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BANKING & COMMUNITY

FEDERAL
RESERVE BANK
OF DALLAS

Perspectives
SECOND QUARTER 2000

Housing Partnership
Blooms in East Texas
Houses More
Affordable
Thanks to State
Infrastructure Grant
Houses in the mixed-income
Green Oaks subdivision average
1,300 square feet, with three
bedrooms, two baths, two-car
garages, energy-efficient
appliances and other amenities.

A

INSIDE
Banking on Entrepreneurs

•

Making Affordable Housing
More Affordable

•

Reviewing Economic
Development Needs

•
•
National Lending School
Call for Papers

n East Texas developer is using a
state infrastructure grant to reduce the
cost of an affordable housing development in the city of Nash. Steve Harris,
who owns H&H Builders, is passing the
savings on to eligible homebuyers by
selling the lots at a much reduced rate.
Thanks to a $424,000 grant awarded
in 1999 to Nash from the Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs
(TDHCA) Housing Infrastructure Fund,
H&H Builders and other area construction companies aren’t having to absorb
costs of installing wastewater systems,
streetlights, sidewalks, streets, drainage
and fire hydrants.
Because of the savings, Harris and the
other builders are able to lower the cost

of each house by $6,150.
“Affordability starts with the lot cost,”
says Harris, who, with his wife, Roxan,
bought the 18 acres of woods in 1997 to
build an affordable housing subdivision.
“If you don’t have affordable lots, you are
already defeated. Also, it is extremely difficult to find for-profit builders who are
interested in building homes in this price
range.”
H&H Builders is part of an East Texas
partnership that includes city and state
governments, banks and builders. The
partnership is constructing 69 affordable
homes in the mixed-income Green Oaks
subdivision. The houses range from
$60,000 to $85,000, but most are being
sold for about $70,000. The Housing

PUBLIC & PRIVATE PARTNERSHIP

A foundation is ready to be
poured for a house in the
Green Oaks subdivision.
Steve and Roxan Harris, who
own H&H Builders, bought
these 18 acres of woods in
Nash to build an affordable
housing subdivision.

Infrastructure Fund requires that 35 of
the 69 houses be sold to low- and moderate-income families.
Because H&H didn’t have to recover
infrastructure costs, the company sold
lots to area builders for $5,000 each, less
than half the normal price—a major
drawing card for the subdivision.
“There are so many communities in
East Texas that need affordable housing,”
says Wayne Dial, a TDHCA field representative. “It makes all the partners in
this project very proud to meet the needs
of low- and moderate-income families.”
In addition to TDHCA, H&H’s partners include the city of Nash, North East
Texas Housing Finance Corp., USDA
Rural Housing Services, Regions Bank,
Century Bank, FirstBank and Hibernia
National Bank.
H&H will build 22 homes in the subdivision, with area builders Whitaker
Homes, Hackelmann Construction,
Brownco, J. K. Porter and Shade
Construction handling the rest. To date,
28 homes have been completed and 14

sold to low- and moderate-income families. H&H Builders plans to build 12
more houses this year. As the subdivision developer, H&H is responsible for
repaying all or a portion of the $424,000
grant if Green Oaks isn’t completed
within three years.
Regions Bank in Texarkana furnished
a $300,000 line of credit to H&H for
construction of 22 houses. “We are
always looking for community reinvestment opportunities, and when H&H
A public/private
partnership
came together
to construct 69
affordable
homes in the
city of Nash.

2 FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF DALLAS • PERSPECTIVES • SECOND QUARTER 2000

Builders came to us for financing, we
knew this was a good loan,” says Lloyd
Champion, Regions Bank president.
“H&H had an excellent plan and had
identified a need for affordable housing
in Nash. Regions is always excited to
work with someone who has a vision
similar to ours, which is meeting the
needs of our community.”
City officials agreed to waive all
building permit and tap fees, saving
builders a total of $35,535.

