HomeMy WebLinkAboutAgenda - Full - Finance Committee - 04/19/2021 -
Finance Administration
215 N. Mason
2nd Floor
PO Box 580
Fort Collins, CO 80522
970.221.6788
970.221.6782 - fax
fcgov.com
AGENDA
Council Finance & Audit Committee
April 19, 2021
10:00 am - noon
Zoom Meeting 27TUhttps://zoom.us/j/8140111859U27T
Mayor Troxell conferred with the City Manager and the City Attorney and have determined
that the Committee should conduct this meeting remotely because meeting in person would
not be prudent for some or all persons due to the current public health emergency.
Approval of Minutes from the March 15, 2021 Council Finance Committee meeting.
1. Affordable Housing Fee Credits 20 mins. V. Shaw
S. Beck-Ferkiss
2. Immigration Legal Defense Fund 30 mins. K. Stannert
C. Champine
3. Hickory Village Mobile Home Park Resident Owned Community (ROC) Funding
30 mins. K. Stannert
S. Beck-Ferkiss
Council Finance Committee
Agenda Planning Calendar 2021
RVSD 04/15/21 ck
Apr. 19P
th
P 2021
Affordable Housing Fee Credits 20 min V. Shaw
S. Beck-Ferkiss
Immigration Legal Defense Fund 30 min K. Stannert
C. Champine
Hickory Village Mobile Home Park Resident Owned Community
(ROC) Funding 30 min K. Stannert
S. Beck-Ferkiss
May 17P
th
P 2021
GERP Review 30 min B. Dunn
Assumptions for the 2022 Budget 30 min L. Pollack
Carnegie Center CCIP Acceleration 30 min J. McDonald
K. Mannon
Timberline Recycling Center Operations 30 min V. Shaw
C. Mitchell
Jun. 21P
st
P 2021
2020 Fund Balance, Revenue, and Expenditure Review 30 min B. Dunn
Utilities Income-Qualified Assistance Program (IQAP) 30 min L. Smith
July 19P
th
P 2021
2020 Audit Results
Future Council Finance Committee Topics:
• Golf Debt Issuance
• Metro District Policy Update – TBD
• Revenue Diversification – TBD
• Front Range Financial Comparison – Blaine Dunn – August 2021
• 2022 Development Review and Capital Expansion Fee Updates – August 2021
o Consideration of new fees
• 2021 Annual Adjustment Ordinance – September 2021
• Financial Policy Updates – October 2021
• Future Capital Projects and Debt Financing
• Utility Long-term Financial Plan and Capital Improvement Plan – November 2021
Finance Administration
215 N. Mason
2nd Floor
PO Box 580
Fort Collins, CO 80522
970.221.6788
970.221.6782 - fax
fcgov.com
Finance Committee Meeting Minutes
March 15, 2021
10 am - noon
Zoom Meeting
Council Attendees: Mayor Wade Troxell, Ken Summers, Ross Cunniff, Susan Gutowsky
Staff: Darin Atteberry, Kelly DiMartino, Kyle Stannert, Travis Storin, Carrie Daggett,
John Duval, Tyler Marr, Jennifer Poznanovic, Jackie Kozak-Thiel, Victoria Shaw,
Sue Beck-Ferkiss, Erik Martin, Blaine Dunn, Dave Lenz, Jo Cech, Zack Mozer,
Jordan Granath, Kelley Vodden
Others: Kevin Jones, Chamber
____________________________________________________________________________________
Meeting called to order at 10:02 am
Mayor Troxell; I would like to note for the record that I have conferred with the City Manager and the City
Attorney and have determined that the Committee should conduct this meeting remotely because meeting in
person would not be prudent for some or all persons due to a current public health agency recommendation.
Approval of Minutes from the February 22, 2021 Council Finance Committee Meeting. Ross Cunniff moved for
approval of the minutes as presented. Ken Summers seconded the motion. Minutes were approved unanimously
via roll call by Ken Summers, Ross Cunniff and Mayor Troxell.
A. Marketplace Facilitators & Economic Nexus Update
Jennifer Poznanovic, Sr. Project & Revenue Manager
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
The purpose of this item is to provide an update on impacts from the U.S. Supreme Court’s South Dakota v.
Wayfair, Inc. decision (June 2018) since the City’s adoption of Marketplace Facilitators and Economic Nexus
Ordinances, which was effective November 1, 2020.
GENERAL DIRECTION SOUGHT AND SPECIFIC QUESTIONS TO BE ANSWERED
This item provides an opportunity to provide an update and discuss impacts of the Marketplace Facilitators and
Economic Nexus Ordinance with Council Finance Committee.
BACKGROUND/DISCUSSION
U.S. Supreme Court Decision in South Dakota v. Wayfair, Inc.
2
Under the City’s sales and use tax ordinances, sales tax is levied on all sales and purchases of tangible personal
property and taxable services at retail unless prohibited under the constitution or other law of the United
States. In June 2018, the United States Supreme Court decided the case of South Dakota v. Wayfair, Inc. (2018).
South Dakota enacted a statute requiring internet sellers with no physical presence in the state to collect and
remit sales tax, which was not allowed under prior Supreme Court rulings.
In Wayfair, the Supreme Court overturned its prior rulings that had held that a state may only tax a retailer if
that retailer has a physical presence in the state. The Wayfair court held that an out-of-state retailer’s physical
presence in the taxing state is not necessary for the state to require the seller to collect and remit its sales tax.
Rather, a state could require an out-of-state retailer to collect and remit its sales tax if the retailer has a
substantial economic nexus with the state. The Supreme Court approved of South Dakota’s system finding it did
not place an unconstitutional burden on interstate commerce, because the system set a threshold amount
below which smaller retailers did not have to collect tax, provided a statewide single point of remittance and tax
administration, simplified tax rate structures, set other uniform rules, and applied only prospectively after its
adoption.
The Colorado Municipal League (CML) Sales Tax Simplification Committee met in October 2018 and all self-
collected home rule municipalities agreed to continue voluntary compliance to keep the municipal sales tax
system in the state as simple as possible. Through the Committee’s direction, a group of municipal attorneys
and municipal finance staff worked to develop a model ordinance with uniform definitions and requirements.
The intent behind the model ordinance is to clarify who can collect and remit taxes along with clarifying the
authority given to taxing jurisdictions by the U.S. Supreme Court in the Wayfair case. The stated goal behind the
ordinance is uniformity and simplicity so that all municipalities in Colorado can collect tax from online or remote
retailers.
Colorado Department of Revenue (DOR) Implementation of Wayfair
In July 2019, State House Bill 19-1240 established an economic nexus for purposes of state sales tax on retail
sales made by retailers without a physical presence in Colorado. As of October 2020, HB19-1240 requires
marketplace facilitators (a person that operates an online marketplace, such as Amazon) to collect and remit
sales tax on behalf of marketplace sellers (a person that sells goods through the online marketplace). While
HB19-1240 has set some precedent in Colorado for the collection of sales tax from retailers without physical
presence, its requirements do not apply to sales taxes imposed by home rule municipalities, which have their
own taxing authority under the Colorado Constitution.
In furtherance of HB19-1240, the Colorado Department of Revenue has developed a software system to allow
retailers a single point to remit sales tax. The Department has made the system available for home rule
municipalities to collectively provide retailers a system similar to the one operated by South Dakota. The
Department collects state and local sales tax from out-of-state retailers for those taxing entities for which it
already collects sales tax from in-state retailers. The Department collects for approximately 265 jurisdictions,
150 statutory cities, 24 home rule municipalities and all but two counties.
Colorado Department of Revenue’s Single Point of Remittance Software (SUTS System) & Single GIS System
The Department’s single point of remittance software, including the SUTS System and GIS System, is an option
for the numerous self-collecting taxing jurisdictions to align more closely with the South Dakota tax system.
Remote sellers with sufficient economic nexus can file and pay tax via the SUTS System to those taxing
jurisdictions that have chosen to participate in the system. The SUTS System is available for any business, not
just those whose only contact with the City is economic nexus. Businesses with physical presence can file and
remit taxes using the SUTS System. Businesses with physical presence in the City still need to have a Fort Collins
3
sales tax license. The portal is essentially an additional filing option for businesses, meaning businesses could file
on paper, using the City’s online system, or via the Department’s SUTS System.
Colorado Municipal League’s (CML) Model Ordinance & the City of Fort Collins
The City of Fort Collins’ Marketplace Facilitator and Economic Nexus Ordinance was effective November 1, 2020.
The Ordinance is based on a model ordinance prepared by a working group of municipal attorneys and
municipal finance staff, coordinated by the Colorado Municipal League (CML). In addition to adoption of the
Ordinance, the City also entered into an agreement with the Colorado Department of Revenue to allow such
taxpayers to remit tax to the City using the Department’s single point of remittance software (SUTS System).
Top Internet Retailers Licensed in Fort Collins
Nationally, e-commerce represents 14.0%* of total retail sales. Of the top 10 U.S. companies based on
percentage of e-commerce sales, eight are licensed in Fort Collins (see chart below).
*U.S. Census Quarterly Retail E-Commerce Sales 4P
th
P Quarter 2020
**Top 10 US companies based on % of e-commerce sales, eMarketer, July 2018
Impact of Marketplace Facilitators and Economic Nexus Ordinances for Fort Collins
Marketplace Facilitators and Economic Nexus Ordinance was effective November 1, 2020, which began
impacting November 2020 tax returns (December tax collections). On the City’s Monthly Sales and Use Tax
Report, most online retailers are in the “Miscellaneous Retailers” category.
Below is a breakdown of the City’s 18 categories with the percent change between 2019 and 2020:
4
Miscellaneous Retailers saw the greatest positive percent change of any category at 19% ($1.8M) from 2019 to
2020. This increase can be attributed to a shift in buying behavior towards online goods in general, and in
particular due to the pandemic. It also includes one month of tax collections from Economic Nexus and
Marketplace Facilitators. The percent change from December 2019 to December 2020 was 79% or $650M.
The trend in significant growth in the Miscellaneous Retailers category has been consistent for the first three
months of tax collections since the ordinance:
• December 2020 compared to 2019 saw 79% growth or $650k
• January 2021 compared to 2020 saw 66% growth or $850k
• February 2021 compared to 2020 saw 71% growth or $550k
DISSCUSSION / NEXT STEPS:
Mayor Troxell; good report and interesting data - thank you
Can you remark on our sales tax coming into this year? It looks like our sales tax revenue is looking rather strong
Jennifer Poznanovic; it is looking good so far this year - 2.4% up so far YTD for sales and use tax
Mayor Troxell; good foundation – reworked 2121 budget – we are in a good position pending any unforeseeable
events
Ross Cunniff; thank you – this is good news that it is operating as it should and good news for the e-retailers that
we have a consistent framework across the state. All good news – 650 out of 1.8M - will be interesting to see
how that tracks over the year
Ken Summers; good news for the city to recoup some sales tax revenue in a challenging environment.
GENERAL DIRECTION SOUGHT AND SPECIFIC QUESTIONS TO BE ANSWERED
This item provides an opportunity to provide an update and discuss impacts of the Marketplace Facilitators and
Economic Nexus Ordinance with Council Finance Committee.
