Transcripts For CSPAN3 Freedmans Bank 150th Anniversary 2016

Transcripts For CSPAN3 Freedmans Bank 150th Anniversary 20160207

Hosts a ceremony to rename the treasury and its building. It was built on the original site of the freedmens bank. This is about 30 minutes. Good afternoon. I am the assistant secretary for management here at the Treasury Department. Thank you all for being here today. Those of you joining us virtually as well. It is a tremendous privilege to come to work here at the Treasury Department every day and this is stored building. Century,or more than a decisions made at this building have impacted the lives of our fellow citizens. I am honored to work for the secretary, a great leader and tireless advocate. Often times in the daytoday routine it is easy to forget the , historic significance of the institution we work for, the legacy we are part of, and the people we serve. Today, we take a small step and in preserving the history of the building and the legacy of service and inclusion. I want to start off by recognizing john hope brian. It was his idea that we name the Treasury Annex the freedmans Bank Building, and im delighted this idea came to fruition. [applause] thank you for your leadership and continued commitment to Financial Inclusion for all americans. We are also honored to be joined by liberty bank ceo Alden Mcdonald, and a mandates no introduction ambassador young. Ambassador young. , Professor William spriggs could not be with us today, but they do send their warmest regards. Our first speaker today will be mr. Alden mcdonald junior, president and ceo of liberty bank and trust, a position he has held since the bank inception in 1972. He is the longest tenured africanamerican Financial Executive in the country, and on january 11, he celebrates his 50th anniversary in banking. He is recognized [applause] he is recognized as a passionate advocate and a dynamic catalyst in helping people own homes, build wealth, and develop as community leaders. To start us off with more on the history of the freedmans bank. I want to welcome mr. Alden. Thank you. [applause] thank you very much mr. Secretary. Secretary, distinguished guests, members of congress, ladies and gentlemen. I come before you this afternoon standing on the shoulders of historic men and women who recognize the need to build wealth in the Africanamerican Community to make us a strong and prosperous nation. Today, the u. S. Treasury department is dedicating its Annex Building as the freedmans Bank Building. This is a clear symbol of our countrys continued commitment to inclusive prosperity. It is a special treat for me to be part of this historymaking event because on monday, i celebrate 50 years of being in the banking business. [applause] alden i also want to share with you a piece of history. I was the first africanamerican banking officer to be employed in the state of louisiana in 1967. To be able to stand before you today and to share this banks history makes me a very special moment for me. The tradition of inclusive prosperity has had it starts and stops in the history of our country. The establishment of the freedmans Bank Following the civil war was one of the most inspiring efforts aimed at developing a stable, diverse middleclass and reducing the disparity between rich and poor americans. Providing Banking Services to the newly freed slaves was hurt by the assassination of president lincoln. And a congressional compromise between the north and the south essentially relegated africanamericans to a secondclass citizenship. In the jim crow environment, africanamericans continue to develop avenues for financial growth as witnessed by the development of black Banking Institutions following reconstruction. Two of the early blackowned banks to operate in the United States were the Capital Savings Bank of washington, d. C. , which began in 1888. That same year, William Washington brown, a next late, exslave, found the true reformer savings bank in richmond, virginia. There were many other successful banks that were owned by africanamericans in the United States. One of the most successful of the early blockowned banks was the alabama penny loan and savings bank. Others included mechanics and farmers in durham, north carolina, which is still in existence today. Which is still in existence today. Citizens and southern philadelphia, pennsylvania, the Penny Savings Bank of richmond, virginia, whose founder was madam cj walker, the first woman president in the United States. [applause] alden from 1888 to 1934, africanamericans owned more than 130 Financial Institutions. During that same time, the the number of blackowned businesses rose from 4000 to 50,000 businesses. Africanamerican banks in our communities, in our country, make a difference. We help to grow the economy, and we help to build jobs. This has been history, and we continue to do it today. I and other new orleans citizens found the bank in 1972, followed what i like to call the second civil war, the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s. Historic men and women like my friend and fellow new orleans citizen, ambassador andrew young, fought and won battles for basic rights in nonviolent protests that ended the denial and access of africanamericans to Public Places and insured our right to vote. The battle of Economic Equity and overcoming blatant disparity for which dr. Martin luther king was murdered continues today. Today, there are only a handful of africanamericanowned banks. A little over 25. That is from a number when i got into the banking business of close to 100, and during the period i mentioned earlier, 130 africanamericanowned banks. The assets of these institutions today are nearly 6. 