The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Banking firm commits $12M to housing effort

Jpmorgan Chase will invest about $2.5M in Atlanta.

- By Wilborn P. Nobles III Wilborn.nobles@ajc.com

Banking company Jpmorgan Chase is investing $12 million into five organizati­ons working to improve housing affordabil­ity in the Black, Hispanic and Latin communitie­s. About $2.5 million of that money will be invested in Atlanta.

The investment announced Tuesday in Atlanta will come from a larger, five-year program that aims to spend $400 million toward homeowners­hip stability for underserve­d households.

Jpmorgan CEO Jamie Dimon made the announceme­nt Tuesday from Herman J. Russell Center for Innovation and Entreprene­urship (RCIE). He discussed his commitment to closing the housing affordabil­ity gap through public/private partnershi­ps during his chat with Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens.

“You’re making a huge statement. This is not just charity,” Dickens said. “This is about making sure that you invest in the future of all Americans.”

The Atlanta portion of the Jpmorgan investment will go through the Atlanta Neighborho­od Developmen­t Partnershi­p over the next three years. The nonprofit wants to prioritize risk-sharing business partnershi­ps with smaller, local Black-owned real estate firms.

John O’callaghan, Atlanta Neighborho­od Developmen­t Partnershi­p president and CEO, said the funds will also help them develop more affordable single-family homes, which will in turn create wealth in minority communitie­s.

“Atlanta’s got an affordable housing problem,” O’callaghan said. “So we’re working on this model to connect capital to small, often Blackowned, businesses whose product is a home that keeps people in their neighborho­od.”

Jpmorgan is also making a $2 million three-year commitment to the national, California-based Grounded Solutions Network nonprofit. The national nonprofit will use those funds to help distressed homeowners remain in their homes in Atlanta, Chicago, Houston and Minneapoli­s, according to Jpmorgan officials. The nonprofit will also increase technical skills, production rates, and capacity of community land trusts and other nonprofit housing programs with the funds.

The Housing Partnershi­p Network, Center for Community Self-help, and Parity Homes will also receive millions of dollars from Jpmorgan. The Urban Institute plans to work with the banking company to measure the impact of each organizati­on’s work, according to the firm.

Jpmorgan is the latest banking giant to invest into affordable housing efforts. Last week, Wells Fargo announced plans to put $1.3 million into an initiative to build 1,000

Atlanta homes on churchowne­d land.

Soaring housing costs have created affordabil­ity barriers for many citizens. Meanwhile, Black communitie­s are still dealing with the negative impact of redlining, a discrimina­tory practice institutio­nalized by the federal government during the New Deal era and implemente­d then and now by private lenders, according to U.S. Department of Justice.

In October, the DO J created an initiative to address redlining, which is prohibited by the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Credit Opportunit­y Act.

Dimon said the pandemic and the Minneapoli­s police murder of George Floyd showed that minority communitie­s still “pay a much heavier price” across the board to live in America.

He said those events spurred Jpmorgan to invest $30 billion into racial equity. But he said it’s going to take more than that to improve the inner-city schools, health care systems and regulation­s negatively impacting budding small businesses. He urged more big companies to step up to help underserve­d communitie­s.

“You need jobs, you need housing and all these other things. It’s not just one thing,” Dimon said. “You’ve got to make progress in all these things at once.”

Dickens lauded Jpmorgan’s efforts as the bedrock of support for addressing the wealth gap. The mayor said these initiative­s help people who are working to become homeowners in the near future.

“We don’t want people living in subsidized housing forever,” Dickens said. “We want them to graduate out of the need to have supportive housing.”

 ?? ALEX WROBLEWSKI/ GETTY IMAGES/TNS 2019 ?? Jpmorgan CEO Jamie Dimon on Tuesday detailed a push to close the housing affordabil­ity gap in Atlanta and elsewhere.
ALEX WROBLEWSKI/ GETTY IMAGES/TNS 2019 Jpmorgan CEO Jamie Dimon on Tuesday detailed a push to close the housing affordabil­ity gap in Atlanta and elsewhere.

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