Homebuyer Assistance Provided
The city received $182,000 from the
TDHCA HOME Program to provide
down-payment and closing-cost assistance for homeowners. Homebuyers
may be eligible for up to $7,500 in zerointerest, 30-year deferred-payment loans.
USDA Rural Housing Services also
provided reduced-rate financing at 6.75
percent over 30 years to assist lowincome buyers. To date, the agency has
financed four homes in the subdivision.
The North East Texas Housing
Finance Corp. issued state bonds to provide mortgage assistance to first-time
homebuyers. FirstBank, Hibernia,
Century Bank and Regions purchased
the bonds and are providing 30-year
fixed-rate mortgages between 6.15 percent and 6.75 percent to eligible buyers.

Best Feeling in the World
Last June, Christine Manley became
one of the first homebuyers in Green
Oaks. “Being able to purchase my first
home and provide a stable environment
for my daughter is the best feeling in the
world,” Manley says. “My actual monthly
mortgage payment of $563 is lower than
the rent I was paying for an apartment.”
The houses in Green Oaks average
1,300 square feet, with three bedrooms,
two baths and two-car garages. The lowmaintenance dwellings include energyefficient appliances, low-flow toilets, gas
water heaters, high-efficiency air conditioners, 9- and 10-foot ceilings, French
doors, garden tubs with separate showers,
brick mailboxes and fireplaces.
The Harrises have bought another 20
acres for an affordable housing subdivision, and the city is seeking a second
TDHCA infrastructure grant. “It is
rewarding for my wife and me to help
individuals who otherwise may not have
been able to purchase a home,” Harris
says. “We have had a lot of challenges in
developing this project, but with tenacity
and determination, we got over the
obstacles and developed a magnificent
subdivision that the homeowners of
Nash are extremely proud to call home.” ◗

Fast Facts
Green Oaks Subdivision, Nash, Texas
Using a Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs Housing Infrastructure Fund
grant from the city of Nash, H&H Builders was able to reduce the cost of the lots in the mixedincome Green Oaks subdivision. The grant allowed the developer to pass on about $6,150 in
savings to each eligible homebuyer. The public/private partnership, which also includes the city
of Nash, Regions Bank, FirstBank, Hibernia National Bank, Century Bank, USDA Rural Housing
Services and North East Texas Housing Finance Corp., is transforming 18 acres of vacant land
into a subdivision of 69 affordable houses, of which 35 will be sold to individuals at or below 80
percent of the median income.
Developer/Builder Financing:
TDHCA—Housing Infrastructure Fund
Provided grant to city of Nash for infrastructure development of 69
single-family lots with at least 51 percent of the houses sold to
low- and moderate-income people

$424,000

City of Nash
Waived building permit and tap fees

$ 35,535

Regions Bank
Issued interim construction line of credit to H&H Builders
at 9 percent interest to build 22 houses

$300,000

Total Developer/Builder Financing

$759,535

Home Ownership Financing:
USDA Rural Housing Services
Provides 30-year mortgages at 6.75 percent interest for low-income people
North East Texas Housing Finance Corp.
Issued state bonds to provide 30-year fixed-rate mortgages from
6.15 percent to 6.75 percent interest. FirstBank, Hibernia, Century Bank and
Regions Bank purchased the bonds and are originating the mortgages.
City of Nash (TDHCA HOME Program)
Offers down-payment and closing-cost assistance

$182,000

For more information:
TDHCA:
Austin Office (512) 475-3800
Mount Pleasant Office (903) 572-0111
City of Nash (903) 838-0751

FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF DALLAS • PERSPECTIVES • SECOND QUARTER 2000 3

Banking on Entrepreneurs
Business Training Attracts Lenders

The 30-hour People’s
Business College
provides comprehensive training on
building and running
a small business.

A Dallas-area nonprofit is taking the
visions of entrepreneurs and transforming them into real business plans that are
attracting the attention of local lenders.
The John C. Ford Program, whose mission is to enhance the knowledge and
economic self-sufficiency of low- and
moderate-income people, has developed
an entrepreneurship training program
that teaches participants how to build
and run a small business.
The 30-hour People’s Business
College provides comprehensive training
in entrepreneurship at no cost to the
enrollee. Participants meet for three
hours on 10 Saturdays to learn how to
prepare balance sheets, project cash
flow, address tax issues and market their
product. “Not only do students learn
how to run a business, each lecture is on
a component of a business plan,” says
Jacqueline Varma, Ford Program executive director. Participants must complete
a business plan to graduate.
Like most of those with start-ups and
small businesses, entrepreneurship graduates often lack access to capital. The
Ford Program developed a relationship
with Chase Bank and began referring
graduates needing larger loans—$25,000
to $100,000. However, because many
graduates are not in the market for loans
this big, the program turned to First
Mercantile CEO Roy Salley to address
their microloan needs.
“We’ve been very successful with

