The Enterprise Social Investment Corporation and Fannie Mae Announce $100 Million Tax Credit Partnership Fund to Spur Supportive
2004年7月9日 - 1:25AM
PRニュース・ワイアー (英語)
The Enterprise Social Investment Corporation and Fannie Mae
Announce $100 Million Tax Credit Partnership Fund to Spur
Supportive Housing Development NEW YORK, July 8 /PRNewswire/ -- On
the heels of New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg's announcement
of an ambitious plan to reduce the number of homeless people in New
York City by creating 12,000 units of supportive housing over 10
years with city, state, and federal funds, Fannie Mae (NYSE: FNM),
the nation's largest source of financing for home mortgages, and
The Enterprise Social Investment Corporation (ESIC) announced a
$100 million Low- Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC) fund to help
increase the supply of permanent supportive housing nationally for
chronically homeless people. The fund has been under development
since March, when Fannie Mae announced its expanded American Dream
Commitment(R). At that time, Fannie Mae said it would work with its
partners to create at least two new LIHTC funds dedicated to
permanent housing for the homeless. The Enterprise Foundation, of
which ESIC is an affiliate, has committed to build 2,500 new
supportive housing units in New York, investing in tax credit
equity, acquisition and predevelopment loans, and providing grants
in the process. Permanent supportive housing is considered to be an
effective way to help people make the transition from homelessness
to sustainable independent living by providing counseling and
services in addition to shelter. A study conducted by The
Enterprise Foundation found that residents living in supportive
housing were able to increase their monthly income from $225 to
$643; decrease their hospitalization rate from 65 percent to 38
percent; and increase their average residential tenure to 4.6
years. Fannie Mae and ESIC are committed to helping a coalition of
organizations dedicated to ending homelessness through the creation
of permanent supportive housing nationally. As part of this
commitment, Fannie Mae today presented $1 million of a five-year,
$5 million grant to the Corporation for Supportive Housing (CSH), a
national nonprofit organization that helps communities create
permanent housing with services to prevent and end homelessness.
Participating in today's announcement at Chelsea Court, a model
18-unit permanent supportive housing residence opened a year ago by
Palladia Inc., with financing from Fannie Mae, ESIC and the New
York City Department of Housing Preservation and Development (HPD)
were: Linda Gibbs, New York City Department of Homeless Services
commissioner; John Warren, HPD first deputy commissioner; Carla
Javits, president of CSH; Bart Harvey, chairman and CEO of The
Enterprise Foundation and chairman of ESIC; and Daniel H. Mudd,
vice chairman and COO of Fannie Mae. "The $100 million investment
we are announcing today is the first of many initiatives we and our
partners will undertake to tackle homelessness," said Mudd. "While
America is among the world's best-housed nations, homelessness is a
chronic and growing problem. Fannie Mae is going to invest its
creativity and capital to help expand the stock of permanent
supportive housing for families and individuals that are homeless.
We are honored to make ESIC our first partner in this initiative."
"For more than 20 years The Enterprise Foundation and ESIC have
worked to restore and stabilize urban communities through the
development of affordable housing, and Fannie Mae has supported our
efforts with its investments," said Harvey. "We are pleased to
announce this timely initiative to extend our work beyond bricks
and mortar, to contribute to the development of supportive housing
for those who may need help with life's challenges in New York and
nationwide." ESIC has financed 17,000 units of supportive housing
nationwide. Supportive housing studies have concluded that homeless
people achieve improvements in housing stability when services that
provide counseling for issues such as substance abuse, mental
illness, the absence of job and financial management skills, and
health are combined with housing. Unlike community residences and
shelters, supportive housing allows tenants a choice in their
living arrangements, separating housing from the support services
they receive on-site or nearby. "New York has struggled, as have
many American cities, with a disturbing increase in the number of
people who are homeless, many for long periods of time," said
Gibbs. "Studies initiated more than a decade ago have helped us
understand the value and efficacy of supportive housing. Today's
announcement by Fannie Mae and ESIC will help New York get off to a
fast start with our plan to create 12,000 new supportive housing
units for the chronically homeless." LIHTCs are provided by the
federal government to encourage corporate investment in housing
that is affordable to people earning up to 60 percent of an area's
median income, which is $32,640 in New York City. Fannie Mae
invests primarily through limited partnership funds that pass the
LIHTC benefits through to investors, and is the largest single
investor in LIHTCs to increase the availability of affordable
multifamily housing. The LIHTC fund announced today will primarily
support developments for individuals and families earning less than
30 percent of an area's median income. The $100 million equity
investment through ESIC and the $5 million grant to CSH are part of
Fannie Mae's expanded American Dream Commitment to expand access to
homeownership for millions of first-time home buyers; help raise
the minority homeownership rate to at least 55 percent; make
homeownership and rental housing a success for millions of families
at risk of losing their homes; and expand the supply of affordable
housing where it is needed most. The Enterprise Social Investment
Corporation (ESIC) is a national leader in affordable housing and
community revitalization efforts. Founded in 1984 as a socially
motivated for-profit affiliate of The Enterprise Foundation, ESIC's
direct core business is syndicating Low-Income Housing Tax Credit
(LIHTC) equity investments. ESIC advocated for and took a lead role
in the creation of LIHTC legislation, a federal program enacted in
1986 that encourages the private investment of capital for the
development of decent, affordable housing and the rehabilitation of
existing affordable housing for low-income people throughout the
United States. Since the LIHTC program's establishment, ESIC's
syndication group has raised and currently manages nearly $4
billion in equity through more than 85 investment funds, including
national multi- investor funds, private label funds and a variety
of regional funds. These investments are helping to build an
estimated 70,000 affordable homes in 45 states, Puerto Rico and the
District of Columbia. http://www.esic.org/ Fannie Mae is a New York
Stock Exchange company and the largest non-bank financial services
company in the world. It operates pursuant to a federal charter and
is the nation's largest source of financing for home mortgages.
Since 1968, Fannie Mae has provided $5.9 trillion of mortgage
financing for 60 million families. More information about Fannie
Mae can be found on the Internet at http://www.fanniemae.com/. The
American Dream Commitment is a registered mark of Fannie Mae.
Unauthorized use of this mark is prohibited. Style Usage: Fannie
Mae's Board of Directors has authorized the company to operate as
"Fannie Mae," and the company's stock is now listed on the NYSE as
"FNM." In order to facilitate clarity and avoid confusion, news
organizations are asked to refer to the company exclusively as
"Fannie Mae." DATASOURCE: Fannie Mae CONTACT: Michael Dutton of
Fannie Mae, +1-215-575-1538; Sandi Abadinsky Baer of The Enterprise
Foundation, +1-202-256-4749; or Sally Robey of ESIC,
+1-443-694-1780 Web site: http://www.fanniemae.com/ Company News
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