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U.S. Bank to Provide $1MM in Grants to Black-Led CDFIs

byPhil Neuffer
August 11, 2020
in News

U.S. Bank Community Development Corporation (USBCDC) will provide $1.15 million in grants to more than a dozen Black-led Community Development Financial Institution (CDFI) partners and — in partnership with the U.S. Bank Foundation — a grant to the African American Alliance of CDFI CEOs. This is part of U.S. Bank’s overall $116 million commitment to addressing social and economic inequities.

“These grants will directly support Black communities by providing immediate funding in the wake of COVID-19 and by strengthening relationships between U.S. Bank, our partners and the communities that we all serve,” William Carson, vice president of USBCDC, said. “This emphasis on closing racial gaps is consistent with our ongoing allocation and investment strategy and is a framework for lasting impact.”

A total of 15 CDFIs will receive grants ranging from $50,000 to $100,000 while the African American Alliance will receive $150,000 to support Black-led CDFIs to help measure their combined impact and speak as a united voice for the industry.

The CDFIs include:

  • Black Business Investment Fund – Orlando, FL
  • _x000D_

  • Capital Impact Partners – Arlington, VA
  • _x000D_

  • Carver Financial Corporation – Savannah, GA
  • _x000D_

  • Chicago Community Loan Fund – Chicago
  • _x000D_

  • City First – Washington, D.C.
  • _x000D_

  • Enterprise/ESIC New Markets Partners – Columbia, MD
  • _x000D_

  • Harbor Bank of Maryland Community Development Corporation – Baltimore
  • _x000D_

  • Hope Enterprise Corporation – Jackson, MS
  • _x000D_

  • Liberty Bank & Trust – New Orleans
  • _x000D_

  • Local Initiatives Support Corporation – New York
  • _x000D_

  • Opportunity Finance Network – Washington, D.C.
  • _x000D_

  • Southern Bancorp Community Partners – Little Rock, AR
  • _x000D_

  • Texas Mezzanine Fund – Dallas
  • _x000D_

  • The Housing Fund – Nashville, TN
  • _x000D_

  • TruFund Financial/Empowerment Reinvestment Fund – New York
  • _x000D_

Grants will be used for direct support to Black businesses, families and individuals to offset financial stresses caused by COVID-19, or for organizational capacity building. Many of these CDFIs were founded and historically operated by Black leaders to help overcome the structural barriers that often have limited access to capital. Black organizations also tend to have a deeper understanding of where and why resource gaps exist within Black communities and how to close those gaps.

“We’re grateful for U.S. Bank’s partnership,” James H. Bason, president and CEO of TruFund Financial Services, said. “This investment will allow TruFund to deploy affordable, flexible capital and put additional resources to work in the communities that most need them. Now more than ever, support of small minority owned businesses is critical.”

TruFund promotes economic development in underserved communities in New York, Alabama and Louisiana.

“This grant from U.S. Bank helps to strengthen The Harbor Bank of Maryland Community Development Corporation’s ability to bring necessary and available access to capital and technical assistance to some of the most impacted businesses in the Baltimore community,” John Lewis, president of The Harbor Bank of Maryland CDC, which focuses on underinvested communities in the greater Baltimore area, said.

The African American Alliance represents 29 Black-led CDFIs focused on increasing capital and financial services to African American-owned businesses with a goal to change the odds and outcomes for African Americans in underserved communities across the country.

“The African American Alliance of CDFI CEOs (AAA) is deeply grateful for the recent investments made by U.S. Bancorp’s Community Development Corporation and the U.S. Bank Foundation,” Donna Gambrell, chair of the African American Alliance of CDFI CEOs, said. “The funding will enable AAA to focus on the organization and to build its infrastructure, focus on the leaders and their development, and focus on African American families, small businesses and communities that have been hard hit by the pandemic.”

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