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Joint Trades Letter to FSGG Subcommittee on FY26 CDFI Fund and BEA Appropriations - April 1st 2025

April 1, 2025

Dear Chair Hagerty, Chair Joyce, Ranking Member Reed and Ranking Member Hoyer:

On behalf of the undersigned banking trade associations, we strongly urge you to continue to provide support for FY 2026 funding for the Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFI) Fund of the U.S. Department of the Treasury. As you work to finalize FY 2026 appropriations, we ask you to support annual appropriations for FY 2026 at not less than the $324 million recently enacted for FY 2025 via the Full-Year Continuing Appropriations and Extensions Act, 2025. This includes an allocation for the Bank Enterprise Award (BEA) Program of not less than $40 million. The topline request for the CDFI Fund represents a necessary continuation in funding levels, and it is justified by the significant demand and over subscription of the programs.

The $324 million request in CDFI funding is modest relative to the size and scope of the CDFI industry. According to the Federal Reserve Board of New York, as of Q1 2023, 1,487 CDFIs collectively held approximately $452 billion in total assets. The $354 million will leverage up to 12-times its initial value in private capital and be channeled to local businesses, affordable housing, and other drivers of economic growth in underserved rural, urban and Native American markets. Collectively our organizations represent thousands of FDIC-insured depository institutions across the United States. Since 1996, hundreds of banks have participated in the programs of the CDFI Fund. The programs of the CDFI Fund have a documented record of creating impact, and they have become invaluable in helping banks find ways to serve credit markets and communities that otherwise might not be served. It is one of the Federal Government’s best market-based strategies for leveraging and channeling needed resources to our most distressed communities.

The principal channel for bank participation in CDFI Fund programs is the BEA. Since 1996, the BEA Program has helped facilitate billions in new investments that benefit the lowest income census tracts (30% poverty, 1.5 times the national unemployment rate). From 2016 through 2024, BEA Program award recipients increased their lending and direct investments in these underserved communities by more than $4.5 billion. Additionally, BEA principally benefits small CDFI and community banks. Over the past five years, 97% of all award dollars have gone to certified CDFI banks. By size, 53% of all 2024 award dollars went to the smallest banks with total assets of less than $391 million, and 90% of awards went to banks with less than $1.6 billion in total assets.

In the interests of promoting job creation and economic vitality in neglected rural, urban and Native American communities, we urge you to: (1) Preserve FY 2026 appropriations for the CDFI Fund at not less than the $324 million recently enacted in the FY 2025 continuing resolution; and (2) support the BEA Program at not less than $40 million.