5
B. Land Bank Sale
Victoria Shaw, Sr. Financial Analyst
Sue Beck-Ferkiss, Lead Specialist Social Sustainability
SUBJECT FOR DISCUSSION
Land Bank parcel sale for affordable home ownership housing
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
In response to the 2017 City Council priority to deploy a land bank parcel for affordable homeownership, staff
has partnered with a development team to create an opportunity to develop 54 townhomes on the Kechter land
bank parcel. Although affordable housing, especially affordable for-sale housing, requires substantial subsidy,
for this development the City subsidy will only consist of the in-kind donation of land value. The parcel was
purchased in 2002 for $556,000, appraised in 2018 at $1,200,000 and the proposed sale price is $25,000. The
contribution of the $1,175,000 in land value translates to a subsidy level of $21,759 per unit. The City’s only
contribution is the value of the land and will not require additional cash investment. Partners are bringing an
additional $4.1M or $76,000 per unit of cash subsidy.
GENERAL DIRECTION SOUGHT AND SPECIFIC QUESTIONS TO BE ANSWERED
Does the Council Finance Committee support the sale of the Kechter land bank parcel for $25,000 for the
purpose of developing 54 permanently affordable for-sale townhomes?
BACKGROUND/DISCUSSION
The Land Bank Program is the City’s only long-term affordable housing incentive. This program was created in
City Code in 2001 with the purpose to enable the City to acquire, hold, and sell real property to assist housing
providers in providing permanently affordable rental and homeownership housing. One land bank parcel has
been sold to date. In 2016, the Horsetooth parcel was sold to Housing Catalyst and has since been developed
into 96 affordable rental apartments.
Following the deployment of the Horsetooth parcel, in 2017 City Council established a priority to issue a Request
for Proposals (RFP) for a home ownership development project on a land bank parcel. Staff determined the
Kechter parcel to be appropriate for home ownership, obtained an appraisal, conducted a historic review, and
compiled file documents that would be relevant to the sale process. Staff proceeded to issue an RFP for the sale
of the Kechter parcel. Only one response was received, so a second RFP was issued, and 3 responses were
received. TWG, a for-profit developer out of Indiana was selected and the City entered into an Exclusive
Negotiating Agreement for the Kechter Townhomes project.
A development partnership was created consisting of:
• Housing Catalyst (HC) to provide local technical assistance and tax abatement
• Elevations Community Land Trust (ECLT) as a community land trust partner
• TWG as the developer and builder of the townhome community
• The City of Fort Collins as the seller of the land
The partners worked together to determine project feasibility, and it was quickly determined that substantial
subsidy would be required to offer homes at affordable sales prices. Beyond the subsidy pledged by ECLT and
tax abatement provided by HC, the parties determined that additional subsidy would be required to meet the
goal of affordable ownership in perpetuity. The City would need to donate most of the value of the land and the
Colorado Division of Housing approved additional subsidy for the project.
6
Both the Division of Housing and ECLT are providing more than their typical subsidy because this project will
deliver permanently affordable home ownership units. Habitat for Humanity has been the primary developer of
affordable home ownership product in Fort Collins and the City has provided between $40,000 and $74,500 in
cash subsidy per unit for those homes. For Kechter Townhomes, the City’s contribution is only the value of the
land and equates to $21,759 per unit. These townhomes will also be affordable in perpetuity through the land
trust coupled with deed restrictions whereas a typical deed restricted unit is restricted for at least 20 years.
Kechter Townhomes will be the City’s first permanently affordable home ownership project.
Summary of Subsidy:
Investor Per Unit Typical Subsidy
Amount
Total subsidy
Elevations Community
Land Trust
(cash)
$48,500 $30,000 $2,619,000
Division of Housing
(cash)
$27,500 $15,000 $1,485,000
City of Fort Collins
(in kind)
$21,759 $38,970 ($50K for
ownership)
$1,175,000
Total $97,759 direct
subsidy per unit
$5.28M direct subsidy
Upon construction of the development, TWG will sell the units to ECLT who will keep ownership of the land and
sell the homes to qualified low-income buyers. ECLT will certify buyers, confirm sale prices and be the long-term
steward of the community.
On March 4, 2021, the project was approved by a Hearing Officer. Legal documents are being circulated to
assure permanent affordability. Staff intends to bring a Purchase and Sale Agreement, incorporating the
requirement for permanent affordability, conditioned on the project successfully completing the City’s
development review process for Council consideration in May. The City will be selling the land, but because this
community will be permanently affordable with the land held by ECLT, the land remains a community asset even
after the sale.
Next Step:
Council consideration of the Purchase and Sale Agreement.
DISSCUSSION / NEXT STEPS
Ken Summers; overall a good project -thinking of the long-term benefit for someone who is trying to make
progress in terms of their financial situation - they buy into an affordable unit and then for them to get out of an
affordable unit - is there some kind of an equity building opportunity?
Victoria Shaw; home ownership can be a substantial path to wealth building for families - future buyers would
also have to be certified and qualified for affordable housing to purchase the unit - the first owners would take
some of the equity with them which would include any equity they built by paying down their mortgage as well
7
as Elevation has a specific formula that allows them to take some appreciation of the unit with them - would
not be as much as a market rate unit since we are maintaining that affordability for subsequent generations.
Sue Beck-Ferkiss; since we have Elevation working with the homeowners – they will be getting financial coaching
- they will be encouraged to move on and give the opportunity to another qualified family.
Ross Cunniff; conceptually I like this but am concerned about the lack of reimbursement to the land bank.
We are losing approximately 10% of the value of the land bank based on some of the appraisals (some are
older). I do like the evergreen affordability term - that tradeoff makes the trade-off worth it to accept a
reduction in our land bank overall portfolio. I would like a future Council to contemplate ways to replenish the
land bank.
Darin Atteberry; as you know, the Affordable Housing Plan does talk about the importance of the land bank
program. that is the exact concern I have - I agree that the evergreen affordability is key here. With our
Affordable Housing Plan and the BFO process, this will be front and center with our next Council.
Mayor Troxell; I am supportive - these are complex transactions, and you have a great list of partners on this.
Share Ken’s general concern of we do not want people into lower income framework – I appreciated the intent
and the answer described there – also, the replenishment – with the appreciation of properties I view this as
more of an exception than the rule. I am supportive of this going forward.
GENERAL DIRECTION SOUGHT AND SPECIFIC QUESTIONS TO BE ANSWERED
Does the Council Finance Committee support the sale of the Kechter land bank parcel for $25,000 for the
purpose of developing 54 permanently affordable for-sale townhomes?
RESULT: Committee is supportive of this going forward to the full Council.
Other Business:
PRPA Refund check:
Ken Summers; can you tell us more about the PRPA check (refund) to the city? Where do these funds go?
Darin Atteberry; sure, we received a $468K refund check from PRPA and have been talking about where the
funds would be best leveraged. We are planning to ask Council tomorrow evening to appropriate those funds
toward the utilities non-payment gap as we think that is where it will go the furthest.
Snowstorm:
Darin Atteberry; today at LPT we talked quite a bit about the snowstorm. I don’t have any hard financial data to
share, but this is not a typical snowstorm. This snow is very wet and very heavy and in some parts of town we
received over 24 inches which is inhibiting our efforts to clear the streets. Larry Schneider and teams have been
working this for the last 48 hours - major and minor arterials are in great shape - on some we have no snow. We
did a lot of work on collectors last night but still issues with turn lanes. Residential areas are a challenge as the
weight and density of the snow is causing issues for some of our heavy-duty plows so we have gone to front
loaders and dump trucks to export the snow. When we do one pass through a residential area it can cause up to
4-foot drifts and if you have ever dug out of a snow drift from a plow, it can be like moving concrete.
Additionally, we are having significant brand and limb issues and are trying to clear the roadways for safety
reasons.
8
We did not use much deicing material, but we do have a lot of labor and overtime which could have a pretty
significant impact on our streets budget. The every 5-10 year storms are not typically budgeted but we do have
reserves to cover these things which may not be from the Streets budget.
If we do go all in with residential streets and if we do end up doing branch pick up which I am not prepared to
say what we will do at this point and even talk with Council about it. The big storm we had in 2003 we spent
over $1M picking up limbs and branches and exporting snow. If we do one swipe residential pass we are
probably looking at $100-200K of extra costs. Depending on the level of branch pick up - it could be hundreds of
thousands of dollars.
I wondered if you are hearing from your constituents. How are you feeling now?
Ross Cunniff; I just received my first email an hour about a residential tree. I expect to get more as the day goes
on. I think people thought they could get their SUVs out, but they cannot - high center and this snow does not
compact like our normal snow does.
Darin Atteberry; If you get stuck in your neighborhood people tend to abandon your car then If we get a 911 call
and Police and Fire can’t get through then a plow or a loader has to escort them through - we don’t want folks to
abandon their vehicles because it causes other problems.
Ross Cunniff; If needed, we could schedule a special Finance Committee meeting if there are trade-offs or other
special considerations involved.
Darin Atteberry; I will take you up on that if needed. There could be decisions made in the next 24 hours that
could drive our costs up significantly - the west side got hit hard including the CSU and City Park areas. Very
significant branches down in those areas - we do want to get them out of right of way and there will be private
damage as well. The City owns approximately 50K trees so we will be responsible to have those trees taken care
of.
Ken Summers; We need to do what we need to do - I can’t think of any better use of reserves than something
like this - this is why we have healthy reserves - to deal with the unbudgeted and the unanticipated. I am not
sure it will be quite as bad across the city with tree damage as past storms.
Meeting adjourned at 11:10 am
COUNCIL FINANCE COMMITTEE
AGENDA ITEM SUMMARY
Staff: Victoria Shaw, Sue Beck-Ferkiss
Date: April 19, 2021
SUBJECT FOR DISCUSSION
Two Requests for Affordable Housing Fee Credits
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
The purpose of this item is to seek feedback on requests from two development projects to
provide fee credits from the City for qualifying affordable housing units. These units will serve
households making no more than 30% area median income (AMI). At the discretion of City
Council, fee credits of $14,000 per qualifying unit of new construction may be provided under
the City Code to incentivize the development of units which serve families that earn up to 30%
of Area Median Income (AMI) if the proposed credit will not jeopardize the financial interests of
the City.
GENERAL DIRECTION SOUGHT AND SPECIFIC QUESTIONS TO BE ANSWERED
1. Is Council Finance Committee supportive of issuing fee credits to two affordable housing
developments with qualifying units?
2. Does Council Finance Committee have direction on which City fund to provide these fee
credits from?
BACKGROUND/DISCUSSION
The City has received requests for fee credits from two affordable housing developments:
1. Housing Catalyst (HC) is developing the Oak 140 project at 140 Oak Street in Fort
Collins. This project will deliver 79 affordable apartment homes and 7 of them qualify
for fee credits. Their request is for a total credit of $98,000. See HC’s request attachment
1.
