The City & County of San Francisco and Citi Community Development Receive 2013 Excellence Award in Public-Private Partnerships from U.S. Conference of Mayors
The City and County of San Francisco and Citi Community Development
today received the 2013 Excellence Award for Public-Private Partnerships
at the U.S. Conference of Mayors 81st Winter Meeting in Washington, DC.
The award, which honors the outstanding achievements made possible
through the combined effort of cities and members of the Mayors Business
Council, recognizes the cross-sector collaboration on Kindergarten to
College, the nation’s first universal college savings program for
children.
First launched in 2010, Kindergarten to College automatically
establishes savings accounts in Citibank branches for children entering
kindergarten in all 75 of the San Francisco Unified School District’s
elementary schools. All accounts are seeded with an initial $50 deposit
by the City of San Francisco, and children receiving free and reduced
price lunches receive an additional $50.
“I thank Citi Community Development, San Francisco Unified School
District, Mayor Lee, and all our partners who have worked to make K2C a
success,” said Treasurer José Cisneros. “Research tells us that a child
with a college savings account in their name is several times more
likely to go to college, and we are cultivating expectations for
academic success for our students.”
Kindergarten to College is designed to embed a savings culture among San
Francisco’s children and their parents as a way to expand college access
and increase college completion rates while decreasing debt. Since its
inception, nearly 8,000 accounts have been opened, with the City of San
Francisco matching additional contributions dollar-for-dollar up to $100
in the first year. Thereafter, families may make yearly contributions of
up to $2,500. To facilitate the program, Citibank created a platform
through which accounts are opened and managed electronically.
“Kindergarten to College is an integrated approach to building assets
and making higher education attainable through a universal student
savings account program,” said Bob Annibale, Citi’s Global Director of
Microfinance and Community Development. “Citi is proud that other cities
are recognizing our work with the City and County of San Francisco as a
national model for expanding financial inclusion and access to higher
education, both of which are key drivers for economic opportunity.”
Children with savings accounts are seven times more likely to attend
college, according to research. Even modest savings have been shown to
not only provide children with a foundation to begin paying for their
educations, but childhood exposure to basic money management helps to
build the financial skills they will need throughout their lives. Over
the course of a lifetime, individuals with college degrees earn up to 75
percent more than those with just high school diplomas – nearly $1
million more in total.
Kindergarten to College began as a two-year pilot launched by the Office
of the Mayor and the Office of the Treasurer in San Francisco along with
the Department of Children, Youth and their Families, the San Francisco
Unified School District and a number of non-profit organizations,
including CFED, EARN, the San Francisco Foundation and the New America
Foundation. In 2012, Mayor Edwin M. Lee and the Board of Supervisors
approved funding to expand the pilot into a permanent universal savings
program.
About Citi Community Development
Citi Community Development is leading Citi’s commitment to achieve
economic empowerment and growth for underserved individuals, families
and communities by expanding access to financial products and services,
and building sustainable business solutions and innovative partnerships.
Our focus areas include: commercial and philanthropic funding;
innovative financial products and services; and collaborations with
institutions that expand access to financial products and services for
low-income and underserved communities. For more information, please
visit www.citicommunitydevelopment.com.