lush with cash

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Christine Flowers attends a Tea Party ! 07 Suite Spot debunks opera’s mythical fat ladies ! 19 Equality Forum vs. Prop 8 ! 33 Feeding Frenzy: Taco trucks & Mango Bushes ! 40 " 7 SPORTS COMPLEX | How is it possible Philly’s most beloved sports figure was a broadcaster? " 18 THEATER | American Buffalo takes “fuckin’ Ruthie” to the next level. " 25 MOVIES | Sweetbread is the Eye of the Tiger in its feature debut. " 39 FOOD | Trey Popp on Chifa: Loves it. c typaper [ PHILADELPHIA ] PHILADELPHIA’S INDEPENDENT WEEKLY NEWSPAPER April 23 - April 30, 2009 #1248 | www.citypaper.net CAN e3 PUT THE GREEN BACK IN BANKING? BY ANDREW THOMPSON

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Can e3 put the green back in banking?

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Page 1: Lush With Cash

Christine Flowers attends a Tea Party ! 07Suite Spot debunks opera’s mythical fat ladies ! 19

Equality Forum vs. Prop 8 ! 33Feeding Frenzy: Taco trucks & Mango Bushes ! 40

" 7 SPORTS COMPLEX | How is it possible Philly’s most beloved sports fi gure was a broadcaster?" 18 THEATER | American Buffalo takes “fuckin’ Ruthie” to the next level. " 25 MOVIES | Sweetbread is the Eye of the Tiger in its feature debut." 39 FOOD | Trey Popp on Chifa: Loves it.

c typaper[ P H I L A D E L P H I A ]

P H I L A D E L P H I A’ S I N D E P E N D E N T W E E K LY N E W S PA P E RApril 23 - April 30, 2009 #1248 | www.citypaper.net

CAN e3 PUT THE GREEN BACK IN BANKING?BY ANDREW THOMPSON

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n 2007, Frank Baldassarre realized he had been destroying the Pennsylvania country-side.

Baldassarre is giving me a tour of the head-quarters of e3bank, which, when it opens this summer, will be the first sustainability-focused

bank in the region. It’s not your typical financial hub: Instead of a monolithic glass skyscraper, e3’s Malvern headquarters (a Philly location is planned for 2010) is a quaint, renovated late-19th-century house painted light green and certified with the highest environmental standards. As we walk, he explains how every aspect of the house has been modified to minimize environmental impact.

In his prior life, Baldassarre specialized in real estate development at Fox Chase Bank in Exton. A vague interest in the burgeoning green-build-ing movement led him to an information session at the Delaware Valley Green Building Council (DVBGC).

“It was like, Oh my God, what have I done?” he says. “I financed shopping centers, single-family homes, knocked down all that farmland. I just couldn’t go back to business as usual. I didn’t see anything wrong with that at the time because I

didn’t know any better.”He learned that buildings account for

48 percent of global greenhouse gas

emissions, according to the American Institute of Architects, and that the way we build is a key factor in Earth’s quickening degradation.

Ultimately, he realized that changing how we bank could change the world.

Baldassarre, 47, is about 5-foot-5 and wears the uniform of the urbane professional, complemented by brown, slicked-back hair. He looks like a banker. And it’s tempting to wonder if this isn’t a marketing gimmick. But when he talks about e3 — an acronym of sorts for “enterprise, environment and equity,” what environmentalists call the triple bottom line — he does so with a gesticulative excitement that can leave him nearly breathless. For years, he says, he followed “grossly inadequate” environmental regulations that gave him a false sense of security, allowing him to work without truly understanding the ramifications of his actions. “I don’t want to say ignorance was bliss,” he says. “What I didn’t understand was the total impact, from a systems standpoint, that I was having.”

Baldassarre says he found himself the only per-son at Fox Chase meetings to consider the bank’s environmental impacts beyond EPA regulations. “I had an option,” he says. “I could try to develop these ideas and retrain the existing banking world by creating a new division in the bank. But sustain-ability is not a division. Sustainability is a belief

system. Unless that organization believes in sustainability across all its systems, it’s hard to be sustain-able in the long haul.”Some wonder if being sustainable

in the long haul is even possible, and say real sustainability is anathema to profitability.

