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By Dana Bykowski
March 2003
Mayors across the country continue to take advantage
of CitiesFirst®, an innovative community development affordable
housing initiative created by the U.S. Conference of Mayors and
the Nehemiah Corporation of California. Working with Mayors, CitiesFirst®
is designed to implement proactive strategies to develop urban communities.
Roundtable discussions are hosted in select cities,
with Mayors, and other community and business leaders, to discuss
the affordable housing concerns and needs of a particular city.
CitiesFirst® has hosted roundtable discussions in North Little
Rock, AR, Augusta, GA, Columbus, OH, Houston, TX, Nashville, TN,
Tacoma, WA, Denver, CO, Virginia Beach, VA and Charlotte, NC.
Some of the actions that have been achieved through
CitiesFirst® roundtable discussions are: develop strategies
with the Mayor, community leaders, and the business community provide
special needs housing and down payment assistance to potential homebuyers
who qualify for FHA loans; help foster and build new relationships
between the city and local community organizations, banks, and real
estate associations; and provide technical and potential financial
assistance for affordable housing and community development challenges.
As mayors across the country work to find innovative
and practical housing solutions it is essential to have public/private
partnerships like CitiesFirst® leading a national discussion
in cities across the country about the issue of affordable housing,
and we grateful for the opportunity to be a part of this discussion,
said Augusta, GA Mayor Bob Young, who hosted a CitiesFirst®
roundtable last fall.
CitiesFirst® offers several innovative housing
initiatives to mayors including the Community Reinvestment Fund,
a community development financial institution serving as an intermediary
between financial investors and economically underserved communities.
Another program, Nehemiah Urban Land Trust (NULT), manages and preserves
housing for social service agencies that assist low-income, special
needs families and individuals. This $1,000,000 pilot program was
launched in June 2001, is helping the cities of Baltimore, Charlotte,
Indianapolis, and Atlanta.
In mid-July of 2002, NULT and the city of Charlotte
held an application session for local social service organizations
seeking additional funding and housing resources for their clients.
Ten organizations sent in Request for Proposals (RFPs) to
the NULT program. NULT is now working with the city of Charlotte
and a local social service organization to establish a site to house
those in need.
CitiesFirst® will also join the Mayor in welcoming
a new homeowner into their first home. Together, the Mayor, a CitiesFirst®
representative, and local builder partners will by present a family
with the keys to their new house during a press event/ceremony in
front of the new home. Past key turning ceremonies have been covered
by The Today Show, and other prominent local TV and print outlets.
United States Conference of Mayors Executive Director,
J. Thomas Cochran touched on the importance of CitiesFirst®,
We are very excited about this partnership with Nehemiah,
and will continue to work closely with them to provide our members
mayors with new and innovative ways to combat the serious problem
of affordable housing in our nations cities.
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