Our story began with three women who refused to give up on their community. Their perseverance and vision inspired Jim and Patty Rouse to create Enterprise.
In March, our Southern California and national teams joined our partners to shape housing policy, protect permanent supportive housing, and support communities building for a resilient future.
Enterprise Community Loan Fund, the community development financial institution of Enterprise Community Partners, announced today a significant milestone in its 34-year history: more than $3.1 billion lent to help finance affordable housing and critical community and economic development projects across the country.
This year, Enterprise Southeast was at the Capitol advocating for legislation that would protect renters, limit private equity acquisition of single-family rental homes, and increase state resources for emergency rental assistance and homelessness prevention. We were proud to work in coalition with partners in Georgia to advance and oppose bills that have the power to shape the housing ecosystem in our state for years to come.
Enterprise Community Partners announced that it has successfully appealed the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s (HUD) decision to terminate the organization’s Community Compass and Distressed Cities technical assistance agreements.
For Columbia Residential and affordable housing developers nationwide, building and retrofitting to green standards means fulfilling their commitment to create healthy, high-quality homes with lower utility bills.
In a typical day, Enterprise's Tim Block balances high-profile work on a calendar filled with local civic committees in Atlanta and a stream of outside activities that tie back to his commitment to affordable housing and community building.
Nine Tribes from Michigan, Minnesota, and Wisconsin participated in our latest Enhancing and Implementing Homeownership Programs in Native Communities training.