2. Volunteers of America (VOA) is developing Cadence, a 55-unit age-restricted affordable
housing development at 2555 Joseph Allen Drive. This project will have 55 apartment
homes and 18 of them qualify for fee credits. Their request is for a total of $252,000. See
VOA’s request attachment 2.
Fee credits replaced the City’s prior fee waiver program and is currently the City’s only
mechanism to specifically incentivize units which serve households that earn 30% or less of
AMI. These units are the hardest to develop since they have the largest cost gap because
resulting rents are extremely low. For instance, a household of two must earn no more than
$22,590 annually to qualify. Most mechanisms to incentivize affordable housing are available for
units that serve up to 80% of AMI. The table below illustrates the 2020 AMI thresholds for the
Fort Collins – Loveland MSA. (2021 AMI thresholds have not yet been published).
Household Size 100% AMI 80% of AMI 60% of AMI 50% of AMI 30% of AMI
1 $65,900 $52,700 $39,540 $32,950 $19,800
2 $75,300 $60,200 $45,180 $37,650 $22,600
3 $84,700 $67,750 $50,820 $42,350 $25,450
4 $94,100 $75,250 $56,460 $47,050 $28,250
5 $101,700 $81,300 $61,020 $50,850 $30,550
6 $109,200 $87,300 $65,520 $54,600 $32,800
7 $116,700 $93,350 $70,020 $58,350 $35,050
8 $124,300 $99,350 $74,580 $62,150 $37,300
Fee waivers were previously calculated based on the sum of eligible fees, prorated by the percent
of the development’s total units which are restricted to serve ≤30% AMI. Fees historically
considered eligible for waiver include:
• Development Review Fees
• Building Permit Fee
• Capital Expansion Fees (including those for Fire, Police, Streets, and Parks)
Other fees collected by the City that are not considered eligible for waivers include fees which
are collected on behalf of other agencies (such as Larimer County or Poudre School District) and
fees for utilities.
In 2020, City Council changed this subsidy from a pro-rated waiver to a flat credit of subsidy.
The amount was set to $14,000 per unit for new development units and $5,500 per unit for
redevelopment units where the project gets the benefit of prior fees paid on the property. This
simplified the process and provided predictability to developers. City Council retained discretion
to authorize each request. Authorization is dependent on a determination that issuing the credits
will not jeopardize the financial health of the City. City Council may also direct staff on which
fund, such as General Fund or Affordable Housing Capital Fund, to use when issuing waivers.
The request from HC is for Oak 140 to be located at the site of the former Elks Lodge at Oak and
Remington Streets in downtown Fort Collins. All 79 new apartments will be restricted
affordable. It will have a mix of studio, one and two-bedroom apartments with the vast majority
one bedroom. They will be priced to target households earning between 30% and 80% AMI. 7
units qualify for fee credits because they will be restricted to serve households with ≤30% AMI.
This project, in partnership with the Fort Collins Downtown Development Authority, aims to fill
a demand for downtown employees that find downtown housing costs a challenge to living near
where they work.
The request from VOA is for Cadence, a 55-unit age- and income restricted housing community
in one building at 2555 Joseph Allen Drive near the corner of Drake Street and Timberline Road.
All 55 new apartments will be affordable. They will be priced to target adults 55+ earning
between 20% and 80% AMI. 18 units qualify for fee credits because they target households at or
below 30% AMI. Including 20% AMI targets is unusual and will serve extremely low-income
households. The location of this community is near a bike path, a bus route and a supermarket
which are well suited to the special population (seniors) targeted by this project.
These two requests are the first requests to be considered under the new fee credit process. Both
requests are for qualifying new units of construction. Therefore, the flat fee to be applied to these
requests is $14,000 per unit. The total of the two requests is $350,000. In the past, fee waiver
reimbursements have been funded from General Fund Reserves or the Affordable Housing
capital Fund (AHCF), which is part of the Community Capital Improvement Project funding.
Often the cost was split between these two sources, as shown in the below table:
The AHCF currently has $810,359 available, and 28% of AHCF dollars through 2020 have been
used to fund fee waivers.
ATTACHMENTS
1. Request of Housing catalyst
2. Request of Volunteers of America
Project Total Waivers % Backfilled Total Backfill General Fund Transportation Fund AHCF
Redtail Ponds 274,762$ 85%233,781$ 274,199$ -$ -$
Village on Redwood 100,708$ 0%-$ -$ -$ -$
Oakridge Crossing 90,923$ 100%90,923$ -$ -$ 90,923$
Village on Horsetooth 352,319$ 83%292,345$ 179,845$ -$ 112,500$
Mason Place 326,081$ 90%294,054$ 190,554$ 3,500$ 100,000$
Total 1,144,793$ 80%911,103$ 644,598$ 3,500$ 303,423$
Backfill SourcesBackfill of Waivers
March 31, 2021
Sue Beck-Ferkiss, Social Sustainability Specialist
Office of Social Sustainability
City of Fort Collins
222 Laporte Avenue
Fort Collins, CO 80521
Re: Fee Credit Request – Oak 140
Dear Mrs. Beck-Ferkiss,
I am writing to request fee credits for Oak 140, a mixed-use development that will bring 79
affordable apartments and two ground-floor commercial spaces to the site of the former Elks
Lodge at Oak and Remington Streets in downtown Fort Collins. The project is made possible
through a partnership between Housing Catalyst and the Fort Collins Downtown Development
Authority (DDA), two organizations that bring vast experience to the project and have a
demonstrated commitment to making Fort Collins a stronger, safer, and better community.
Name, address and contact information for developer
Kristin Fritz
Chief Real Estate Officer
Housing Catalyst
1715 W Mountain Ave
Fort Collins, CO 80521
C: 415-531-5617
kfritz@housingcatalyst.com
Name and address/location of development,
and location map
Oak 140
Northwest corner of Remington St. and Oak St. in
downtown Fort Collins
OAK ST
REMINGTON ST OAK 140
Total number of units with breakdown of AMI targets for all units
100% of the 79 studio, one-bedroom, and two-bedroom apartments will be affordable for those
earning between 30% and 80% of the Area Median Income (AMI), with an average resident income
of 60% of the AMI. Below is the detailed AMI breakdown and unit mix:
30% AMI Units - 7
40% AMI Units - 6
50% AMI Units - 29
70% AMI Units - 29
80% AMI Units – 8
Studio - 4
One-bedroom – 58
Two-bedroom apartments - 17
Note: Oak 140 does not include any apartments at 60% AMI due to the
predominance of 60% AMI units in the City’s existing portfolio of LIHTC units.
Description of development and why it qualifies for affordable housing fee credits
Oak 140 is well-aligned with both the City of Fort Collins’ belief that one of the keys to a healthy
community is the ability to house its residents in good quality, affordable housing and the City
Council’s priority to improve access to a broad range of quality housing that is safe, accessible, and
affordable. With 79 affordable units, this project will make a significant impact in helping the City
achieve its goal of having 10% of the City’s housing stock be affordable by 2040.
Oak 140 creates living options for downtown employees that currently find it financially challenging
to live and work in Fort Collins because of rising housing costs. The DDA’s contribution of the land
at the former Elks building site provides a rare opportunity to make building affordable housing in a
highly desirable downtown location financially feasible. Housing Catalyst and the DDA are proud to
have developed an architectural design that respects the rich history and essence of Downtown
Fort Collins, while also reflecting the evolving needs and character of the community.
Since identifying the significant need and desire for affordable housing for people working in and
around downtown, the DDA and Housing Catalyst have worked to create a development that
honors the vision to address this unique community demand. Project amenities include an on-site
leasing office, community room with a community kitchen, exercise room, bike storage, parking,
and an elevated terrace with gardens and seating areas. Oak 140 is ideally located for public transit
use and easy access to job centers across the City. The site is within a quarter-mile of multiple bus
stops with daily service to most areas of Fort Collins and adjacent cities, along a bike route and
adjacent to a bike sharing program, and provides next-door access to hospitality and retail jobs.
The site is also in a highly walkable location with convenient access to the many incredible
amenities that are at the heart of Old Town Fort Collins.
Proposed construction timeline
Construction will begin in June 2021 and be completed in March 2023.
Thank you for your consideration and please let us know if you need any additional information.
Sincerely,
Julie J. Brewen
CEO
March 24 , 2021
Sue Beck-Ferkiss via email only
Social Policy and Housing Program Manager
Social Sustainability Department
City of Fort Collins
222 Laporte Ave.
Fort Collins, CO 80521
RE: Fee Waiver Request
Cadence – Fort Collins, CO
Dear Sue:
Pursuant to the City’s process for reviewing fee waivers, please find enclosed the subject request and necessary
information.
1.Name, address and contact information for developer
Volunteers of America
Ft. Collins VOA Senior Housing LLC
1660 Duke Street
Alexandria, VA 22314
(303)726-1055 or (703) 341-5045
2.Name and address/location of development, and location map
2555 Joseph Allen Drive
Fort Collins, CO 80525
3.Total number of units with breakdown of AMI targets for all units
# of Units Area Median Income %
4 20% 7.3%
14 30% 25.5%
5 40% 9.1%
4 50% 7.3%
10 60% 18.2%
12 70% 21.8%
6 80% 10.9%
55 51.3% average 100%
4.Description of development and why it qualifies for affordable housing fee credits
Cadence is a new development of 100% affordable housing u nits for older adults, age 55+ in the
City of Fort Collins. Eighteen (18) units or 33% of the project provides very low income units at
the 20 & 30% Area Median Income levels which qualify for the fee waiver program. These units
help the City of Fort Collins fulfill their goals of providing additional new affordable housing
units at these very low AMI levels.
5.Proposed construction timeline
Cadence recently closed on its financing and broke ground in March, 2021. Construction is
anticipated to be completed in May, 2022.
Based on our understanding of the City of Fort Collins current affordable housing fee waiver program, Cadence
is eligible for a $14,000/very low income unit credit towards the project’s City fees. This would equate to 18 x
$14,000/unit = $252,000.
Please let us know if you have any additional questions.
Sincerely,
Doug Snyder
Vice President, Regional Real Estate Development
1
Affordable Housing Fee Credit Requests
Sue Beck-Ferkiss, Victoria Shaw
Direction Sought
1.Is Council Finance Committee supportive of providing fee credits for two
affordable housing developments with qualifying units?
2.Does Council Finance Committee have direction on which City fund to
provide these fee credits from?
2
GUIDING
PLANS
•City Plan
•Affordable Housing Strategic
Plan
•Housing Strategic Plan
•Our Climate Future
•Talent 2.0
Strategic Alignment
3
COUNCIL
PRIORITIES
•Affordable and Achievable
Housing Strategies
•Equity and Inclusion
STRATEGIC
OBJECTIVES
Neighborhood Livability & Social
Health
•NLSH 1.1 Improve and
increase…housing…
affordable to a broad range of
income levels.