1 billion. They employed 2000 plus people and have Equity Capital of approximately 550 million. I have to learn how to say million again. This is a great asset for our communities and country. We grow the community. We grow the economy. And we grow jobs. In neighborhoods left unbanked by mainstream Financial Institutions. In the Great Recession of 2008, these 25 institutions served some of the most economically challenged markets in our country. New orleans, birmingham, montgomery, atlanta, detroit, milwaukee, i can go on and on. These communities today are still challenged in the africanamerican Financial Institutions are still there supporting economic growth. African american Financial Institutions continued to face challenges relative to earnings, capital, and cost of operations. Many continued to improve. According to the fdic Research Study published in 2014, it was stated that the africanamerican banks are very successful in serving the africanamerican population of low and moderate income. It was also stated in that same study that over 60 of the loans made to individuals in these census tracts were made by africanamerican institutions. Approximate 30 was made by nonbanks, and the balance made by the mainstream Financial Institutions. We have a place in this economy. We have a place to help grow our economy, grow our community, and provide jobs. We have learned how to effectively serve disadvantaged communities, build credit worthiness, and expand Economic Opportunities for Small Businesses and young professionals. We understand that we have to be engaged in providing greater social, political, and Economic Opportunities for the people we serve. That is why we have invested in educating our youth, expanding homebuying opportunities, and have fought for greater inclusion of black businesses in mainstream economy. We can only survive and thrive when the people we serve are making progress and building wealth. African american banks are on the front line of combating urban decay, battling predatory lenders, and continuing the critical fight for homeownership and wealth building. Building opportunities for black americans. I want to take this opportunity to thank the u. S. Treasury department for providing us with creative and flexible financial tools to address disparity challenges. The u. S. Treasury department is at the forefront, attempting and have recognized the disparities that exist. The Community Development Financial Institution program, the cdfi, has proven to be an effective method for closing some of the disparity gaps. There are a number of programs in the toolbox. To name a few, the Bank Enterprise program, technical assistance, Financial Empowerment grants, new market tax credits, very important for the africanamerican Financial Institutions to provide. The new market tax credits help provide earnings, help create a Larger Customer base, and help build and maintain communities that would normally be untouched and create decay in many parts of our country. I would like to encourage the u. S. Treasury department to not only continue these tools, but to find a way to expand these tools. Members of congress, we need more funding for the u. S. Treasury department because these tools represent an investment in our country. [applause] alden again, i would like to thank the Treasury Departments leadership for supporting this mission. While we are here today to dedicate a Federal Building in the name of the freedmans bank, one of the nations most important efforts to balance the economic scales in america, i challenge everyone in this room to recommit yourselves to continuing the fight for inclusive prosperity for every american. We are stewards of a sacred american legacy that every man and woman has the right to life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness. Lets make future generations proud of what we could accomplish together. I thank you once again for keeping history alive by naming this building the freedmans Bank Building and continuing the mission of serving the underserved in our country. Thank you very much. [applause] i would like at this time to invite my good friend, the honorable ambassador andrew young to come to the podium for a few remarks. [applause] mr. Young thank you very much. We are really celebrating here something that few of us know much about, but as we look back at the freedmans bank, we realize that before the civil war, there were 27 black millionaires in louisiana alone. In my wifes hometown of marion, alabama, there was a school that was built by nine black landowners at the end of the civil war, where they wrote to the American Missionary Association in boston and said, we have land and we can build a building. We need teachers, and so the American Missionary Association sent down teachers, and they built the Lincoln School in marion, alabama. It just so happens that out of that county, when Horace Mann Bond wrote his dissertation in the 1940s, there were more phds from that one county in alabama, black phds, than there were from any state in the union. So there is a