V « * • « « ' .'vvws*v^rtMÿ«ô* f» •• Page 10 The Portland Observer—A p ril 17, 1991 April 17, 1991 First Interstate Bank Opens Community Lending Center A Joint Community Effort The Community Lending Center has been designed to: • Work closely with community lead­ ers to identify home ownership needs in the community and ad­ dress those needs through unique and innovative lending programs. • Actively promote First Interstate Bank’s HOME (Home Ownership Made Easy) Loan Program to tar­ geted communities in Portland. • Assist Oregonians with low and moderate incomes in achieving the goal of home ownership. meeting certain household income requirements. Debt/incom e ratios and cash reserve requirem ents are eased for qualified borrowers. • • Act as a focal point for the many specialized residential real estate loan programs offered through First Interstate. During its first year of operation, the Community Lending Center will focus on lending in specific areas in North, Northeast and Southeast Portland. Loan programs available through the center include: • HOME (Home Ownership Made Easy) loan p ro g ra m . An en­ hanced FHA program which eases down-payment requirements and debt/income ratios. • Home Affordability program . De­ veloped by the Portland Organiz­ ing Project, the Home Affordabil­ ity program. Developed by the Port­ land Organizing Project, the Home Affordability Program provides mortgage funds to targeted geo­ graphic locations and borrowers State o f O regon hom e loan p ro ­ g ram . From tim e to time the state makes funds available at lower interest rates for home loans to first-time home buyers with low to moderate incomes. • C onventional loans and sta n d a rd FHA a n d VA p ro g ra m s. The full array o f First Interstate’s real yes- tate loan program s will be avail­ able to custom ers o f the lending center. The C om m unity L en d in g C enter S ta ff will: • Assist low- and moderate-income families in qualifying for home loans in targeted areas. • Help neighborhood residents evalu­ ate their financial situations and counsel them on how to prepare to buy a house. • Act as a referral source for all the special program s available through outside agencies, focusing on find­ ing the loan package that best meets the needs o f the borrower, even if it is not a loan from First Inter­ state. • Offer home ow nership seminars to neighborhood residents in coopera tion with community organizations. 'We are grateful to the Portland Organizing Project and the Black United Front for helping us develop this valuable program," said Ralph Nickerson, manager of the Community Lending Center. "The HOME Loan Program will help us meet the needs of many first-time buyers. In addition, the Community Lending Center will offer other programs that we can tailor to fit the individual circumstances of people who want to own their own homes. And we’ll continually work to develop innovative ways to increase the bank's lending in Portland neighborhoods." Portland Lender To Launch Homebuyer Education Seminars Com m issioner Grethchen Kafoury today praised Portland’s leading finan­ cial institutions as they announced plans to provide a series of free seminars that will help Portland-area renters leant how to become homebuyers. “ We need to reach out into the neighborhoods of Portland to help people learn what it takes to buy a home and then tell them about the opportunities available,” she said. “ The banks have been very responsive thus far in offer­ ing new loan program s, and I hope this effort will increase the num ber o f eli­ gible applicants. Home ownership is a key ingredient o f com m unity develop­ ment, and 1 look forward to continued cooperation with the lenders in prom ot­ ing access to mortgage financing.” The three-part educational series leads potential homebuyers through the process of determining how much home they can afford, selecting and making an offer on a home, and obtaining mortgage financing. The seminars arc sponsored by the City o f Portland Bureau of Community Development, Com m issioner Kafoury, U .S. Bank, First Interstate Bank o f O re­ gon, Security Pacific Bank o f Oregon, Key Bank, Bank of Am erica, the O re­ gon Bankers Association, the Oregon M ortgage Bankers Association, the Oregon League o f Financial Institu­ tions and other mortgage lenders. “ Based on our past experience with sponsoring homebuyer seminars, w e’re expecting a good turnout,” said Karen Tolvstad, vice president and com m u­ nity rein vestment officer for U .S. Bank. “ We hope to attract many participants, because there are several new financing programs available specifically for low- and moderate-incom e buyers, and we want to get the work out about those program s.” The seminars cover how to qualify for a mortgage loan, w hat to look for when selecting a home, and what to expect from a real estate agent, lender, appraiser and closing agent. They also highlight specific mortgage loan pro­ gram s, some very new to the Portland market, that are available through a variety o f lenders. Some of these new program s require that a homebuyer at­ tend the seminar series to receive their benefits. The first thrcc-part seminar series is scheduled for W ednesday evenings, January 9th, 16th and 23rd, from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. at Vernon Presbyterian Church, N.E. 27th and Killingsworth. A fourth, follow-up sem inar will be scheduled for those who purchase a home in the near future. It will cover life as a homeowner. The series will be repeated each month at a different location. February sessions are scheduled for the 13th, 20th and 27th at St. Peter’s Catholic Church in southeast Portland. Because space is limited, persons interested in attending the seminars arc encouraged to reserve a place. Call the Oregon Bankers Association, 223-5875. First Interstate Bank officially opened its Com m unity Lending Center in January. The lending center, located at the bank’s w alnut Park branch, 5730 