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Community Stabilization in the Wake of the Foreclosure Crisis Ali Solis, Vice President, Public Policy & Industry R

Community Stabilization in the Wake of the Foreclosure Crisis Ali Solis, Vice President, Public Policy & Industry Relations Enterprise Community Partners HUD Summit on Housing: Partnering for Responsible Policy October 7, 2008. The Enterprise Mission.

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Community Stabilization in the Wake of the Foreclosure Crisis Ali Solis, Vice President, Public Policy & Industry R

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  1. Community Stabilization in the Wake of the Foreclosure Crisis Ali Solis, Vice President, Public Policy & Industry Relations Enterprise Community Partners HUD Summit on Housing: Partnering for Responsible Policy October 7, 2008

  2. The Enterprise Mission Enterprise’s mission is to see that all low-income people in the United States have the opportunity for fit and affordable housing and to move up and out of poverty into the mainstream of American life.

  3. How We Do It We advise, finance and assist in the construction and rehabilitation of affordable housing and economic development projects. We create community development models and policies that can be replicated.

  4. What We’ve Accomplished More than $9 billion in equity, loans and grants invested since 1982 More than 240,000 affordable homes created Investing $1 billion in equity, loans and grants annually

  5. Foreclosure Tsunami’s Impact on Communities • 40.6 million homes in neighborhoods surrounding foreclosed homes will suffer price decline • Property values for each home located in the neighborhood of a foreclosed house will drop an average of $8,667 • $352 billion total decline in property values • Localities will lose $4.5 billion in property taxes and other local tax revenue In short: whole communities, not just individual homebuyers, suffer from concentrations of foreclosures. Source: Center for Responsible Lending

  6. Enterprise Community Stabilization Goals • Keep residents in their homes • Restore market confidence • Prevent and eliminate blight • Preserve property values • Renovate and sell/rent vacant properties • Create land banks for obsolete properties • Reduce holding periods of REOs by lenders/servicers • Target at-risk communities to stop downward cycle

  7. Lessons Learned • Good data and mapping critical • Precise geographic targeting • Sustain at-risk owners through workouts • Demolish obsolete & blighted properties • Renovate and sell/rent vacant properties • Provide quality pre- and post-purchase counseling • Vacant land banking/re-utilization • Public-private partnerships a must • Flexible subsidies to fill development gaps

  8. Enterprise’s Target Community Stabilization Areas • Atlanta • Baltimore • Cleveland • Columbus • Dallas • District of Columbia • Los Angeles • New York City • Rochester • State of Mississippi

  9. Enterprise’s Role in Target Communities • Leveraging Public Funds through Innovative Financing • Property Valuation Assistance • Program Design Expertise • Integration with Local Efforts • Assistance to state/local government partners on developing NSP Action Plans • Experience with REO-Rehab-Disposition Programs • Access to REO Properties through National Community Stabilization Trust

  10. Leveraging Public Dollars to Create Size, Scale and Impact • New financing tools to address gaps in current funding sources • Leveraging of public dollars for greater impact • Blended interest rates to stretch subsidies • Credit enhancement for leveraged pools of capital • Investment earnings help support operations

  11. Cleveland’s Concentration of Foreclosed Properties

  12. Cleveland Foreclosure Response Pilot Partners: Neighborhood Progress, Cleveland Housing Network City of Cleveland, 6 CDCs Development cost totals $21 million including: • Demolition resources: $1.2 million in CDBG • REO Redevelopment: $1.5 million in CDBG soft seconds ($10,000 per homeowner) • $4.5 million in gap funding from OHFA Enterprise’s Role: • Technical assistance in the creation of this pilot program • $1 million in pre-development and acquisition financing • $200,000 grant for program reserves

  13. Cleveland Pilot Target Communities

  14. Cleveland Foreclosure Response Pilot Three Year Pilot Plan impacting 750 homes in 6 Cleveland neighborhoods: • Help 300 families at risk of foreclosure stay in their homes • Demolish 300 obsolete, blighted structures • Redevelop 150 vacant homes for homeownership, lease/purchase or rental housing (60-120% AMI)

  15. Remaining Challenges • Production capacity – need to ramp up quickly • $3.92 billion – great start, not nearly enough • Timely access to discounted REOs in bulk • Untangling REOs from complicated pools of loans

  16. New Innovation: Community Stabilization Trust • National Community Stabilization Trust (NCST) would coordinate the purchase and disposition of REO properties from lenders, loan servicers, investors • Lead partner organizations: Enterprise, the Housing Partnership Network, the Local Initiatives Support Corporation and NeighborWorks America

  17. National Approach to Bulk Dispositions National Community Stabilization Trust • Debt and Equity Financing • Transfer Agent - Servicers to Localities • National Focal Point - REO and Neighborhood Stabilization

  18. Stabilization Trust Mechanism • Acquire REO properties in targeted communities at a significant scale, on a systemic basis and at market-appropriate, risk-adjusted prices • Assemble public, private and foundation resources to fund these acquisitions • Work through local organizations to return the properties to the affordable ownership and rental housing stock for low- and moderate-income families • Provide mechanisms for localities to use Neighborhood Stabilization Program (NSP) funds effectively

  19. For Further Information Ali Solis Vice President, Public Policy and Industry Relations asolis@enterprisecommunity.org / 202.842.9190

  20. Thank You!

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