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This week we interview Ralph Boyd. Ralph is the President and CEO of SOME, Inc., a large Washington, D.C.-based housing development, health care, and human services organization. Boyd has extensive experience as a senior executive and board leader in both the public company and nonprofit sectors and served as a federal prosecutor and assistant attorney general in the U.S. Department of Justice. His executive experience also includes serving as EVP and general counsel of a Fortune 50 financial services company, CEO of a major corporate foundation, CEO of the Americas region of an international real estate development organization, and a regional CEO of The American Red Cross. Boyd also previously practiced law as a partner in the Boston office of Goodwin Procter LLP and the Washington, D.C., office of Alston & Bird. Ralph serves on the board of directors for InfuSystem and currently serves as chair of the Compensation Committee. He also serves as a member of the Corporate Nominating and Governance Committee.He previously served as a board member and Audit Committee chair of the DirecTV Group, Inc. (formerly NASDAQ: DTV) and as a member of the company's Nominating and Governance Committee. He currently serves as chair of Sandy Spring Bancorp's (NASDAQ: SASR) Compensation Committee and as a member of the Executive and Nominating and Governance Committees. Boyd also is the non-executive chairman of the NHP Foundation, a nonprofit developer, owner, and operator of multi-family affordable housing properties nationwide. Boyd is a graduate of Haverford College and Harvard Law School.
Katie wraps up her conversation with ChangeMaker, Eric Price, the President of the NHP Foundation, a publicly supported not-for-profit real estate corporation that has invested nearly $3 billion in the preservation of affordable housing.
This week's ChangeMaker is Eric Price, the President of the NHP Foundation, a publicly supported not-for-profit real estate corporation that has invested nearly $3 billion in the preservation of affordable housing. Eric provides the NHP Foundation with over 30 years of experience in the development and financing of affordable housing and community development.
“We need a more efficient and coordinated system of providing subsidies and funding,” NHP Foundation's Mecky Adnani told MHN in the September episode of the "Mission Success: Women in Multifamily" podcast series.
This interview features Ellis Carr, President & CEO of Capital Impact Partners. JB and Ellis discuss inclusive growth, CDFIs, and economic empowerment in underserved communities.Hosted by JB Holston. Produced by Jenna Klym, Francesca Ioffreda, Ian Lutz, Nina Sharma, and Justin Matheson-Turner.Learn from leaders doing the work across the Capital Region and beyond. These conversations will showcase innovation, as well as history and culture across our region, to bridge the gap between how we got here and where we are going.About our guest:Ellis Carr has more than 20 years of experience in the financial services and mortgage industries. Mr. Carr served as Capital Impact's Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer from July, 2012 until his appointment as President and Chief Executive Officer in May, 2016.Prior to joining Capital Impact, he held various positions in the investments, capital markets, strategy and corporate finance areas within Freddie Mac and in fixed income fund management both domestically and abroad at Deutsche Bank.Mr. Carr is a trustee of the NHP Foundation; the Treasurer and Board member of Martha's Table; a Board member of Housing Partnership Network (HPN); and a Board member of the Opportunity Finance Network (OFN). In 2015, he was recognized as one of the “Top 40 under 40” business executives by the Washington Business Journal. Mr. Carr graduated from Towson University with an undergraduate degree in accounting, and from Georgetown University with a master's degree in real estate with a concentration in finance.
Maggie Jones, Assistant Director for Community Development at Tarrant County, TX, joins the show to talk all things change-making. Hear what's it been like to adapt as a local government professional providing community services during COVID, why change does not have to equal loss, and how working at a Greek restaurant was the perfect customer service training. Plus, Maggie knows more about Jeeps than any other person on the planet, Laura enforces the rules of a new game a little too stringently, and Sarah is open to trying to the new trend of cooking cicadas. Thank you to the NHP Foundation for sponsoring this episode, and be sure to learn more about NHP's annual symposium at NHPFoundation.org! Find us on Twitter at @HousingPodcast, rate, review, subscribe, and send us an email to podcast@nacced.org. Thanks for listening!