NE Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., was developed in partnership with the Port­ land Organizing Project and the Black United Front to respond to the needs of the neighborhoods these organizations represent. Lending to first-tim e home buyers in inner-city, outer N ortheast and outer Southeast neighborhoods is the focus of the new Com m unity Lending Center, which is designed to help the bank con­ tinue to meet its ongoing com m itm ent to assist home buyers across the eco­ nomic spectrum, according to Robert Ames, president o f First Interstate Bank o f Oregon. Ames said that First Interstate also plans to strengthen its com m itm ent to low- and m oderate-incom e home buy­ ers by helping to fund and develop the newly-created Home C enter in coopera­ tion with other area banks, governm en­ tal agencies and com m unity colleges. The Home Center, proposed last Fall by Portland City Com m issioner Gretchen Kafoury, will offer informal counseling on how to buy and m aintain a home, how to qualify for a loan and how to work through the com plicated process of obtaining a mortgage. The Home Center recently began holding classes at the Vernon Presbyterian Church. Through its Com m unity Lending Center, First Interstate w ill also offer information, counseling, seminars and alternative loan program s, including a new program called the HOM E (Home Ownership Made Easy) Loan Program. “ The Portland O rganizing Project is pleased with First Interstate B ank’s aggressive approach to marketing the HOM E Loan Program , including its opening o f the Com m unity Lending C enter,” said Paul Kelly o f the P ort­ land O rganizing Project. “ This is a positive step toward increasing home ownership am ong low-and moderate- income fam ilies in our city. W e look forward optim istically to working with the bank on other im portant aspects of this program, such as rehabilitation of deteriorated but salvageable housing.” The HOME Loan Program , de­ signed to help low- and moderate-in- come people buy their first homes, was developed with assistance from the Portland O rganizing Project and the Black United Front. Major features of the HOM E Loan Program include: First Interstate Bank has donated funds to Oregon Com m unity Founda­ tion, an Oregon nonprofit corporation to provide a grant o f 1% to be applied toward the down payment. -A p p lican ts can be qualified for house paym ents o f up to 33% of their m onthly incomes (instead o f the usual 28%). -R ecu rrin g monthly obligations such as rent and utility paym ents can be used as credit references. -M in im u m dow n payment. - N o extra fees for low er loan amounts. -M o rtg ag e Credit C ertificate pro ­ gram availability. Multnomah County Fair Housing Initiatives Program Education and Outreach Project The M ultnomah County Com m u­ nity Development Division has received a $75,000 grant from the U.S. D epart­ ment o f Housing and Urban Develop­ ment (HUD) to conduct education and outreach activities under the Fair H ous­ ing Initiatives Program. HUD establish this federal “ Education and O utreach Initiatives” funding to support com ­ m unity-based programs which prevent or elim inate discrim inating housing practices. HUD’s other emphasis through the FH IP program is designated for “ Enforcem ent Initiatives” under the federal civil rights law. Clearly, there is a continuing need to educated the com m unity on fair housing law. An estimated two-hundred reports o f housing discrimination were made to governm ent agencies in O re­ gon during 1989-90. O f this number, the State o f O regon’s Civil Rights Division and HUD handled 105 formal com plaints through their adm inistra­ tion resolution process. In addition to these com plaints, a num ber o f private lawsuits were filed. The “ Fair Housing Education and O utreach” project will sponsor activi­ ties which prevent or elim inate dis­ crim inatory housing practices. The project activities planned for 1991-1992 include w orkshop sessions for the community; training for realtors and property managers; specialized outreach to the disabled; a state-w ide fair hous­ ing conference and production o f fair housing educational materials. “ The project has been developed with an eye tow ard preventing housing discrim ination problem s in our com ­ m unity,” says Chair Gladys McCoy. “ This federal grant, one of only forty nation-w ide, will make it possible to bring a comprhensivc array of fair housing education services top our residents. People employed in the housing indus­ try will receive information on their re­ sponsibilities under civil rights law. People seeking housing will becom e informed about civil rights protections.” Education and outreach on state and federal fair housing law addresses the housing discrim ination issue in two ways. First, people em ployed in the housing industry receive training and materials designed to educate them about their responsibilities under civil rights law. Second, people who are seeking housing learn about civil rights protec­ tions. Multnomah C ounty’s Fair H ous­ ing Education and O utreach Project will contract with a num ber o f non­ profit agencies to conduct program ac­ tivities. Those cooperating on the proj­ ect, include: M ulti-Family Housing Council Oregon; M ultnomah County Legal Aid Service; Access Oregon: Urban League of Portland; the Portland Com m unity Housing Office will also be working with the project. Project ac­ tivities, which will be conducted in 1991-92, arc summarized below: Information Matcrials-Brochures on fair housing rights will be developed for people seeking housing in the rental market. These brochures will be pro­ duced in english, Spanish and the pre- dom inantasian languages. Information directed toward special populations, ie. families with children and the disablcd, will also be developed. Instructional M atcrials-Training packets on fair housing law and af­ firmative marketing will be developed for landlords and realtors.