NCSHA Announces 2022 Board of Directors
WASHINGTON, DC — The National Council of State Housing Agencies elected its 2022 Board of Directors on September 26 during the association’s 50th Annual Conference. Board officers and directors are nominated from among and voted on by the executive directors of the member state housing finance agencies. NCSHA’s re-elected officers are:
- Chair: Scott Spivey | Mississippi Home Corporation
- Vice Chair: Margaret Salazar | Oregon Housing and Community Services
Newly elected to the office of Secretary/Treasurer is Joaquín Altoro of the Wisconsin Housing and Economic Development Authority.
Re-elected directors are:
- Jennifer Ho | Minnesota Housing
- Chrystal Kornegay | MassHousing
- Ralph Perrey | Tennessee Housing Development Agency
Newly-elected directors are:
- Izzy Hernandez | New Mexico Mortgage Finance Authority
- Scott Farmer | North Carolina Housing Finance Agency
Incumbent Board directors are:
- Bryan Butcher | Alaska Housing Finance Corporation
- Maura Collins | Vermont Housing Finance Agency
- Kristin Faust | Illinois Housing Development Authority
- Scott Hoversland | Wyoming Community Development Authority
- Nandini Natarajan | Connecticut Housing Finance Authority
- Ryan Vincent | Kansas Housing Resources Corporation
- Robin Wiessmann | Pennsylvania Housing Finance Agency
- Bobby Wilkinson | Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs
The new Board elected Minnesota Housing’s Jennifer Ho to serve as the At-Large Member of the Executive Committee.
Scott Spivey, executive director of the Mississippi Home Corporation, was unanimously re-elected as Board Chair. “I am honored and humbled by my colleagues’ confidence in me to serve again as chair,” Spivey said. “The state HFA network has never been stronger or more unified.”
“The 2022 Board of Directors reflects the vibrant diversity of state HFA leadership today,” said NCSHA Executive Director Stockton Williams. “Under their superb leadership across the board, and through NCSHA, state HFAs stand ready to play an even larger role in meeting the nation’s affordable housing needs.”
