![]() Dear Friend, In just a few months we’ll hold our Policy. Practice. Power. Conference in Washington, D.C., and today we’re thrilled to announce key updates to the event schedule, including session titles! We’ll kick this year’s conference off on May 27 with community tours and organized networking activities. Our opening keynote on May 28, titled Assets or Activism: How the Ownership Economy is Forging a New Kind of Movement, will help set the tone for this year’s convening and inspire important conversations among attendees. Our plenaries, Just Action & The Color of Law on May 28 and Hope Starts at Home: A Call to Build a More Equitable Future on May 29, will further highlight innovative housing policies, thoughtful shared equity housing programs, and community-led solutions. In addition to these plenaries, the conference will feature a series of concurrent breakouts focused on one of our conference themes of policy, practice and power, and participants will have the opportunity to participate in Learning Labs to discuss challenges they face in their everyday work. Click below to view the full schedule! Sponsorship Opportunities We are thankful to have the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation as one of our sponsors for this year’s conference, and we are excited to secure other sponsors committed to advancing housing with lasting affordability. Sponsors help keep our conference affordable and accessible to a broad cross-section of individuals from throughout the housing ecosystem. As a sponsor, you can expand your organization’s visibility through our 500+ attendees and the people within their networks. You’ll also have the opportunity to showcase your organization in our exhibitor hall and network with key housing stakeholders. Click below to learn more about becoming a sponsor. Where we live matters.We bring together an extensive network of partners and member practitioners from local communities who have a deep understanding of best practices in community land trusts, shared equity housing, local housing policies such as inclusionary zoning, and more. ![]() |