🚫 Park National Bank: When a Bank Leaves and Doesn’t Come Back | Behind the Lines

2 months ago
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In 2022, the U.S. Department of Justice filed a redlining complaint against Park National Bank, an Ohio-based lender that didn’t just overlook Black and Latino communities—it abandoned them.

From 2015 to 2021, Park National closed its only branch in a majority-Black neighborhood in Columbus…and never came back.

📉 What did the investigation find?
❌ No branches in Black or Latino neighborhoods after 2018
👥 No loan officers assigned to serve those areas
📣 No marketing or community outreach
🏠 Other banks made 5x more loans in those communities

Park National didn’t say “no” out loud.
But their absence sent a message loud and clear:
You’re not a priority.

⚖️ What was the outcome?
In a $9 million settlement, the bank agreed to:

💰 $7.75M for home loan subsidies in redlined areas
📚 $750K for outreach, counseling, and advertising
🤝 $500K for building new local partnerships
🏦 Open a new branch and lending center
🔍 Undergo monitoring and staff training on fair lending

🧱 Why it still matters:
Redlining isn’t just about overt denial.
It’s about who gets left behind when banks disappear—and who gets the opportunity to build wealth through homeownership.

📘 Want to learn more?
Download The Redlining Case Files—my free e-guide breaking down real-life cases of housing discrimination and what we can do to challenge it. https://242922488.hs-sites-na2.com/tool-kits

📖 READ THE FULL BLOG POST:
👉 https://theconstructivehouse.blogspot.com

📺 Subscribe to The Constructive House Channel for more housing justice content, tools, and true stories to help protect your homeownership journey.

Because showing up for communities matters.
And justice starts with accountability.

#ParkNationalBank #Redlining #HousingDiscrimination #ColumbusOhio #TheConstructiveHouse #MortgageJustice #FairHousing #RedliningCaseFiles #ModernRedlining #BehindTheLines

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