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Feature Article
 

Western Maryland Nonprofit Joins NeighborWorks

Network of Community Development Organizations

 

October 20, 2004 Interfaith Housing Alliance, a Western Maryland nonprofit, officially joined today the national NeighborWorks network of community development organizations. The NeighborWorks network is comprised of more than 230 affordable housing and community development organizations in 49 states.

Interfaith Housing Alliance was founded in 1990 by religious and lay leaders concerned about the lack of any private significant response to the region's growing number of shelter poor. Since then, the organization has created affordable homeownership and rental opportunities for families and seniors, as well as shelters for homeless people and victims of domestic violence.

Western Maryland Nonprofit Joins NeighborWorks Network of Community Development Organizations

U.S. Senator Paul S. Sarbanes (left) applauds as Interfaith Housing Alliance board chair Craig Russell accepts an official NeighborWorks charter on behalf of his organization from Ken Wade, CEO of Neighborhood Reinvestment Corporation.

Interfaith Housing Alliance's most popular homeownership program, self-help housing, provides working families with the opportunity to trade their labor for a down payment on a home. The organization provided construction supervision and helped arrange low-interest mortgages for 120 households. More than 40 hours of home buyer, budget, and home maintenance counseling ensures that families are prepared for the challenge of homeownership. The organization was featured in Marketwise, a community development magazine published by the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond. [View publication]

 

Interfaith Housing Alliance also celebrated the official opening of a new 12-unit project-based Section 8 apartment facility in Frederick , Md. The apartments will be rented at below market rents and home to Section 8 families and other families whose incomes are at least 60 percent below the median income. Among the guest speakers were U.S. Senator Paul S. Sarbanes, Frederick County Commissioner Michael L. Cady, and Frederick Mayor Jennifer Dougherty.

 

A special presentation and award of Charter Membership in the NeighborWorks network was given by Kenneth D. Wade, Chief Executive Officer of the Neighborhood Reinvestment Corporation, a Congressionally-funded organization that provides support and grants to the organizations in the NeighborWorks network. For more information on the Interfaith Housing Alliance, contact the main office in Frederick at 800/836-6088, or 301/662-4225, www.interfaithhousing.org .

 

For more information on the NeighborWorks network, visit www.nw.org .

 

 

 

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