HomeMy WebLinkAboutAffordable Housing Board - Minutes - 05/03/2012CITY OF FORT COLLINS
AFFORDABLE HOUSING BOARD
281 N. College Ave.
Fort Collins, Colorado
May 3, 2012
4 to 6 p.m.
Chair: Dan Byers
Staff Liaison: Ken Waido 970-221-6753
City Council Liaison: Lisa Poppaw
Board Members present: Ben Blonder, Dan Byers, Jeff Johnson, Troy Jones, Karen
Miller, Mike Sollenberger
Board Members absent: Wayne Thompson
Advance Planning Department Staff present: Ken Waido, Chief Planner; Beth Rosen,
Affordable Housing Administrator
Council Members present: None
Other Staff present: Beth Sowder, Neighborhood Services Manger; Kate Jeracki, Note
Taker
Guests: Marilyn Heller, League of Women Voters; CSU Student Observer Bruno
Meeting called to order with a quorum present at 4:10 p.m. by Chair Dan Byers
Ken Waido has returned, and was welcomed warmly by the Board.
There were no changes to the agenda as presented.
PUBLIC COMMENT
Marilyn Heller reported that the League of Women Voters’ public forum on housing for
veterans was well attended and will be broadcast on YouTube as well as Channel 14. Dan
Byers said he would like to watch it.
NEW BUSINESS
APPROVAL OF MINUTES — The minutes from the April, 5, 2012, were approved as
presented on a motion from Mike Sollenberger seconded by Karen Miller, with Jeff
Johnson abstaining. Johnson, a member of the CARE Housing Board, had arrived after
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the Analysis of Impediments to Fair Housing discussion, and took issue with the
consultant’s characterization of CARE policies. He asked that the current minutes reflect
that while the original charter provided housing strictly for working families, CARE now
offers some units for seniors and for the unemployed with some form of income. Karen
Miller was concerned that the consultant’s final report might not be accurate, and Mike
Sollenberger wanted clarification on how the current CARE policies squared with HUD
Fair Housing regulations. Ken Waido will invite a representative from CARE to next
month’s meeting, as well as a representative from BBC Consulting, to clarify the issue.
JULY MEETING DATE – Ken Waido pointed out that the regular monthly meeting for
July meeting is scheduled for July 5. By consensus, the Board agreed to reschedule the
meeting to July 12.
FORT COLLINS HOUSING AUTHORITY FEE WAIVERS UPDATE — Ken
Waido said that Deputy City Manager Diane Jones had been scheduled to give this report
but could not attend. It will be presented at a future meeting.
PERIODIC REVIEW SELF-ASSESSMENT — The Board discussed the
questionnaire sent to individual members to determine a consensus response that Ken
Waido will forward to City Council by June 1. During discussion, Dan Byers said that
Council seemed to be interested in the Board’s opinion and members should keep
affordable housing issues, such as student housing, historic preservation and budgeting,
in front of Council. Ken Waido suggested speaking during the public comment portion of
Council meetings when relevant items are on the agenda. The issue of whether the Board
should focus more on subsidized housing or market-driven affordability was also
discussed.
STUDENT HOUSING ACTION PLAN UPDATE — Beth Sowder, Neighborhood
Services Manager, presented a report on the status of SHAP, a collaborative effort of the
City, CSU, and Front Range Community College, neighborhood organizations,
developers, the Fort Collins Board of Realtors, the Northern Colorado Rental Housing
Association, CSU student government and students at large. The effort originated in Plan
Fort Collins to address a potential CSU enrollment of 34,000, up from the current 27,000.
Sowder said while that number had been projected to be reached within 10 years, recently
CSU has revised that to perhaps as long as 20 years.
Sowder said staff is now gathering feedback from Boards and Commissions as well as
from a large group dialog facilitated by the CSU Center for Public Deliberation to
develop a prioritized action list for City Council and a map showing areas of future
demand for student housing, to be presented in October. She recapped the top issues
identified so far, which included expanded transit options, comprehensive planning
strategies, improved design standards and predictable development approval processes,
better enforcement and greater accountability for landlords, and improved education on
existing policies and incentives.