Fee Credit Program
•Only mechanism that incentivizes ≤30% AMI units
•Adopted as LEAN process improvement in 2020, previously the City
provided fee waivers
•Flat amount of $14,000 per new development unit; $5,500 per re-
development unit
•Requires Council determination that issuing the credits does not
pose a risk to the financial health of the City
•All previous qualifying fee waiver requests have been granted
4
Current Requests
•Housing Catalyst
•Oak 140 project (downtown)
•79 affordable apartment homes
•7 of them qualify for fee credits
•Fee Credit request of $98,000
•Volunteers of America
•Cadence project at 2555 Joseph Allen Drive
•55-unit affordable housing development
•Also age restricted
•18 of them qualify for fee credits
•Fee Credit request of $252,000
5
Requests total $350K and add 25 qualifying units
Developments add 134 affordable homes to our inventory
Past Fee Waivers & Backfill
•Past 5 Affordable Housing projects with fee waivers:
•28% of Affordable Housing Capital Fund dollars have been expensed
on waivers through 2020
•Current AHCF balance is $810,359
6
Project Total Waivers % Backfilled Total Backfill General Fund Transportation Fund AHCF
Redtail Ponds 274,762$ 85%233,781$ 274,199$ -$ -$
Village on Redwood 100,708$ 0%-$ -$ -$ -$
Oakridge Crossing 90,923$ 100%90,923$ -$ -$ 90,923$
Village on Horsetooth 352,319$ 83%292,345$ 179,845$ -$ 112,500$
Mason Place 326,081$ 90%294,054$ 190,554$ 3,500$ 100,000$
Total 1,144,793$ 80%911,103$ 644,598$ 3,500$ 303,423$
Backfill SourcesBackfill of Waivers
Direction Sought
1.Is Council Finance Committee supportive of providing fee credits for two
affordable housing developments with qualifying units?
2.Does Council Finance Committee have direction on which City fund to
provide these fee credits from?
7
8
Backup
Incentivizing 30% AMI Units
Resource Serves up
to 80% AMI
Serves up
to 30% AMI
Requires Permanent
Affordability
Requires
Ownership
Affordable Housing Capital Fund X
Competitive Process Grant X
Fee Waivers X
Private Activity Bond X
Development Incentives
(Density Bonus, Priority Processing,
Fee Delay)
X
Land Bank Program X X
Land Trust Partnership X X X
Special Taxing District X
9
Previous Fee Waivers
10
Development Review
Building Permit
Historically Eligible for Fee Waiver
o Fees collected on behalf of other agencies (Larimer County, PSD)
o Utilities Plant Investment Fees
Not Waived
Apply % of total units that serve up to 30% AMI against total eligible fees
Waiver Amount Calculation
Capital Expansion (e.g. Fire, Parks, Streets)
Fee Offset Amount
•Fee Credits are set to $14,000 per qualifying new development unit & $5,500
per qualifying re-development unit
11
Project Year Fee
Waivers
# of 30%
AMI Units
Waiver per
Qualifying Unit
Proforma 2020
Waiver Amount
Proforma Waiver
per Qualifying Unit
Redtail Ponds 2015 274,762$ 40 6,869$ 512,300$ 12,808$
Village on Redwood 2017 100,708$ 13 7,747$ 185,842$ 14,296$
Oakridge Crossing 2018 90,923$ 13 $ 6,994 172,882$ 13,299$
Village on Horsetooth 2018 352,319$ 43 8,193$ 595,737$ 13,854$
Mason Place 2020 326,081$ 60 5,435$ 317,572$ 5,293$
TOTAL 1,144,793$ 169 6,774$ 1,784,333$ 10,558$
Actual Proforma Based on 2020 Fee Updates
Fee Credit Administrative Structure
•Grant a lump amount per each unit that serves up to 30% AMI
•Deposit amount into trust account held with City for when permits are
issued
•Developer may use funds from trust account to pay any balances
due to City
•Amount of per unit subsidy to be updated every 4 years with the fee
update process and tied to historically waivable fees
12
Total City Subsidies by Development
13
New Construction Projects:
Project - Completion Date:Competitive
Process Funding
Capital
Funds $
Discounted
Land
Fee
Waivers
Total City
Provided Subsidy # Units Subsidy per
unit
# Units @
30% AMI
Waiver per
Unit
Oakridge Crossing $ - -$ -$ 90,923$ $ 90,923 110 $ 827 13 $ 6,994
Redtail Ponds - 2015 1,391,077$ 274,762$ 1,665,839$ 60 27,764$ 40 6,869$
Village on Redwood- 2017 2,719,700$ 100,708$ 2,820,408$ 72 39,172$ 13 7,747$
Village on Horsetooth - 2018 1,125,000$ 233,700$ 352,319$ 1,711,019$ 96 17,823$ 43 8,193$
Mason Place - 2020 1,123,338$ 876,662$ 326,081$ 2,326,081$ 60 38,768$ 60 5,435$
TOTAL:6,359,115$ 876,662$ 233,700$ 1,144,793$ 8,614,270$ 398 21,644$ 169 6,774$
Note: Mason Place per unit waiver is less because it is adaptive reuse
Rehab Projects:
Project - Completion Date:Competitive
Process Funding
Capital
Funds $
Discounted
Land
Fee
Waivers
Total City
Provided Subsidy # Units Subsidy per
unit
Northern Hotel-2018 $675,000 $675,000 47 $14,362
Village on Shields-$3,135,011 $3,135,011 285 $11,000
DMA Plaza -2020 $2,500,000 $2,500,000 124 $20,161
TOTAL:$6,310,011 $0 $0 $0 $6,310,011 456 $13,838
Home Ownership:
Project - Completion Date:
Competitive
Process Funding
Capital
Funds $
Discounted
Land
Fee
Waivers
Total City
Provided Subsidy # Units
Subsidy per
unit
Avondale Cottages - 2016 $745,000 $745,000 10 $74,500.00
Harmony Cottages - Phase I - 2020 $480,000 $480,000 12 $40,000.00
Harmony Cottages - Phase II - 2021 $400,000 $400,000 8 $50,000.00
TOTAL:$1,625,000 $1,625,000 30 $54,166.67
Fee Update Cadence
•The amounts for reimbursements will be updated every 4 years in
conjunction with the fee update process and based on waivable fees
on an average per unit basis.
14
COUNCIL FINANCE COMMITTEE
AGENDA ITEM SUMMARY
Staff: JC Ward, Senior City Planner, CDNS
Leo Escalante, Community Engagement Specialist, CPIO
Date: April 19, 2021
SUBJECT FOR DISCUSSION Municipal Immigration Legal Fund
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY (a brief paragraph or two that succinctly summarizes important
points that are covered in more detail in the body of the AIS.)
The purpose of this item is to respond to a request from some members of Council for an off-cycle
general fund appropriation to create a Municipal Immigration Legal Fund pilot program. If approved, this
appropriation would create a pilot grant program to provide local access to immigration legal services for
Fort Collins residents seeking citizenship or lawful presence. Grant funds will be awarded to legal service
providers based on a competitive process and will be dedicated to program administration, education,
and outreach; providing defense for people at risk of deportation; children seeking Special Immigrant
Juvenile Status; and for community members seeking pathways to citizenship and lawful presence also
known as Affirmative Cases.
GENERAL DIRECTION SOUGHT AND SPECIFIC QUESTIONS TO BE ANSWERED
(Work session questions should be designed to gather direction from Council without requiring
Councilmembers to make a decision.)
1. What feedback does the Council Finance Committee have regarding the research and
unmet needs assessment for immigration legal services in Fort Collins?
2. What feedback does the Council Finance Committee have regarding the funding level or
services that could be provided to Fort Collins residents as part of a municipal
immigration legal fund?
BACKGROUND/DISCUSSION (details of item – History, current policy, previous Council
actions, alternatives or options, costs or benefits, considerations leading to staff conclusions, data
and statistics, next steps, etc.)
During the March 23 City Council Virtual Work Session, City staff from Neighborhood Services and the
Communications and Public Involvement Department presented their findings from the research
conducted on immigration legal defense funds implemented in 42 different jurisdictions across the
country. The information covered included demographic data and unmet needs assessment in Fort
Collins, program design from other jurisdictions, potential funding and service level options to assist
undocumented residents in Fort Collins with pathways to lawful citizenship and lawful presence, and
strategic alignment with City Council priorities to improve safety, community trust, equity and livability.
Key Findings on Greatest Needs in Fort Collins
City Staff worked with several service providers in Northern Colorado with expertise in immigration
services to assess current service levels and unmet need for immigration legal services. Based upon this
research, the following is a summary of our key findings to inform Council’s decision on the City’s role in
immigration services to Fort Collins residents.
• Limited Availability of Services: Currently there is only one immigration attorney practicing in
Fort Collins. Attorneys in other practice areas may take on immigration clients but are not focused
on complex systems of administrative or immigration law, making the representation challenging
and outcomes less consistent. In addition to the limited availability of direct legal representation
for immigration cases in Fort Collins, legal advice and documentation assistance for cases related
to extension of visas, DACA renewal, citizenship, or legal permanent resident (“LPR”)
applications are largely unavailable and can cost hundreds of dollars for consultation with an
attorney.
• Affordability: According to data provided by community partners from target population surveys
and feedback from engagement activities, the lack of affordable legal services and representation
are considered the biggest barriers to successful integration for immigrants in Fort Collins. While
we do not have access to Fort Collins-specific information, data from regional partners working
with immigrant communities confirms that 2,963 Northern Larimer County residents are eligible
for immigration relief and need low-cost or pro bono legal services to pursue lawful paths to
citizenship and presence. We also learned that many need these services for multiple family
members in the same household. Out of pocket expenses for deportation defense range from
$6,000 to $20,000 in filing fees and $10,000 to $50,000 for attorney costs depending on the
specifics and complexity of the case. DACA, Visa, or LPR applications and renewals have varying
filing fees and though the total varies widely, average approximately $4,000 in attorney costs.
• High Demand for Services:
o In Fort Collins, 2,200 residents are eligible for naturalization and the remaining 2,300
non-citizen immigrants are estimated to be undocumented and currently at risk for
detention and deportation.P 0F1 P According to local immigrant advocacy organizations
conducting outreach and operating immigration hotlines, the estimated unmet need for
Fort Collins Detention/Deportation cases is 75-100 per year, SIJS cases is 100 per year,
and affirmative cases (DACA, LPR, Naturalization) is 400 per year.
o As of December 2020, there were 418 Larimer County residents with pending
immigration deportation proceedings initiated by Department of Homeland Security, 83 of
whom lacked legal representation.18TP7P18T The Larimer County case numbers and
unrepresented immigrants in detention as of December 2020 are almost double the 2019
case numbers.
o In the Poudre School District, there are 54 students who arrived in the U.S. as
unaccompanied minors seeking asylum because they are unable to return to their
countries of origin due to threat of death or imminent harm. These students could remain
in the United States through Special Immigrant Juvenile Status (“SIJS”). Due to the age
of the children and current placement in foster care or with relatives other than their
primary caregivers, these children only have access to immigration legal services through
community programs. The Interfaith Solidarity and Accompaniment Coalition fundraises
and connects children with legal service providers for SIJS cases, but their work is limited
by the amount raised and availability of pro bono attorneys willing to take Fort Collins
cases who are also skilled in complex SIJS cases.
