U.S. Bank outlines details of $15 million Rebuild and Transform Fund

In addition to these grants, U.S. Bank continues to focus on supporting customers and small businesses in the Twin Cities community throughout this challenging time. Efforts include establishing a mobile banking unit in the Lake Street/West Broadway area to ensure all customers have access to the banking services they need and adding an ATM on West Broadway, through which the bank has been refunding foreign ATM fees for customers in the area.

Transforming communities to support systems change


The U.S. Bank Foundation is donating $3 million to transforming the Twin Cities, investing in leaders who are driving access to economic mobility by addressing structural systems that lead to racial disparities and inequities. These multi-year funds will be distributed in three pillars:

  • Racial equity and housing: Urban League; Philanthropic Collective to Combat Anti-Blackness & Realize Racial Justice; Hope Community and Nexus Community Partners
  • Small business and economic development: Pillsbury United Communities’ newly created Community Development Corporation – Justice Built Communities
  • Workforce advancement and education: Summit Academy OIC; Northside Achievement Zone (NAZ) and Generation Next

U.S. Bank Foundation will soon share details of the other $10 million from the Rebuild and Transform Fund, which will support other markets impacted by civil unrest and include funding for national partnerships.


“Our investments start with listening and learning from local community leaders who understand the challenges and opportunities in their communities better than anyone,” said Reba Dominski, Chief Social Responsibility Officer. “We are providing general operating funds and investing in people because we trust community leaders to know how, when and where to use these funds for the greatest impact. And we know philanthropy cannot solve these problems alone. When philanthropic dollars are combined with other resources a bank can provide, like increased access to capital, it creates opportunities for catalytic change.”

In addition to these local commitments, U.S. Bank has a deep partnership with the Center for Economic Inclusion (CEI) in the Twin Cities. In 2019, the Foundation provided the organization with a $500,000 grant to help break down historical and structural barriers to economic mobility. U.S. Bank intends to expand its partnership nationally with CEI as part of its efforts to address economic and racial inequities.

The U.S. Bancorp Community Development Corporation (USBCDC) also recently announced details of the $1 million in grants to 15 Black-led Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFI) partners across the country as part of the bank’s larger $116 million commitment. USBCDC and the U.S. Bank Foundation also donated $150,000 to the African American Alliance of CDFI CEOs, which represents 29 Black-led CDFIs focused on increasing capital and financial services to African American-owned businesses with a goal to change the odds and outcomes for African Americans in underserved communities across America.

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