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HomeMy WebLinkAboutAffordable Housing Board - Minutes - 09/20/2012CITY OF FORT COLLINS AFFORDABLE HOUSING BOARD MINUTES SPECIAL BOARD MEETING 281 N. College Ave. Fort Collins, Colorado Sept. 20, 2012 4 to 6 p.m. Chair: Dan Byers Staff Liaison: Ken Waido 970-221-6753 City Council Liaison: Lisa Poppaw Board Members present: Dan Byers, Jeff Johnson Troy Jones, Mike Sollenberger, Wayne Thompson Board Members absent: Ben Blonder, Karen Miller Staff present: Ken Waido Council Members present: None Other Staff present: Chadrick Martinez, Executive Director, Fort Collins Housing Authority; Kristin Fritz, Senior Project Manager, Fort Collins Housing Authority; Kate Jeracki, Note Taker Guests: Marilyn Heller, League of Women Voters Meeting called to order with a quorum present at 4:15 p.m. by Chair Dan Byers AGENDA REVIEW No changes. PUBLIC COMMENT No public comment. NEW BUSINESS Dan Byers announced that Ben Blonder has resigned from the Affordable Housing Board. In addition, Mike Sollenberger and Wayne Thompson are both coming to the end of their terms in December and have indicated to Ken Waido that they do not intend to seek reappointment. Ken asked Board members to help with recruitment of new members. 2 PRIORITY RANKING OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING PROPOSALS Ken Waido reviewed the six applications for Affordable Housing funds have been received for the Fall Cycle of the Competitive Process. The Board discussed each request, then assigned priority ranking for recommendations to the Community Development Block Grant Commission. Jeff Johnson recused himself from the discussion because of a conflict of interest; he sits on the board of Funding Partners, which is involved in request HO-6. HO-1 -- $50,000 grant from the Affordable Housing Fund for the City of Fort Collins Homebuyer Assistance Program HO-2 -- $50,000 grant from HOME funds for the City of Fort Collins Homebuyer Assistance Program The overall program funding is anticipated to serve a minimum of 42 households earning less than 80 percent of Area Median Income with loans of up to 6 percent of a home’s purchase price – up to $10,000 – for downpayment and closing costs. AHF monies provide the City’s portion of the funding match for CDBG loans; HOME funds provide the required federal match. Funds paid back from loans to homeowners are returned to general Competitive Process coffers. HO-3 – $156,240 grant from HOME funds for the Fort Collins Housing Authority’s Tenant-Based Rental Assistance CDDT program HO-4 – $17,434 grant from the Affordable Housing Fund for administrative support for Fort Collins Housing Authority’s Tenant-Based Rental Assistance for CDDT program HO-3 is for the rental assistance component of the Community Dual Disorders Team’s program to support chronically homeless people. The amount requested would provide fro 24 months of rental and deposit assistance for up to 10 individuals suffering from both severe mental illness and a severe substance abuse disorder. Such assistance is eligible for HOME funding only. HO-4 is to support administrative functions of the program — eligibility, compliance, coaching, housing search. Lease negotiations, housing retention and re-housing issues. HO-4 could be covered by HOME or CDBG funds, but there is no current funding available in those budgets, so the funding must come from the AHF. HO-5 -- $75,000 grant from the Affordable Housing Fund for the Larimer Home Improvement Program (LaHIP) LaHIP is administered by the Loveland Housing Authority and provides low- and no- interest loans to county homeowners – including within the city limits of Fort Collins – to address health, safety and energy-efficiency repairs to their homes. The program is available to families earning no more than 80 percent AMI, but the average participant is closer to 50 percent. The Emergency Funds Program provides a one-time-only grant of up to $1,000 to very low-income families – 50 percent AMI or below – for emergency 3 repair needs. The amount requested will match the larger state DOH grant for housing rehabilitation. Request components are $42,500 for rehab for an estimated three households; $25,000 for emergency repairs for an estimated 25 households; $7,500 for program administration. Repaid loans are returned to the program; fund must come from the AHF. HO-6 – $1,072,081 loan to Villages Ltd. For Property Acquisition: Phase 1 This request from the nonprofit development arm of the Fort Collins Housing Authority seeks to provide partial financing for the purchase of 284 affordable rental units at risk of converting to market rate rents. The amount requested is 5 percent of the total purchase price of $21,456,215 for three adjacent properties at the northeast corner of Horsetooth Road and Shields Street which serve households between 45 percent and 80 percent of AMI. The applicant has secured significant commitments for other financial layering of the project, which must close by Dec. 15. Purchase of the property will extend affordability of units to 2043. Chadrick Martinez of the Fort Collins Housing Authority explained that HO-6, the Villages project, is being underwritten by First Bank and Funding Partners. Villages has also applied for a $2 million grant from the Colorado Division of Housing for the first phase of the project. Phase II will be the tax credit phase, in which the nonprofit will take out short-term – 12-24 month – debt for rehabilitation of the units. Dan Byers asked if the financing should fall through on the acquisition, would the units go to market rate rentals? Ken Waido said yes. Martinez explained that the current owner’s 15-year tax credits are expiring at the end of the year. The Villages represents 15 percent of the City’s tax-credit portfolio and has since the early 1990s. If they were to go to market rates, it would take 10-15 years to replace 60-80 units at a time, and longer than 2 years to approve a deal, and another 15 years to get back to where we are right now. He added that the property is worth keeping affordable, given the number of units in one spot, but some components are at the end of their useful life and will require $20,000 to $30,000 per unit to rehab. The location has passed all HUD-required environmental reviews, and FirstBank is not requiring any additional. Full funding of the amount requested is required because of the many pieces of the financial puzzle that need to fit together, Martinez said. If they don’t make the closing, the deal’s off the table. Mike Sollenberger said this was the most exciting opportunity to retain and expand the city’s affordable housing base he has seen and offered kudos to Martinez. He asked if there was enough money to fund all of the projects fully. Ken Waido said that all of the housing projects could be funded, but the CDBG has an additional $680,000 in requests for four additional proposals – three for Public Facilities and one for Economic Development – in the Fall Cycle. 