UMarket Rates & Pilot Program Budget
To inform Council’s consideration of the fund amount, City Staff obtained attorney costs by case type in
the Fort Collins market from nonprofit immigration service providers, Rocky Mountain Immigrant
Advocacy Network (“RMIAN”) and Interfaith Solidarity and Accompaniment Coalition (“ISAAC”) and are
based on actual attorney and legal staff costs. The amounts listed cover limited filing fees associated with
the pro bono representation.
1 https://dornsife.usc.edu/csii/eligible-to-naturalize-map/
Case Type Pro Bono Legal
Costs/Case in Fort
Collins market
Detention/Deportation $6,000/case
Special Immigrant Juvenile Status (SIJS) $4,000/case
“Affirmative Cases”- Deferred Action for Childhood
Arrivals (DACA), Lawful Permanent Resident
(LPR), or Naturalization
$1,000/case
Pilot Program Budget
Start up costs for the program would include funding program administration and pro bono attorney’s
costs to represent a minimum of 10 deportation cases to recruit and retain an attorney and support staff
to provide local representation.
The pilot program is proposed for 12 months from June 2021 to June 2022 to allow time to evaluate the
long term need and City role for this program. The program start up costs below are based on this
timeframe. This timing also allows for an informed discussion, if desired, as part of the 2023/2024
Strategic Plan and Budgeting for Outcomes process.
Note: This timing would create a funding gap of approximately six months in 2022. If desired, Council
could consider an 18 month pilot program to address the funding gap.
Program Start Up Minimum
Item Amount Description
Program Administration $60,000 Program outreach to target populations, educational
materials, translation and interpretation services,
coordination of legal advice clinics and training sessions,
capacity-building activities for local and regional service
providers, administrative duties related to legal
representation and grant reporting
10 Deportation Cases $60,000 Direct legal representation, intake assessment, and legal
advice for Fort Collins residents facing detention and
deportation, including residents on bond from detention
awaiting immigration hearings
Additional Service Options
Item Amount Description
Additional Deportation
Cases
$6,000/case Direct legal representation, intake assessment, and
legal advice for Fort Collins residents facing detention
and deportation, including residents on bond from
detention awaiting immigration hearings
SIJS Cases $4,000/case Direct legal representation, intake assessment, and
legal advice for Fort Collins residents who arrived as
unaccompanied minors, are seeking asylum, and are
unable to return to their country of origin due to the
threat of death or imminent harm
“Affirmative” Cases
(DACA, LPR, or
Naturalization)
$1,000/case Direct legal representation, intake assessment, and
legal advice for Fort Collins residents who may qualify
for DACA, LPR, or Naturalization pathways to
citizenship or lawful presence
Next Steps: First Reading of the appropriation Ordinance for a municipal immigration legal fund is
scheduled for City Council consideration on April 20, 2021. If this appropriation is approved by City
Council, Staff anticipates releasing a request for proposal from legal service providers to perform work
under a competitive selection process in the second quarter of 2021 and anticipate work to begin in the
third quarter of 2021.
ATTACHMENTS (numbered Attachment 1, 2, 3,…)
1. Municipal Immigration Legal Fund AIS from City Council Work Session on March 23, 2021
2. Municipal Immigration Legal Fund City Council Work Session Summary
3. Municipal Immigration Legal Fund City Council Meeting AIS for First Reading for April 20,
2021
Staff:
JC Ward, Sr. City Planner, Neighborhood Services
Leo Escalante, Public Engagement Specialist, CPIO
SUBJECT FOR DISCUSSION Municipal Immigration Legal Fund
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
The purpose of this work session is to provide Council with information requested on the need
for immigration legal services in Fort Collins, existing municipal immigration legal fund
implementation and funding models, and alignment of potential solutions with our community-
specific needs.
General Direction Sought
1. What feedback does City Council have regarding the research and unmet needs
assessment for immigration legal services in Fort Collins?
2. What next step would Council like Staff to pursue regarding a municipal immigration
legal fund for Fort Collins residents?
Background
As City Council has acknowledged, fear and uncertainty due to immigration status and lack of
due process can impact overall community safety, equity, and livability. While immigration
policy and enforcement are controlled by the federal government, Fort Collins City Council
noted in the 2020 Legislative Policy Agenda that “issues pertaining to civil rights at the United
States’ borders and immigration law more broadly have wide impacts that can directly impact
the day-to-day life of Fort Collins residents.”0F
1 The City Council’s Resolution 2019-100 details
concerns that fear resulting from federal immigration law and enforcement policies could
discourage Fort Collins residents from engaging with safety personnel, Police Services, and
other City departments to access services and resources.1F
2
Fort Collins has an immigrant community of more than 11,000 people or 6.8% of the total
population.2F
3 Approximately 4,500 Fort Collins residents are currently not United States citizens.
3F
4 2,200 residents are eligible for naturalization and the remaining 2,300 non-citizen immigrants
are estimated to be undocumented and at risk for detention and deportation.
4F
5 15% of children
in Fort Collins live with at least one immigrant parent and 75% of these children are themselves
US citizens.5F
6
1 https://www.fcgov.com/citymanager/files/19-21914-2020-legislative-policy-agenda-web.pdf?1578507829, page 9
2https://citydocs.fcgov.com/?cmd=convert&vid=72&docid=3390688&dt=AGENDA+ITEM&doc_download_date=OC
T-01-2019&ITEM_NUMBER=11
3 https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/fortcollinscitycolorado
4 http://research.newamericaneconomy.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/nae-co-report.pdf
5 https://dornsife.usc.edu/csii/eligible-to-naturalize-map/
6 U.S. Census Bureau (2017), Age and nativity of own children under 18 years in families and subfamilies by nativity
of parents. 2016 ACS 1-year estimates. Retrieved from https://data.census.gov/cedsci/
In December 2020, there were 418 Larimer County residents with pending immigration
deportation proceedings, 83 of whom lacked legal representation.6F
7 Many people in deportation
proceedings have valid legal claims to remain in the United States but cannot effectively assert
those claims or gather necessary evidence without legal representation. Any non-citizen
including lawful permanent residents, refugees, and people who entered legally on visas can be
placed in deportation proceedings.7F
8 Immigrants are 10.5 times more likely to be able to lawfully
remain in the U.S. when they have legal representation.8F
9 42 municipalities in the U.S. now have
some form of immigration legal assistance to assure due process and equity so that inability to
afford an attorney is not a determining factor in the ability to lawfully remain in the United
States.9F
10
Fort Collins lacks available pro bono or low-cost legal advice and assistance for cases related to
extension of visas, DACA renewal, citizenship, or legal permanent resident applications. There is
one immigration attorney practicing in Fort Collins and although community partners are
providing assistance for immigrants, no organizations currently provide pro bono or low-cost
immigration legal defense and advice for Fort Collins residents. 2,963 Northern Larimer County
residents are eligible for immigration relief and need low-cost or pro bono legal services to
pursue lawful paths to citizenship. Best practices from other municipal immigration legal fund
delivery models include legal services that meet the most urgent needs, reach the greatest
number of impacted community members, and build trust in the immigrant community
through ongoing self-advocacy and program support. In Fort Collins, those services have an
estimated funding need of $145,000-$380,000 annually based on the service levels and number
of cases that would be provided to the community.
Strategic Alignment
• Strategic Outcome - Neighborhood Livability & Social Health 1.4 Advance equity for all,
leading with race, so that a person’s identity or identities is not a predictor of outcomes.
• Strategic Outcome - Economic Health 3.2 Understand trends in the local labor market
and work with key partners to grow diverse employment opportunities.
• Strategic Outcome - Safe Communities 5.1 Improve overall community safety while
continuing to increase the level of public trust and willingness to use emergency
services.
• Strategic Outcome - High Performing Government 7.3 Improve effectiveness of
community engagement with enhanced inclusion of all identities, languages and needs.
• 2020 Legislative Policy Agenda – Immigration and National Border Conditions 1.
Supports the humane treatment of persons who are detained by Immigration Officials
and the rapid resolution of legal proceedings to determine their status; 2. Supports a
pathway to legal immigration into the United States that is sustainable in the long term.
7 https://trac.syr.edu/phptools/immigration/nta/
8 https://www.usa.gov/deportation
9 Vera Institute of Justice Policy Brief (February 2021). Retrieved from https://www.vera.org/publications/a-
federal-defender-service-for-immigrants.
10 https://www.vera.org/initiatives/safe-initiative
• City Council Resolution 2019-100 re: The Immigration Crisis at the Southern Border of
the United States and its Impact on the Fort Collins Community
• Social Sustainability Strategic Plan (2016) – Equity and Inclusion Theme B1.2.b Research
existing partner and community programs to help inform refugee and immigrant
populations of their legal rights and responsibilities; seek opportunities to create
programs where none currently exist.
Immigration policy, enforcement, and adjudication are under federal jurisdiction, but as Fort
Collins City Council noted in the 2020 Legislative Policy Agenda, “issues pertaining to civil rights
at the United States’ borders and immigration law more broadly have wide impacts that can
directly impact the day-to-day life of Fort Collins residents.”10F
11 The City Council’s Resolution
2019-100 and Community Trust Initiative outline additional concerns that fear resulting from
federal immigration law and enforcement policies could discourage Fort Collins residents from
engaging with safety personnel, Police Services, and other City departments to access services
and resources.11F
12 12F
13 This lack of engagement could discourage people from obtaining
emergency assistance or reporting crimes, and ultimately interfere with obtaining an accurate
count of people living in Fort Collins, putting at risk the City’s accurate representation in
Congress and in the Colorado General Assembly, as well as federal funding. These local
impacts on safety, equity, and livability led 42 municipal government entities across the United
States to create immigration legal defense programs.
Challenges for Immigrant Communities
Fort Collins lacks available pro bono or low-cost legal advice and assistance for cases related to
extension of visas, DACA renewal, citizenship, or legal permanent resident applications. There is
one immigration attorney practicing in Fort Collins and although community partners are
providing assistance for immigrants, no organizations currently provide pro bono or low-cost
immigration legal defense and advice for Fort Collins residents. 2,963 Northern Larimer County
residents are eligible for immigration relief and need low-cost or pro bono legal services to
pursue lawful paths to citizenship.
• Deportation proceedings are the only legal proceedings in the United States where
people are detained without access to legal representation.13F
14 Because deportation is
considered a civil rather than criminal penalty, immigrants facing removal are not
protected by the Sixth Amendment “right to counsel” in place for criminal defendants.
Every immigrant in a deportation hearing is confronted by a government prosecutor
11 https://www.fcgov.com/citymanager/files/19-21914-2020-legislative-policy-agenda-web.pdf?1578507829, page
9
12https://citydocs.fcgov.com/?cmd=convert&vid=72&docid=3390688&dt=AGENDA+ITEM&doc_download_date=O
CT-01-2019&ITEM_NUMBER=11
13 https://citydocs.fcgov.com/?cmd=convert&vid=17&docid=3391549
14 Vera Institute of Justice, Immigrants Facing Deportation do not have the Right to a Publicly Funded Attorney.
Here’s How to Change That. February 9, 2021. Retrieved from https://www.vera.org/blog/immigrants-facing-
deportation-do-not-have-the-right-to-a-publicly-funded-attorney-heres-how-to-change-that.
advocating for their deportation and is not entitled to representation even if they are in
the most vulnerable categories like children, detainees, or asylum seekers.
