Title: Housing Choice: Most Promising Housing Strategies
1Housing Choice Most Promising Housing Strategies
- 2005 American Planning Association State National
Planning Conference - San Francisco, CA
- March 20, 2005
2- Bill Klein, AICP
- Director of Research, American Planning
Association - bklein_at_planning.org
- Stuart Meck, FAICP
- Senior Research Fellow, American Planning
Association - smeck_at_planning.org
- Lynn M. Ross
- Research Associate, American Planning Association
- lross_at_planning.org
3Housing Choice Scoping Sessions
- Sponsored by Fannie Mae Foundation
- 6 half-day sessions held Fall 2004
- North Carolina, Southern New England,
Oregon-Washington, Midwest, Texas, and
California. - Participants from various disciplines.
4Key Discussion Components
- Each Scoping Session Addressed
- Housing Need
- Politics of Housing
- Affordable Housing Production and Retention
- Most Promising Strategies
5North Carolina
6Housing Need(North Carolina)
- Regional differences
- East
- Metropolitan areas
- Coastal areas and resort areas
- Impact of second home owners
- Section 8 waiting list
- Demand for one person units
7Politics of Housing(North Carolina)
- Lack of overarching housing policy
- Housing policy and production functions spread
out - No dedicated source of funding
8Affordable Housing Production and Retention
(North Carolina)
- Lack of capacity for rehabilitation
- Limitations on investment tax credits
- Shortage of land for multifamily housing
- Difficulty in amending state building code
- Lack of express authority of inclusionary zoning
- Race-based opposition
9North CarolinaMost Promising Housing Strategies
- Education on handling money and credit
- Authorization for inclusionary zoning
- Statewide minimum housing code
- Development of rental housing production capacity
- Incentivized housing trust fund for realtors and
bankers - Education campaign on benefits of affordable
housing
10Southern New England
11Housing Need (Southern New England)
- Transition from industrial to service economy
- Changes in household size and composition
- Immigration, especially for key target areas
- Loss of subsidy for very low income hshds
- Stratification/segregation
- Focus on workforce hsng impacts very low income
12Politics of Housing (Southern New England)
- Anti-tax feelings drive the discussion
- Resources down to ¼ what they once were
- Anti-development feelings generally
- Fear of in-migration, impact on schools
- Perception of excess profits by developers
- Legitimate infrastructure needs
- The Governor must lead
13Affordable Housing Production and
Retention(Southern New England)
- Devolution of Federal responsibilities
- More sophisticated ways to stop dev
- Loss of by-right zoning for multi-family
- Lack of certainty in process
- Diminished profitability, fewer for-profits
- Impact fees pacing and phasing mechanisms
off-site improvements
14Southern New England Most Promising Housing
Strategies
- Massachusetts Chapter 40R Smart Growth Zoning
Districts - 2 carrots for higher density
- Rhode Island Public Laws, Chapter 286
- R.I. Affordable Housing Act
- Inclusionary Housing Strategies
- Voluntary vs. mandatory inclusionary tools
15Oregon-Washington
16Housing Need(Oregon-Washington)
- Most counties in Washington and Oregon have
affordable housing need - Age and income cohorts affect housing
- Immigration impactHispanics represent 1 in 3 new
households - Portland, Corvallis becoming more expensive
- Seattlevery expensive
17Politics of Housing(Oregon-Washington)
- Strong state growth management structure
- Limitation on use of inclusionary zoning in
Oregon - No dedicated source of funds
- Voluntary housing goals from Portland Metro
- Reliance on sales tax and commercial activity
18Affordable Housing Production and Retention
(Oregon-Washington)
- Land inside Portland growth boundary not ready
for development - Hard to find individual building lots for under
100,000 - Hope VI working well in Seattle
- Investment tax creditstoo many soft costs
19Oregon-Washington Most Promising Housing
Strategies
- Oregon LCDC needs to develop capacity to assist
