[Ccpg] AS GREEN BANKING FLOURISHES AT THE GRASSROOTS LEVEL, 10 LEADING PROPONENTS ACROSS U.S. HONORED
Wesley Roe and Marjorie Lakin Erickson
lakinroe at silcom.com
Wed Jan 22 08:49:38 PST 2003
PERMACULTURE CREDIT UNION IS BEING HONORED TODAY BELOW www.pcuonline.org
AS GREEN BANKING FLOURISHES AT THE GRASSROOTS LEVEL,
10 LEADING PROPONENTS ACROSS U.S. HONORED
Community Investing in Environment Appeals to Individuals, Institutions;
Dollars Used to Preserve Forests, Clean Water, Farm Responsibly and Recycle.
WASHINGTON, D.C.///January 22, 2003///Green banking - in which community
investing dollars from banks, credit unions, venture capital firms,
foundations and other organizations are directed to support environmentally
beneficial businesses and nonprofits that might otherwise be overlooked by
traditional financial institutions - is making major strides today across
the United States. Today, the Community Investing Campaign, a project of
the Social Investment Forum Foundation and Co-op America, singled out 10
organizations that best exemplify the building of economic opportunity and
hope for individuals through community investing.
Forest preservation, clean water production, eco-tourism, responsible
farming practices and the recycling of discarded materials are just a few
of the Earth friendly activities that are being supported through
community investing dollars. Individual and institutional community
investors make it possible for local organizations in urban and rural areas
to create jobs, provide financial services to low-income individuals, and
supply capital for small businesses, affordable housing and vital community
services.
The organizations recognized today by the Community Investing Campaign are:
Chittenden Bank (Brattleboro, VT); Coastal Enterprises, Inc. (Wiscasset,
ME); Permaculture Credit Union (Santa Fe, N.M.); Rudolf Steiner Foundation
(San Francisco, CA); Self-Help Credit Union (Durham, N.C.); ShoreBank
Pacific (Ilwaco, WA); Sustainable Jobs Fund (Durham, N.C.); Underdog
Ventures, LLC (New York, NY); Vermont Community Loan Fund (Montpelier, VT);
and Wainwright Bank & Trust Company (Boston, MA).
The Social Investment Forums Community Investing Campaign Chair Deborah
Momsen-Hudson said: We are honoring these 10 groups today because they
are outstanding examples of how community investing dollars quite literally
can transform the world in which we live. Americans who want to make a
change in the lives of others need to understand that community investing
is a powerful and personal way to get the job done. The organizations
singled out for praise today are among hundreds in the U.S. that are
building a better planet through the wise stewardship of community
investing dollars.
Social Investment Forum Foundation President David Berge said: This is
socially responsible investing at its best, for people who want to improve
our environment and communities. The environment is part of the community
investing story, but there is much more to it. Community-based financial
institutions work with low-income individuals earning the minimum wage in
North Carolina to purchase homes, assist impoverished battered women in
Texas in opening a community-based shelter, and provide displaced timber
workers in the Pacific Northwest with loans to start successful and
environment-friendly businesses. In addition to supplying urgently needed
capital in under-served neighborhoods, community investment groups make
available key services, such as education, mentoring and technical support.
EXAMPLES OF GREEN BANKING ACROSS THE U.S.
For socially aware individuals and institutions, the powerful attraction of
community investing is the opportunity to connect with the lives of people
and make a concrete difference in them. Consider these examples:
* Chittenden Banks Socially Responsible Banking Program, of Brattleboro,
VT., allows depositors to benefit conservation, affordable housing,
business and economic development, community building and
education. Chittenden lendee Beeken Parsons of Shelburne, VT, designs and
creates handcrafted furniture with wood harvested from sustainable
forestry. Bruce Beeken and Jeff Parsons use a specific type of wood called
character wood, which is found at the center or heart of the log. This
uses the wood of a tree more efficiently typically sawyers work a log from
the outside in until they reach the knotty heart, a practice that also
produces the most waste. Character wood provides evidence of the random
workings of nature and highlights the unique qualities of each individual
piece of wood.
* Coastal Enterprises, Inc. (CEI) of Wiscasset, ME, is a nonprofit
community development corporation and community development financial
institution. Candice and Dan Heydon of Oyster Creek Farm & Mushroom
Company in Damariscotta, ME first came to CEI in 1993 for start-up
financing for their gourmet mushroom business. In total, they have received
five loans from CEI using a variety of lending programs, in addition to
several courses and seminars and CEIs our one-on-one business counseling
services. The Heydons grow thousands of mushrooms on logs in sheds and
lean-tos on their property and also buy wild mushrooms from foragers
throughout Maine. Among the environmental aspects of the business are its
reliance on the sustainable harvest of a renewable, non-timber forest
product and its virtual elimination of any waste products what does not
sell fresh is sold dried and what does not sell dried is ground and sold as
powder.