• A common misperception is that deportation proceedings are only for undocumented
immigrants. In fact, any non-citizen including lawful permanent residents, refugees, and
people who entered legally on visas can be placed in deportation proceedings.8
• Increases in economic hardship, food insecurity, and housing instability are associated
with deportation of a family member.14F
15 In Colorado, families lose 30% of their income
when an individual is detained or deported.15F
16 Colorado immigrants in detention lose
$3.9 million in earnings per year.16F
17
• According to the Colorado Fiscal Institute, “Every dollar spent by an immigrant family
generates $1.60 in local economic activity.”17F
18 The $3.9 million in earnings lost by
immigrant families due to detention equals $6.2 million lost by Colorado’s local
economies each year.
• There is currently one immigration attorney practicing in Fort Collins.
• Although community partners are providing a wide spectrum of assistance for
immigrants, organizations and attorneys taking on pro bono immigration cases currently
provide limited pro bono or low-cost immigration legal defense and advice for Fort
Collins residents. This assistance does not meet the need for local, immigration legal
services.
• No statewide pro bono or subsidized immigration legal defense is provided in Colorado.
Currently, the State of Colorado does not provide legal services or support for
immigration cases and proposed legislation to create an immigration legal fund will still
be insufficient to meet the needs of Colorado immigrants. The Colorado Legislature is
considering HB21-1194 to create a statewide immigration legal defense fund. However,
the fund would be limited to providing legal representation for detention-deportation
cases. If approved, the anticipated funding level is unlikely to meet 100% of the overall
need for all Colorado residents. Advocates for the Fort Collins immigrant community say
the solution is not exclusively federal or state or local but requires the additive
combination of funding and policy change at all levels.
For additional information on the immigration process, associated costs, and timelines, see
background information attachments.
Current Conditions in Colorado
15 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2017.04.007
16 https://www.coloradofiscal.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/2.12.21-Final-Report-2.pdf, page 13
17 https://www.coloradofiscal.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/2.12.21-Final-Report-2.pdf, page 14
18 https://www.coloradofiscal.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/2.12.21-Final-Report-2.pdf, page 15
In 2019 the Department of Homeland Security adjudicated 8,500 immigration deportation cases
in Colorado.18F
19 65% of immigrant detainees in those cases did not have legal representation.19F
20
In Colorado in 2020, 2,154 children faced immigration court deportation proceedings and 61%
of these children did not have access to legal representation. Unfortunately, those without
representation are much more likely to be detained while awaiting their hearings and to
eventually be deported. Being represented by an attorney helps immigrants return to their
families, jobs, and communities more quickly and keeps them there while their case is awaiting
the deportation hearing. Immigrants are 10.5 times more likely to be able to remain in the U.S.
when they have legal representation.9 Immigrants are 3.5 times more likely to be released on
bond while awaiting trial if they have access to legal counsel.20F
21
The direct and indirect effects of detention and deportation harm employers, communities, and
Colorado’s economy. The negative impacts of detention and deportation on individuals, their
families, and their community range from negative emotional and mental effects on children to
economic loss from the absence of a breadwinner. It is extremely costly for employers to
replace immigrant workers with little to no notice. In Colorado, employers of workers earning
less than $30,000 per year expend roughly 16% of the employee’s wages to replace them.21F
22
Providing universal legal representation would allow more immigrants to remain in Colorado
and on the job, thereby reducing costly disruption and expense for employers. Immigrants in
our Congressional District contribute $172.4 million in state and local taxes and more than $406
million in federal taxes.22F
23 When a provider is detained, state and local governments also lose
over $350,000 in tax revenue for critical public services and infrastructure.19
Current Unmet Need for Immigration Services in Fort Collins
In the Fort Collins 2020 Legislative Policy Agenda, City Council indicated support for the humane
treatment of immigration detainees, rapid resolution of legal proceedings to determine their
status, and pathways to legal immigration into the United States.1 The City of Fort Collins also
affirms its commitment as an organization to equity, inclusion, and diversity through the
articulated Equity Statement and Social Sustainability Strategic Plan. City Leadership
acknowledges “the role of local government in helping create systems of oppression and racism
and are committed to dismantling those same systems in pursuit of racial justice.”23F
24 A coalition
of regional service providers believes that helping to establish pro bono and low-cost legal
services in Fort Collins is a key part of building equity and trust.
Demographics – General
19 Colorado Fiscal Institute. A Matter of Justice: Cost Savings from Universal Legal Representation for All Colorado
Immigration Proceedings. (February 2021). Retrieved from https://www.coloradofiscal.org/wp-
content/uploads/2021/02/2.12.21-Final-Report-2.pdf
20 TRAC Immigration Reports, Syracuse University, “State and County Details on Deportation Proceedings in
Immigration Court,” available at: https:// trac.syr.edu/phptools/immigration/nta
21 Ryo, Emily, “Detained: A Study of Immigration Bond Hearings,” Law & Society Review 50, no. 1, 2016, 117-153.
22 Boushey, Heather & Glynn, Sarah Jane, “There are Significant Business Costs to Replacing Employees,"
Washington, DC: Center for American Progress, November 2012, p. 2.
23 https://www.newamericaneconomy.org/locations/colorado/colorado-district-2/
24 https://www.fcgov.com/socialsustainability/equity
In addition to the absence of critical representation for detained immigrants awaiting hearings,
legal advice and assistance are lacking in Fort Collins for cases related to extension of visas,
DACA renewal, citizenship, or legal permanent resident applications. The lack of affordable legal
services and representation is considered the biggest barrier to successful integration for
immigrants in Fort Collins by local service providers. This unmet need creates significant
challenges to our unauthorized and partially documented immigrant community members,
including financial and emotional instability; lack of access to health care, stable housing, higher
education, and meaningful work; and a cycle of poverty.
• Fort Collins has an immigrant community of more than 11,000 people or 6.8% of the
total population.24F
25
• Approximately 4,500 Fort Collins residents are currently not United States citizens.
25F
26
2,200 residents are eligible for naturalization and the remaining 2,300 non-citizen
immigrants are estimated to be undocumented and currently at risk for detention and
deportation.
26F
27
• 2,963 Northern Larimer County residents are eligible for immigration relief and need
low-cost or pro bono legal services to pursue lawful paths to citizenship and presence.
• As of December 2020, there were 418 Larimer County residents with pending
immigration deportation proceedings initiated by Department of Homeland Security, 83
of whom lacked legal representation.7 The Larimer County case numbers and
unrepresented immigrants in detention as of December 2020 are almost double the
2019 case numbers.
• An August 2020 poll of immigrant residents in Fort Collins had 162 respondents of which
70% reported their unmet need for immigration attorney services.27F
28 49% of
respondents cited the high cost of immigration legal services as the primary barrier to
access, 36% could not find information on local legal services, and 39% did not think
their current status had a pathway to citizenship.
Demographics – Children
Because of valid concerns about disclosure of immigration status to federal government
agencies, state and local relief and assistance programs are increasingly filling the gap in those
services to assure that all children and families can meet basic needs.
• 15% of children in Fort Collins live with at least one immigrant parent and 75% of these
children are themselves US citizens.6
• “Mixed status” families, where one or more family member is undocumented, can face
uncertainty due to inconsistent federal policy. Children who are U.S. citizens did not
receive the first round of COVID-19 economic stimulus benefits if even one parent was
25 https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/fortcollinscitycolorado
26 http://research.newamericaneconomy.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/nae-co-report.pdf
27 https://dornsife.usc.edu/csii/eligible-to-naturalize-map/
28 Alianza NORCO August 2020 Immigrant Community Survey
undocumented.28F
29 The second round of those benefits could be accessed by the children
if one parent is lawfully present, but not if both parents are undocumented.
• Locally, undocumented parents (even those with citizen children) indicate a reluctance
to allow their citizen children to enroll in or access programs like Supplemental Nutrition
Assistance (SNAP) Program, Medicaid, or Section 8 housing vouchers out of fear that the
parent’s future application for citizenship would be negatively impacted.
• In the Poudre School District, there are 54 students who arrived in the U.S. as
unaccompanied minors seeking asylum because they are unable to return to their
countries of origin due to threat of death or imminent harm. These students could
remain in the United States through Special Immigrant Juvenile Status (“SIJS”) and later
adjust their status to lawful permanent resident as long as they apply before the child’s
21st birthday. Processes for both SIJS and Adjustment of Status are complex, require
payment of multiple fees or applications for fee waivers at varying points in the process,
and have strict deadlines.
• In Fort Collins, the Interfaith Solidarity And Accompaniment Coalition (“ISAAC”) has
successfully assisted 12 Fort Collins youth through these processes and established
relationships with local attorneys who can provide these services. Ultimately, costs of
application, legal fees, and age may determine whether any of these children can safely
remain in the U.S.
• Abused, neglected, and abandoned children in any other court system in the United
States are entitled to legal representation as well as a Guardian ad Litem to assess the
best interests of the child.29F
30 Children in immigration proceedings have no right to legal
counsel, Guardian ad Litem evaluation, or adult supervision during detention or
hearings.30F
31
Peer City Municipal Immigration Legal Funds – Program Design
Local government entities are increasingly creating and expanding immigration defense funds.
42 municipalities in the U.S. currently have some form of immigration legal assistance to assure
due process and equity so that inability to afford an attorney is not a determining factor in the
ability to lawfully remain in the United States.10
Public-Nonprofit Partnerships
39 of the 42 municipal immigration legal funds are public-nonprofit partnerships with municipal
oversight of the funds which are dispersed through competitive grant processes to qualified,
local immigration legal service providers. 29 distribute funds through municipal purchasing or
grant processes. Coordination of the work of multiple grant recipients for municipal
immigration legal funds is often part of the scope of work for one of the external grant
recipients.
29 https://chicago.suntimes.com/politics/2021/1/8/22213330/immigrants-stimulus-mixed-status-covid-
coronavirus-chicago
30 https://www.childwelfare.gov/pubPDFs/represent.pdf
31 ACLU. Immigrant Children Do Not Have the Right to an Attorney Unless They Can Pay, Rules Appeals Court.
(February 6, 2018). Retrieved from https://www.aclu.org/blog/immigrants-rights/deportation-and-due-
process/immigrant-children-do-not-have-right-attorney
10 municipal immigration legal funds work with a community foundation that coordinates
distribution of the funds, contracts with service providers, and reports annually to the
municipality.
Public Defender’s Office Units
Some large metropolitan areas like San Francisco and Chicago initially began immigration legal
defense funding by establishing units inside their existing Public Defender’s Office dedicated to
detention and deportation defense. Most have now evolved into the municipality funding not
only Public Defender positions, but also community partner-delivered education, outreach,
affirmative case assistance, and legal advice clinics.
