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New Affordable Housing Partnership to Tackle Economic, Health and Racial Inequity Crises in Wake of Pandemic

Innovative Joint Venture Aims to Invest $1 Billion Nationwide in First Five Years

MEDIA CONTACT: Shayna Samuels, shayna@ripplestrategies.com, (718) 541-4785

SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 6, 2020 – As tens of millions of people face eviction across the country, a new partnership has been established to assist low-income families and communities of color, who are being disproportionately impacted by the current affordable housing crisis.

A joint venture was announced today between the Low Income Investment Fund (LIIF), a national nonprofit financial institution with $900 million in assets under management, Stewards of Affordable Housing for the Future (SAHF), a nonprofit collaborative of thirteen affordable housing providers who own nearly 150,000 rental homes, and National Affordable Housing Trust (NAHT), a nonprofit low-income housing tax credit syndicator with over $1 billion in assets under management.

Together they will work to raise $1 billion over the first five years of the partnership to build, protect and preserve approximately 10,000 affordable homes across the country. Their innovative approach will elevate tenant voices and community needs when it comes to creating new developments, generating greater social impact — as well as financial return — for investors.

“This joint venture will create bold solutions, from capital innovations to policy advocacy, in order to create, protect and preserve affordable housing,” said Kimberly Latimer-Nelligan, President of LIIF, whose portfolio is located in neighborhoods where over 70% of residents are people of color. 

The pandemic’s long-term economic impact on the affordable rental housing industry will be widespread and long-lasting. Renters face a large-scale eviction crisis and housing providers are experiencing rent payment shortages. Developers are grappling with construction and supply chain disruption, and funders may limit the flow of capital to avoid risk at a time of uncertainty. And, with policy responses to the pandemic set to soon run out or already depleted—such as moratoria on evictions and the CARES Act stimulus payments, respectively—the public health crisis will surely lead to a crisis of displacement, eviction and homelessness. 

“We are launching this partnership at a time of immense crisis for communities with lower incomes,” said Andrea R. Ponsor, President & CEO of SAHF. “The reality and scale of the current situation requires an immediate response to ensure that hundreds of thousands of homes remain affordable to people that need them.”

In past recessions, such as in 2008, private equity was quick to respond to the flood of distressed real-estate assets at bargain prices with readily available capital, snapping up a staggering amount of affordable homes and converting them out of affordability, while the need for affordable homes skyrocketed. 

“We cannot let this happen again,” said Lori Little, President & CEO of NAHT. “We will proactively equip affordable housing developers with financing solutions that will allow them to be competitive. We will challenge the status quo to ensure an equitable recovery.”

Access to safe, affordable housing is one of the most powerful social determinants of health and a foundational asset for individual mobility. Yet, access is fraught with inequities, and the housing and finance industries have both played a significant role in perpetuating systemic racism through discriminatory policies and exclusionary programs. Policies such as redlining, exclusionary zoning, systematic displacement and segregation, predatory lending and exclusion of people of color in programs such as the G.I. Bill have impacted housing choice and hindered wealth creation for communities of color for decades. 

Already, LIIF has invested nearly $2.7 billion in housing, education, child care and other community facilities in 34 states across the nation, making an especially significant impact in California, New York City, Atlanta and Washington, D.C. SAHF members own nearly 150,000 affordable rental homes in almost every state across the U.S., including over 31,000 homes in California, nearly 10,000 homes in Ohio and Massachusetts and more than 6,000 homes in states such as Illinois, Florida, Maryland and Minnesota. NAHT has financed the development of over 18,000 affordable rental homes in 33 states, including properties that serve seniors, families, persons with special needs and low-income individuals. Beekman Advisors represented Low Income Investment Fund in the due diligence and negotiation of the transaction. This partnership received the generous support of the SeaChange-Lodestar Fund for Nonprofit Collaboration.

The three organizations have already partnered on several initiatives to preserve affordable housing, including the Fund to Preserve Affordable Communities (FPAC), a $100 million collaborative between LIIF, NAHT and others, that provides acquisition financing to SAHF members. Through FPAC, a $3.3 million acquisition loan was made to the NHP Foundation to preserve the long-term affordability of 120 affordable homes on Maryland’s Eastern Shore, for example

Another partnership announced this summer is a $100 million Health & Housing Fund with UnitedHealth Group, along with SAHF and NAHT, to build more than 1,000 new homes for low-income renters over the next two years, with initial construction slated for the District of Columbia, Texas and Oklahoma. 

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The Low Income Investment Fund (LIIF) is a national nonprofit community development financial institution with $900 million in assets under management. LIIF’s mission is to mobilize capital and partners to achieve opportunity, equity and well-being for people and communities. Since 1984, LIIF has deployed more than $2.7 billion to serve more than two million people in communities across the country from its five offices. An S&P-rated organization, LIIF innovates financial solutions that create more equitable outcomes for all by building affordable homes, quality educational opportunities from early childhood through higher education, health clinics, healthy food retail and community facilities.

Stewards of Affordable Housing for the Future (SAHF)  is a nonprofit collaborative of thirteen exemplary multi-state nonprofit affordable housing providers who own nearly 150,000 affordable rental homes. SAHF brings a knowledge base garnered from and informed by its members who have a proven track record of delivering financially responsible affordable housing that encompasses resident voice and community choice. Additionally, SAHF brings an experienced, respected and developer-informed policy perspective to the partnership.

National Affordable Housing Trust (NAHT) is a nonprofit low-income housing tax credit (LIHTC) syndicator and development consultant committed to financing and investing in the preservation and development of affordable multifamily rental homes across the United States. NAHT brings more than thirty years of mission-focused work with developers and investors to create and preserve housing for seniors and families. 

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