“There’s no such thing as a truly sustainable busi-ness right now, there are only degrees of sustain-ability,” says Janet Ranganathan, vice president for science and research at the World Resources Institute in Washington, D.C. Such a sentiment is typical of many environmentalists who feel that our system has to be entirely upended before it can be fixed, and that the only truly sustainable enter-prise is the one that exists outside of an economic structure born in the Industrial Age.

“She should have said, ‘The way we live today is unsustainable. The way we live tomorrow can be,’” Baldassarre says with a smile, emphatically slamming his hand down on the conference table. “I guess at the end of the day, I’m optimistic. Will it be hard? Hell yeah. Will it be a challenge to get to where we really need to be? Yes. But I’m optimistic on our capacity to really change. I know of no other way to answer it because we are upstream.

“And in the worst case,” he continues, “you start over and go to a different stream.”

B aldassarre’s decision to start from scratch brought him to become more involved with the DVGBC, which led him to Sandy Wig-

gins, one of the council’s founding members. At 54, Wiggins is grayed and calm with a soft smile. A former real estate developer, he has since traded his BMW for PhillyCarShare, moved from the suburbs to Chestnut Hill, started walking to his hardware store. Though only seven years separate them, Wiggins and Baldassarre interact like seasoned mentor and eager apprentice: Baldassarre remains jubilant over his new enterprise; Wiggins is more reserved. Baldassarre is brightly optimistic, ask-ing why I’m so skeptical when I bring up potential

CAN e3 PUT THE GREEN BACK IN BANKING?BY ANDREW THOMPSON ILLUSTRATION BY JASON FRITZSCHE

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hurdles in fulfilling their mission. Wiggins is opti-mistic, too, but he asks no such questions.

“My first reaction was, ‘You’ve got to be kidding me. I’m not a banker,’” says Wiggins of Baldassarre’s proposal in 2008 to start e3. “I couldn’t think of an industry that interested me less.” But it wasn’t long before he was convinced that changing methods of lending and borrowing is the surest way to change behavior.

We’re sitting in an office on 17th and Locust where Wiggins and Baldassarre are showing me the simple PowerPoint presentation they use when making their case to potential investors. It doesn’t start with pie charts and market potential. It starts with graphics of environmental and urban carnage: a miles-wide Chilean copper mine so toxic that three nearby towns had to be relocated; a crippled man on a street in China; an Earth laid waste.

And then they show The First Bank of the United States, just across town from the office we’re sit-ting in. “This edifice was really designed to inspire security and safety,” says Wiggins, looking at the picture of the traditional Greek structure. “But ultimately it became all about the bank, where the bank set all the ground rules and controlled people’s lives very much.”

Wiggins and Baldassarre want to change those ground rules. They want to take an industry that has traditionally eschewed mindfulness and make it mindful, somehow working within the constraints of the same system that wrought the problems they hope to repair. To them, the finan-cial world’s narrow, profit-obsessed mentality for unending growth that undercut itself and wreaked havoc on the world economy is ultimately the same thing that financed projects that spewed billions of tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere and dumped toxic chemicals into water systems. From Baldassarre’s perspective, banking is the force that has powered every project — nefarious or otherwise — in the past few hundred years, and the trick is to point that power in a different direction.

In the past few years, a handful of similar banks across the country — like New Resource Bank in San Francisco and ShoreBank Pacific in Ilwaco, Wash. — have either opened or been conceived with the goal of shifting consumer behavior through information, and lending and borrowing. These institutions, like e3, vow not to be simply places that use paperless account statements or put solar panels on their headquarters and call themselves “green” (although they tend to do these things). Instead, their goal is to change how projects are financed from the start.

They also share the adoption of the triple-bot-tom-line principle of devising metrics not only for financial performance but social and environmen-tal performance, as well.

