Carver Federal Savings Bank
Richar Anozier, New York, NY
Richar Anozier is only six-years old, but he already has a savings account and dreams of attending Stanford University when he grows up.
Richar is just one of 75 preschoolers in New York City who participated in the Corporation for Enterprise Development’s Saving for Education, Entrepreneurship, and Downpayment (SEED) Policy and Practice Initiative, launched in 2003 in 12 communities across the United States to provide matched-savings accounts and financial education for young people. Each SEED account holder receives an initial deposit of $500 and can earn a dollar-for-dollar match and savings incentives up to a total of $2,000. The money can be used for financing education, starting a small business, buying a home, or financing retirement.
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In New York City, the SEED savings accounts are held at Brooklyn-based Carver Federal Savings Bank, a CDFI and the largest bank operated predominantly by African Americans and Caribbean Americans in the United States. As of June 30, 2007, Carver’s SEED participants had accumulated $115,467 in savings and matching dollars, with an average account balance of $1,539.
Both Richar and his mother, Darlene, attend financial education classes offered by the SEED program. Whenever Ms. Anozier had savings, she took Richar to Carver Bank to make deposits into his account. “It”s a fantastic feeling knowing that the money I’m depositing is going toward my son’s future,” she says. “I want him to know education is the most important thing.”
Richar recently transferred his savings from Carver Federal Savings Bank to a 529 account to further his dream of one day attending Stanford University.
