U.S. Bank will increase new lending to black-owned businesses and rebuild three Minneapolis branches damaged in riots last week, its parent U.S. Bancorp said Friday as it announced other steps to combat racial inequality.
The Minneapolis-based company, which is the nation's fifth-largest bank, said it will boost its support for small and minority-owned businesses that create jobs and build social infrastructure, including $100 million annually in higher lending to black-owned and -led businesses.
The company's foundation also put aside $15 million to award grants to groups that are addressing systemic economic and racial inequities.
U.S. Bank also said it was looking at its own record of hiring and promoting people, saying it would change its "talent management strategy to develop and promote people of color to leadership roles."
Three of its branches, two along Lake Street and another in north Minneapolis, were closed after being damaged or looted in the violence that erupted from protests about George Floyd's death in Minneapolis police custody on May 25.
"We will not turn our backs or abandon the neighborhoods where so many are hurting right now," Andy Cecere, the company's chief executive, said in a statement.
The company, which has branches in 25 states, experienced damage at a handful of other branches as protests against police violence stretched across the nation in the past week. Those locations were able to quickly reopen.
On the day after Floyd's death and before the protests grew huge, Cecere wrote to U.S. Bank employees that he expected to be held personally accountable for U.S. Bank's "core value of drawing strength from diversity."