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Corporate Social Responsibility
News
5.27.2008 - 02:48pm ET
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New Study Calls for National Commitment to Increase Energy Efficiency in Low-income Homes
(CSRwire) LOS ANGELES, May 27 /PRNewswire/ -- An estimated 25 million very low-income
families in America struggle with increased utility and energy costs due to
inefficiently built housing. A new study by Enterprise Community Partners,
Bringing Home the Benefits of Energy Efficiency to Low-Income Households:
A Case for a National Commitment, calls for a national commitment to
rehabilitate and retrofit low-income housing with energy-efficient
features that will offer substantial financial savings for the residents
and ensure long-term gains in environmental and energy sustainability.
The Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) currently spends
more than $4 billion each year to pay utilities in government-assisted
properties; yet, the funds only cover a fraction of the families and
individuals in need of financial help. In contrast, with an investment of
$5 billion annually during a ten-year span to rehabilitate low-income
homes, considerable gains can be made in energy savings, carbon reduction
and cost savings to the renters and homeowners.
"A national commitment to bring home the benefits of energy efficiency
to low-income families in their homes would save families money, cut carbon
emissions and create hundreds of thousands of good green jobs, " said
Stockton Williams, senior vice president and chief strategy officer of
Enterprise Community Partners. "A relatively modest federal investment
would generate major progress right away."
The report recommends a comprehensive, 10-point plan that would, among
other aspects, be able to:
-- Build capacity to implement low-cost improvements
-- Ensure climate change legislation supports low-income home
energy
efficiency
-- Green the revitalization of distressed public housing
communities
-- Improve and expand federal tax credits for residential energy
efficiency and solar power
-- Incentivize major financial institutions to finance
energy-efficient
very low-income homes
These recommendations would engage public-private partnerships to help
overcome the market barrier of financing the cost of improvements. The
points also offer suggestions for federal support to incorporate private
capital investment such as credit enhancements and tax incentives as
structures to diversify direct governmental spending.
Enterprise has a strong history of working with public-private
partners to create market change in the field of affordable housing and
community development. In 2004, the organization created the Green
Communities(R) initiative, a program designed to bring green affordable
housing to an industry standard. Since its inception, Green Communities
has invested $570 million in grants, loans and equity to create 11,000
highly sustainable homes.
To read Bringing Home the Benefits of Energy-Efficiency to Low-Income
Households in its entirety, go to www.enterprisecommunity.org.
For more information on Green Communities, go to www.greencommunitiesonline.org.
Enterprise is a leading provider of the development capital and
expertise it takes to create decent, affordable homes and rebuild
communities. For more than 25 years, Enterprise has pioneered neighborhood
solutions through public-private partnerships with financial institutions,
governments, community organizations and others that share our vision.
Enterprise has raised and invested more than $9 billion in equity, grants
and loans to help build or preserve more than 240,000 affordable rental
and for-sale homes to create vital communities. Enterprise is currently
investing in communities at a rate of $1 billion a year. Visit www.enterprisecommunity.org
and www.enterprisecommunity.com
to learn more about Enterprise's efforts to build communities and
opportunity.
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