Wiggins and Baldassarre want e3 to be part bank, part knowledge repository. Studies have

shown that a chief impediment to con-sumers purchasing greener products

has been a simple unawareness of their options. For a business owner, that means knowing how to get in touch with fair-trade suppliers or provid-ers of lower electricity usage. For a homebuyer, it means knowing exactly what options exist to weatherize a house.

In the built environment, they see a particu-larly striking dearth of information, and the area where they hope to make the biggest impact is the mortgage division. Green buildings are the fastest-growing real estate sector in the country: The number of LEED-registered buildings in the Delaware Valley is now more than doubling every year and is on track to increase at least tenfold by 2010, according to the DVGBC.

The mortgage division employs what is perhaps the bank’s most innovative feature: tiered mortgage rates — something few, if any, of the new eco-banks have adopted. Homes with higher efficiency incur lower interest rates. (Those rates, Baldassarre says, are locked in once mortgages are signed.) From a risk-analysis standpoint, it makes sense. Lower operating costs mean more money to pay back a loan, and thus a lower risk of defaulting.

For the most part, banks haven’t absorbed this. Most bankers haven’t boned up on green build-ing procedures and don’t know how to handle a builder interested in a LEED-certified project. And

that’s created situations like Jackie O’Neil’s.

When taking out a mortgage, certain criteria have to be met: You

have to have a heating system, a water system, waste disposal and so on. The conventional forms of these processes differ from newer, greener means of

construction, but most banks know only how to appraise the old forms; they haven’t yet adapted to evaluate the green methods. And that’s why O’Neil, an e3 board member and IT consultant, became frustrated with M&T Bank in October 2004 when she attempted to build the first LEED-certified home in Pennsylvania.

“They didn’t have a clue, honestly,” says O’Neil. “It’s no fault of theirs — they do tons and tons of mortgages. But they like clean, conventional construction.”

O’Neil wanted to use solar power to heat her home, but says M&T’s appraiser wouldn’t grant her a conventional mortgage. They asked her again how she planned to heat her home; she repeated she would use solar, and after some more back-and-forth, she compromised by building an extraneous heater-grade fireplace in her home.

This is where Wiggins and Baldassarre think e3 plays an antidotal role to the current economic crisis borne from mortgage defaults. By creating incentives for borrowers to decrease energy costs in their homes, they say, you decrease both the long-term costs of the home as well as the burden of debt.

“It’s win, win, win,” says Baldassarre.

“I think we’ve designed one of the stupidest finan cial systems possible,” says Josh Farley, an ecological economist at the University of

Vermont. “One of the biggest problems with our current system is that money is loaned into exis-tence bearing interest, and so anybody who borrows money has to pay back more than they borrowed, and on average, that means the economy has to

e3bank’s Frank Baldassarre (left) and Sandy Wiggins hope to change banking’s ground rules.

JESSICA KOURKOUNIS

>>> continued on page 14

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be bigger every year so that people can pay back loans from the previous year.”

Farley’s criticism echoes that of many in his field: The financial world has prescribed a sys-tem of infinite, exponential growth completely out of touch with nature. Requiring borrowers to repay debt with interest demands ever-increasing extraction of resources.

The source of this problem, say Farley and his colleagues, is that banks can loan out more than they actually have. If e3 reaches its $30 million capital-raising goal, it will be able to loan $300 million. This means it, like every other bank, can generate money essentially out of nothing — and the only way to make nothing into something is to turn it into a physical good created from a natural resource. Critics’ solution is to make banks loan out only what they have on hand.

In other words, the solution is less growth, not more.

“I don’t have the equation to take nature to the fin-ancial services sector, yet,” says Baldassarre when

I ask him how e3 will try to coun ter an economy based on infinite growth.

“But the fact that we’re looking at these things are the first steps.”

O n Sept. 26, 2008, the day after Washington Mutual collapsed and became the largest bank failure in U.S. history, Baldassarre

and Wiggins sat in the FDIC branch office in New York to pitch their idea for e3. Given the crisis of confidence rippling throughout the financial sec-tor, they weren’t sure what to expect.

