Appendix: Timeline—Community Development in Cleveland
1967
Carl Stokes elected Mayor
Hough Area Development Corporation formed.
1969
Commission on Catholic Community Action supports community organizing.
1973
Detroit Shoreway Community Development established.
1974
Congress passes the Community Development Block Grant program the leading source of federal funding for community development corporations and neighborhood projects.
1976
Federal judge Frank Battisti orders the Cleveland School District to desegregate leading to mixed improvements in academic opportunities but contributing to massive white flight to the suburbs.
Congress creates Community Development Block Grant program.
1977
Jimmy Carter elected President.
Community Reinvestment Act passed by Congress holding banks accountable for their mortgage lending activity.
Dennis Kucinich elected Mayor.
1978
Cleveland Municipal loan default.
1979
George Voinovich elected Mayor.
1980
Cleveland Municipal Housing Court established by the Ohio General Assembly.
1981
Cleveland Housing Network formed.
Ronald Reagan elected President.
1981
Cleveland Tomorrow, a private civic organization made up of CEOs of the largest companies in the Cleveland area is created.
1982
Reclaim America brings 600 demonstrators to the Chagrin Valley Hunt Club to protest neighborhood disinvestment. Action leads to a shift in support for community organizing by funders.
1983
Richard Celeste elected Governor of Ohio.
1984
Ohio legislature passes Housing receivership legislation allowing CDCs to repair abandoned properties.
1986
Lexington Village Housing project in Hough – the first large scale development in Cleveland since the Stokes era.
The Low Income Housing Tax Credit Program is established by Congress.
1988
Neighborhood Progress Inc. created.
1990
Michael White elected as Mayor. Emphasis on new market rate housing construction at scale, Gateway Sports and Entertainment district, support for CDCs, and ending court ordered school desegregation.
1991
George Voinovich elected as Ohio Governor
Shore Bank Cleveland established.
Village Capital incorporated as wholly owned subsidiary of NPI.
1993
Bill Clinton elected President.
Congress passes Empowerment Zone initiative. Cleveland awarded a supplemental designation in 1994.
De-regulation of US banking industry with repeal of Glass-Steagall Act.
1996
Congress passes the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act (TANF) to “end welfare as we know it”
1996-2006
NPI and its CDC partners initiative a range of major projects beginning with Nehemiah Homes, the Fries and Schuele bloc, Dave’s Super Markets and redevelopment of the St. Lukes Hospital campus.
2001
George W. Bush elected President.
Jane Campbell elected as Cleveland Mayor.
2004
Greater Cleveland Partnership is formed through the merger of Cleveland Tomorrow, Greater Cleveland Growth Association, the Greater Cleveland Roundtable, and the Council of Smaller Enterprises.
Vacant Property Action Council formed.
2005
Frank Jackson elected Cleveland mayor pledging to make city government work for those who have less.
2007
Mortgage foreclosure crisis and the Great Recession.
2008
The federal Neighborhood Stabilization Program established by Congress to restore housing markets through selective demolition and housing rehab.
2009
Barak Obama is elected President.
Cuyahoga Land Bank is created.
2010
Voters approve new Cuyahoga County governance structure with 11 County Council members and a Chief executive officer following the conviction of more than 3 dozen public officials and private contractors for public corruption.
Leadership transition at NPI.