4 After discussion, the Affordable Housing Board gave the proposals the following ranking: 1. HO-6; recommended full funding 2. HO-3 and HO-4; partial funding acceptable 3. HO-1 and HO-2; partial funding acceptable 4. HO-5; partial funding acceptable Dan Byers felt they were all good programs, and asked Boardmembers for comments on the rankings to share with the CDBG Commission at its meeting on Oct. 11. HO-6 was the obvious first choice, and the Board felt it should be fully funded even if other proposals were not. Wayne Thompson pointed out that it keeps a huge number of units affordable, units that would take a decade and a half to replace. Troy Jones said HO-3 and HO-4 are important because of the very-low income population served. Ken Waido added that it is part of the city’s effort to break the cycle of homelessness. Wayne Thompson said it seemed that HO-3 and 4 spend a lot of money to help 10 people, and HO-1 and 2 provided more bang for the buck. Ken said he expects demand for homebuyer’s assistance will pick up soon, now that the City has hired someone to administer the program. Mike Sollenberger thought HO-5 should be a lower priority because the people served are already in a home. Wayne Thompson felt that it was something that could help people stay in their homes by addressing safety and quality of life issues. IMPLEMENTATION ACTIONS FOR STUDENT HOUSING ACTION PLAN PLAN Given City Council’s fast track for implementation of portions of the plan, Dan Byers asked the Board if they would like to send an immediate memo to Council outlining how these changes would affect affordable housing as a whole. Ken Waido said Phase I changes, including requiring an operations manual for any multifamily project to be made available to the public, are set to be considered immediate; Phase II and III will be considered at Council’s Oct. 23 worksession. Kristin Fritz pointed out that the Planning and Zoning Board was scheduled to consider Phase II items later this evening (Sept. 20). One of the specific issues is lowering the limit on the number of units that trigger a Type II review, which requires public hearings in front of P&Z, to 50 units or 75 bedrooms. According to the currently Land Use Code such small projects are reviewed by a hearing officer only in a Type I review. Jeff Johnson said limiting Type I reviews to projects with less than 50 units or 75 bedrooms was a real bad idea. He pointed out that it is already difficult enough to get modifications for affordable housing projects. Chadrick Martinez added that elevating the 5 level of review provides another place for objections, and when affordable housing projects ask for modifications, it raises more red flags. Mike Sollenberger agreed, saying the entire Land Use Code does not need to be changed to address specific problem areas. He also rejected the idea of defining “student housing” in the Land Use Code and then restricting it in certain areas. Students can pay greater than market rents, which pushes all rents up and has a direct impact on supply and demand. Johnson was most concerned about the unpredictability of Type II reviews that can have a direct negative impact on affordability across the board. A hearing officer can take the time needed to review a project for code compliance and technical issues; decisions made in public hearings can be based on subjective factors and complicated issues can be difficult to articulate. The Type II process can also result in time delays that cause developers to lose control of the property and/or financing opportunities, such as the Villages project discussed earlier in the meeting. The sentiment was to leave the Land Use Code unchanged. Troy Jones moved that the Affordable Housing Board recommend against setting the trigger point for a Type II review of multifamily housing projects at 50 units or 75 bedrooms. Mike Sollenberger seconded. Passed unanimously. Dan Byers said another proposed change was to limit the number of four-bedroom units to 25 percent; staff had recommended 30 percent. Troy Jones said that limiting the number of four-bedroom apartments in new multifamily projects could create a shortage of affordable units for families. Mike Sollenberger pointed out that developers who do affordable housing and student projects concentrate on one- and two-bedroom units. Wayne Thompson agreed with the 25 percent limit, and suggested letting Council know the Board would be in favor of the change. Troy Jones moved that the Affordable Housing Board recommend that a 25 percent limit on the number of four-bedroom apartments in multifamily housing projects seems reasonable but the limit should not be reduced below 25 percent. Mike Sollenberger seconded. Passed unanimously. Troy Jones will draft a memo to Council and circulate it by email for approval by the Board. As soon as it is approved, Ken Waido will send it directly to Council. Kristin Fritz added that the Housing Authority has also sent a memo to the Planning and Zoning Board. FUTURE MEETING AGENDAS At the Oct. 4 meeting, the Board will discuss: The Board’s Work Plan for 2013 Affordable Housing Redevelopment Displacement Mitigation Strategies Student Housing Action Plan Dan Byers will formally invite Lisa Poppaw to attend. 6 -- Meeting adjourned at 6:05 p.m. by Chair Dan Byers. --