Affordable Housing Finance honored its 2012 Hall of Fame inducte…
Affordable Housing Finance honored its 2012 Hall of Fame inductees, Young Leaders, and Readers’ Choice winners at a luncheon concluding AHF Live: The 2012 Affordable Housing Developers’ Summit on Nov. 16 in Chicago. The luncheon was sponsored by Bank of America Merrill Lynch. View the slideshow to see the recipients.
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Affordable Housing Hall of Fame inductee Michael Bodaken, presid…
Affordable Housing Hall of Fame inductee Michael Bodaken, president of the National Housing Trust.
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Affordable Housing Hall of Fame inductee Patrick Clancy, former …
Affordable Housing Hall of Fame inductee Patrick Clancy, former president and CEO of The Community Builders.
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Affordable Housing Hall of Fame inductee Michael Levitt (center)…
Affordable Housing Hall of Fame inductee Michael Levitt (center), founder of The Michaels Organization, with Christine Serlin, executive editor of Affordable Housing Finance, and David Leopold, senior vice president of Bank of America Merrill Lynch.
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Sen. Olympia Snowe addresses the luncheon audience via video.
Sheri Whitko Photography
Bob Moss (center), senior vice president of Boston Capital, acce…
Bob Moss (center), senior vice president of Boston Capital, accepts Sen. Olympia Snowe’s award on her behalf from Christine Serlin, executive editor of Affordable Housing Finance, and David Leopold, senior vice president of Bank of America Merrill Lynch.
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Affordable Housing Finance Executive Editor Christine Serlin (ri…
Affordable Housing Finance Executive Editor Christine Serlin (right) and Bank of America Merrill Lynch Senior Vice President David Leopold (left) also honored the magazine’s fifth annual Young Leader recipients. The 2012 Young Leaders are Natalia Williams, vice president of finance for Bayside Communities; Ginger Hitzke, president of Hitzke Development Corp.; Mickey Northcutt, executive director of North Shore CDC; Michael Gilliard, former senior real estate development project manager for Habitat for Humanity New York City; and Terce Sandifer, senior vice president at Union Bank.
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Emerald Springs in Detroit was honored as both overall developme…
Emerald Springs in Detroit was honored as both overall development and best family development in Affordable Housing Finance’s Readers’ Choice Awards. The project was developed by Unified Property Group and the Detroit Housing Commission. Pictured are (from left) David Leopold, senior vice president of Bank of America Merrill Lynch; Nick Kolb, Unified development officer; Teanisha Eli, Detroit Housing Commission director of development; Affordable Housing Finance Executive Editor Christine Serlin; and Steve Falcone, Unified president.
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The winner in the green category is M Station in Austin, Texas, …
The winner in the green category is M Station in Austin, Texas, which was developed by Foundation Communities. Pictured are Walter Moreau (right), executive director of Foundation Communities, and David Leopold, senior vice president of Bank of America Merrill Lynch.
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The best historic rehab honor goes to Saint Luke’s Manor in Cl…
The best historic rehab honor goes to Saint Luke’s Manor in Cleveland, developed by Pennrose Properties, LLC, and Neighborhood Progress, Inc. Pictured are Ryan Bailey (center), a Pennrose development officer; Sean Thomas from the Ohio Housing Finance Agency; and Affordable Housing Finance Executive Editor Christine Serlin.
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Savannah Gardens in Savannah, Ga., developed by Mercy Housing So…
Savannah Gardens in Savannah, Ga., developed by Mercy Housing Southeast, Inc., is the winner of the master-planned/mixed-use category. Pictured are Kris Bryant (right), project developer for Mercy Housing Southeast, and David Leopold, senior vice president of Bank of America Merrill Lynch.
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The winner of the preservation category is Harold Washington Apa…
The winner of the preservation category is Harold Washington Apartments in Chicago, developed by Mercy Housing Lakefront. Cindy Holler (left), president of Mercy Housing Lakefront, accepts the award from Affordable Housing Finance Executive Editor Christine Serlin.
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Alta Vista de la Montana in Delta, Colo., which was developed by…
Alta Vista de la Montana in Delta, Colo., which was developed by Community Resources and Housing Development Corp., took the top honor in the rural category. Robin Wolff, director of marketing and resource development at Community Resources and Housing Development Corp., accepts the award from David Leopold, senior vice president of Bank of America Merrill Lynch.
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The winner of the seniors category is Fair Oaks Plaza in Sunnyva…
The winner of the seniors category is Fair Oaks Plaza in Sunnyvale, Calif., developed by MidPen Housing Corp. Abby Goldware (right), a project manager at MidPen Housing, accepts the award from Affordable Housing Finance Executive Editor Christine Serlin.
