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Community
Boston Community Capital
Published, July 5, 2006
In 1985, when Boston Community
Capital was founded by a group of
socially responsible investors, we
asked a series of questions:
- Can housing for low-income families
and individuals be designed, built,
and managed to remain affordable
and well-maintained over time, as
well as help to strengthen our communities?
- Can distressed inner-city neighborhoods
be transformed into thriving
and welcoming communities that are
home to a diverse population of residents
who live there by choice?
- Is debt a useful tool to finance the
transformation of inner-city neighborhoods,
and can we demonstrate
that loan dollars will not only be
repaid, but also recycled?
Twenty years later, the answer to
those questions is a resounding "yes."
Together with our partners, we have
invested more than $235 million to build
and preserve healthy communities. We
have helped finance affordable homes for
more than 8,000 families and individuals.
Moreover, because these homes have been
carefully maintained and updated, they
have helped to transform entire neighborhoods.
Our loans and investments have
supported the renovation of child care
centers, community facilities, and commercial
real estate in economically distressed
areas, and created quality jobs,
goods, and services for low-income people.
Our historical loan losses continue to
be less than one-tenth of one percent, and
all of our lenders have been repaid on
time and in full.
Yet, the divide between rich and
poor-between those who have access to
education and professional advancement
and those who do not, between those
who can build a stake in the future and
those to whom that opportunity is
denied-is expanding, not contracting.
In today's economic and political landscape,
we ask new questions:
- How do powerful regional, national,
and global trends intersect with community
development strategies that
are intended to create meaningful and
wide-scale economic and social
opportunities for low-income people?
- Can we (and should we) expand our
services and financing from a focus
on organizations to a focus on the
unmet needs of individuals?
- By building alliances with new partners
in commercial finance, organized
labor, education, health and
environmental services, and with
partners across neighborhood, state,
and even national boundaries, can we
magnify our impact?
We are using these questions to guide
the creation of significant change. Last
year, our loans supported the development
of 1,329 homes, including homes
for first-time homeowners, low-income
rental apartments, and supportive housing
for low-income seniors. We helped
renovate former mills; preserved existing
affordable rental housing; and supported
the development of new affordable housing.
We also launched the Green Building
Production Network and announced
more than $2 million in financing to support
the development and renovation of
more than 800 units of "green" housing.
Our loans also supported nonprofit
organizations such as the Media and
Technology Charter High School, a public
high school preparing Boston students
to succeed in college and beyond; and the
Cambridge Women's Center, a community
organization providing counseling,
support, and training for close to 700
women a week.
Together with our partners, including
individual and institutional investors
like Walden's clients, we are developing
strategies that allow us to make loans and
investments that other financial institutions
are unwilling or unable to provide-
and simultaneously create real
value for our borrowers and investors.
—E. Cherry
Elyse Cherry is the CEO of Boston
Community Capital. For more information,
call 617-427-8600 or visit
www.bostoncommunitycapital.org.
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