Enterprise Community Partners to Help Houses of Worship Build Thousands of Affordable Homes With $8.5 Million in Grants From Wells Fargo

Nationwide expansion of faith-based affordable housing development kicks off in Atlanta
Feb 24, 2022 9:05 AM ET
Man at podium
Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens announced an $8.5 million grant from the Wells Fargo Foundation to help houses of worship convert underutilized land into affordable homes and community facilities.

ATLANTA, February 24, 2022 /3BL Media/ - Joined by Mayor Andre Dickens inside Atlanta First United Methodist Church, Enterprise Community Partners (Enterprise) today announced $8.5 million in grants from the Wells Fargo Foundation to help houses of worship across the U.S. convert underutilized land into affordable homes and community facilities. Faith-based organizations collectively own tens of thousands of acres of underutilized and vacant land across the U.S., often in high-cost real estate markets where community members struggle to find affordable, quality housing. The funding from Wells Fargo will support the nationwide expansion of Enterprise’s Faith-Based Development Initiative, which will partner with houses of worship to create roughly 6,000 affordable homes—including 1,000 in Atlanta.

“Communities of faith were central to Enterprise’s founding 40 years ago, and they continue to serve as strong cornerstones in creating neighborhoods where people and families can thrive,” said Jacqueline Waggoner, president, Solutions Division, Enterprise. “There is so much potential in building partnerships with faith-based organizations and through this collaboration with Wells Fargo we can cascade much needed resources and mentorship to help faith-based organizations create affordable homes.”

Nationwide, 10.5 million families pay more than half their income in rent each month, and housing development currently cannot keep pace with the growing need for affordable homes. Land costs are soaring, and land acquisition is a major barrier to housing production.

“Far too many people across the country are facing housing instability and we’re grateful to be a part of this movement that is paving a new avenue for the construction of more quality affordable homes that will make a real difference in opening up economic opportunity for people in Atlanta and across the nation,” said Eileen Fitzgerald, Wells Fargo’s head of housing affordability philanthropy. “As community anchors, houses of worship are at the center of so many lives and working together, we can bring a whole new level of innovation to the housing supply challenge.”

With the training and resources provided by Enterprise’s Faith-Based Development Initiative, faith-based organizations will acquire the knowledge necessary to turn land they already own into desperately needed affordable homes.

In Fulton County alone, faith-based organizations own more than 6,000 acres of land, much of which is underutilized. With Wells Fargo’s support, Enterprise will help approximately 15 houses of worship in the Atlanta metro create 1,000 affordable homes for community members over the next five years. 

Enterprise’s Faith-Based Development Initiative launched in 2006 in the Mid-Atlantic region, where it has helped faith-based organizations to create or preserve more than 1,500 affordable homes and one community-based health clinic, with more than a thousand additional affordable homes in the development pipeline. The work has led to the creation of a successful model and generated interest from faith-based organizations and cities to partner on a proven program.

“To meet my Administration’s ambitious goal of creating or preserving 20,000 units of affordable housing, we will need the assistance of all facets of our community using all tools at our disposal,” said Mayor Andre Dickens. “By partnering with houses of worship to develop under-utilized land owned by faith-based groups to develop affordable housing, we have the opportunity to get at least 1,000 units closer to our goal. Thank you to Wells Fargo and Enterprise Community Partners for their investment in housing equity in Atlanta.”

Faith-based organizations participating in the program will gain access to:

  • Funding: Support for market/feasibility studies and pre-development activities
  • Training: Virtual and in-person trainings to help participants understand the ins and outs of the development process
  • Technical assistance and tools: One-on-one technical assistance to help overcome obstacles during the development process, as well as access to informational tools and resources
  • Access to experts: Referrals to vetted development partners, such as architects and designers, real estate lawyers and development consultants
  • Peer-to-peer learning: Geographic cohorts of faith-based organizations will network and learn from one another as they go through the process of housing development, and a national summit will bring faith leaders from across the country together to advance program learnings and celebrate successes

About Enterprise Community Partners

Enterprise is a national nonprofit that exists to make a good home possible for the millions of families without one. We support community development organizations on the ground, aggregate and invest capital for impact, advance housing policy at every level of government, and build and manage communities ourselves. Since 1982, we have invested $54 billion and created 873,000 homes across all 50 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico – all to make home and community places of pride, power and belonging. Join us at enterprisecommunity.org.​

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