* Durham, NC-based Self-Help is a nonprofit credit union and community
development lender that provides home mortgage and small business lending
services. Lea Clayton borrowed from Self-Help to purchase 15 acres near
the Haw River in rural Alamance County, N.C. Clayton is developing an
organic farm on the site, using a Community Supported Agriculture (CSA)
business model that increases the financial returns to small farmers by
eliminating distribution steps that add cost to the product. With the CSA
model, consumers purchase shares of the farmers yield at the beginning
of the season, and produce is delivered directly to shareholders. (Several
Self-Help staff participate as shareholders). Clayton will use her
experience in sustainable farming to use technologies such as solar power
and gravity irrigation to reduce overhead costs.
* ShoreBank Pacific, of Portland, OR, and Ilwaco, WA, was the first
environmental bank in the United States. ShoreBank Pacific supports
individual and community efforts to bring together conservation and
economic development. ShoreBank Pacific has provided support to Ned
Dempsey, president of Century West of Portland, OR. The firm is developing
a new specialty: sustainable engineering. Among this new divisions current
projects are: a fish-friendly hydropower project; an innovative
agricultural fish screen technology to keep fish out of irrigation ditches;
and a product that has the potential to save significant amounts of
industrial electricity used to compress air.
Century West President Ned Dempsey said: Before I came to ShoreBank
Pacific, I had been bounced around by larger banks who did not seem to care
about my business and what I was trying to accomplish. Working in
sustainable development, I needed to find a banking solution that
understood my goals and my business. ShoreBank Pacific recognized that and
worked with me to develop a plan to help my company and, more importantly,
the planet.
* Underdog Ventures, LLC, of New York, NY, is a community venture fund that
made an investment to help Happy Planet Foods of Vancouver, BC grow their
organic juice business and their positive impact on the environment. The
Underdog Ventures Legacy Fund invested $250,000 in Happy Planet. As a part
of that investment, Happy Planet employees and shareholders have agreed to
donate $500,000 in cash and stock to the Underdog Foundation to support
grants to environmental organizations. The Underdog Foundation has
committed a low cost loan to benefit a farmers cooperative producing fair
trade organic fruit in Costa Rica, which Happy Planet has committed to buy.
* Wainwright Bank of Boston was founded in 1987 as a socially responsible
commercial bank. Wainwright Bank provided to the Silent Spring Institute a
line of credit that will be used to assist in their breast cancer research.
Silent Spring is a nonprofit research institute in Newton, MA that is
dedicated to identifying the links between environmental exposure and
womens health.
(See the fact sheet at http://ww.communityinvest.org containing information
on each of the 10 organizations.)
HOW TO BECOME A COMMUNITY INVESTOR
Any individual or institution can become a community investor. Community
investing dollars often come in the form of savings accounts, checking
accounts, mutual funds and even direct high impact investments.
Many community investors use community development banks and credit unions
for their basic banking needs. These institutions are committed to
strengthening low-income communities across the country. Everything from
checking and savings accounts, to CD's and IRAs, to mortgages and other
loans, can be provided through a community bank or credit union. If there
is no such organization in your community, you can use ATMs, the mail and
online banking options.
Other individuals become community investors by focusing on mutual funds
with a community-investing component. Still another approach is to invest
directly in what are often called high impact investments that go
directly into community investment programs.
For a comprehensive list of community investing alternatives, go to
www.communityinvest.org.
ABOUT COMMUNITY INVESTING
A 2001 study from the Social Investment Forum shows that community
investing is now the fastest-growing category of socially responsible
investing in the United States: Individual and institutional assets
flowing into community investing organizations grew by a substantial 41
percent between 1999 and 2001, increasing from $5.4 billion to $7.6
billion. According to the Social Investment Forum, the overall growth rate
for community investing now exceeds that of socially responsible mutual
funds, all types of screened portfolios (including separate accounts for
institutions and wealthy individuals) and socially concerned shareholder
advocacy.
ABOUT THE COMMUNITY INVESTING CAMPAIGN
The Community Investing Campaign is a joint partnership of the Social
Investment Forum Foundation and Co-op America. The Social Investment Forum
Foundation is a national nonprofit organization providing research and
educational programs on socially responsible investing. Co-op America is a
national nonprofit organization founded in 1982 that provides the economic
strategies, organizing power and practical tools for businesses and
individuals to address today's social and environmental problems. The
campaigns Web site is www.communityinvest.org.
CONTACT: Stephanie Kendall, 703/276-3254 (direct) or
skendall at hastingsgroup.com.
FOR MORE INFORMATION: To hear a Web-based recording of the national news
event, go to http://www.communityinvest.org/GreenBanking.html after 6 p.m.
EST on January 22, 2003.
FOR COMMUNITY INVESTING ON THE WEB, GO TO:
http://www.communityinvest.org
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