2025-2026 Board of Directors
Officers

President
Meghan Cano
Community Housing Resource Partners

Immediate Past-President
Nathan Kelley
Blazer

President-Elect
Kathryn Saar
Ulysses Development Group

First Vice President
Darren Smith
Pivotal

Second Vice President
Nick Walsh
The NRP Group

Treasurer
Hector Zuniga
KeyBank Real Estate Capital

Secretary
Ellie Fanning
Portfolio Resident Services
(Ex-Officio)

Past President
Valerie Williams
Bank of America

Past President
Jean Latsha
Pedcor Investments
Directors

Dan Allgeier
Lakewood Property Management

Jen Brewerton
Plummer and Associates

Avis Chaisson
AFC Real Estate Development Services

National Church Residences

BOK Financial

Quinn Gormley
Baker Tilly

Summer Greathouse
Bracewell LLP (Ex-Officio)

Blair Henderson
Churchill Stateside Group

Karsten Lowe
JPI

Ryan Lunderby

Brad McMurray
Opportunity Home San Antonio

Stephanie Naquin
Novogradac & Company, LLP (Ex-Officio)

Rachel Thomas Phillips
Regions Bank
Become a Member
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Latest News
TAAHP Member helps Tarrant County Church build Affordable Housing For Seniors
TAAHP member CommunityBank of Texas partnered with Bethlehem Baptist Church in Mansfield, Texas to build a 135-unit affordable housing apartment complex for seniors.
Laredo faces gap between median income and rent affordability
It comes as no surprise to affordable housing providers that even one of the most “affordable” communities in Texas is relatively unaffordable for the residents living there.
U.S. Senator Introduces Yes In My Backyard Act to Encourage Communities to Cut Regulations and Increase Housing Supply
On June 20, 2019 U.S. Senator Todd Young (R-Ind.) introduced the Yes In My Backyard (YIMBY) Act to shed light on discriminatory land use policies, encourage localities cut burdensome regulations, and bring a new level of transparency to the community development process. Instead of adopting inclusive land use policies that allow citizens of all income levels, backgrounds, and identities to live, work, and flourish in their city or town, some communities are building paper walls of regulations around themselves that negatively affect and sometimes discriminate against low- and middle-income Americans.



