HomeMy WebLinkAboutAffordable Housing Board - Minutes - 07/07/2005CITY OF FORT COLLINS
AFFORDABLE HOUSING BOARD
MEETING MINUTES
281 N. College Ave.
Fort Collins, Colorado
July 7, 2005
Kay Rios, Chair
Denise Rogers, Vice Chair
Ken Waido, Staff Liaison, 970-221-6753
Kurt Kastein, City Council Liaison, 970-223-0425
Board Members Present: Jon Fairchild, Michelle Jacobs, Joe Hebert, Joe Rowan,
Peter Tippett, and Kevin Brinkman. Kay Rios and Denise Rogers were excused.
Advance Planning Staff Present: Maurice Head, Clark Mapes and Ken Waido.
Council Members Present: None
Guests: Mark Beck, Chair, Commission on Disability; Dana McBride, Homebuilders
Association; Glen Schlueter, Stormwater Utility; Felix Lee, Building and Zoning
Director; Tess Heffernan, Policy and Project Manager, City Manager's Office.
Acting Chair Jon Fairchild called the meeting to order with a quorum present at
4:05 p.m.
There were no comments from the public.
New Business
Minutes
Jon Fairchild moved to accept the June 9, 2005 minutes as submitted; Michelle
Jacobs seconded, motion carried unanimously.
Conflicting City Policies and/or Regulations and Impacts on Affordable Housing
Programs (e.g., Practical Housing for All)
Ken Waido began with a summary of the previous meeting's discussion. One issue
presented was the difficulty in building ADA accessible ramps given the space
restrictions between sidewalk and house on narrower lots. The question raised was
whether there were City regulations further exacerbating the problem, for example,
Stormwater drainage slope requirements. Glen Schlueter from Stormwater and
Felix Lee, Building and Zoning Director, were invited to the July 7 meeting to
discuss possible inconsistencies and contradictions in City code that could hinder
efforts to provide accessible housing.
Fort Collins Affordable Housing Board
July 7, 2005 Minutes
Page 2 of 4
According to Dana McBride, Practical Housing for All, the main difficulty from a
builder's point of view is combining an accessible no step entry with the City's 2%
drainage grade requirement. Mr. Schlueter replied that there is nothing in the
City's Stormwater code to prevent builders from complying with ADA accessibility
recommendations. In fact, builders interested in alternate drainage plans can
present them to City staff for review, although lower grades typically require more
expensive drainage systems to meet City standards. Mr. Lee added that there is
nothing in the Building Code that specifically blocks PHA, and the need to
encourage accessible housing in Fort Collins has already been endorsed by Council.
Thus builders can comply with City code and create accessible homes, though extra
planning will be necessary.
Michelle Jacobs inquired about cost effective design examples used in other
communities, such as slab construction. Apparently the combination of Fort
Collins's climate, soil type, and typical use of basements prevents some of the more
common solutions utilized elsewhere.
The Board agreed that successfully implementing PHA requires more attention in
the early design and development phases, since changes and additions once
construction has begun can quickly become problematic. One idea is to have PHA
advocated by City staff at the conceptual review stage. Another possibility would
be to educate engineers to look for and to tag sites in the drafting phase that easily
fit the necessary grading profiles.
Jon Fairchild asked that PHA be encouraged —but not mandated —by the City during
the development review process. Staff said they will look into it.
3-Unrelated Ordinance
Tess Heffernan, Policy and Project Manager for the City Manager's Office, began by
summarizing the ordinance and Council's current actions. The law was first enacted
in the 1960s, but has been deemed unenforceable for many years now, and has
been largely ignored as of late.
The new Council at their June meeting asked the City Manager's Office to provide
them with three scenarios. The first changes the 3-unrelated offense from criminal
to civil. This would shift burden of proof to tenants and landlords, and would, in
theory, be more enforceable. Second is a permit system for up to four tenants,
applicable citywide. The third scenario is a permit system for specially zoned areas.
