翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Women in the Australian Senate
・ Women in Germany
・ Women in Ghana
・ Women in government
・ Women in government relations
・ Women in governments of Israel
・ Women in Greece
・ Women in Guam
・ Women in Guyana
・ Women in Hawaii
・ Women in heraldry
・ Women in Hinduism
・ Women in Hong Kong
・ Women in Hospital
・ Women in House of Representatives
Women in Housing and Finance
・ Women in Hungary
・ Women in India
・ Women in Indonesia
・ Women in Iran
・ Women in Iraq
・ Women in Islam
・ Women in Israel
・ Women in Italy
・ Women in Ivory Coast
・ Women in Japan
・ Women in jazz
・ Women in Jordan
・ Women in journalism and media professions
・ Women in Judaism


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Women in Housing and Finance : ウィキペディア英語版
Women in Housing and Finance

Women in Housing and Finance (WHF) is a membership organization of professionals in the area of housing and finance located in the greater metropolitan area of New York City. Founded in 1981, WHF promotes and supports the professional growth of women in housing, finance and development and provides a vehicle through which members share knowledge and experience.
==History==

WHF Founder Cynthia Lewis was living in Washington, DC, working at the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), during the Carter years, a very heady time for women. Many were appointed to high level jobs in the Administration. (The Washington Women's Network ) held meetings in the Grand Ballroom of the Washington Hilton and hundreds of “power women,” and some not-so-powerful, believed that a new era had begun for women. HUD had its share with Secretary Pat Harris and Assistant Secretary Donna Shalala.
Lewis was invited to join a new group called ''Women in Housing and Finance'',〔( Women In Housing and Finance, DC )〕 composed of women from government agencies, Capitol Hill staff, and local law firms. She recently had been put in charge of a regulatory program and was able to make the contacts she needed through the group.
Late in 1979, Lewis came back to New York to work at the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation(FDIC) and she felt very isolated. With her responsibility for enforcement of the Community Investment Act, Lewis needed to meet people in the field. So she started to talk to women she met about the need for an “old girls’ network.” Lewis finally realized that it never would happen unless she did something herself. So Lewis started recruiting.
Connie Gibson, from the New Jersey Mortgage Finance Agency (NJMFA), spoke at a conference Lewis attended at Citibank. Lewis asked her if she would be interested in a women’s networking group; she was. Lewis had met Anita Miller when, as Acting Chair of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board (FHLBB), she spoke at WHF Washington. She was back in New York at the Ford Foundation and thought it would be a good idea. Lewis also talked to Fran Levenson (Goldome Bank), Harriette Silverberg (Metlife), Kathy Wylde (Anchor Savings Bank), Lois Kleinerman (New York State Division of Housing and Community Renewal (DHCR)), Beverly Wettenstein (Federal Home Loan Bank Board (FHLBB)), Carla Lerman (Bergen County Housing Authority), Jean Lerman (New York City Housing Preservation and Development (HPD)), and Kay Bergin (Neighborhood Reinvestment Corporation).
They all got together in Lewis’s living room in the fall of 1980. They decided that they should each call ten women and invite them to a luncheon meeting to discuss forming a new organization. About 50 women came, and it was clear that they were on our way. Lewis suggested that they affiliate with WHF Washington because it was an established group. That is how WHF got its name. Periodically, WHF discussed changing the name, but the Board of Directors always decides that, although WHF welcomes men members, it wants to keep its original identity.
WHF began officially with a luncheon on January 16, 1981 at McGraw-Hill. Caryl Austrian, President of WHF Washington, and Anita Miller (then with the Ford Foundation) were the speakers. Beverly Wettenstein notified the media of the event.
On February 4, Cynthia Lewis and the other “founding mothers” — Kay Bergin, Jean Lerman, Harriette Silverberg, Connie Gibson, Dana Cahoon, Lois Kleinerman Bernstein, Beverly Wettenstein, Fran Levenson, and Kathy Wylde — met and formed a steering committee to draft a statement of purpose, by-laws, and membership criteria which required a “level of professionalism consistent with retaining active participation of high-level women.”
This task was completed by August. The first slate of candidates included President Cynthia Lewis, First Vice President Connie Gibson, Second Vice President Fran Levenson, Secretary Lois Bernstein, and Treasurer Mary Williams. They were elected unanimously in October, 1981, together with board members Kay Bergin, Martha Lamar, Carla Lerman, Jean Lerman, Anita Miller, Harriette Silverberg, Beverly Wettenstein, and Kathy Wylde. The members approved the By-laws and an annual budget of $5,000.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Women in Housing and Finance」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.