Baltimore Sun

Bank to invest $20M-plus in Baltimore job training, loans

JPMorgan Chase to reveal recipients at event today

- By Lorraine Mirabella

JPMorgan Chase plans to invest more than $20 million in West Baltimore and elsewhere in the city to boost homeowners­hip and offer job skills and small-business training for residents.

The five-year commitment is part of $75 million in flexible, low-cost loans and philanthro­pic spending announced Tuesday for programs aimed at closing the racial wealth divide from Baltimore to Richmond, Virginia. It includes $20 million for programs in some Washington, D.C., neighborho­ods and $35 million to be spread across the region.

“Business must do its part to help solve challenges facing the customers and communitie­s it serves,” said Peter Scher, vice chairman of JPMorgan Chase, in Tuesday’s announceme­nt.

Officials of the New York-based bank have scheduled an event with Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott today in Kirby Lane Park on West Saratoga Street to announce grants to Baltimore recipients.

They include $5 million to the POWER: Prioritizi­ng Our Women’s Economic Rise collaborat­ive, led by the Latino Economic Developmen­t Center in Brewer’s Hill. The collaborat­ive will offer small-business developmen­t resources, workforce skills training, affordable real estate developmen­t, and

homeowners­hip opportunit­ies for Black, Hispanic and Latina women in West Baltimore. The bank said that about two-thirds of Black and Latino households in Baltimore meet the standard for liquid-asset poverty, and the largest share of those in poverty are women 25 to 54.

The New York-based banking and financial services giant selected the group through an annual competitio­n for projects designed for and by Black and Latina women. The collaborat­ive works in partnershi­p with Baltimore City government, the University of Maryland Baltimore’s Community Engagement Center, Black Women Build

Baltimore, Baltimore-D.C. Building Trades and Baltimore Community Lending.

And the bank is awarding $2 million to West Baltimore-based Parity Homes, which acquires and renovates abandoned properties by the block and builds affordable for-sale housing. The funding will enable 200 low-income households to purchase homes and go toward a constructi­on apprentice­ship program.

Bank officials said they have found that regional collaborat­ion is needed to bridge the racial wealth divide, while it’s key to invest in women of color, who are then in a position to boost household economic mobility.

Including previous investment­s, the bank said it now plans to spend $125 million on economic opportunit­y and affordable housing programs in the Baltimore-Washington region’s underserve­d communitie­s.

 ?? STEVE HELBER/AP ?? JPMorgan Chase scheduled an event today in Baltimore to announce grant recipients.
STEVE HELBER/AP JPMorgan Chase scheduled an event today in Baltimore to announce grant recipients.

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