City/County Employee Coordinator
Dane County, Wisconsin is the only municipality that created a municipal staff position to
coordinate the immigration legal defense fund and associated projects from their Department
of Human Services. The county Immigration Affairs Coordinator is a social worker who provides
holistic case management, family support, and coordination of outside legal services.
Student Law Office Clinics and Fellows
In addition to funding a county staff member and one local immigration attorney, Dane County
also funds a portion of the student law office immigration clinic at the University of Wisconsin
to offer pro bono immigration legal representation and advice.
The state of New York offers a unique service delivery model with funding assistance from New
York University and the Vera Institute of Justice, this immigration legal defense fund co-locates
law school graduate fellows with legal aid programs throughout the state.
Peer City Municipal Immigration - Funding
The table below provides comparative information on funding and sources for immigration
legal funds for Fort Collins’ peer cities as well as municipalities with similar percentages of
immigrant community members to that of Fort Collins. Fort Collins has an immigrant
community of more than 11,000 people or 6.8% of the total population. The Fort Collins
Metropolitan Statistical Area has an immigrant community of more than 19,000 people or
11.4% of the total population.
Baltimore, MD
•$200,000/year
•26 cases/year
•60,000 immigrant
population/10% of total
population
•Municipal Funds
($200K)
Minneapolis, MN
(Hennepin County)
•$275,000/year
•75 cases/year
•42,000 immigrant
population/10% of total
population
•Municipal Funds
($275K)
Santa Rosa, CA
(Sonoma County)Dane County, WI
•$250,000/year
•75 cases/year
•49,202 immigrant
population/9% of
total population
•Municipal Funds
($150K)
•Grant Funds
($100K)
San Antonio, TX
(Harris County)
•$250,000/year
•75 cases/year
•180,960 immigrant
population/12% of
total population
•Municipal Funds
($150K)
•Grant Funds
($100K)Municipal Funding Only Municipal & Nonprofit Funding Municipal & Catalyst Grant Funding
Service Levels and Delivery Model Options for the City of Fort Collins
Estimates for funding levels to provide effective pro bono or low-cost immigration legal services
to residents of Fort Collins were determined by demographic analysis and current unmet need;
data, regional service costs, and subject matter expertise from local and regional community
partners on inputs necessary to build and support local capacity for these services; and
comparative service levels, outcomes, and costs from cities with existing municipal immigration
legal funds.
Best practices demonstrated by effective municipal immigration legal funds and modeled by
the Vera Institute of Justice’s ‘Safety & Fairness for Everyone’ Initiative offer wrap-around,
holistic services to meet the most urgent needs, reach the greatest number of impacted
community members, and build trust in the immigrant community through ongoing self-
advocacy and program support. The majority of municipal immigration legal funds include
these free and low-cost elements:
• Direct legal representation for the lifecycle of immigration cases
• An emphasis on legal services for deportation and detention cases
• Support for legal pathways to citizenship
• Scholarships or subsidized application and renewal fees for affirmative cases like DACA,
SIJS, Visa Renewals, Adjustment of Status for LPR, U Visas, and Family Reunification
• Legal Advice & Consultations through legal clinics
• Know Your Rights Trainings in detention centers and embedded in local immigrant
communities
• Education and outreach that includes leadership and empowerment training to improve
self-advocacy
Columbus, OH
•$159,000/year
•68 cases/year
•87,800 immigrant
population/10% of total
population
•Municipal Funds ($25K)
•Grant Funds (100K)
•Nonprofit Funds ($34K)
Denver, CO
•$325,000/year
•42 cases/year
•84,670 immigrant
population/12% of total
population
•Municipal Funds ($200K)
•Grant Funds ($100K)
•Nonprofit Funds ($25K)Municipal, Grant, & Nonprofit Funding
• Focus on outcomes-based program metrics (program accomplishments like
improvements in community safety) rather than output-based metrics (participant
numbers or number of cases resolved)
• Program coordinator housed in a local nongovernmental organization
Potential future success of these elements in our community is further indicated by the
outcomes of the successful City of Fort Collins Eviction Legal Fund 2020 pilot, which used a
similar model and employed direct legal representation, education and outreach, self-advocacy
empowerment, and community partner leadership to reach residents and landlords in need of
assistance with eviction prevention.
A successful municipal immigration legal fund in Fort Collins would include some form of the
above-referenced effective elements with the delivery model determined through continuing
collaboration with legal services providers, community partners, members of the immigrant
community, and economic stakeholders. The difference in the funding options below is the
level of service that could be provided with each annual funding amount.
Each option includes a full-time program coordinator position employed by a partner
organization rather than the City of Fort Collins to increase community trust and avoid putting
the City in the position of providing direct legal services. Optimally, the coordinator role would
be staffed by someone with paralegal experience and the potential to assist with program
fundraising at the lower funding levels.
The estimated unmet need for Fort Collins Detention/Deportation cases is 75-100 per year, SIJS
cases is 100 per year, and affirmative cases (DACA, LPR, Naturalization) is 400 per year.
Annual
Funding Level
#
Detention/Deportation
Cases per year
SIJS Cases
per year*
Affirmative Cases – DACA,
LPR, Naturalization per year*
$380,000 20 25 100
$220,000 10 10 50
$145,000 10 4 OR 25
Affirmative
Cases
(funding level
does not
support
both)
25 OR 4 SIJS Cases (funding
level does not support both)
*Unmet need in Fort Collins is estimated for 2021 and may be higher due to reluctance of
immigrant community members to identify themselves and their need for services for use by
a governmental entity in this analysis.
Potential Partners for Fort Collins Municipal Immigration Legal Fund
Vera Institute of Justice
The Vera Institute of Justice provides matching funds to municipal immigration legal funds for
deportation defense through the SAFE Initiative catalyst grants of up to $100,000, the
community seed grants of $15,000 to $30,000, and in-kind infrastructure support.
Municipalities partnering with the Vera Institute of Justice receive training and technical
assistance for legal service providers, program evaluation and reporting of metrics, streamlined
program administration, strategic support in communications and outreach, and connection to
a national movement for due process, universal representation, and community-led advocacy.
The Vera Institute of Justice is an important partner for the City and County of Denver’s
immigration legal fund and has worked closely with City of Fort Collins Staff over the past five
months to provide valuable information and guidance for our research.
Student Law Office Clinics
The University of Colorado Law School and University of Denver College of Law offer
immigration clinics through their student law offices that are funded by the institutions. Both
clinics offer no cost, law student representation, consultation, removal defense, and advising
on detention/deportation and DACA cases. At their current funding levels, neither can expand
services to represent immigrants from the Fort Collins community.
Rocky Mountain Immigrant Advocacy Network
The Rocky Mountain Immigrant Advocacy Network (“RMIAN”), a Colorado nonprofit
organization serving low-income adults and children in immigration proceedings, also
provides legal representation, Know Your Rights training sessions, and legal clinics for
immigrants in detention in Aurora. RMIAN promotes knowledge of legal rights, provides
effective representation to ensure due process, and works to improve detention
conditions under a universal representation model, selecting cases based on the need of
the client and capacity of attorneys, not likelihood of winning. RMIAN employs immigration
attorneys and works with a network of pro bono attorneys to provide these services. Additional
funding would be necessary for RMIAN to build capacity necessary to provide representation
specifically for Fort Collins residents.
Engagement
The City Staff Team for this research project would like to sincerely thank the community
partners for their contributions, patience, and openness in supplying valuable data,
connections, and anecdotal information on the unmet needs of the Fort Collins immigrant
community. Because of the understandable reluctance of undocumented immigrants to self-
identify and open themselves and their families to risk of deportation, the City Staff worked
with local and statewide advocacy groups with existing relationships with Fort Collins
immigrants to conduct a local needs assessment, research existing and projected conditions in
Larimer County for the immigrant community, analyze other municipal immigration fund
program and budget models, and conduct public engagement.
We appreciate the community partners who worked directly and indirectly with the Staff Team:
Alianza NORCO, Colorado Immigrant Rights Coalition (CIRC), Interfaith Solidarity And
Accompaniment Coalition (ISAAC), Rocky Mountain Immigrant Advocacy Network (RMIAN),
Fuerza Latina, Catholic Charities, BIPOC Alliance, Foothills Unitarian Church Community
Dreamer Fund, Mujeres de Colores, CSU Dreamers United, La Cocina, Vera Institute of Justice,
University of Colorado Law School and Dr. Violeta Chapin, The Denver Foundation, Denver
Councilmember Jamie Torres, and BakerRipley (Immigration Fund Manager in Harris County,
Texas).
ATTACHMENTS
Immigration & Federal Process
Immigration has long been a source of demographic revitalization, cultural enrichment, and
innovation for our country.31F
32 Immigration boosts economic growth and raises the general
productivity of the American workforce by providing much-needed skill and intellectual
capital. Immigrant workers allow crucial sectors of the economy to expand, which attracts
investment and creates additional employment opportunities for all Americans. The world
becomes more interconnected through cultural exchange and shared experiences, fostering
global progress on human rights causes.
Lawful Entry into the US
Legal entry into the U.S. for foreign-born non-citizens requires a valid visa issued to the
immigrant or visitor by the federal government prior to stepping onto U.S. soil.32F
33 Visa
categories include temporary tourist, education, work, and immigration.33F
34 Immigration visas
are issued to potential permanent immigrants who are either: related to American citizens,
qualified priority professionals with special skills, asylum seekers, or winners of the “diversity”
lottery. Each of these immigration visa categories has annual limits on the number issued,
although the caps can change based on the federal administration.34F
35 The United States
currently allows up to 675,000 permanent immigrant Visas each year across various
categories.35F
36 Additional permanent immigrants are granted lawful entry through the Refugee
Resettlement Process, which also has annual caps.34 Visa applications and renewals have
varying filing fees and though the price varies widely, average approximately $4,000 in attorney
costs.
Citizenship through Naturalization
It is impossible to apply for U.S. citizenship through the naturalization process without first
becoming a Lawful Permanent Resident (“LPR”), usually requiring lawful initial entry into the
country.36F
37 Once a person obtains a permanent immigrant visa and comes to the United States,
they obtain Lawful Permanent Residency, or become a LPR-holder. In some very limited
circumstances, non-citizens already inside the United States can obtain LPR status through a
process known as Adjustment of Status.
People with Lawful Permanent Residency are permitted to work and live permanently in the
United States.37F
38 After residing in the U.S. for five years, people with Lawful Permanent
32 https://www.cato.org/publications/commentary/immigrants-have-enriched-american-culture-enhanced-our-
influence-
world#:~:text=Successive%20waves%20of%20immigrants%20have,edge%20in%20the%20world%20economy
33 https://www.usatoday.com/pages/interactives/graphics/deportation-explainer/
34 https://travel.state.gov/content/travel/en/us-visas/visa-information-resources/all-visa-categories.html
35 https://www.uscis.gov/
36 https://www.americanimmigrationcouncil.org/research/how-united-states-immigration-system-
works#:~:text=The%20overall%20numerical%20limit%20for,less%20than%20140%2C000%20each%20year.