loans we have made to Ford Program
graduates, but we couldn’t meet the
demand alone,” says Salley. Armed with
past lending successes, Varma and Salley
approached several Dallas-area independent banks about forming a coalition to
lend working capital.
The result is Bankers’ Working Capital
Coalition Inc., a six-bank consortium
with $150,000 for loans ranging from
$5,000 to $20,000 for program graduates.
“If they have the tenacity and commitment to complete the program and prepare a business plan, then hopefully we
can help them reach their dream by providing a loan,” says Salley, who is coalition chairman. The coalition plans to
make its first loans in April.
Joining First Mercantile in the coalition
are five other independent banks: Lone
Star Bank, Texas Capital Bank, Abrams
Centre National Bank, Signature Bank
and North Dallas Bank & Trust.
The entrepreneurship program relies
on corporate partners to teach participants the mechanics of running a business. The volunteer teachers are drawn
from more than 400 accountants,
lawyers, bankers and other professionals
who have committed to the program. “It
really is a collective effort; we wouldn’t
have a program without it,” Varma says.
By partnering with inner-city churches
and using their facilities for classes, the
program has tapped an existing community network to attract participants and

4 FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF DALLAS • PERSPECTIVES • SECOND QUARTER 2000

graduate 500 entrepreneurs since the
program started in 1996; 200 graduated
in 1999. Varma expects the number of
graduates to rise to 300–400 a year due
to the recent completion of centers that
use two-way video conferencing equipment to accommodate additional students.
Program alumni find that support
doesn’t end at graduation. The Ford
Program provides five years of followup, offering mentors for guidance.
Graduates are provided one-time pro
bono legal assistance, which they often
use to incorporate their business.
The Ford Program also offers graduates the opportunity to enroll in an
advanced business training program.
Many select the 16-week On-Site
Business Consultant Program, which teams
the business owner with a lawyer,
accountant, marketing specialist and
management analyst who thoroughly
review the business and identify improvements that could take it to the next level.

Giving Shape to Ideas
After operating North Texas Aerial
Surveys for six months, Enrique Ordonez
enrolled in the entrepreneurship program because “I was a rookie and they
offered me the training I needed.” After
graduating he was able to expand his
business with a Chase Bank loan for
equipment and working capital. Now
teamed up with his son, who has
enrolled in the entrepreneurship program, Ordonez is thankful for what the
Ford Program has helped him accomplish. “The people at the program give
shape to your ideas, helping to turn
them into reality,” he says.
With 92 percent of entrepreneurship
graduates still in business and 85 percent
Continued on back page

Making Affordable Housing More Affordable
Doing Things Differently Reduces Rising Construction Costs
Rising construction
costs have some builders
questioning what constitutes “affordable” and
whether they can build
houses within reach of
low- to moderate-income
families.
However, homebuilders using special
strategies can reduce the
rising costs of labor and
materials to make housing more affordable.
For example, the Tetra
Group of Dallas uses
alternative building prodFibrecrete panels replace more costly, traditional wood frames.
ucts to replace more
expensive wood frames. Community
Development Corporation of Brownsville
Closing the Gap
(CDCB) streamlines its bidding and purTo bring material and labor costs in line
chasing procedures to get the most effiwith homebuyers’ budgets, Tetra uses panciency out of the preconstruction phase.
els of Fibrecrete, an alternative building
The availability of affordable homes is
product made with cement, sand, water
becoming a problem, says Hugh
and a fiber such as wood chips, rice husks,
Robinson, Tetra president and CEO. “A
jute and other fibers available locally.
person needs only to analyze the past
Fibrecrete panels replace traditional wood
growth and future trends in housing con- frames, which are more costly and require
struction costs and compare them with
greater skill to cut and engineer on site.
the median household income.”
Fibrecrete is molded into 2-by-8-foot
What is considered an affordable
interlocking panels that are cured for 72
home in today’s market ? Jack C. Harris,
hours before use. Fire- and termite-proof,
research economist with the Real Estate
the panels are easily cut to accommodate
Center at Texas A&M University, says his
electrical wiring and plumbing. “In 25
research shows that the typical first-time
days, we can provide a completed house
homebuyer in Texas has a household
at less than $30 a square foot and at the
income of about $26,600. Using current
same time provide meaningful jobs for
interest rates and FHA financing, he estilocal people,” Robinson says.
mates that a household at this income
The CDCB, whose housing initiatives
level can afford a home priced at
date to 1973, builds about 130 homes a
$70,500, as long as there is no additional
year. Its bidding and construction strategies
debt. A car payment or other debt might
have reduced costs to about $30–$33 per
reduce the amount of mortgage debt the
square foot, says executive director Don
family could afford.
Currie.