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Dan Byers asked if it would be possible to quantify the existing supply and demand for
student housing. Sowder said there are 17 projects with 2100 units in some stage of
development; she distributed a list of projects and said the most current information is
available on the City’s website. She added that what the City didn’t want was a glut of
student-focused housing, given the unpredictable nature of enrollments past 5 years or so.
Ken Waido pointed out the natural progression of student housing demand over a 4-year
college career, from dorm to apartment to house. Beth Sowder confirmed that the No. 1
housing choice in a survey of CSU students was a house. Mike Sollenberger agreed that
you can’t modify student behavior by building more student housing, and also asked for
more demand metrics. Jeff Johnson offered to supply some national data if the Board
would be interested.
Jeff Johnson pointed out that historic preservation concerns have a significant and
arguably negative impact on multi-family development in the areas closest to the CSU
campus, in the Planned Development Overlay District. Conflicting policies affect supply
which affects affordability. Mike Sollenberger asked Ken Waido to confirm that the
Boulder City Council had adopted a policy of not approving any more student projects in
town, so CU will have to build more dorms for its own students. He added that if CSU
has land for a new stadium it should have land for dorms, and it is irresponsible to knock
down single-family homes to build student housing. Johnson argued that with the 3-
unrelated rule, multi-family units are a more efficient way to provide housing for
students.
Sowder said that through the dialog process, FRCC issues emerged that were different
from CSU’s. The typical FRCC student more closely resembles the person in need of
affordable housing, with 10 percent of the 6,000 students at risk of homelessness.
Transfort doesn’t serve FRCC’s campus on East Prospect Road. Jeff Johnson would like
to get more input from FRCC, so the student housing issue isn’t so CSU driven.
Sowder said she would return to a future meeting to get the Board’s formal
recommendation to Council on action items.
OTHER BUSINESS
PROVINCETOWNE — Troy Jones said that email correspondence since the last
meeting shows that 67% of homes in Provincetowne are now owner-occupied and an
application has been submitted to the FHA for loan eligibility.
Ben Blonder presented an update on the individual property that had sparked interest in
the Provincetowne covenants. The City Attorney has granted an individual waiver of the
owner-occupied requirement and the home is now scheduled for a short sale to close on
May 23 — the fourth contract on the property so far. Blonder said while the price cap of
$237,500 remains in place, he is concerned the waiver will set a precedent. Mike
Sollenberger pointed out there is no way to stop owners from renting now, and it’s likely
that the renters are people in need of affordable housing. Blonder said that the current
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sellers’ market will be pushing prices up in the next two months, and investors will be
able to increase rents as well. Beth Rosen pointed out that if the number of deed-
restricted units drops from the current 70% to 60%, the City’s interest in the subdivision
will be less than 50%.
Troy Jones felt that while the individual homeowner has a solution and the issue is less
urgent, the Board should continue the discussion to determine what the City should do in
the future to keep housing affordable and what lessons have been learned from
Provincetowne. Jeff Johnson asked to review a copy of the existing covenants, and Beth
Rosen said she would forward them to Board members.
Dan Byers would like the Board to formulate a message on the issue to deliver to City
Council.
FUTURE MEETING AGENDAS
At the June 7 meeting, the Board will discuss:
Clarification on CARE Housing policies.
Clarification of Boulder student housing policy.
Provincetowne covenants.
Revisions to Board Bylaws.
FCHA fee waiver.
At some future meeting, the Board would like to:
Hear a report on the Land Bank Program.
Review the effects of the City’s Green Building Code on housing affordability.
Discuss outreach to Fort Collins Housing Authority on alternative models of
ownership for mobile home parks and residents.
Meeting adjourned at 6:10 p.m. by Chair Dan Byers.