In Tangipahoa, St. Helena, and Livingston parishes, a local nonprofit is pursuing all housing opportunities to ensure everyone has a quality, affordable place to call home.
The lasting impacts of segregation and redlining continue to play a significant role in limiting access to decent, safe, and affordable residential housing and homeownership in Black communities.
The Section 4 program is to develop the capacity and technical capabilities of Community Development Corporations (CDCs) and Community Housing Development Organizations (CHDOs).
Join Enterprise’s Tribal Nations and Rural team for this valuable inventory of available resources. This webinar includes an approach to partnership, updates on current opportunities with Enterprise, and federal policy updates.
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.
Last year brought dramatic funding cuts, shifting priorities and daily crises for affordable housing organizations working to keep families safely and stably housed. Yet we saw real progress in our Rocky Mountain region.
Twenty-eight tribal organizations from New York to Hawaii to Alaska are strengthening their capacity to serve Native families with nearly $1.5 million in Section 4 grants.