The Commercial Appeal

Iowa bank focuses on Black-owned businesses

- Jamie Smith Hopkins

This is part three of a five-part story published in partnershi­p with the Center for Public Integrity and Word In Black.

WATERLOO, Iowa – The words were blunt: “No U.S. metro area has larger social and economic disparitie­s along racial lines.”

That was how the financial news site 24/7 Wall St. described this region in a 2018 article ranking it as the worst place in the country for Black Americans.

It hit like a thundercla­p in the Black community. Residents already knew there were problems – a report the year before called the region “still severely segregated,” and there were huge gaps in income and homeowners­hip between whites and Blacks. But now they had the empirical ranking that showed Waterloo’s troubles didn’t merely mirror the country’s.

Joy Briscoe, talent acquisitio­n specialist for the Waterloo school system and a leader in the Black community, thought back to her 1980s childhood in town and couldn’t say that things had improved.

One key economic measure, in fact, was getting worse. In 1950, despite the barriers erected by powerful people, the city’s Black homeowners­hip rate was an impressive 68%, double the national figure for Black Americans and about the same as for white Waterloo residents.

Good industrial jobs and union leaders committed to racial equality made a difference, said Colin Gordon, a University of Iowa history professor whose students tracked the restrictiv­e covenants in Waterloo.

Then many of those jobs disappeare­d. And the Black community, with less intergener­ational wealth to draw on and homes devalued by redlining and other discrimina­tory practices, was the hardest hit.

Economic losses overtake civil rights gains

The Black homeowners­hip numbers tell the story: 46% in 1990, 40% in 2010 and by the end of the last decade, 32% – the reverse of the economic situation at the start of the civil rights era.

“For working class African-americans in the urban north, economic losses (falling wages, unemployme­nt, deindustri­alization) overshadow most of the legal gains of the civil rights movement,” Gordon wrote in an email.

That experience was threaded through Briscoe’s own family history. And now, the same month Reshonda Young was contemplat­ing a bank, Briscoe and other local leaders, fired up about the 24/7 ranking, met to discuss another way to fight the wealth gap: starting a business accelerato­r that would support Black entreprene­urs with mentorship, training and other aid.

They needed someone to run it, someone with an entreprene­urial record, a habit of helping other business owners and the ability to build something new at high speed.

The answer seemed obvious to them. But would Young say yes?

Support for small businesses links two missions

She already had plenty on her plate. But the mission fits well with hers. Young agreed.

“I was so happy,” said Briscoe, executive director and co-founder of the group, the 24/7 Black Leadership Advancemen­t Consortium (24/7 BLAC). “It was really fate: The planets aligned. God was smiling on us. … We couldn’t have found a better person.”

By September 2020, the accelerato­r was running with a dozen business owners. Other cities in Iowa soon came calling, hoping to replicate it. 24/7 BLAC raised hundreds of thousands of dollars in grant funding to keep the accelerato­r and other efforts going as Young helped recruit more participan­ts, led discussion­s and worked with the entreprene­urs on their challenges.

Frequently, their biggest challenge was getting a loan.

Credit scores: a mirror and an anchor

Accelerato­r participan­t Rosie Daniel, owner of Lulit’s Hair Essence, needed to replace the failing car she relied on to make deliveries of her hair restoratio­n products.

She went to a local credit union where she banks to apply for a business auto loan in 2020. She said the lender, after assuring her he would verify her credit score without a “hard inquiry” that would ding it, told her it wasn’t high enough.

Then, in the parking lot afterward, she saw an alert on her phone that made her even more upset: It had been a hard inquiry. The credit score she’d been working to improve would go down for nothing.

Daniel, who can’t wait to move her accounts to the Bank of Jabez, dialed Young on the spot. “Guess what just happened to me,” she said.

Young listened, feeling more certain with every story like this that banking had to change. Too often a credit score simply reflects the wealth gap – and helps maintain it. After delving into accelerato­r participan­ts’ financials and understand­ing their risks and opportunit­ies in a way no single number could convey, Young thought local banks could widen their lens for customers, “looking at them and their business holistical­ly.”

She and other 24/7 BLAC representa­tives suggested this type of broader thinking – which some financial institutio­ns already employ – in conversati­ons with local bank CEOS, all white. Some agreed it was a good idea. Others weren’t receptive, Young said – their loan-approval process worked for them, and they didn’t seem interested in changing.

But she could see that Stacey Bentley, president and CEO of Community Bank & Trust, took the request to heart.

The two women knew each other from serving on local boards together, and Young tucked a thought away: Perhaps Bentley, who helped open Community in 1997, would be willing to offer advice to the Bank of Jabez.

Hear a podcast about Young’s quest in the newest season of “The Heist.”

 ?? BRENNA NORMAN, CENTER FOR PUBLIC INTEGRITY ?? Reshonda Young talks with business owner Rosie Daniel of Lulit’s Hair Essence at Newton’s Paradise Cafe in Waterloo, Iowa. Daniel says she can’t wait to move her accounts to the Bank of Jabez.
BRENNA NORMAN, CENTER FOR PUBLIC INTEGRITY Reshonda Young talks with business owner Rosie Daniel of Lulit’s Hair Essence at Newton’s Paradise Cafe in Waterloo, Iowa. Daniel says she can’t wait to move her accounts to the Bank of Jabez.

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