But the FDIC reps received their idea well. So well, Wiggins recalls, that by the end of the pre-sentation, he and Baldassarre were getting pats on the back for a job well done. “I think they were really tired of regulating an industry with no value system,” says Wiggins.

The FDIC also likely knew the same thing as investors, who poured $1.5 million into e3 over two meetings last spring, according to Baldassarre. That is, they knew it had a market — a crucial part of getting government approval to start a bank.

Wiggins speculates that had Al Gore’s environ-mental warning calls not invaded mass conscious-ness in the past few years and created a “perfect

storm of awareness” in the U.S., e3 never would have gotten past lunch-time conversation.

An idea like e3 may once have app-ealed only to the granola-eating co-op

shopper, but dread has become main-stream. Wiggins won’t give the exact numbers found by Shelton Group, the

company hired by e3 to map out the bank’s market. But he expects four main demographics to compose the e3 customer base: the “true believer” who has “lived and breathed this for a while”; the “concerned mom” who lightly takes notice of global meltdown; the “cautious conservative” who at least acknowledges the reality of phenomena like global warming; and the “millennial generation,” the group more likely than any other to switch brands to support a cause.

Wiggins and Baldassarre insist there’s no compro-mise between fulfilling their mission and being financially successful — in fact, they say, that mind-set is what’s prevented businesses from being sus-tainable in the first place. And after all, it’s the people who don’t bleed green who need convincing.

But consumers are fickle. While e3’s investors can rest assured that die-hard environmentalists would be willing to take a quarter-percent cut in CD returns to fund local projects (the bank’s “deep green” money market account), others won’t. They’ll seek the highest returns.

“We’re not a niche. We’re a bank, we’re a bank, we’re a bank,” says Ken LaRoe, founder of First Green Bank in Eustis, Fla., which opened in February. He raised a staggering $19 million in start-up capital for his bank in five weeks. “In Florida, we wouldn’t last a month if all we did business with were sus-tainable investors. It’s an educational process. We have to show people these things, and if we don’t do it right, we’ll be out of business.”

The debate over whether firms can be profitable >>> continued on page 16

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The Academy of Natural Sciences • American Helicopter Museum and Education Center • American Swedish Historical Museum • Athenaeum of Philadelphia • Battleship New Jersey Museum and Memorial • Betsy Ross House • Cedar Grove Mansion • Chemical Heritage Foundation • Chester County Historical Society • Cliveden of the National Trust • Delaware Center for the Contemporary Arts • Delaware Museum of Natural History • The Design Center at Philadelphia University • Eastern State Penitentiary Historic Site • The Fabric Workshop and Museum • Fort Miffl in on the Delaware • Franklin Square • The Franklin • Garden State Discovery Museum • Glencairn Museum, Academy of the New Church • Hagley Museum and Library • Historic Philadelphia, Inc. • Independence Seaport Museum • Independence Visitor Center Corporation • Institute of Contemporary Art • James A. Michener Art Museum • John James Audubon Center at Mill Grove • Laurel Hill Cemetery • Longwood Gardens • Masonic Library and Museum of Pennsylvania • Mercer Museum • Morris Arboretum of the University of Pennsylvania • Mount Pleasant Mansion • Mütter Museum of The College of Physicians of Philadelphia • National Constitution Center • The National Liberty Museum • National Museum of American Jewish History • Nemours Mansion and Gardens • Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts • Peter Wentz Farmstead • Philadelphia Museum of Art • Philadelphia Zoo • Please Touch Museum • Reading Public Museum • Rosenbach Museum & Library • Ryerss Museum and Library • Schwenkfelder Library and Heritage Center • Simeone Foundation Automotive Museum • Spiral Q Puppet Theater • Temple Judea Museum of Keneseth Israel • University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology • Wagner Free Institute of Science • Winterthur Museum and Country Estate • Woodford

Mansion • Woodmere Art Museum, Inc.

April 27-May 3, 2009Discounts on Admission and Shopping!

PhillyFunGuide.com/MuseumWeek

Produced in partnership with the 2009 AAM Annual Meeting & MuseumExpo, Philadelphia