Press Room
Media
Advisory
For immediate release
Housing Fund to unveil
Non-Profit
Affordable Housing Affiliate,
Red Iron Housing Development Co., at
Open House set for May 16
BIRMINGHAM, AL – May 10,
2007 – The Housing Fund of
Central Alabama will unveil its non-profit housing development company
at an
Open House on May 16. The event to showcase Red Iron Housing
Development Company
will begin at 10 a.m. at 1305
Bush Boulevard in the Bush Hills
neighborhood. This
house is one of two that Red Iron has renovated in the community.
The goal of the new company is to bring more
quality housing
to the moderate-income market. Red Iron is targeting single-family
homes and
apartments primarily in the City of Birmingham
neighborhoods for renovation and resale. Red Iron also recently
acquired the
Forest Park Terrace Apartments in the South
Avondale
neighborhood.
Significantly increasing the supply of safe, decent,
moderately priced housing has been at the heart of the mission of the
Housing
Enterprise of Central Alabama (HECA) and its non-profit affiliate, the
Housing
Fund of Central Alabama (the Fund) since the two companies opened in
2003.
“In the Birmingham
market, quality, affordable, single-family homes available to families
whose
annual incomes range from $34,000-$57,000 are few,” said HECA Chief
Executive
Officer Michele Jenkins-Utomi, who also oversees Red Iron activities.
“Red Iron
allows the Fund to become an even bigger part of the housing solution
by
focusing on the renovation and resale of neglected houses in
underserved
neighborhoods.”
HECA is a $56.5 million community development loan
consortium made up of the top banks in Birmingham
– Regions Bank, Compass Bank, New South Federal Savings Bank, First
American
Bank, Superior Bank, and Aliant Bank. HECA loans money to non-profit
and
private developers to build and renovate moderately priced housing in a
12-county area of Central Alabama.
The Housing Fund of Central
Alabama provides grants and technical
assistance to non-profit developers of affordable housing in the
12-county
footprint. Its grant pool is funded by HECA’s investor banks and area
community
foundations, including The Community Foundation of Greater Birmingham,
the
Community Foundation of Calhoun County, and the Walker Area Community
Foundation. Lois Chenier is the Grants Officer who oversees Fund grants
and the
Fund’s Non-Profit Incubator Program.
Red Iron Housing Development
Co.’s focus is to acquire homes
that can be renovated and resold generally in the $120,000-$170,000
price range,
and multifamily with targeted rents of $425-$525.
“Red Iron provides us an
opportunity to get into development
in a specific way,” Ms. Jenkins-Utomi said. “The City has some
wonderful
neighborhoods, and housing stock that needs repairs to attract and
retain
families who want to be a part of these communities of such potential.
What we
have done in Bush Hills is to get these homes ‘homebuyer ready.’ We
believe
we’ve gone beyond the scope of what most investors would put into these
homes.”
Red Iron is able to keeps its
projects affordable in part
because it is using HECA loan dollars and Fund grant dollars for
projects. HECA’s Loan and Investment
Committee approved a
$500,000 revolving line of credit for Red Iron to do rehab. The
HECA/Fund Board
and the Fund’s Capacity Building Advisory Committee approved a $300,000
Fund
grant for Red Iron to purchase homes.
HECA and the Fund work closely
with HECA’s financial
consultants, Birmingham-based Censeo, Inc., on Red Iron projects. They
are
forming partnerships with experienced contractors and real estate
agents in
order to ensure Red Iron’s success. Ms.
Jenkins-Utomi
said Red Iron is working with Realtors to identify other properties in
the City
of Birmingham.
The Fund has invited several
guests to share in the May 16
celebration, which will be hosted by HECA’s Board Chair, Jerry Powell,
General Counsel
and Secretary of Compass Bancshares and its lead bank, Compass Bank,
and Ms.
Jenkins-Utomi. Attendees include: Daryl Perkins, District Director,
Office of
U.S. Representative Artur Davis; Birmingham City Councilor Steven W.
Hoyt; Bush
Hills Neighborhood President Alma Dennis; and The Community Foundation
of
Greater Birmingham President Kate Nielsen.
The contributions of Superior Bank and Aliant Bank to HECA also will be
highlighted at the event.
In addition to the home at 1305 Bush Boulevard,
Red Iron has
renovated a nearby house at 1212 Bush Circle. That home sold
last month.
For more information about Red
Iron or the Open House Event,
please contact Tabitha J Lacy, 205-323-9888 or tlacy@housingenterprise.com.
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The HECA and Housing Fund website is www.housingenterprise.com