Enterprise submitted comments on the Federal Housing Finance Agency’s Request for Input (RFI) regarding Fannie Mae’s and Freddie Mac’s required Equitable Housing Finance Plans.
In January 2020, Enterprise Community Partners launched its Native Homeownership Learning Communities Cohort (NHLCC), a twelve-month initiative focused on building the capacity of participating organizations to deliver homeownership programming.
Enterprise is an intermediary under the Section 4 Capacity Building for Affordable Housing and Community Development program (Section 4), funded by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and our vision is a country where home and community are steppingstones to more.
Building on previous Enterprise research, this case study addresses six challenges associated with the publicly owned parcel development process in Washington State’s Puget Sound region. It provides recommendations aimed at helping the region’s public agencies expand their efforts to coordinate and ensure effective policies and adequate resources are in place to facilitate more equitable development on publicly owned parcels
An easy-to-use resource cataloguing a wide range of strategies to prevent eviction and promote housing stability that offers policymakers, practitioners and advocates a broad overview of available tools and guidance on when to use them.
This brief tutorial addresses the grant eligibility requirements that organizations need to meet in order to apply for and receive Section 4 funding from Enterprise.
Small and medium multifamily buildings are the most affordable segment of the housing stock and play a crucial role in providing reasonably priced homes to thousands of families. We must preserve and expand the affordable stock to meet current needs even as we encourage the market to produce more housing which, with time, will become affordable.