
Read about TRF’s Approach to Community Development in the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco’s publication Community Investments. More >
Arts, Culture and Community Renewal
Congressional testimony in support of increasing funding for the National Endowment for the Arts by former TRF CEO, Jeremy Nowak. (2009)
Rediscovering a Public Purpose in Financial Services
A paper co-authored by former TRF CEO Jeremy Nowak and Ellen Seidman of ShoreBank for the Opportunity Finance Network. (2009)
Economic Crisis, Civil Society & Creativity
Remarks to the Association of Performing Arts Presenters addressing the counter-cultural logic of creativity in an economic crisis. (2009)
Update On Mortgage Originations, Delinquency and Foreclosures In Maryland
A presentation by Ira Goldstein of some of the findings from a study by TRF on behalf of the Baltimore Homeownership Preservation Coalition. (2008)
Update On Mortgage Delinquencies and Foreclosures In Pennsylvania
A presentation by Ira Goldstein to the Pennsylvania Association of Realtors on mortage delinquencies and foreclosures in the state. (2007)
Lost Values: A Study of Predatory Lending in Philadelphia
A presentation by Ira Goldstein offering an overview of TRF's study Lost Values: A Study of Predatory Lending in Philadelphia. (2007)
A presentation by Ira Goldstein at the Opportunity Finance Network's 2006 conference in Washington, DC. The presentation offers a review of TRF's Market Value Analysis (MVA) tool and provides an example of the MVA that was developed with the City of Baltimore.
A presentation by Ira Goldstein at the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia's conference on Reinventing Older Communities: People, Places Markets in April 2006. The presentation offers a glimpse of a study that found that increasing numbers of foreclosure filings have an independent and statistically significant negative impact on neighborhood home prices.
Market Value Analysis: Understanding Where and How to Invest Limited Resources
Article by Ira Goldstein and Sean Closkey on TRF's proprietary tool, the Market Value Analysis (MVA) for Bridges, the quarterly publication of the St.Louis Federal Reserve Bank. (2006)
Predatory Lending and Mortgage Foreclosures in Philadelphia
A presentation by Ira Goldstein at the Equal Justice Conference of the American Bar Association and the National Legal Aid and Defender Association in 2006. The presentation offers a look at key findings of TRF's study of predatory lending and mortgage foreclosures of residential properties across Philadelphia.
Entrepreneurship in Low- and Moderate-Income Communities
Concluding remarks by former TRF CEO Jeremy Nowak at a conference on Entrepreneurship in Low- and Moderate Income Communities hosted by the Kansas City Federal Reserve Bank and The Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation in November, 2005
Keeping People in Their Homes: A Follow Up
A presentation by Ira Goldstein on homeownership in Pennsylvania. The presentation looks at some of the findings of TRF's foreclosure studies in Pennsylvania and offers a glimpse into the causes for the rising foreclosure rate. The presentation was made at Fannie Mae's Fair Lending Conference in September, 2005.
A report by the Building Industry Association of Philadelphia that proposes ten fixes to improve and streamline the development process in Philadelphia. The report aims to eliminate or change steps in the process that unnecessarily add to the cost of a home and otherwise deter developers from building or rehabilitating houses in the city.
Bringing Subprime Mortgages to Market and the Effects on Lower-Income Borrowers
A working paper on how some borrowers end up with subprime mortgages and the extent to which those loans serve the true financial needs of those borrowers. Published by Harvard University's Joint Center for Housing Studies, the paper was first presented at Building Assets, Building Credit: A Symposium on Improving Financial Services in Low-Income Communities, held at Harvard University on November 18-19, 2003. (February 2004)
Civic Lessons: How CDFIs Can Apply Market Realities to Poverty Alleviation
A discussion of the social and economic trends that influence poverty alleviation policies and strategies, the result of these trends, the argument that community development financial institutions (CDFIs) can be one source from which regional civic intermediaries can be created, and examples of CDFI regional intermediary roles. (March 2001)
Nothing Left to Lose: Only Radical Strategies Can Help America’s Most Distressed Cities
This article was first to be called "Cities Forgotten by Their Regional Economies," but as the authors reflected more on the competitive position of distressed central cities, they realized that the title was wrong. Cities have not been forgotten by their regional economies; rather, all too often, the opposite has happened. Distressed central cities have not, or perhaps cannot, react to changes in their current competitive positions within their regional economies. (Summer 2000)