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DS News December 2022

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91 91 INVESTMENT GOVERNMENT PROPERTY PRESERVATION Journal Follow Us At: @DSNewsDaily Sarah co-led the national ACTION Campaign to strengthen and increase the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit. Sarah also previously led Enterprise's state and local policy in Califor- nia, where she managed the state fair housing taskforce and the successful implementation of California Opportunity Maps. Sarah previous- ly contributed to research with Color of Law author Richard Rothstein, the Haas Institute for a Fair and Inclusive Society, and the Terner Center for Housing Innovation and worked for the National Low Income Housing Coalition. As President and CEO of e Port, Brunner directs a public, mission-focused, quasi-govern- mental agency dedicated to expanding pros- perity by repositioning real estate and creating value from land assets in a way that benefits everyone in Hamilton County, Ohio. Since her appointment in 2011, Laura has leveraged her background in commercial real estate and public accounting to lead e Port in strengthening its platform to improve regional economic, social, and environmental conditions and foster greater economic mobility. Laura works closely with e Port's Board of Directors delivering on a three-pronged revitalization approach that guides its work—a public finance practice that drives development; a holistic neighborhood strategy that restores property to productive use and raises quality of life; and an urban Industrial revitalization initiative designed to create devel- opment-ready sites that support next-generation manufacturing to attract high paying jobs to our region. Goodman is an Institute Fellow and Found- er of the Housing Finance Policy Center at the Urban Institute. e Center provides policy- makers with data-driven analyses of housing finance policy issues that they can depend on for relevance, accuracy, and independence. Before joining Urban, Goodman spent 30 years as an analyst and research department manager at several Wall Street firms. From 2008-2013, she was a Senior Managing Director at Amherst Securities Group LP, a boutique broker-dealer specializing in securitized products, where her strategy effort became known for its analysis of housing policy issues. From 1993-2008, Goodman was Head of Global Fixed-Income Research and Manager of U.S. Securitized Products Research at UBS and predecessor firms, which were ranked first by institutional investors for 11 straight years. Before that, she held research and portfolio management positions at several Wall Street firms. She began her career as a Senior Economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. Goodman was inducted into the Fixed Income Analysts Hall of Fame in 2009. As Co-Founder and Inaugural Director of the Nowak Metro Finance Lab, Katz regularly advises global, national, state, regional, and municipal leaders on public reforms and private innovations that advance the well-being of metropolitan areas and their countries. Katz is the co-author of e New Localism: How Cities Can rive in the Age of Populism (Brookings Institution Press, 2018) and e Metropolitan Revolution: How Cities and Metros are Fixing Our Broken Politics and Fragile Economy (Brookings Institution Press, 2013). Both books focus on the rise of cities and city networks as the world's leading problem solvers. Katz was the inaugural Centennial Scholar at the Brookings Institution from January 2016 to March 2018, where he focused on the challenges and opportunities of global urbanization. Before assuming this role, Katz was a VP at the Brookings Institution and founding Director of the Brookings Metropol- itan Policy Program. Before joining Brookings, Katz served as Chief of Staff to HUD Secretary Henry Cisneros and was the Senior Counsel and then Staff Director for the U.S. Senate Subcom- mittee on Housing and Urban Affairs. After the 2008 presidential election, Bruce co-led the housing and urban transition team for the Obama administration and served as a Senior Advisor to HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan, for the first 100 days of the Administration. Broom was sworn in as the 27th Mayor of College Park, Georgia, in January 2020. She is the first woman and the first person of color to serve as mayor of College Park. A native of Cleveland, Ohio, she has lived in College Park since 2008. Under Mayor Motley Broom's leadership, College Park has continued to thrive. Mayor Motley Broom has championed new housing developments in areas of the city plagued by a generation of disinvestment. ose efforts have paid off through projects such as South Park Cottages (a tiny home community) and Somersby (a mixed-use/mixed-income development adjacent to North Clayton Middle School). e Diamond @ College Park, a partnership with the College Park First United Methodist Church, recently broke ground near the College Park MARTA station, which will bring an arts campus and additional residents to a vibrant part of the city. Dr. Raymond is interested in the finan- cialization of housing and property in land, displacement and dispossession through housing systems, housing and disasters, housing justice, race, segregation, and the transnational Pacific Islander community. Dr. Raymond has explored widening housing wealth inequality following the real estate and financial crises of the 2000s, and the relationship between the financial- ization of rental housing and eviction-led displacement. She has studied the effect of the foreclosure and affordability crises on Pacific Islander communities in Los Angeles, as well as the financialization of customary land in Samoa. Dr. Raymond has ongoing projects on housing, displacement and disasters, including work on eviction and migration following disasters. Sullivan's research focuses on poverty, environmental inequality, legal regulation, and the built environment, with a special interest in housing and residential mobility. Her book Manufactured Insecurity: Mobile Home Parks and Americans' Tenuous Right to Place won the 2019 Robert Park Award. e book examines the sociolegal, geospatial, and market forces that intersect to create housing insecurity for an entire class of low-income residents in U.S. manufactured home parks. She continues to publish on various aspects of housing insecu- rity as it relates to manufactured housing. Her work on this topic has appeared in American Sociological Review, Urban Studies, Housing Policy Debate, Qualitative Sociology, Journal of the American Planning Association, and elsewhere. Her research has been covered in the New Yorker, the New York Times, the Washington Post, and TIME. Zurbrigg holds a master's degree in Community Planning from the University of Maryland, with an emphasis on equitable development and preserving diversity through maintaining affordable housing in gentrifying neighborhoods. Zurbrigg has worked in the affordable housing and community development field for more than 22 years and volunteered as an advocate for affordable housing and com- munity-based arts and education. She chaired the Finance Committee on the DC Council's Limited Equity Coop Taskforce and served on the Board of Directors for the Coalition for Nonprofit Housing and Economic Develop- ment (CNHED) for more than 15 years. She currently co-chairs CNHED Tenant Purchase Working Group, which focuses on building support for affordable co-ops.

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