Harvard President Neil L. Rudenstine is expected to announce a multi-million dollar initiative today to use University money to fund affordable housing in Cambridge and Boston over the next 20 years.
Rudenstine is scheduled to unveil the plan at a press conference at the Kennedy School of Government (KSG) with Boston Mayor Thomas M. Menino and Cambridge City Manager Robert W. Healy.
It will call for the University to give $20 million in low-interest loans and a $1 million grant to three non-profit groups in the Boston area. The loan money will be given by those groups to affordable-housing organizations and the grant will go to fund housing research.
"This is part of what I see as a continuous effort to help build housing stock over two decades," Rudenstine said.
Harvard's Vice President of Government, Community and Public Affairs Paul S. Grogan spearheaded the initiative, which will also include a Faculty advisory committee that he will chair.
The University will loan the $20 million over 20 years at two percent interest, a rate significantly lower than those offered by government agencies and private banks. The money will be dispensed to local housing development groups--$10 million to Cambridge and $10 million to Boston.
Using non-profit groups as intermediaries allows Harvard to take a hands-off approach.
"We don't want to directly underwrite housing initiatives. That's not what we do," Grogan said.
Read more in News
Bush Spent Undergrad Years Away From PoliticsRecommended Articles
-
Cantabrigians Seek Fair Rent From HarvardMore than 70 students and members of the Cambridge community gathered in Sever Hall last night to discuss Harvard's management
-
Rudenstine Touts Harvard-Boston RelationsIn the second sign in a week that Harvard is taking a new tack in its relationship with Boston, Harvard
-
The Candidates: Who They Are, Where They StandKatherine Triantafillou, 49 Endorsements: Lavender Alliance, Greater Boston Labor Council, Massachusetts Women¹s Political Caucus, NOW, New Party Painters and Allied
-
Housing Plan Means Windfall for Local CitiesHarvard's recently announced commitment to fund affordable housing with $20 million in loans and a $1 million grant could eventually
-
Menino Orders Additional Affordable HousingIn hopes of solving what he has called "a crisis in housing," Boston Mayor Thomas M. Menino announced Monday that
-
New Harvard Initiatives Will Aid CommunityHarvard is poised to undertake a series of major community initiatives in Boston and Cambridge, pledging to commit the financial