The organization seeks
separate material and labor
bids from several suppliers, buys its own materials
in bulk—eliminating
markup costs—and purchases 100 to 200 lots at a
time. Builders bid only on
labor. And because the
CDCB is a nonprofit, it is
exempt from state sales
tax. Currie says his techniques result in lower
labor and material costs.
The Tetra Group and
CDCB approaches are
two examples of efforts
that for-profit and nonprofit developers are making to reduce
the cost of building affordable homes.
Low- and moderate-income families are
also turning to manufactured housing as
an alternative. The price for such housing averages about $29 per square foot
nationwide, according to the Texas
Manufactured Housing Association.
In Texas, manufactured housing comprises one out of every three units purchased, the association says. The
Manufactured Housing Institute credits
the affordability to factory efficiency.
“The controlled environment and assembly-line techniques remove many of the
problems of the site-built sector, such as
poor weather, theft, vandalism and damage to building products stored on-site,”
an institute spokesperson says. ◗
For more information:
Community Development Corporation of
Brownsville, (956) 541-4955
The Tetra Group, (214) 744-0420
Texas Manufactured Housing
Association, (512) 459-1221

FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF DALLAS • PERSPECTIVES • SECOND QUARTER 2000 5

Reviewing Economic
Development Needs
Small Business Financing and Infrastructure
Are Still Issues in the Eleventh District
Periodically reviewing small business
and economic development needs can
help determine if current efforts are
effective. Community Development
Resources (CDR) assessed the needs of
five states, including the Eleventh Federal
Reserve District states of Louisiana, New
Mexico and Texas. The 1999 study
examined rural and urban communities,
focusing primarily on small business,
industrial development and local infrastructure. Housing issues were also discussed.
Focus groups were conducted in El
Paso, Houston and Weslaco, Texas; New
Orleans and Baton Rouge, Louisiana; and
Albuquerque, New Mexico. The groups
included representatives from financial
institutions, businesses, nonprofit organizations, universities, and city and state
agencies, as well as elected officials.
Supplementing these were interviews
with lenders, banking regulatory agencies, nonprofits and small business development centers.
The study also reviewed reports and
plans prepared by the U.S. Department

Small loans for small businesses
are the study’s most frequently
cited credit need.

of Agriculture, state agencies and economic development districts. Development
plans reviewed included the Texas
Strategic Economic Development Plan
1998–2008, as well as reports from the
South Plains Association of Governments
in Lubbock; the Lower Rio Grande Valley
Development Council, McAllen; the Gulf
Coast State Planning Region, Houston;
Central and Southeastern New Mexico
Economic Development districts; North
Delta Regional Planning and Development District, Monroe, Louisiana; and
Louisiana Economic Development
Council.
The CDR study found that although
Texas, New Mexico and Louisiana have
diverse economies, their small-business
and affordable-housing financing needs
are similar. The three states also have
common infrastructure needs, with limited water resources and an untrained
labor force the most often identified constraints to future development.

