The Federal Home Loan Bank San Francisco is teaming with the Urban Institute in a $1.5 million collaboration to close the racial homeownership gap.
This program, called the Racial Equity Accelerator for Homeownership, is planned to run for two years and will create an incubator to develop innovations in housing finance, including mortgage underwriting and financial technology.
"The rates of Black homeownership, in particular, have plummeted to levels not seen since housing segregation was legal,"
The accelerator will conduct research and development on alternatives to credit scoring models and technologies that could help to overcome historical biases. It will also look to create product structures that can better support homeowners who experience temporary financial hardship.
In addition, the program will look to address the student loan debt repayment problem, which has a disproportionate effect on the Black community, the press release said.
"The evidence is clear and the time is ripe for seizing the moment, and every segment of the home lending industry should work together to address long-standing barriers," said Urban Institute President Sarah Rosen Wartell.
Creating equality in homeownership wealth
A Fannie Mae blog post from March states it would
Last month, a group of Democratic Senators, led by Mark Warner of Virginia, introduced
Separately, Sen. Raphael Warnock, D.-Ga., introduced the upper chamber's companion bill to the Downpayment Toward Equity Act.
Supporters of the down payment assistance bill — the National Fair Housing Alliance, the National Coalition for Asian Pacific American Community Development, the National Urban League, the National Community Reinvestment Coalition, the Center for Responsible Lending, UnidosUS, and the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights — issued a joint statement on Sept. 30 that not only pointed out the current Black homeownership rate is as low as it was in both 1890 and 1968, but for Latinos, it's 25 points lower than for whites.
"This unfortunate reality, coupled with the COVID-19 pandemic's disproportionate harm on American communities least able to shoulder the burden, has resulted in an ever-widening homeownership gap that has left communities of color behind with little capital to invest in wealth-building opportunities," the groups said.
This story has been amended to correct the name of the Federal Home Loan Bank San Francisco.