News updateposted on 11 MAY 2007 |
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HUD Committed to Corporate Community Partnerships |
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Bernardi Addresses Business Civic Leadership Center’s National ConferenceWASHINGTON, 11 May 2007 -- U.S. Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Deputy Secretary Roy Bernardi today addressed the opening remarks of the 2007 Business Civic Leadership Center’s (BCLC) National Partnership Conference. The conference, which is affiliated with the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, launched the BCLC’s new program dedicated to corporate community investment and brought business leaders and their community partners together. Bernardi discussed HUD’s commitment to creating corporate community partnerships through HUD’s Community Development Block Grants (CDBG) and the HOME Investment Partnership Program. “A city is more than a place on a map. Great cities are about people; their hopes, hard work, and investments,” said Bernardi, who opened the day’s conference. “A great city is its people and their families. And a corporation can be a powerful part of that story.”
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“HUD can be a strong, valuable partner in your efforts to enhance our cities. We have been in the ‘city business’ from the beginning. And we know that working partnership make a profound difference, both financially and in quality of life,” concluded Bernardi. Since 1974, HUD’s Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) has awarded an estimated $119 billion to state and local governments to target their own community development priorities. The rehabilitation of affordable housing and construction of public facilities and improvements have traditionally been the largest uses of the grants, although CDBG is also an important catalyst for job for growth and business opportunities. HUD’s HOME (Investment Partnerships Program) is the largest Federal block grant to state and local governments designed exclusively to produce affordable housing for low-income families. Since 1992, 645 communities have completed almost 781,000 affordable housing units, including more than 327,000 for new homebuyers. In addition, more than 163,000 tenants have received direct rental assistance. If cities and private corporations work together, Bernardi said we can create stronger communities, do a better job revitalizing our inner cities and energize the people who live there. “I propose that we leave this conference with such a commitment. If our partnership does produce greater corporate involvement in the future of our cities, then we will observe a timeless truth. Magnetically, all good things will be attracted to our cities in greater number,” Bernardi concluded. (HUD) |
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