HomeMy WebLinkAboutCommunity Development Block Grant Commission - Minutes - 03/10/2021
CDBG COMMISSION
REGULAR MEETING
March 10, 2021 at 5:30 PM
Remote/ZOOM due to COVID-19
3 /10/2021 – MINUTES Page 1
1. CALL TO ORDER
• At 5:33PM the meeting was called to order by Josh Johnson.
2. ROLL CALL
• Board Members Present
o Olga Duvall
o Steve Backsen
o Ethnie Treick
o Sara Maranowicz
o Mike Kulisheck
o Pat Hastings
o Josh Johnson, Chair
• Board Members Absent
o Nick Verni-Lau
o Sam Stoltz
• Staff Members Present
o Adam Molzer, Staff Liaison, CDBG Commission – City of Fort Collins
o Beth Rosen, Social Sustainability Department – City of Fort Collins
o Ingrid Decker, City Attorney’s Office – City of Fort Collins
o Sue Beck-Ferkiss, Social Sustainability Department – City of Fort Collins
For further information, details and insight, and audio recording, resources are available by
contacting the CDBG Commission staff liaison.
3. AGENDA REVIEW
Josh Johnson read remote session instructions for the Community Development Block Grant
Commission (“CDBG”) and public attendees. It was noted that nominations for Chair and Vice
Chair would be added to the agenda. Adam Molzer reviewed agenda. The Commission
accepted the agenda with this modification.
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4. PUBLIC PARTICIPATION
Diane Cohn from the Affordable Housing Board was in attendance. She shared that she was
attending to represent AHB and hear the housing presentation
5. APPROVAL OF MINUTES – February 10, 2021 Regular Meeting
Pat Hastings moved to approve the minutes. Olga Duvall seconded approval.
Motion approved with roll call. Mike Kulisheck abstained. Passed unanimously.
6. UNFINISHED BUSINESS
CDBG CV Round 2 Funding Update Beth Rosen
• Beth Rosen provided an update on the CDBG-CV award of $400,000 to Neighbor to
Neighbor. She shared that after the Commission made recommendations, Neighbor to
Neighbor disclosed they are working with Larimer County to disperse $9.6MM in funds from
the Federal Treasury. This is in addition to funding awarded from the State of Colorado for
Emergency Housing Assistance Payment. Neighbor to Neighbor’s priority is to spend those
two funds first in 2021 and they do not know if and/or when they will be ready to deploy the
CDBG-CV funds.
• The shelter programs needed the allocation immediately to continue emergency sheltering.
• The City’s Recovery Team met and have decided to move forward with recommendations
as is, but hold off on contracting with Neighbor to Neighbor for the CDBG-CV funds.
• If rent assistance is no longer a need, the most equitable way to redistribute those funds
would be to open a new application with new guidelines letting all eligible nonprofits have a
new opportunity to apply. If necessary to redeploy, the Commission will be informed of next
steps for making a funding recommendation.
7. LEARNING SERIES PRESENTATION
Conflict of Interest Policy Ingrid Decker – Senior Assistant City Attorney
• Ingrid Decker provided an overview of the City Attorney’s staff structure, City Charter and
City Code (available on the City Clerks’ website), and the Fort Collins’ Conflict of Interest
Policy.
• The Charter describes how the City Council may establish Boards and Commissions and
limits what Council and Boards can do.
• The City Regulations Manual should be the first reference should there be questions about
how boards and its members should conduct business.
• Conflicts of Interest is a legal issue that comes up frequently. There are two kinds of interests
to watch for -- financial interest and personal interest. Ingrid provided some examples.
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• If you or relative has a conflict of interest, you cannot vote on an issue; attempt to influence;
or otherwise participate in that decision in any manner.
• A conflict of interest must be disclosed. A copy of the disclosure form is available in the
Boards and Commissions Manual or the City Clerk’s office.
• If you think you have a conflict, review the Charter and Code language (available online)
and if you are unsure, talk through it through with the Staff Liaison (Adam Molzer) or Ingrid
Decker. If you decide there is a conflict, file a disclosure statement with the City Clerk’s
Office.
• Do not communicate with or try to influence the Board in any way on the item or issue for
which you have a conflict.
• Olga Duvall asked if her employment at the Salvation Army in Loveland, which is a separate
branch from the Salvation Army in Fort Collins, poses as a conflict of interest. Ingrid
explained that it doesn’t sound like there is a true conflict of interest because she is not an
employee of the direct branch that is going to apply for funding. If she has concern that her
expertise can influence other members decisions, she can personally decide to excuse
herself from voting.
• Adam would like to know in advance if any Commission members will be opting out of any of
the proposals up for consideration.
Affordable Housing Sue Beck-Ferkiss & Beth Rosen
• Sue Beck-Ferkiss and Beth Rosen provided a presentation of goals, desired outcomes and
how to navigate the proposals for housing.
• The lower end of the Continuum of Housing Affordability is getting hit hard by COVID so it’s
important to have good housing options for people to stabilize their lives.
• Sue provided an overview of the 2020 Income levels that the City is targeting (80% is
maximum that qualifies for any affordable housing). The average household size is 2.3
people.
• The 30% AMI units are the hardest to build and sustain.
• Guiding plans and policies that inform City priorities include: the 2020-2024 Consolidated
Plan, Housing Strategic Plan, and the Affordable Housing Strategic Plan.
o Consolidated Plan Goals: Increase the supply of affordable housing units, provide
emergency sheltering and services, and increase access to services. Kept broad so that
the projects that come in can fit, can include rental and for sale, we look to special
populations, emergency services related to infection prevention and homeless prevention,
and financial assistance and case management.
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o Housing Strategic Plan: everyone has a healthy, stable housing they can afford.
