Community Development Corporations (CDCs)
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OVERVIEW
Community development corporations are non-profit, community-based
organizations that anchor capital locally through the development
of both residential and commercial property, ranging from affordable
housing to developing shopping centers and even owning businesses.
First formed in the 1960s, they have expanded rapidly in size and
numbers since. An industry survey published in 2006 found that 4,600
CDCs promote community economic stability by developing over 86,000
units of affordable housing and 8.75 million square feet of commercial
and industrial space a year.
No sector of the expanding community wealth-building economy is
more celebrated for its success than community development corporations
(CDCs). From humble beginnings, the CDC movement today has grown
to an estimated 4,600 CDCs spread throughout all 50 states and in
nearly every major city. Community development corporations are
typically neighborhood-based, 501(c)3 non-profit corporations, with
a board composed of at least one-third community residents, that
promote the improvement of the physical and social infrastructures
in neighborhoods with populations significantly below the area median
income. Many CDCs perform a wide variety of roles, including housing,
commercial, and retail development, as well as leading community
planning, assisting with community improvement programs (improved
lighting, streetscapes, and the like) and providing social services.
In some cases, CDCs extend far beyond the bounds of a single community
to cover an entire city, county, multi-county region, or even an
entire state.
CDCs have strongly influenced many of the communities in which
they work. A 2002 Urban Institute study of 23 cities found that
CDCs had noticeably improved multiple neighborhoods in eight cities,
one neighborhood in each of another eleven cities, with more limited
“block-by-block” impacts in the remaining four cities.
Basic industry statistics are below:
Community
Development Corporations: Basic Statistics
(Based on 2005 industry census) |
| Number of community development
corporations |
4,600 |
| Median CDC age |
18 years |
| Median CDC staff size |
10 |
| CDCs that have completed non-residential
projects |
45% |
| Average annual housing production
(1998-2005) |
86,000 units |
| Avg. annual commercial space
production (1998-2005) |
8.75 mill. sq. ft. |
| Total CDC sector employment
|
199,000 |
| Jobs created by CDC activity
per year (1998-2005) |
75,000 |
| CDCs that have equity investments
in business operations |
17% |
| CDCs that operate one or more
businesses |
21% |
| CDCs that offer individual development
accounts |
22% |
|