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The best special-needs development is The Commons at Livingston …
The best special-needs development is The Commons at Livingston in Columbus, Ohio, developed by National Church Residences. Pictured are Michelle Norris, senior vice president and chief development officer at National Church Residences; Sean Thomas (center) from the Ohio Housing Finance Agency; and David Leopold, senior vice president of Bank of America Merrill Lynch.
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The honor for top urban development goes to The Homes at Old Col…
The honor for top urban development goes to The Homes at Old Colony in South Boston, Mass., developed by Beacon Communities Development, LLC, in partnership with the Boston Housing Authority. Accepting the award from Affordable Housing Finance Executive Editor Christine Serlin are Pamela Goodman (center), president of Beacon, and Darcy Jameson (right), project director.
Four individuals who have made lasting contributions to affordable housing were recognized at AHF Live: The 2012 Affordable Housing Developers’ Summit in Chicago.
Michael Bodaken, president of the National Housing Trust (NHT); Pat Clancy, who was instrumental in The Community Builders for more than 40 years before retiring in 2011; Michael Levitt, founder of The Michaels Organization, one of the nation’s top developers; and Sen. Olympia Snowe, a longtime advocate of the low-income housing tax credit (LIHTC) program, were inducted into AHF’s Hall of Fame.
Bodaken recalled two residents, Gertie and Dan, from his days as a young tenant organizer in Kansas.
“One was a single mother,” he said. “One was a senior citizen. Both were living in newly built Sec. 236 projects in Topeka. They helped me understand how important it was for them to have stability to reach their potential.”
Bodaken helped established a housing rights commission and then became a Legal Aid lawyer to sue Sec. 236 owners. He has been with NHT since 1993 and has overseen the preservation of more than 20,000 affordable homes.
“I’m fortunate enough to have worked with 25 unbelievable individuals who every day work to try to make sure that housing policy in the United States focuses on saving affordable housing for people who earn less than $12,000 a year,” he said.
“Probably everyone in this room has had a Gertie or Dan moment in their life, where you decided for whatever reason to get into this crazy business,” Bodaken said. “My guess is all of you had something in your life that turned it toward doing something important for people like Gertie, and people like Dan, and for the millions of other families in the United States for whom we provide affordable housing. That’s not a small thing. It’s a large thing.”
Clancy helped build The Community Builders into one of the nation’s top nonprofit affordable housing developers. He joined the organization in 1971 and then took over the helm in 1976.
During his tenure, Clancy and the organization worked in the trenches to revitalize struggling neighborhoods. They have been involved in the creation of nearly 30,000 homes in 14 states.
Like Bodaken, Clancy recognized the residents of those many properties.
“I accept this honor on behalf not of myself but of the over 400 committed folks at The Community Builders, on behalf of all of our many partners–financial, public, design, construction–on everything we do and did, and the communities and community leaders we work with, but particularly on behalf of the families that we serve, the residents, the folks struggling to make it in this the richest nation on Earth for whom a decent and affordable home that they can take pride in is such an invaluable cornerstone of building a better life.”
Levitt has built one of the nation’s largest and most prominent affordable housing firms. Michaels has developed more than 55,000 units in 33 states, the District of Columbia, and the Virgin Islands.
“How lucky are we, those of us in this room who are in the business of developing and managing affordable housing?” he said. “We can not only make a good living, but we can also give back.”
The Michaels Organization houses more than 100,000 residents “better than they have been housed before,” he said.
Levitt spoke of the residents and the firm’s many social programs aimed to help them improve their lives.
“I’m especially proud of our computer learning centers, where we partner with local and national companies who then hire our graduates,” he said, noting that 14,000 residents have gained meaningful employment through the program.
Snowe (R-Maine) has been the key Republican champion for the LIHTC program since its establishment in 1986.
“As you all certainly well know the housing market has been a source of tremendous concern for the past several years with the number of foreclosures remaining high, home sales continuing to languish, and new housing starts failing to accelerate, and regrettably as is typical of all downturns it is the most vulnerable who are hit the hardest,” she said in a video to accept the award. “That’s exactly why I have been a longstanding advocate for housing-related tax provisions like the low-income tax credit, which is designed to assist the most economically disadvantaged communities.”
She is leaving Congress at a time when tax reform looms large for the industry.
“Considering how minimal the cost of the credit is relative to its tremendous impact, the program must be extended,” she said.
The 2012 Young Leaders and winners of this year’s Readers’ Choice Awards were also honored at the luncheon, which was sponsored by Bank of America Merrill Lynch.
Donna Kimura is deputy editor of Affordable Housing Finance. She has covered the industry for more than 20 years. Before that, she worked at an Internet company and several daily newspapers. Connect with Donna at dkimura@questex.com or follow her @DKimura_AHF.