For Immediate Release s312

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

CONTACT: NRDC: Kaid Benfield, 202-289-6868, or Elliott Negin, 202-289-2405

The Enterprise Foundation: Sandi Abadinsky Baer, 410-772-5285 or 202-256-4749 (cell)

The Enterprise Social Investment Corporation: Anne Madison, 410-964-0552

Enterprise and NRDC Launch $550 Million Initiative

For Healthy, Environmentally Friendly Affordable Housing

WASHINGTON (September 28, 2004) – A premier national affordable housing provider and a leading national environmental group have launched the Green Communities Initiative, a five-year, $550 million commitment to build more than 8,500 environmentally friendly affordable homes across the country. The initiative will offer financing, grants and technical assistance to developers to build affordable housing that promotes health, conserves energy and natural resources and provides easy access to jobs, schools and services.

The Green Communities Initiative is a partnership of The Enterprise Foundation/Enterprise Social Investment Corporation (ESIC) and the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), along with the American Institute of Architects, the American Planning Association, and top corporate, financial and philanthropic organizations. Over time, the initiative hopes to transform the way Americans think about, locate, design and build affordable homes.

“Too many Americans live in unhealthy, inefficient and poorly sited housing that hinders them from reaching their full potential,” said Bart Harvey, chairman and CEO of The Enterprise Foundation and chairman of ESIC. “Enterprise and NRDC have forged an unprecedented alliance of housing, health and environmental organizations -- supported by visionary corporate institutions and foundations -- to ensure smarter, healthier homes are available to Americans with limited incomes.”

“Building affordable green housing is not a new concept, but Green Communities will broaden the ongoing efforts of developers, states and cities and make it mainstream,” said Patricia Bauman, vice chair of NRDC’s board of trustees. “We will assist developers that are already building green housing and encourage hundreds more to come on board. Our project will make thousands of affordable green developments bloom.”

The initiative also will provide expert training and technical assistance to help housing developers “go green.” For example, it will provide or help arrange technical assistance and training with experienced consultants, as well as fund planning activities for green projects -- such as feasibility analyses and market studies -- and initial architectural, engineering and environmental reviews.

In addition, the Green Communities Initiative will encourage government agencies at the local, state and federal level to “green” their affordable housing programs. For example, Enterprise, NRDC and other partners will work with state agencies to dedicate a significant portion of their federal housing tax credits to healthy, energy-efficient affordable housing sited near public transportation or vital services.

One of green housing’s major selling points is that it means healthier homes. “For many families, asthma, injuries and lead poisoning are just symptoms of the underlying problem,” said Dr. Megan Sandel, a nationally recognized expert on housing’s impact on children’s health at the Boston University School of Medicine. “Inadequate housing is the real disease. Safe, decent affordable housing is the best preventive medicine low-income families can get. This initiative will ensure that thousands of homes and the children that reside in them are safer and healthier.”

The Enterprise Foundation/Enterprise Social Investment Corporation and NRDC were joined by a number of partners at a press conference this morning: the American Institute of Architects, the American Planning Association, Bank of America, Blue Moon Fund, BP America, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Global Green USA, The Home Depot Foundation, JPMorgan Chase, The Kresge Foundation, Low Income Housing Institute, Merrill Lynch Community Development Company, M&T Bank, National Center for Healthy Housing and Washington Mutual. The US Green Building Council strongly supports the Green Communities Initiative as well.

The Enterprise Foundation helps America’s low-income families with their struggle out of poverty by providing decent homes, access to steady employment, quality child care and safer streets. Working with a network of 2,500 community organizations nationwide and through its 15 local offices, The Enterprise Foundation and its wholly owned subsidiary, The Enterprise Social Investment Corporation, have leveragedmore than $5 billion in investments and donations to buildmore than 160,000 affordable homes and help nearly 40,000 hard-to-employ people find jobs since 1982. For more information, visit: www.enterprisefoundation.org.

The Natural Resources Defense Council is a national, non-profit organization of scientists, lawyers and environmental specialists dedicated to protecting public health and the environment. Founded in 1970, NRDC has more than 1 million e-activists and members, served from offices in New York, Washington, Santa Monica and San Francisco. More information is available at NRDC’s Web site, http://www.nrdc.org/.