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Published byBryan Stokes Modified over 9 years ago
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Seattle’s CDBG Economic Development Activities NCDA Annual Conference Cincinnati, Ohio June 2011
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Background – 2011 initial allocation $14 million annual program – $4.6 million for public services – $3.1 million affordable housing – $5 million economic development – $1.2 million planning & administration
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Economic Development Activities Entrepreneurial / Microenterprise Training Business Assistance Loans Access to Capital Neighborhood Business District Assistance
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Entrepreneurial / Microenterprise Training 24 CFR 570.201(o) LMC, LMJ, LMA national objectives Microenterprise – “a commercial enterprise that has 5 or fewer employees, 1 or more of whom owns the enterprise”
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Seattle’s Program Classroom training provided by a community- based non-profit organization Target low-income, immigrant and refugee communities Business practices and skills: – Licensing, tax filing, health dept. compliance – Effective communication, financial planning, business technology
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The Details LMC $150,000 CDBG – $70,000 match 100 participants Minimum 40 businesses started, formalized, or expanded
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Business Assistance Loans 24 CFR 570.203(b) or 570.204 LMJ, LMA Public Benefit standards at 570.209 Your own “headline” test
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Business Asst. Loans (continued) If LMJ – Jobs creation agreement identifying jobs by title and full- or part-time – What actions will be undertaking to ensure LMI clients have access to jobs – What jobs were made available to or filled with LMI persons – Income information on person taking the job – See Guide to National Objectives for more details
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Seattle’s Program Solicited participation of CBDOs LMA and LMJ national objective Loans amortized with monthly repayments – For CBDO, not CDBG program income Understand that these are more risky loans $50,000 - $200,000
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Example: Tire & Auto Service $50,000 Direct Financial Assistance to For- Profits (570.204) LMA – Provides service to local area residents Equipment plus working capital
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Example - continued Loan terms: – 5% – Amortized over 72 months – Secured by promissory note – UCC filing, securing against personal property “secured by the business assets of the borrower” Caution re: DBA enforcement
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Example - continued “with new equipment and a mobile diagnostic tester, revenues are up and the business has stabilized”
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Access to Capital 570.203(b); 570.204 LMA, LMJ Public Benefit Standards at 570.209
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Access to Capital – Seattle’s Program Credit enhancement – Mitigate collateral risk for qualifying loan projects Use CDBG funds to provide for loan loss reserves – Percentage of loan loss must be carefully calculated, defended – Is it required by third party lender? Cannot be used in conjunction with another federal source
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Access to Capital – continued $150,000 pool of funds Contracts with three economic development agencies (CBDO) Assume 15% loan loss reserve Estimate 50 loans Average loan size $20,000 = $3,000 loss reserve
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Access to Capital - continued Reserves revert to CBDO upon attainment of national objective Expect losses – But this is a concern of CBDO, not City Work carefully with your HUD rep
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Business District TA 570.204(a)(1) Neighborhood revitalization project LMA “activities of sufficient size and scope...” Write contracts broadly to encompass a specific plan so discrete activities are all covered under the implementation of the plan
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Seattle’s Program A package of activities to revitalize a neighborhood – Clean up, graffiti, crime – Branding – Community events – Marketing – Building capacity of neighborhood business district councils
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Economic Development Activities Entrepreneurial / Microenterprise Training Business Assistance Loans Access to Capital Neighborhood Business District Assistance
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