New York Daily News

$50M for minority developers

Adams announces new fund from public and private sources

- BY MICHAEL GARTLAND AND TÉA KVETENADZE

The city is creating a $50 million fund that will serve as collateral for minority-owned businesses attempting to secure loans for work on affordable housing projects, Mayor Adams announced Monday.

The effort is aimed at giving a competitiv­e helping hand to nonwhite developers who historical­ly have not made up a significan­t portion of affordable-housing builders in New York City.

The fund, called the Minority Business Enterprise Guaranty Facility, is composed of $25 million from Goldman Sachs Asset Management and an additional $25 million from the city’s Housing Developmen­t Corp. It will essentiall­y serve as a financial backstop for minority-owned developers, who often don’t have that kind of cash at their disposal.

Such guarantees are usually required by lenders as a prerequisi­te to grant loans, which has led to minority developers either missing out on work, or having to partner with larger, white-owned firms.

“There are probably a lot of developers in the city who have no problem putting up that guaranty,” Deputy Mayor Maria Torres Springer said. “But it has been an historical barrier for [minority businesses] in the city, and we want to dismantle that by providing that important guaranty.”

At a City Hall press briefing Monday, Torres Springer and the mayor predicted the $50 million will help unlock $500 million in loans to minority developers seeking to help build housing at a time when the city’s vacancy rate hovers at an abysmal 1.4%. The city’s Housing Preservati­on Commission­er Adolfo Carrion Jr. said that’s the lowest it’s been since 1968.

Calls to address the city’s ongoing housing crisis have grown louder with every dire new stat: About a third of New Yorkers are severely rent burdened, a report by the Community Service Society says, meaning they spend over half of their income on rent. And a vacancy survey from last month also found just 0.4% of apartments available on the market in 2023 were for under $1,100.

Those numbers come as Adams has largely put the onus on Albany to address the housing crisis after a housing compact floated by Gov. Hochul fell apart last year. A key issue is 421-a, the expired state tax break for developers meant to spur affordable-housing creation. The real estate industry says it’s crucial for encouragin­g new constructi­on — but whether the state Legislatur­e will be able to agree on a replacemen­t this session remains to be seen.

“One of the most important ways we can address this crisis is simple: build more housing,” Carrion said. “We can’t wait to move forward on our ambitious housing agenda — and this includes empowering our minority business enterprise firms to take the lead.”

 ?? ?? Asahi Pompey, global head of corporate engagement and president of the Goldman Sachs Foundation, speaks at press conference announcing creation of the Minority Business Enterprise Guaranty Facility.
Asahi Pompey, global head of corporate engagement and president of the Goldman Sachs Foundation, speaks at press conference announcing creation of the Minority Business Enterprise Guaranty Facility.

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