Wells Fargo Foundation and the NeighborWorks®
Network Step Up Partnership to Promote Homeownership
April
5, 2004-- The Wells Fargo Foundation is stepping up its four-year-old
partnership with the NeighborWorks network of community development
organizations. In 2003, the Foundation provided $436,500 in funding
to 33 NeighborWorks HomeOwnership Centers™ that promote
home ownership among low- to moderate-income people, in addition
to $441,660 for training activities for community development
practitioners.
"The goal of NeighborWorks HomeOwnership Centers is a parallel
mission to Wells Fargo's--getting more people into homes,"
said Kimberly Jackson, executive director of the Wells Fargo Housing
Corporation. "We recognize the power of working with organizations
like the Neighborhood Reinvestment Corporation and the NeighborWorks
network because they can do a more efficient job of helping more
moderate- and low-income families become ready to buy homes."
NeighborWorks HomeOwnership Centers offer a comprehensive range
of user-friendly services that help significantly boost homeownership
among the nation's most underserved buyers - women, minorities
and families of modest means. These services include financial
education, counseling of prospective and current homeowners, and
community workshops on home ownership. There are more than 75
HomeOwnership Centers around the country.
In addition to providing direct funding to HomeOwnership Centers,
Wells entered into a three-year agreement with the Neighborhood
Reinvestment Corporation (the national organization that provides
support to the NeighborWorks network) to provide fund training
activities for community development practitioners. Wells Fargo
agreed to donate $441,660 towards the development of the Native
American Community Development Curriculum and $300,000 to establish
Wells Fargo scholars at training institutes sponsored by the Neighborhood
Reinvestment Corporation.
The Wells Fargo Housing Foundation, funded by Wells Fargo Mortgage,
was created to provide solutions to affordable housing needs in
Wells Fargo communities nationwide. Through the volunteerism of
Wells Fargo team members, more than 1,000 homes have been built
or renovated through the foundation since its inception in 1993.
The foundation began its partnership with the NeighborWorks Network
in 2000, when it agreed to support the expansion and renovation
of 25 HomeOwnership centers. "Some of the HomeOwnership Centers
were in obscure, less accessible locations," said Jackson.
"We wanted to help move them from side streets to main streets
so they could reach more low- to moderate-income families."
After visiting a HomeOwnership Center run by Chicago Neighborhood
Housing Services, a member of the NeighborWorks Network, Jackson
observed: "The first thing you have to give people is hope.
The environment of a HomeOwnership Center engenders hope. Clients
learn to control their destinies by reducing their debt and improving
their credit. With hope, you can help people get into homes. First
hope, then homes."
For more information on NeighborWorks HomeOwnership Centers,
please visit www.nw.org and click on
'community strategies.'
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