert staff toward crafting and implementing an agenda that is squarely focused on improving the lives of low-income people and the urban areas in which they live.
Living Cities Members: AARP Foundation, AXA Equitable, Bank of America, The Annie E. Casey Foundation, Citi Foundation, J.P. Morgan Chase Company, Deutsche Bank, Ford Foundation, Bill Melinda Gates Foundation, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, W.K. Kellogg Foundation, John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, The Kresge Foundation, John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, The McKnight Foundation, MetLife, Inc., Morgan Stanley, Prudential Financial, The Rockefeller Foundation, Surdna Foundation Affiliate Members: The Cleveland Foundation, The Skillman Foundation
Available for Interview:
Ben Hecht, President CEO, Living Cities
Stockton Williams, Living Cities' Senior Advisor, Director, Green Economy Initiatives
MEDIA CONTACT:
Andrea Martone
Email: amartone@livingcities.org
(917) 929-0527 (mobile on site)
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