local governments with affordable housing - Needs to be a mechanism to pledge affordable
housing as a condition of UGB expansions - Real estate transfer tax for affordable housing,
lift ban on exclusionary zoning in Oregon - Banking land for affordable housing
- Citizen education
- More short term activity to produce affordable
units
20Midwest
21Housing Need(Midwest)
- Participants were from Indiana
- Loss of jobsno longer strong industrial base
- Central Indiana housing affordable, northern part
of state more need - Lack of high-end housing in Indianapolis
- Imbalance of housing choices in Indy region
- Lack of very low income housing
- Homelessness
22Politics of Housing(Midwest)
- State has 66 public housing authorities
- But state oversees public housing
- No dedicated revenue source for affordable
housing - No housing planning requirement in Indiana, but
now in Illinois
23Affordable Housing Production and Retention
(Midwest)
- Manufactured housing filling needs in rural areas
of state - Special exception requirements for manufactured
housing - Fort Wayne citywide housing strategy
- Affordable housing trust fund in Indianapolis
- Owner-occupied downtown housing in Indy
24Midwest Most Promising Housing Strategies
- Illinois Comprehensive Housing Plan
- Illinois Affordable Housing Planning and Appeal
Act - Cooperative efforts outside government
- Training local planning commissions concerning
affordable housing - UniGov approach to housing to share burdens and
benefits
25Texas
26Housing Need (Texas)
- Immigrant Influx
- Household Composition
- Spatial Component- Rural v. Urban
- Jobs- Housing Balance
- Change in Poverty Dynamics
- Boom/Bust Economy
27Politics of Housing(Texas)
- State Level
- Not typically a Governors Office issue
- A Regional Issue for the Legislature
- Local Level
- NIMBY
- Race and Income Segregation
- Property Values
28Affordable Housing Production and
Retention(Texas)
- Low Income Housing Tax Credit
- Regulatory Barrier Removal
- State Programs
- Role of the Non-profit Sector
- Manufactured Housing
29Texas Most Promising Housing Strategies
- S.M.A.R.T. HousingTM program
- Austin
- Land Assemblage Redevelopment Authority (LARA)
- Houston
- Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (VITA)
- San Antonio
30California
31Housing Need(California)
- Sharp population growth
- Immigration
- Inadequate production of housing overall
- Two markets
- Those who bought early
- Those who are trying to get in
- Speculative housing in Sacramento region
32Politics of Housing(California)
- Proposition 13 and impact
- Housing policy not a priority for any governor
- Lack of comprehensive approach
- Local government barrierslarger houses, larger
lots
33Affordable Housing Production and Retention
(California)
- Builders wary of affordable housing market
- Regulatory barriers
- Private, but not public, enforcement of state
housing element law - Lack of certainty
- San Diego SRO
34California Most Promising Strategies
- More housing generally
- Accessory dwelling units
- Higher densities
- Statewide inclusionary zoning
- Maintaining Section 8
- The Urban Williamson Act
- Linking affordable housing to job development
- Building affordable housing in smaller clusters
35Top 10 Most Common Themes
- 10. Impact of Local/Regional Tax Structure
- 9. Inadequate State Funding for Housing
- 8. Lack of Support at State Legislative Level
- 7. Use of Tax Credits
- 6. Wages vs. Cost of Living
36Top 10 Most Common Themes
- 5. Service Gap for the Very Low Income
- 4. Change in Household Composition
- 3. Impact of Federal Programs
- 2. Need for More Education, Training, and
Capacity-Building Programs - 1. Not In My Backyard
37Learn More
- APA Website, www.planning.org
- Affordable Housing Reader
- Free online reader features 100 APA published
articles. - Housing and Community Development Division
- Learn about the division activities, join, read
the newsletter. - Housing Choice online (coming soon)
- Complete session summaries, theme analysis,
strategy descriptions.
38Thank you for attending!
- 2005 American Planning Association National
Planning Conference - San Francisco, CA