An additional requirement for the permit scenarios is that any registration system
Council enacts would need to be entirely fee supported to fully offset the cost of
staff members and inspections. Permits would be tied to properties to help track
problem areas. Also, staff discretion would be allowed throughout the process.
Ms. Heffernan discussed the Economic and Market Study, the motivation for the
possible shift from three to four allowed household members. The study showed
that 64% of violator households were found to contain four members.
Fort Collins Affordable Housing Board
July 7, 2005 Minutes
Page 3 of 4
Kevin Brinkman asked about possible negative consequences if the first scenario
were enacted. Ms. Heffernan replied that if the current law or the first scenario
were enforced, average rents of violators would rise by $100 on average. The
City's rental vacancy rate would drop significantly as well, which would increase low
end rental prices citywide.
Jon Fairchild expressed his concerns regarding the high operating cost due to the
inspections that would be required to apply for a permit. Ms. Heffernan explained
that the inspection process would be for tenants' safety. The City could make sure
landlords truly were in compliance with rental codes, i.e. egress windows in all
bedrooms. The City does not want renters to have a false sense of security
regarding their housing, which could happen if the permit system were simply
based on landlord affidavits. In addition, Ms. Heffernan reminded the Board that
spread over three years, permit costs per tenant were not too expensive.
Michelle Jacobs brought up the issue of segregation possible with a zoned system.
Affordable housing is opposed to such a system due to the creation of possible
slums. Santa Barbara, which enacted a similar zoned system, let their college
rental areas run down over time. Ms. Heffernan acknowledged the possibility of
problems with zoned areas, but noted none of the scenarios were perfect. The real
issue is that single family homes were not designed to house large groups of
college students. Ms. Heffernan stated that Council's actions regarding the
ordinance are a move toward a long term solution.
Jon Fairchild said he supported the idea of a citywide permit system, because
"philosophically zones create slums". He moved the board state their support
for a citywide affidavit style system without up -front inspection. The
motion died for lack of a second.
Michelle Jacobs was against the motion because the issue before Council is still very
volatile at this point. Ms. Jacob and Mr. Herbert felt the Board needs to wait until
after the August 23 Council study session before taking a stance. Peter Tippett
expressed his skepticism that any permit system could work. Mr. Tippett was
concerned that the City is working to create another unenforceable ordinance. Jon
Fairchild expressed his concern that the Board takes some sort of stance before it is
too late. Tess Heffernan assured the Board they would have time to give their
input, and offered to return to provide another update.
Budgeting for Outcomes Update
Staff updated the Board on the BFO process. At this point, according to Maurice
Head, the future of the City's Affordable Housing programs is still in flux. Mr.
Waido explained the drilling platform process to the board. Offers are ranked, and
funds distributed according to rank. The top ranked offers get funded, but a line is
drawn when funds are exhausted. Any offers below the final funded level are cut.
He reported that at this point all Boards and Commissions and their staff support
are below the funding line. Staff will update the Board as they learn more.
Fort Collins Affordable Housing Board
July 7, 2005 Minutes
Page 4 of 4
Michelle Jacobs stated that affordable housing and economic development are
interdependent, and hoped that the City would take this into consideration as the
budgeting process continued.
Housing Affordability Index Model Update
Staff reported that although the HAI generated a great deal of interest at previous
meetings, they have not heard from any of the people who volunteered assistance.
Maurice Head reported that BBC Consultants will be coming to give a presentation
on the HAI and variables being considered in the model. Mr. Head stated that
development of the model is going well.
Michelle Jacobs will remind people who offered to help with the Index and
who agreed to take surveys.
Old Business
Update/Reports on Sub -Committee Efforts
ema ma -
Liaison Reports
None.
Other Business
Open Board Discussion
None.
Meeting adjourned 5:37 pm.
Respectfully submitted by
Stephanie Sydorko
July 25, 2005