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Episcopal Church’s Economic Justice Loan Committee invests in six community loan funds

January 24, 2024
Office of Public Affairs

Honoring its commitment to share resources in ways that prioritize those who have been disenfranchised and oppressed, the Economic Justice Loan Committee of The Episcopal Church approved six investments in 2023 totaling $2.35 million.

The loans were given to community development financial intermediaries that help with affordable housing, job creation, and other avenues that support economic well-being, said N. Kurt Barnes, treasurer and chief financial officer of The Episcopal Church.  

In 2023, some of the loans were given to the following organizations:

Access to Capital for Entrepreneurs (ACE), Cleveland, Georgia – $400,000
In 2022, ACE had over $60 million in loans outstanding, twice as many as in 2020. These loans were made primarily to underserved entrepreneurs in North Georgia and metro Atlanta. ACE provides financial, business development, and community economic development resources to minorities and those in low-income communities. ACE seeks to help borrowers create and grow sustainable businesses that generate jobs. Since May 2021, ACE started offering training and educational services through its new Women’s Business Center in Savannah, Georgia. ACE is a nonprofit organization with a vision to narrow the gender and racial wealth gaps, particularly for African American and Latino communities.

Capital for Change, Inc. (C4C), Connecticut – $400,000
Established by the merger in 2016 of three Connecticut community development financial institutions, C4C seeks to provide flexible, creative, and responsive financial products and services that support an inclusive and sustainable economy. C4C provides loans for “community development activities” in the forms of commercial financing for affordable housing development, multi-family energy efficiency upgrades, nonprofit cash flow, and capital needs and small business capital needs.

Fonkozé  – Port-au-Prince, Haiti  – $400,000
Created more than 25 years ago, Fonkozé’s family of organizations works together to provide financial and non-financial services to empower Haitians—primarily women—to lift their families out of poverty. As measured by number of clients, Fonkozé is Haiti’s largest microfinance institution, operating via 44 branches and 1,800 solidarity centers throughout the country. The institution has over 200,000 depositors and more than 56,000 borrowers. This loan is the fourth one approved by the Economic Justice Loan Committee. The main organization is based in Washington, D.C.

Northwest Native Development Fund (NNDF), Washington$250,000
Northwest Native Development Fund (NNDF) is a Native community development financial institution and a nonprofit organization that seeks to foster economic and financial independence. NNDF’s clientele is composed of the most economically distressed Native Americans in Washington state, with over 82% qualifying as low-income and almost half falling into the “very low-income” category. Native Americans make up 93% of NNDF’s clients, with nearly 30% being single mothers. A significant portion of NNDF’s clients reside in Okanogan County, which is classified as both a Persistent Poverty County and an Opportunity Zone.

Additional loans included $500,000 to Homewise Inc. in Santa Fe, New Mexico; and $400,000 to the Genesis Community Loan Fund in Brunswick, Maine.

About the Economic Justice Loan Committee
The Economic Justice Loan Fund is an economic justice ministry through which The Episcopal Church uses part of its investment assets to provide capital for communities and groups that lack full and equal access to financial resources. Loans have been made primarily in the United States to support community economic development, affordable housing, job creation and other avenues of mission. Created in 1998 by the church’s Executive Council, the fund combines two prior loan programs that had existed since 1988 and makes up to $7 million available. Loans are made to financial intermediaries, usually in amounts between $150,000 and $500,000, and usually for terms of three to five years. Loan applicants do not have to be affiliated with The Episcopal Church; however, applicants and recipients must have the endorsement of their local Episcopal bishop. Loans are not made to individuals or for individual projects.

Committee members
The Rev. Will Mebane, chair, Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts; the Very Rev. M.E. Eccles, Episcopal Diocese of Chicago; Timothy Gee, Episcopal Diocese of El Camino Real; the Rt. Rev. Anne Hodges-Copple, Episcopal Diocese of North Carolina; Joe McDaniel, Episcopal Diocese of the Central Gulf Coast; Diane Pollard, Episcopal Diocese of New York; Byron Rushing, Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts; the Rev. Andrew Walter, Episcopal Diocese of Washington; and ex officio members Julia Ayala Harris and the Most Rev. Michael Curry. Staff members include N. Kurt Barnes, treasurer and chief financial officer; Margareth Crosnier de Bellaistre, director of investment management and banking; Tanie Oconer, assistant controller; and Nancy Caparulo, staff liaison.

For more info
For information contact Crosnier de Bellaistre via email or at 212-922-5293.