Small Business
Small loans for small businesses are
the study’s most frequently cited credit
need. Focus group participants in El
Paso, Houston, New Mexico and
Louisiana identified the need for business loans of $25,000 or less. Small businesses also need working-capital lines of
credit. For example, one group noted
that small businesses and nonprofit

6 FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF DALLAS • PERSPECTIVES • SECOND QUARTER 2000

Sonia Armstrong Brown has over 20 years’
experience in the financial industry. Before
founding Community Development
Resources in 1998, she was senior vice
president and director of the Community
Investment Department of the Federal
Home Loan Bank of Dallas.

health and social service providers that
rely on government contracts need lines
of credit to manage uneven cash flows
caused by payment schedules. The focus
groups also identified the need for venture capital funds or other sources of
small business equity capital.
The 1998 Economic Development
Plan for the Gulf Coast Region notes that
bank financing for businesses located in
urban areas is apparently not only available but also highly competitive. The
plan also states that fixed-rate financing
for terms of 10 to 20 years is not uncommon. However, Houston focus group
participants noted the lack of 20- and 30year fixed-rate financing for commercial
and multifamily real estate projects, particularly in low- to moderate-income
areas. In their opinion, some lenders
require increased equity in these areas,
even when appraised values meet collateral requirements. The group attributed
this to lender concern over the future
market value of properties in lower
income areas and said this practice may
cause the city to provide more equity
than necessary when it participates in an
economic development loan.
The focus groups repeatedly pointed
to borrowers’ lack of adequate credit history and equity as primary deterrents to
small business development. Training
programs for small business owners and
public financing enhancements could

help reduce lenders’ credit risk. In
Louisiana, financial institution representatives suggested a statewide loan loss
reserve program similar to the Texas
Capital Access Fund, in which lenders,
small businesses and the state contribute
to a fund that protects lenders in the
event of loan defaults.

Banking Services
Economic development plans for the
Texas Gulf Coast region and the North
Delta area of Louisiana note that nonbank lenders are increasingly financing
business expansions, inventory and relocations. New Mexico focus group participants expressed concern that bank mergers have resulted in smaller local staffs
and lending decisions being moved to
regional offices, where there is little
understanding of local issues.

Housing
El Paso focus group participants
emphasized that the greatest need along
the border is for affordable housing.
Barriers to developing such housing are
created by high land costs and the lack
of a secondary market for nonconforming mortgages.
Financing for the preservation of multifamily affordable housing is also needed. During the next four years, expiring
HUD Section 8 housing contracts may
result in the loss of more than 31,000
affordable housing units in Texas, 7,500
in New Mexico and 2,500 in Louisiana.
Also, the 15-year affordability requirement for property financed with Low
Income Housing Tax Credits between
1987 and 1989 begins to expire in 2002.
Approximately 10,300 units of affordable
housing in Texas were financed with
LIHTC during this period, and some of
these developments have no or limited
requirements to maintain affordability
beyond 15 years.

During the next four years
expiring HUD Section 8 housing
contracts may result in the loss
of more than 31,000 affordable
housing units in Texas, 7,500 in
New Mexico and 2,500 in
Louisiana.

Infrastructure
The future availability of water was
the most frequently cited infrastructure
need in Texas and New Mexico. The
Lower Rio Grande Valley 1998 Economic
Development Plan calls a severe water
shortage the greatest threat to regional
growth. A similar problem exists in the
Texas Panhandle, the South Plains and
along the Texas Gulf Coast. Water is also
an issue in New Mexico. The 1997–98
Southeastern New Mexico Economic
Development Plan states unequivocally
that “the most significant constraint on
growth in Southeastern New Mexico is
water.”
The Louisiana economic development
study, as well as Texas and New Mexico
studies, notes the need for infrastructure
improvements to wastewater systems
and roads. The Louisiana study also
identifies the need to develop an information-systems infrastructure in order to
be truly competitive.
Meeting infrastructure needs will be
costly. Estimates range from $1.5 billion
for improvements in water and wastewater systems and transportation along
the Texas border to $14.2 billion in New
Mexico over 1998–2002. The 1997 report
by New Mexico’s Department of Finance
and Administration that estimates the
state’s infrastructure improvement costs
concludes that “clearly our infrastructure
needs surpass the amount of funding
that is available. Consequently, we need
more effective, efficient and innovative
methods of financing capital projects.”
Federal and state solid waste and
water treatment regulations challenge

smaller communities and rural areas, notes
the New Mexico Southeastern District
report. Many communities can’t finance
infrastructure projects in excess of $100,000,
the report says, making it virtually impossible to keep up with regulatory requirements and meet community demands.
The social service facilities in communities with large population growth—
such as McAllen and Brownsville—are
also being challenged to meet new
demand. More libraries, community centers, and fire equipment and stations are
needed, in addition to water and wastewater infrastructure.
A final issue affecting future economic
growth the study found is the lack of an
adequately trained workforce. The
Louisiana and Texas border region development plans and focus groups noted
that this issue is key to future development.

