The Twin Cities area doesn't have a Black-owned bank, but it soon will.
Detroit-based First Independence Bank, one of about 18 Black-owned banks in the U.S., is planning to open its first branch in Minneapolis in early November, to be followed by a second next year.
"This is going to be a historic move," said Kenneth Kelly, chairman and CEO of First Independence. "This is the first time we have ventured outside of the Detroit area."
It was encouraged to come to the Twin Cities by the region's biggest banks — U.S. Bank, Wells Fargo, Huntington Bank (formerly TCF), Bremer Bank and Bank of America. They are offering financial, technical, consulting and marketing support to First Independence.
Those banks announced millions of dollars in equity initiatives following the police slaying of George Floyd last year. Around the same time, bank executives started talking to each other about how they could work together to reduce the region's huge racial wealth gap, leading to the unusual step of inviting another competitor to the market.
"Some people in the Black community don't always trust banks," said Tim Welsh, vice chairman of consumer and business banking at U.S. Bank. "We can all go back in history and imagine why that's the case. But a Black-owned bank is a place that can bridge that trust gap."
He added that the five banks will continue to commit resources and efforts individually.
"We as the banks all view ourselves as eager to address these issues and are working hard on it, but realize if we create an ecosystem together of lots of different kinds of institutions, we're more likely to be able to be successful in addressing this overall gap," Welsh said.