Our work goes beyond housing services. Through advocacy, organizing, and long-standing partnerships, we support community-driven efforts that protect neighborhoods, advance racial equity, and expand access to opportunity. Highlighted below are both historic and recent initiatives that reflect USBC’s deep roots and ongoing commitment to systems change.
USBC is a founding member and leader of the Historic Neighborhood Alliance (HNA), a coalition established in 1993 to ensure low-income and historically excluded neighborhoods have a voice in public policy and land use decisions.
Through resident-led Sector Development Plans, HNA helped communities preserve neighborhood character, strengthen property values, and protect against displacement.
Through HNA, residents learn how to:
USBC’s Anti-Racism Training Institute of the Southwest (ARTI) began in the early 1990s with the launch of Albuquerque Project Change, a multiracial, multicultural initiative focused on dismantling institutional racism.
In partnership with the Claremont Institute for Democratic Renewal and the University of New Mexico Public Policy Center, USBC created ARTI to address one of the greatest barriers to equity: the lack of a shared understanding of what racism is, how it operates in systems, and how and why it is maintained.
Today, ARTI continues to lead transformative workshops that help individuals and institutions:
Want to be notified about upcoming ARTI trainings and conversations? Want to be notified about upcoming ARTI trainings and conversations?
From 2021 to 2023, USBC co-led Our Humanity: Advancing Health Literacy, a community health initiative that connected Albuquerque residents with trusted, accessible COVID-19 resources.Working in partnership with South Valley MainStreet, Casa del Rey Ministries, and other grassroots organizations, the program reached thousands of residents across neighborhoods such as South Broadway, San Jose, Santa Barbara-Martineztown, Trumbull/La Mesa, Westgate, and the South Valley.
Though funding for Our Humanity has concluded, its legacy continues in the relationships, trust, and public health access built during this critical time.
USBC continues to support New Mexicans through direct housing services, neighborhood advocacy, and systemic change work. Each year, we expand our reach through both legal and community-based support.
In the coming year, we’ll share impact stories, neighborhood updates, and program outcomes to keep you informed about the work ahead.
Check back soon for our annual report and new community highlights.
1991
USBC founds the Fair Lending Center to address racial and ethnic disparities in homeownership and access to fair mortgage and consumer credit. The Fair Lending Center grew out of the Project Change social justice initiative launched in 1991 by the Levi Strauss Foundation to reduce institutional racism. The center has conducted non-discriminatory lending programs for financial institutions and has helped community groups enforce federal laws mandating that financial institutions invest in all communities where they take deposits.
Over 600 industry executives and staff have learned about the impact of discrimination on individuals, neighborhoods and cities by attending Fair Lending Center training. Programs also provide lenders with skills for implementing non-discriminatory lending policies and practices.
1998
The Fair Lending Center expands into offices at the Institute of Public Law at the University of New Mexico School of Law.
2003
The Fair Lending Center initiates the New Mexico Home Loan Protection Act in response to New Mexico’s vulnerability to predatory loans and subprime lending practices.
2004
USBC led the drive to create New Mexico’s Home Loan Protection Act, one of the strongest in the nation, is signed into law.
2006
The Fair Lending Center merges with the United South Broadway Corporation and relocates to the South Broadway neighborhood in Albuquerque, a more accessible location for our clients.
Back to Broadway: An alternative to sprawl development, this USBC-initiated infill housing project gave first-time homebuyers a chance to own attractive, affordable housing in the historic South Broadway neighborhood of south Albuquerque, close to downtown. The Broadway Vistas condominiums were designed by Garrett Smith and constructed by Raylee Vantage Home Builders.
2007
USBC’s Broadway Vistas development is featured on the 17th Annual Homes of Enchantment Parade and awarded Honorable Mention for Urban Infill Development
2008
The Fair Lending Center develops and promotes the New Mexico Loan Originator Licensing Act recognizing the importance of accessibility to mortgage credit for New Mexico residents, and the need to protect consumers seeking mortgage loans.
2009
The New Mexico Loan Originator Licensing Act is signed into law.
2010
The Home Loan Protection Act becomes a model for homeowner protections provided in the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act.
2011
The New York Times features the Fair Lending Center’s proactive work in the February 2, 2011 issue.
2012
The State Bar of New Mexico recognizes the Fair Lending Center’s Foreclosure Defense Project the Outstanding Program of 2012.
2014
USBC develops and promotes legislation to create a statewide Foreclosure Task Force to address mortgage servicing and foreclosure problems in New Mexico.
New Mexico state legislature appoints USBC to chair the New Mexico Foreclosure Process Task Force, which recommends significant improvements to mortgage servicing and foreclosure proceedings in New Mexico.
2016
New Mexico’s First Judicial District Access to Justice Committee recognizes USBC’s outstanding service to New Mexicans through regular participation in pro bono legal clinics.
1997
The Financial Literacy Corps is founded as a partnership with the University of New Mexico Community Engagement Center that trains students to offer workshops and connect families to resources in their own communities to help them prevent or manage financial shocks such as foreclosures and bankruptcy.
2003
The Bosque Youth Conservation Corps serves youth between the ages of fourteen and twenty-one with hands-on training to demonstrate the importance of the community’s connection to forestry and further their education.
2003
Martha’s Garden
2003-2023
The William and Josephine Dorn Charter School, a K-5 public community charter school with a focus on environmental and social justice.
1990
South Broadway Neighborhood Association (SBNA): In the early 1990s, USBC joined SBNA in a successful community-based campaign “Peace in the Streets” to rid the area of entrenched drug traffickers. Neighbors marched in the streets weekly under the banner “Somos Vecinos.”
1994
In recognition of its anti-drug-trafficking campaign, SBNA received the national Neighborhood of the Year Award.
2000
Under USBC’s leadership, the Main Street program rehabilitated and restored buildings in three commercial corridors in Albuquerque: Fourth Street in the Barelas neighborhood, Broadway Boulevard in the South Broadway neighborhood, and Central Avenue in the Huning Highland neighborhood.
2000
Under USBC’s leadership, the Main Street program rehabilitated and restored buildings in three commercial corridors in Albuquerque: Fourth Street in the Barelas neighborhood, Broadway Boulevard in the South Broadway neighborhood, and Central Avenue in the Huning Highland neighborhood.
2004
The Residential/Commercial Façade Improvement and Good Neighbors/Good Fences project helped Albuquerque businesses and residents refurbish street front properties. The project enhanced local streetscapes, brought in new business, and increased the desirability of the historic neighborhoods south and east of downtown.
2005
The USBC Neighborhood Commercial Revitalization Program was awarded the Excellence in Business Initiative.
The USBC Main Street project received the Main Street 2000 Retail Promotion of the Year and Image Promotion of the Year awards.
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