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AUTUMN 2004


Women Entrepreneurs
Growing in Numbers

Bank's Branches Rev Up
Community Affairs Work

Campaign Warns:
Don't Borrow Trouble

Indiana Homeowner Protection
Act Exempts Bankers

Illinois Lenders Invited
to Investment Meetings

Get Checking

Have You Heard

Spanning the Region

Calendar

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A Closer Look
This issue of Bridges includes a supplement for readers in Arkansas. A Closer Look focuses on what is being done in Arkansas to stem the increasing number of defaults on manufactured housing loans.

Bank's Branches Rev Up
Community Affairs Work

By Glenda Wilson
Community Affairs Officer

Photo of Ellen Eubank and Dena Owens
 
Community Affairs Manager Ellen Eubank, left, and Dena Owens have teamed up to cover the Bank’s Memphis zone.  
   
Photo of Lyn Haralson and Amy Simpkins  
Lyn Haralson, left, and Amy Simpkins are working in the Little Rock zone.  
   
Photo of Faith Weekly and Lisa Locke  
Faith Weekly, left, and Lisa Locke will provide assistance in the Louisville zone.  

In case you haven’t heard, the times they are a-changin’ in the Fed’s Eighth District. New people, new programs and a new emphasis on community outreach signal a shift in the focus of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis at its branches in Little Rock, Ark.; Louisville, Ky.; and Memphis, Tenn.

In all three zones its branches serve, the St. Louis Fed is working to build a broad “intellectual presence.” An expanded Community Affairs staff is doing its part by reaching out to an increasing number of community leaders. Even as this outreach is taking place, the “physical presence” of the Fed will be less obvious as it closes its buildings in Little Rock and Louisville and moves a streamlined staff into smaller quarters.

To understand what this all means, let’s back up a little and talk about what precipitated these changes.

One of the Fed’s main functions is processing commercial checks—approximately 15 billion to 20 billion a year. As electronic payments become increasingly popular with consumers, the demand for check processing is steadily falling, and studies predict the trend will continue for some time.

As a result, Reserve Banks throughout the country are reducing their check operations. By the end of 2006, the number of check processing sites will drop from 45 to 23. The St. Louis Fed was among the first to feel the crunch. Check operations in Little Rock and Louisville were shut down this summer and moved to the Memphis branch and the Cleveland Fed, respectively. Cash processing departments housed in Little Rock and Louisville also were closed. The buildings in both cities are being sold and the remaining staff moved.

With the main function of the Little Rock and Louisville branches now dispersed to other locations, the question for Eighth District officials was how to maintain a strong presence in those regions as well as the Memphis region.

One of the answers was an enhanced focus on community outreach.

To accomplish this goal, the branches are expanding outreach efforts and planning new programs. The Bank was a cosponsor of an International Urban Planning and Environment Association symposium in September in Louisville. A major conference on entrepreneurship and small business is scheduled next spring in Memphis. And a community development speaker series is under way in Little Rock. (See related story below.)

New staff have come on board in all three cities.

In Memphis, Dena Owens is working with Community Affairs Manager Ellen Eubank. Owens formerly was with Memphis Center City Commission. Their zone includes part of western Tennessee, part of eastern Arkansas and the northern half of Mississippi. Eubank can be reached at (901) 579-2421 and Owens at (901) 579-4103.

In Little Rock, Amy Simpkins and Community Affairs Specialist Lyn Haralson are working together to cover the majority of Arkansas. Simpkins, who comes to the Fed from Community Health Centers of Arkansas, has experience in nonprofit program management and community outreach. Haralson can be reached at (501) 324-8240 and Simpkins at (501) 324-8268.

In Louisville, Federal Reserve Bank employee Lisa Locke will return to the Community Affairs department after spending several years elsewhere in the Bank. She will join Community Affairs Specialist Faith Weekly. Their zone includes the western half of Kentucky and a portion of southern Indiana. They can be reached at (502) 568-9216.

The six Community Affairs specialists will not be alone in their work. Senior branch executives will play a stronger role in Community Affairs and will participate in an increasing number of outreach activities. Economic education coordinators also have been assigned to the three branches.

The Community Affairs Office has worked for about a quarter of a century to foster community development throughout the District. The office offers information on topics such as affordable housing, fair access to credit, small business and the Community Reinvestment Act. Community Affairs specialists conduct seminars, write articles and collaborate with other organizations on community development and financial education projects.

Most importantly, staff members are a link between lenders and community groups, providing advisory services and technical assistance on issues affecting low- and moderate-income individuals and communities.

Speaker Series Part of Initiative at Branches

One of the ways the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis is demonstrating its commitment to an “intellectual presence” at its branches (see related story) is by sponsoring a community development speaker series in Little Rock, Ark.

Titled “Seizing Opportunities for Improving Local Communities,” the series features three exciting speakers, all well-known authorities on community development. They are Richard Baron, Mark Pinsky and the Rev. Dr. Calvin O. Butts III.

As Bridges goes to press, preparations are under way for the first lecture on Sept. 30 by Baron. His firm, McCormack Baron Salazar in St. Louis, is recognized in the community development industry for its role in rebuilding abandoned urban neighborhoods with mixed-income housing and commercial development. Baron’s holistic approach to revitalizing communities is evident in his personal involvement in the community, such as working with a St. Louis group to transform seven low-performing city schools.

Speaker Series graphic

On Dec. 7, Pinsky will come to the podium to present his “Grow, Change or Die” philosophy for community development corporations. Pinsky practices what he preaches. Since he was named president and CEO of National Community Capital Association in 1995, the network of community development financial institutions has grown six-fold. An author of books and articles on public policy, Pinsky was instrumental in creating the federal CDFI Fund and is on the CDFI Fund Advisory Board. He also was recently named vice chair of the Federal Reserve Board’s Consumer Advisory Council.

Butts will wrap up the series on Feb. 17, 2005. He is pastor of the nationally renowned Abyssinian Baptist Church in Harlem and one of the founders of the Abyssinian Development Corp. The community-based organization has been responsible for more than $300 million in housing and commercial development in Harlem. Butts continues to help guide the daily operation of this nonprofit organization. In addition to his work in the community and as a pastor, Butts is president of SUNY (the State University of New York) College of Old Westbury. A native of New York City, he has received more than 1,000 honors and commendations. Among them is recognition as a “Living Treasure” by the New York City Chamber of Commerce and Industry.

The public is invited to attend the two remaining lectures, which include a reception. For information, visit www.stlouisfed.org or call Lyn Haralson at (501) 324-8240.


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