Difference from the Consolidated Plan is that it is a systems approach to the whole
housing spectrum including affordable housing and other types of housing. Centered in
equity for all, leading with race. The new strategic plan has guiding principles to help
support a holistic approach to evaluating overall priorities for the entire housing system.
Of note to the Commission: building on existing plans and policies, focus direct
investment on the lowest income levels, and make decisions for impact, empowerment
and systems.
For affordable housing, it maintains the 10% goal at 2040.
Continues the four objectives of the affordable housing strategic plan. Fifth pillar refines
and expands development incentives, new funding sources, and new partnerships.
o Affordable Housing Strategic Plan: increase inventory of affordable rental units, preserve
the long-term affordability and physical condition of existing housing stock, increase
housing and supportive services or people with special needs, and support opportunities
to obtain and sustain affordable home ownership.
Greatest needs:
Renters have less housing options that are affordable in our community. The biggest
need is in 0-30% AMI range and biggest mismatch is in the 61-80% AMI.
For sale housing, there is very little inventory in the community that is affordable to
60% or less.
o Northfield Affordable Housing is coming back with a request for a second round of funding
for their affordable rental housing project. Their market study results impacted the entire
distribution of rents across all units. Their presentation will explain more about their
request for additional funds.
o 2021 Financial Resources: There is $3.1M of funding and $2.7M in requests. Beth has
done some primary work based on eligible uses or the different types of requests. It is
possible to fully fund every application, if the commission determines that every
application warrants full funding. No projects lost the funding they needed last year.
• Every source of funds has its own requirements. Beth provided an overview of what can
be funded under CDBG, HOME, and AHF.
• Beth provided an overview of the application components, staff summary, and affordable
housing guidance chart that is provided to the CDBG Commission and Affordable
Housing Board to help make educated decisions.
• Programs where funds are allocated back, such as the Larimer Home Improvement
Program (not an applicant his year), reduced funding means fewer households served.
• Development projects, the project can’t go forward until they have secured the full
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funding needed from all funding sources. For those types of projects, it’s always best to
consider funding the full amount requested in the application.
• Pat Hastings asked for clarification on how requests fit into housing versus human
service – example, Neighbor to Neighbor rent assistance. Beth explained that housing
projects relate to increased inventory of units, whereas rent assistance does not. In
addition, HUD defines rent assistance as a public service. Pat asked about the Larimer
Home Improvement Project (LHIP) and how that gets defined under housing. Beth
explained that LHIP fits under one of the housing strategic goals to support low-income
homeowners retain and sustain their housing. Through LHIP, homeowners can request
assistance for emergency repairs or accessibility improvements – this becomes an
investment directly into the unit.
• Montava / Land Bank: The City has an option to buy five acres of land at Montava, a
development in Northeast Fort Collins. Staff would like to ask the Commission to make a
recommendation (after deliberation of all affordable housing projects) to use the
remaining funds to purchase the five acres for allocation to the land bank.
o Beth and Sue explained that this purchase must meet all land bank requirements and
meets an identified City need that doesn’t create competition with partners.
o Given the unusual nature of this request, staff fielded questions raised by the
Commission members to help them better understood the request to make a
recommendation to Council.
o Questions raised regarded:
Analysis for affordable housing units
What happens if the land is not purchased with these excess funds
Inventory of units and timing of when these units would be available
Affordable Housing Board participation in the recommendation
o Sue will send a memo to the CDBG Commission and AHB in advance of the Housing
Presentation Meeting and members can then determine if they want to make a
decision for recommendation either during Housing Deliberation, consider at a
separate meeting, or not consider at all.
o Beth asked if the Commission would prefer if there was an actual recommendation
from the AHB regarding this project (the AHB is not yet aware of this request for
funding and they don’t usually make recommendations for funding).
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8. NEW BUSINESS
a. Grant Funding Protocol Adam Molzer
• Competitive Process Workbook – New this year, staff created this workbook as a tool
to lay out the projects for both Housing and Human Service. It includes staff guidance
and pages to capture notes with the hope that this is helpful for the Commission in
scoring and making recommendations.
• There are 45 Human Service project requests totaling $1.94M, and $1.1 available for
funding ($800,000 gap).
• Next meeting on March 24 will be a joint session with the Affordable Housing Board.
Votes will not be taken, it’s open to public, and agencies will be present.
• The April 7 meeting is a regular session to workshop through each project, identify
questions to take back to the agencies. This is generally a longer meeting.
• In 2019, the CDBG commission worked with City staff to develop a new scoring
process, based on percentages, to support human service project deliberations.
• Adam requested that the committee reflect and share feedback on this format and if
the committee would like to continue for FY21 deliberations.
• Commission members shared that the colored bands are useful for ranking and
creates some dialogue during deliberation but would like to remove the percentages.
• Adam will amend the Protocol and present it back to the committee to review and
provide additional feedback / suggestions.
9. COMMISSION MEMBER REPORTS
None
10. STAFF REPORTS
None
11. OTHER BUSINESS
• Reimaging Boards and Commissions goes to City Council on March 16. CDBG
Commission will be the Human Service and Housing Funding Board (this change will
take effect in late April).
• City Clerk’s New City Campus charette has been postponed until further notice.
• Budgeting for Outcomes in underway for the 2022 budget. Social Sustainability has
requests for affordable housing and systems approaches to childcare. Adam will
include an offer to recommit $250,000 for Human Service funds.
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12. NEXT MEETING
a. Wednesday, March 24, 2021 | 5:30pm | Remote/Online Via Zoom
13. ADJOURNMENT
Josh Johnson adjourned meeting at 7:37 PM.
Minutes were finalized and approved by the CDBG Commission on ____________________
City of Fort Collins Staff Liaison: ____________________________________________
Adam Molzer
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April 7, 2021