relationship there. It just so happens too that our wives all happen to go to that same school. [laughter] mr. Young so we might not have had a Civil Rights Movement because none of us were any better than our wives made us. [laughter] mr. Young but when we look at the history of the africanamerican integration into america, the one thing that has been most difficult for us is the desegregation of the money. It wasnt an accident that we didnt talk much about money. Every black institution that had been overturned had been overturned because of some financial discrepancies. So dr. King always said to us that, you know, to be free you have got to overcome the level of wealth and the fear of death, and so we did not talk much about either. Though we knew that both were very significant in creating the world in which we live. We were right out of the mccarthy era, so to talk about money too much made you a communist, especially if you were talking about sharing the wealth. Not to mention that that was right out of the new testament, testament. But we have had a long struggle trying to make this country work. But it cannot work so long as we have barriers of race, creed, gender, national origin, and wealth. To desegregate, to get the right to vote in a democracy and not have access to capital is to only be halfway free. And we have always known that. [applause] mr. Young in fact, it was the Poor Peoples Campaign in which Martin Luther king gave his life, which brought not black people together we had 23 organizations of differing ethnic groups throughout america, which c. T. Vivian, who is here, help to organize in january of 1968, and we were beginning to raise those economic questions of economic justice. And we have sort of made it work in atlanta despite the fact that it was stopped nationwide. John bryants moving to atlanta with operation hope constantly nags us and pushes us not to forget the money. We have really demonstrated first that the fortune is at the bottom of the pyramid, but second that poor people can save capitalism. When you look at atlanta, atlanta is a city that is really thriving because we have made it inclusive financially. I want to embarrass my colleague from atlanta, bill rogers, when we were trying to keep dr. Kings papers in atlanta, Shirley Franklin went to him and said we have to have 34 million, and got it. It was paid back, but we have a Civil Rights Museum and we have dr. Kings papers there because of an active relationship between the whole community and access to capital. I know some people dont like wall street, but in atlanta, we like wall street. [laughter] mr. Young because Maynard Jackson told us how to go to wall street and get money and build an airport, and we have an airport that we have put 14 billion in. Keeping aaa bond ratings, but last year that airport generated 38 billion worth of Economic Activity and generated 400,000 jobs. And there are about 35 or 40 of that jobs and wealth is managed by people of color and women who were also locked out of the economy before Maynard Jackson became mayor. So an inclusive economy grows. We have grown from 1. 5 million to 6. 5 million. We want everybody else to go somewhere else and use capitalism to grow their city. [laughter] mr. Young but reminding us of the history of the freedmans bank is a significant part of our economic legacy, and we are doing a lot to try to spread that legacy not only to the cities of the south, but to the rural areas of the south. The Civil Rights Movement came out of rural poverty. But right now i think the best place to live and raise a family in the world is the small cities in the south of the United States of america, where since we got integration and airconditioning [laughter] mr. Young it is kind of hard to find a better place to live. Now our secretary of treasury is part of that legacy, though he has been so much behind the scenes that and thats one good thing about being a secretary of the treasury i was taken on my first trip to africa by one of his predecessors, a good republican, george shultz. I was introduced to the world bank and to World Markets by secretary shultz. At the same time, he was working with tip oneill in congress, and hes worked with just about every Administration Since then. I think that we know, though america does not know, that in a world which is dominated by the struggles of a global economy, i say it is not that we need more boots on the ground. We need more fargamos on the ground. More stacy adams on the ground. We need bankers, investors, people to create jobs, because as johns friend says, the way to stop a bullet is a job. And we are onto something here. We are onto the idea that we have got to make Free Enterprise work here in the United States, but through the United States we have got to make Free Enterprise work throughout this planet because stabilizing a global economy, which we did not create. It was created by all of these things we have in our pockets. We cant get away from it. There is no turning back, and a man who understands that and who struggles every day to keep america secure and probably has saved as many lives as the whole pentagon by his economic dealings with countries that are in constant conflict, but thank god, congress does not know much about it and neither does the press. I would like to introduce our secretary of the

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