Today's Flash Back Friday comes from Episode 994, originally published in May 2018. Jason Hartman wants to prepare you for the coming revolution. The self management revolution is coming, and it's time to see if you're up for the challenge. There are things that you need to do before you take the plunge, and Jason outlines some of them here. Then, Jason talks with CEO of the NHP Foundation, Richard Burns, about the affordable housing crisis in the United States. The current method of creating affordable housing isn't working for anyone, but Richard thinks there's a way that it can be solved that benefits all parties. Key Takeaways: [2:34] The coming revolution of self-management [5:36] Drew's first taste of self-management [7:45] Some steps to take before going full self-management [11:09] Freddie Mac's new program [15:23] Join Jason for his events in Philadelphia and New York, www.JasonHartman.com/Events Richard Burns Interview: [17:45] What solutions are available for affordable housing? [20:38] The two components of real estates value [22:20] We are nowhere near meeting the affordable housing demand, so what do we do? [26:17] Where did the high paying, real careers go that made people end up in careers that were meant to be stop-gap jobs? [28:25] What does Richard's non-profit do? [31:59] Richard's thoughts on rent control [33:51] What the Baby Boomer survey showed Website: www.NHPFoundation.org
Today's Flash Back Friday comes from Episode 994, originally published in May 2018. Jason Hartman wants to prepare you for the coming revolution. The self management revolution is coming, and it's time to see if you're up for the challenge. There are things that you need to do before you take the plunge, and Jason outlines some of them here. Then, Jason talks with CEO of the NHP Foundation, Richard Burns, about the affordable housing crisis in the United States. The current method of creating affordable housing isn't working for anyone, but Richard thinks there's a way that it can be solved that benefits all parties. Key Takeaways: [2:34] The coming revolution of self-management [5:36] Drew's first taste of self-management [7:45] Some steps to take before going full self-management [11:09] Freddie Mac's new program [15:23] Join Jason for his events in Philadelphia and New York, www.JasonHartman.com/Events Richard Burns Interview: [17:45] What solutions are available for affordable housing? [20:38] The two components of real estates value [22:20] We are nowhere near meeting the affordable housing demand, so what do we do? [26:17] Where did the high paying, real careers go that made people end up in careers that were meant to be stop-gap jobs? [28:25] What does Richard's non-profit do? [31:59] Richard's thoughts on rent control [33:51] What the Baby Boomer survey showed Website: www.NHPFoundation.org
In his first appearance on the show in more than two years, Brian Yacktman of YCG Enhanced Fund discussed how enduring pricing power and industry leadership and innovation makes for stocks that investors that can deliver superior long-term results in all market conditions, and he singled out a few stocks that make the grade in the Market Call. Also on teh show, we rebroadcast a recent interview with Ben Hunt of Epsilon Theory, Dick Burns of the NHP Foundation discusses seniors' financial fears and Chuck takes a long lottery-filled journey through the weird financial news
Jason Hartman talks with CEO of the NHP Foundation, Richard Burns, about the affordable housing crisis in the United States. The current method of creating affordable housing isn't working for anyone, but Richard thinks there's a way that it can be solved that benefits all parties. Key Takeaways: [1:36] What solutions are available for affordable housing? [4:29] The two components of real estates value [6:12] We are nowhere near meeting the affordable housing demand, so what do we do? [10:09] Where did the high paying, real careers go that made people end up in careers that were meant to be stop-gap jobs? [12:16] What does Richard's non-profit do? [15:51] Richard's thoughts on rent control [17:42] What the Baby Boomer survey showed Website: www.NHPFoundation.org
Jason Hartman wants to prepare you for the coming revolution. The self management revolution is coming, and it's time to see if you're up for the challenge. There are things that you need to do before you take the plunge, and Jason outlines some of them here. Then, Jason talks with CEO of the NHP Foundation, Richard Burns, about the affordable housing crisis in the United States. The current method of creating affordable housing isn't working for anyone, but Richard thinks there's a way that it can be solved that benefits all parties. Key Takeaways: Jason Intro: [2:34] The coming revolution of self-management [5:36] Drew's first taste of self-management [7:45] Some steps to take before going full self-management [11:09] Freddie Mac's new program [15:23] Join Jason for his events in Philadelphia and New York, www.JasonHartman.com/Events Richard Burns Interview: [17:45] What solutions are available for affordable housing? [20:38] The two components of real estates value [22:20] We are nowhere near meeting the affordable housing demand, so what do we do? [26:17] Where did the high paying, real careers go that made people end up in careers that were meant to be stop-gap jobs? [28:25] What does Richard's non-profit do? [31:59] Richard's thoughts on rent control [33:51] What the Baby Boomer survey showed Website: www.NHPFoundation.org
Jason Hartman talks with CEO of the NHP Foundation, Richard Burns, about the affordable housing crisis in the United States. The current method of creating affordable housing isn't working for anyone, but Richard thinks there's a way that it can be solved that benefits all parties. Key Takeaways: [1:36] What solutions are available for affordable housing? [4:29] The two components of real estates value [6:12] We are nowhere near meeting the affordable housing demand, so what do we do? [10:09] Where did the high paying, real careers go that made people end up in careers that were meant to be stop-gap jobs? [12:16] What does Richard's non-profit do? [15:51] Richard's thoughts on rent control [17:42] What the Baby Boomer survey showed Website: www.NHPFoundation.org
Vernon interviews Ellis Carr, President and CEO of Capital Impact. Vernon and Ellis discuss how Capital Impact effects systemic change - from social systems to government programs - so that all people have paths out of poverty. Ellis Carr has more than 20 years of experience in the financial services and mortgage industries. Mr. Carr served as Capital Impact's Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer from July, 2012 until his appointment as President and Chief Executive Officer in May, 2016. Prior to joining Capital Impact, he held various positions in the investments, capital markets, strategy and corporate finance areas within Freddie Mac and in fixed income fund management both domestically and abroad at Deutsche Bank. Mr. Carr is a trustee of the NHP Foundation; the Treasurer and Board member of Martha's Table and Housing Partnership Network (HPN); Vice Chairman and Board member of the Opportunity Finance Network (OFN). In 2015, he was recognized as one of the "Top 40 under 40" business executives by the Washington Business Journal. Mr. Carr graduated from Towson University with an undergraduate degree in accounting, and from Georgetown University with a master's degree in real estate with a concentration in finance.