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Industry Leaders Plan National Proposal for Next U.S. President to Increase Quality, Quantity of Nation's Affordable Housing
Industry Leaders Plan National Proposal for Next U.S. President to Increase Quality, Quantity of Nation's Affordable Housing
CHICAGO, May 16 /PRNewswire/ -- Mercy Housing, one of the nation's largest
nonprofit affordable housing developers, along with the Stewards of Affordable
Housing for the Future (SAHF) and the Housing Partnership Network (HPN),
convened industry leaders Friday to discuss new opportunities, resources and
programs for affordable housing as well as create a framework for national
proposals to present to the incoming presidential administration.
The symposium titled, "Opening Doors to Affordable Housing: the
Practitioner's Path to Scale and Sustainability," included topics, on the
neighborhood effect on communities with high foreclosure rates, preservation
of existing affordable housing, building improvements to address climate
change, health care and the linkage to affordable senior housing, and
sustaining successful permanent supportive housing for the previously
homeless.
As Mercy Housing celebrates its 25th anniversary of leadership in
innovative affordable housing, the symposium, which is part of a series of
regional events nationwide, was formed to initiate a dialogue among
experienced nonprofit housing practitioners and their partners to increase the
quality and quantity of affordable housing across the country. Following the
Chicago launch of the symposium series, the initiative will travel to forums
inAtlanta,San Francisco,Denver andSeattle, where local leaders of
affordable housing will share their ideas in a similar format. The end result
will be strategy recommendations for the new U.S. Presidential Administration
as it sets and implements its agenda.
"The need for affordable housing has never been greater in our country and
we need to implement a long-term national strategy to meet the growing
demand," said Sister Lillian Murphy, RSM, CEO of Mercy Housing. "By discussing
best practices and lessons learned from other nonprofit affordable housing
organizations, we can make strategic recommendations to the new administration
and help position housing as a key component to address economic, health,
environmental and educational issues."
Symposium speakers included Amy Anthony, CEO of the Preservation of
Affordable Housing; Dione Alexander, regional director for the Nonprofit
Finance Fund; Shekar Narasimhan, principal of Beekman & Associates; Tom
Bledsoe, CEO of Housing Partnership Network; Anne Evens, Center for
Neighborhood Technology; and Jane Graf, president of Mercy Housing California.
"In order to get the housing agenda advanced, we need to stop talking
about the housing agenda," said Barry Zigas, CEO of Zigas and Associates and a
Mercy Housing Trustee. Jack Markowski, president and CEO of Community
Investment Corporation, added, "It's sometimes hard to make the case that
housing is the most important thing. We need to figure out how big things like
climate change, taxation and transportation provide a platform to talk about
housing needs as a critical component to addressing healthy communities."
Attendees discussed whatthe United States has accomplished over 25 years
of housing for the homeless. With Medicaid, mental health and the prison
systems turning more Americans over to homelessness, housing providers are
having trouble funding services for that growing population.
Michael Bodaken, CEO of National Housing Trust, also emphasized how the
foreclosure crisis is impacting state budgets reducing resources for
multifamily rental needs because of states having to bail out single-family
homeowners. "The key is making neighborhoods sustainable," he said.
Some of the other learnings and successes cited over the last 25 years
included low-income housing tax credits and new market tax credits. The U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban Development's 202 program for senior housing
provides the framework for a collaborative model among housing developers and
service providers. Future policy discussions could involve a separate
allocation of tax credits specifically for senior housing with 50 percent of
funds going toward supportive services -- most importantly health care.
"Many cities have signed up for aggressive plans to end homelessness,"
said Sister Lillian. "But unless they're informed on what it really takes to
do it, there's the risk of failure for the owner, the community and the city."
Housing providers need to inform policymakers and community leaders about the
lessons they've learned and what they'll need in the future to meet housing
needs. One future opportunity could be fundraising for affordable housing via
the Internet. Communities also need to focus on financing permanent housing
for the homeless in addition to housing for the chronically homeless.
Scale and size matter, she added. The challenge for developers is how many
properties can an owner build and sustain while still addressing service
needs.
Mercy Housing, a national not-for-profit affordable housing organization
headquartered inDenver, has a presence in 41 states, serves more than 109,000
people on any given day and has participated in the development, preservation,
financing or operation of more than 34,000 homes. About 75 percent of Mercy
Housing's portfolio is rental units, and the remaining 25 percent is
homeownership. Mercy Housing serves families, seniors and people with special
needs (formerly homeless, people with HIV/AIDS and the developmentally
disabled). For more information about Mercy Housing, please visit
http://www.mercyhousing.org.
The Stewards of Affordable Housing for the Future is a 501(c)(3)
organization whose members acquire multifamily rental housing and preserve it
as affordable to low-income families, seniors, and disabled individuals. Each
of SAHF's seven members is a sophisticated, not-for-profit organization with
properties in multiple states. SAHF was launched in 2003 around the notion
that national not-for-profit preservation entities have policy and
transactional issues and opportunities that differ materially from those faced
by exclusively local not-for-profit or for-profit owners of affordable
housing. The organization is funded by its members, the John D. and Catherine
T. MacArthur Foundation, and the Fannie Mae Foundation.
The Housing Partnership Network operates as a peer network and business
alliance of high-capacity, entrepreneurial development nonprofits. By
collaborating through the Network, our members share and spread the
innovations that emerge from their local practice. They obtain more flexible
and better priced capital that rewards their demonstrated performance and
capabilities. And they create strategies and cooperative ventures that respond
to the rapidly changing regulatory, policy, and economic environment.
Contact: Jennifer Kostka
Mercy Housing
(303) 830-3323
Cell (303) 263-4561
jkostka@mercyhousing.org
SOURCE Mercy Housing
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