17. bankers/developers/housing advocates: partnering to

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Bankers/Developers/Housing Advocates: Partnering to Create Housing Opportunities

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Page 1: 17. Bankers/Developers/Housing Advocates: Partnering to

Bankers/Developers/Housing Advocates: Partnering to Create

Housing Opportunities

Page 2: 17. Bankers/Developers/Housing Advocates: Partnering to

Macy Kisilinsky, PNC Bank

Elly Fisher, Oakland Planning and

Development Corp. (OPDC)

Page 3: 17. Bankers/Developers/Housing Advocates: Partnering to

Evolving Relationship Business Banking: • Checking, savings, line of credit and some mortgages • Strong relationship with business banker and local

branch manager Neighborhood Partnership Program: • 6 year funding commitment in exchange for tax credits • Supported community development services from

organizing to workforce development • Formed a deep long-term relationship • Community Development representative on our board

Page 4: 17. Bankers/Developers/Housing Advocates: Partnering to

Evolving Relationship (continued)

Housing Development Application: • Support letter for Low Income Housing Tax

Credit application • Ongoing support and advice to prepare for

award

Page 5: 17. Bankers/Developers/Housing Advocates: Partnering to

Why the Relationship Worked

OPDC: • PNC was dependable, offered products/services

that they needed and shared their interest in developing a longer term relationship

PNC: • OPDC had a track record, they were well

established and experienced • Demonstrated mission driven results, with

staying power

Page 6: 17. Bankers/Developers/Housing Advocates: Partnering to

Keys to Success

PNC: • Navigating the bank organization - finding the right

person at the bank to fill your needs • For a large bank like PNC that may involve getting

to know several people. For smaller banks it may be one person

OPDC: • Start with the Community Development Department,

introduce yourself and your organization, articulate your needs, look for other possible connections

Page 7: 17. Bankers/Developers/Housing Advocates: Partnering to

Andy Haines, S&A Homes

Becky Yago, Dollar Bank

Page 8: 17. Bankers/Developers/Housing Advocates: Partnering to

Federal Hill

Project details: • Pittsburgh, PA • Build and sale period-2009-2012 • 44 homes constructed and sold • Price Range- $145,000 to $380,000 • Homes are reselling at 50% appreciation on average • Built by S & A Homes and Central Northside

Neighborhood Council

Page 9: 17. Bankers/Developers/Housing Advocates: Partnering to

Federal Hill

Financing Sources: • PHFA Homeownership Choice Program • Urban Redevelopment Authority • PHFA & Dollar Bank Construction Loans

Page 10: 17. Bankers/Developers/Housing Advocates: Partnering to

Before

Page 11: 17. Bankers/Developers/Housing Advocates: Partnering to

After

Page 12: 17. Bankers/Developers/Housing Advocates: Partnering to

After

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After

Page 14: 17. Bankers/Developers/Housing Advocates: Partnering to

Why the Relationship Worked

S&A Homes: • Dollar understood the nuances of their deal. Four

funding sources, two were grant sources, bank needed to understand how they all work together

• Dollar had knowledge of the neighborhood and the challenges involved

Page 15: 17. Bankers/Developers/Housing Advocates: Partnering to

Why the Relationship Worked

Dollar Bank: • Expertise and experience of S&A Homes and

their development team – particularly as it relates to construction process. This is where everything happens

• Key underwriting concern – would the market absorb the units planned? Dollar, like the mixed income aspects

• If the deal runs into an obstacle, how are the interests of the bank protected? Gets back to the strength of the development team

Page 16: 17. Bankers/Developers/Housing Advocates: Partnering to

Keys to Success • Understand and be comfortable with the typical multi-

layered financing involved in affordable housing development. Be aware of the different parameters for each source of financing, understand the impact of scale and complexity of the project

• Be prepared to “roll with the punches” expect the unexpected. Both partners

• CRA is a consideration but not always the key driver for banks, track record of the development team is often more important

• Communication among partners. Don’t over react, but don’t under react either. Situations sometimes change quickly particularly during construction, is the relationship nimble enough to react effectively?

Page 17: 17. Bankers/Developers/Housing Advocates: Partnering to

Mollie Phukan, Wells Fargo Home Mortgage

William Hall, Clarifi

Page 18: 17. Bankers/Developers/Housing Advocates: Partnering to

Foreclosure Prevention Efforts Details of the relationship: • Foreclosure Client pipeline management -

specialized team created to help agency manage loss mitigation process

• Foreclosure Prevention Events – – large scale Wells Fargo sponsored events with non-

profit participation – small scale co-branded events

• Atlantic City Casino Closings – partnership on efforts to connect those impacted by casino closings with valuable community resources.

Page 19: 17. Bankers/Developers/Housing Advocates: Partnering to

Why the Relationship Works

Clarifi: • Both sides aligning business goals • Shared mutual interest

Wells Fargo: • Agency leadership open to approaching the

partnership in different ways as industry and markets change

• Valuable perspective on market nuances

Page 20: 17. Bankers/Developers/Housing Advocates: Partnering to

Keys to Success

Clarifi: • Non-profit organizations should put their best

foot forward when engaging with banks, start by doing your homework

• The approach should be relational not transactional. Be clear about what each brings to the table and the roles each will play in the relationship

Page 21: 17. Bankers/Developers/Housing Advocates: Partnering to

Keys to Success

Wells Fargo: • Defining common goals and building the

relationship through those goals • Feedback and communication • Quality and dependability make for a strong

relationship