Summary
The CDR study reviews small-business
and affordable-housing credit needs, as
well as the infrastructure needs important
to sustaining economic development in
Texas, New Mexico and Louisiana.
Many of the study’s findings are not new
and are being addressed by civic leaders,
government agencies and financial institutions. Despite this, it is clear that efforts
to address financing of community and
economic development needs must continue. ◗

Infrastructure needs surpass the
amount of funding that is available
[in New Mexico]. Consequently, we
need more effective, efficient and
innovative methods of financing
capital projects.

FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF DALLAS • PERSPECTIVES • SECOND QUARTER 2000 7

Did You Know. . .?

Banking on Entrepreneurs
Continued from page 4

Call for Papers:
Changing Financial Markets
and Community Development
The Community Affairs officers of the
Federal Reserve System will jointly sponsor a conference on April 5–6, 2001, in
Washington, D.C., on the effects of
recent changes in financial markets on
low- and moderate-income (LMI) communities.
Potential topics include, but are not
limited to, the following:
• Changing role of banks and nonbanks in serving LMI communities
• Role of technology in financial institutions and its impact on LMI communities
• Effectiveness of community development programs
• Effect of changing financial markets
on wealth creation and neighborhood
sustainability
Individuals interested in presenting
research should submit a completed
paper, detailed abstract or proposal by
June 30, 2000, to:
Lynn Elaine Browne
Senior Vice President and
Director of Research

increasing their revenues within 18
months of graduation, Varma points to
the community’s collective effort and
the program’s comprehensive nature
as keys to its success. Salley says the
reason for the program’s achievements
is simple: “People need help preparing
for success, and that is what the John
C. Ford Program does.”
For more information, contact
the John C. Ford Program, Inc. at
(214) 871-5065. ◗

FEDERAL
RESERVE BANK
OF DALLAS

Perspectives
Second Quarter 2000
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Community Affairs Office
P.O. Box 655906, Dallas, TX 75265-5906
(214) 922-5377

Gloria Vasquez Brown
Vice President
gloria.v.brown@dal.frb.org

Nancy C. Vickrey
Assistant Vice President and
Community Affairs Officer
nancy.vickrey@dal.frb.org

Federal Reserve Bank of Boston
600 Atlantic Ave.
Boston, MA 02106
E-mail: lynn.browne@bos.frb.org
Phone: (617) 973-3091

Ariel D. Cisneros
Senior Community Affairs Advisor
ariel.cisneros@dal.frb.org

Shelia M. Watson
Senior Community Affairs Advisor
shelia.watson@dal.frb.org

Toby Cook
Community Affairs Specialist
toby.cook@dal.frb.org

National Lending School
The Federal Reserve Banks of St.
Louis and San Francisco will sponsor a
National Community Development
Lending School July 16 – 20 at
Washington University in St. Louis.
For more information or to register,
contact Fred Mendez at (415) 974-2722
or e-mail fred.mendez@sf.frb.org.

Jackie Hoyer
Houston Branch
Community Affairs Advisor
jackie.hoyer@dal.frb.org
Publications Director: Kay Champagne
Writer: Steve Smith
Editors: Jennifer Afflerbach, Monica Reeves
Design: Gene Autry, Laura J. Bell
The views expressed are those of the authors and
should not be attributed to the Federal Reserve Bank
of Dallas or the Federal Reserve System. Articles may
be reprinted on the condition that the source is credited
and a copy is provided to the Community Affairs Office.
Internet web site: www.dallasfed.org

Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
P.O. Box 655906
Dallas, Texas 75265-5906

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