37 https://www.justice.gov/eoir/page/file/eoir_an_agency_guide/download
38 https://www.dhs.gov/immigration-statistics/lawful-permanent-
residents#:~:text=Lawful%20Permanent%20Residents%20(LPR),-
Residency are then eligible to apply for citizenship. The naturalization process takes
approximately two years (after eligibility is attained). The cost is $725 in filing fees, which are
nonrefundable regardless of the outcome, and attorney’s fees of $500-1,200 per person per
application.
Lawful Presence through Special Circumstances
Victims of trafficking and violence may remain in the U.S. under a temporary non-immigrant
visa, the U Visa.38F
39 U Visas protect non-citizens who have been the victims of certain crimes and
who have aided law enforcement in the investigation and prosecution of those crimes. It was
created to encourage victims to cooperate with police and prosecutors without fear of
deportation. A U Visa provides legal status and employment authorization but expires after four
years unless a renewal is sponsored and supported by law enforcement. Cooperating with law
enforcement may open victims or their families to further violence or retaliation, which deters
some eligible victims from applying for U Visas that provide only temporary protection. After
five years of lawful presence under a U Visa, an immigrant can apply for LPR status if they have
remained cooperative with law enforcement agencies. There is no application or renewal fee
for the U Visa, but LPR application fees are $1,225 and U Visa LPR applications must be
sponsored by the law enforcement agency the victim cooperated with while in the U.S. Legal
assistance to process a U Visa application is approximately $5,000 per case.
Some immigrants who entered the U.S. without authorization have current lawful presence
through the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program (“DACA”). Children brought to the
country before their 16th birthday and prior to June 2007 who are currently in school, a high
school graduate, or honorably discharged from the military, and were under the age of 31 as of
June 15, 2012, qualify to apply for DACA.39F
40 DACA status allows recipients to receive a
renewable two-year deferral of deportation and a work permit. In September 2017, the federal
administration announced a plan to phase out DACA, triggering multiple lawsuits challenging
this action.40F
41 In 2020, the Supreme Court blocked this phaseout of the program on the grounds
that the rationale stated by the Executive Branch was arbitrary and capricious.41F
42 The Court did
not rule on the merits of the DACA program itself, opening it to future elimination with
underlying lawful rationale. On January 20, 2021, President Biden issued an executive order
fully reinstating DACA.42F
43 The DACA program has increased the wages and employment status of
recipients, improved the mental health outcomes for DACA participants and their children, and
Lawful%20permanent%20residents&text=LPRs%20may%20accept%20an%20offer,they%20meet%20certain%20eli
gibility%20requirements.
39 https://www.uscis.gov/humanitarian/victims-of-human-trafficking-and-other-crimes/victims-of-criminal-activity-
u-nonimmigrant-status
40 https://www.uscis.gov/humanitarian/consideration-of-deferred-action-for-childhood-arrivals-daca
41 https://www.dhs.gov/news/2017/09/05/memorandum-rescission-daca
42 https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/19pdf/18-587_5ifl.pdf
43 https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/presidential-actions/2021/01/20/preserving-and-fortifying-
deferred-action-for-childhood-arrivals-daca/
reduced the number of undocumented immigrant households living in poverty.43F
44 44F
45 45F
46 DACA
does not provide LPR status or a path to citizenship for recipients and must be renewed every
two years.40 DACA applications and renewals require $495 in fees. Colorado is home to 18,555
DACA recipients whose renewal fees generate approximately $460,000 per year for the federal
government. 46F
47 Legal representation for DACA applications costs approximately $2,000 per
case.
Undocumented Immigrants
Immigrants who enter or remain in the U.S. without authorization are known as
“undocumented immigrants.” Most undocumented immigrants in the United States entered
lawfully but overstayed temporary visas and often have insufficient economic resources to
pursue legal extensions or citizenship.47F
48 Lawful paths to citizenship, LPR status, refugee status,
and asylum dramatically decreased during the Trump administration.48F
49 The current federal
administration has committed to immigration policy reform but needs bipartisan support in
Congress to expand or create pathways to citizenship for all categories of immigrants. The
proposed comprehensive immigration bill from President Biden contains an eight-year waiting
period of unlawful presence before undocumented residents could apply for citizenship or LPR
status and a plan for citizenship for DACA recipients.49F
50 Currently, there is inadequate support in
Congress for passage of this bill and several stand-alone immigration bills are anticipated to be
considered in 2021 instead of the comprehensive immigration bill.50F
51
Detention and Deportation
A common misperception is that deportation proceedings are only for undocumented
immigrants. In fact, any non-citizen including lawful permanent residents, refugees, and people
who entered legally on visas can be placed in deportation proceedings.51F
52 Another common
misconception is that deportation proceedings are reserved for those with a criminal conviction
Many immigration arrests do not begin with arrest by local law enforcement. More than 1 in 4
44 Pope, Nolan G. (2016). "The effects of DACAmentation: The impact of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals
on Unauthorized Immigrants". Journal of Public Economics. 143: 98–114. doi:10.1016/j.jpubeco.2016.08.014.
45 Patler, Caitlin; Laster Pirtle, Whitney (February 1, 2018). "From undocumented to lawfully present: Do
changes to legal status impact psychological wellbeing among latino immigrant young adults?". Social Science
& Medicine. 199: 39–48. doi:10.1016/j.socscimed.2017.03.009.
46 Antman, Francisca (2016). "Can authorization reduce poverty among undocumented immigrants? Evidence
from the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program". Economics Letters. 147
47https://www.uscis.gov/sites/default/files/USCIS/Resources/Reports%20and%20Studies/Immigration%20Forms%
20Data/All%20Form%20Types/D
48 https://cmsny.org/publications/essay-2017-undocumented-and-overstays/;
https://www.npr.org/2019/01/16/686056668/for-seventh-consecutive-year-visa-overstays-exceeded-illegal-
border-crossings
49 https://www.vox.com/2020/9/3/21408528/trump-naturalization-backlog-citizenship-voting
50 https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2021/01/20/fact-sheet-president-biden-
sends-immigration-bill-to-congress-as-part-of-his-commitment-to-modernize-our-immigration-system/
51 https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/democrats-introduce-bidens-immigration-reform-bill/story?id=75960479
52 https://www.usa.gov/deportation
immigrants arrested Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) have no criminal conviction
and for those that do, the majority have been convicted of victimless crimes such as
immigration or traffic offenses.52F
53
Deportation proceedings begin with an arrest.53F
54 If a crime is committed, local police may notify
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (“ICE”) that they suspect an immigrant is unlawfully
present or that the crime alleged to have been committed would qualify the immigrant for
deportation. If an immigrant is suspected of entering or remaining in the country without
authorization, ICE or U.S. Border Patrol may arrest the individual and put them into detention,
or custody of the federal government. Usually, a case is then filed for a hearing in Immigration
Court against the immigrant by the Department of Homeland Security attorneys.
The immigrant can be detained upon arrest while awaiting their first court appearance or may
be released on immigration bond or on their own recognizance in limited cases known as “catch
and release”. Immigration bonds are set at a minimum of $1,500 but average $10,000 in
Colorado. Denial of an immigration bond or objection to the bond amount may be filed by the
detainee, who must also gather all supporting documentation and sponsor letter, then have all
documents translated into English to file with the court. There is no right to an attorney,
translator, or communication with family or friends during this process, but detainees have the
right to one free local phone call. The average time between being taken into detention and the
immigration hearing is 500 days.
There is no requirement that a detainee remain in the state they were arrested in, so transfers
to out of state detention centers may be made at any time in the process without notice to the
individual or their families and the case transferred to a different immigration court.
At the merits hearing, the judge determines whether to deport the immigrant. That decision
can be appealed within 30 days by either party and deportation typically is ordered within two
months of the order. ICE air operations fly people who are deported back to what has been
adjudicated as their home country. Some people being deported report paying for their own
deportation flights. Deported individuals from Mexico are flown to U.S. border cities and bused
or walked across the border into Mexico. If an individual returns to the U.S. and enters illegally
after being deported, they are permanently banned from lawful entry under any visa type.
After deportation, an immigrant may apply for lawful reentry after a waiting period of 5-20
years, depending on the underlying cause for the initial deportation. Out of pocket expenses for
deportation defense range from $6,000 to $20,000 in filing fees and $10,000 to $50,000 for
attorney costs depending on the specifics and complexity of the case.
Expedited Removal Order
Initially, expedited removals of immigrants could only take place if an individual were to be
arrested within 100 miles of a U.S. border and had not been in the U.S. for more than two
53 https://www.cato.org/blog/criminal-aliens-commit-mostly-victimless-crimes-few-violent-crimes
54 https://www.usatoday.com/pages/interactives/graphics/deportation-explainer/
weeks. The time limit for unlawful presence was expanded to up to two years under the Trump
administration and arrests can now happen anywhere in the U.S., not just within 100 miles of
the border. President Biden ordered a review of this change in February 2021, but as of today it
is still the prevailing policy.
Under expedited removal processes, non-citizens are deported in a single day without an
immigration court hearing or other appearance before a judge. U.S. Border Patrol officers
exclusively conduct the process, which is usually completed within a couple of hours, affording
little to no opportunity for the non-citizen to collect evidence or consult with an attorney. In
most circumstances, the non-citizen does not have a right to appeal. Those who have been
subjected to expedited removal are detained until they are formally removed. This provides the
immigration officer with broad authority in the removal of a non-citizen, allowing the officer to
operate as both prosecutor and judge.
Impact of the Ambiguous Status or Threat of Deportation
Livability, public participation, and access to community services are also affected by
uncertainty related to immigration status. Family members forced to take on additional paid
employment or caregiving responsibilities following detention or deportation weaken family
stability. Older children assuming additional caregiving responsibilities for younger family
members see their own school performance and retention decline.54F
55 55F
56 Community members
who are fearful and mistrustful of public institutions based on immigration policy or
enforcement are less likely to participate in churches, schools, health clinics, cultural activities,
and social services.56F
57 Changes in immigration policy at the federal level are shown to reduce
participation by immigrants in local communities through reductions in visits to parks, libraries,
restaurants, and community events.57F
58 Following a visible immigration raid or arrest, school
attendance drops, businesses see fewer customers, and fewer immigrants seek medical
services or pick up prescriptions. This disconnect from public life and community services can
remove social safety nets for families and children. Many immigrant parents do not enroll their
children in school lunch or health care programs the children are legally eligible to participate in
because of fear that participation will disqualify the parents or children from future
immigration applications under the Public Charge policy, which leads to elevated food
insecurity and poor health outcomes. Prioritizing safety and inclusion for all families, regardless
of immigration status, through programs to foster support networks, sense of belonging,
mental health, and community building are recommended by psychologists and social scientists
as solutions to foster wellness for children and families.58F
59
55 Chaudhary, A., Capps, R., Pedrosa, J.M., Castañeda, R.M., Santos, R, & Scott, M. M. (2010). Facing
our future: Children in the aftermath of immigration enforcement. The Urban Institute. Retrieved
from https://www.urban.org/sites/default/files/publication/28331/412020-Facing-Our-Future.PDF
56 Dreby, J. (2012). The burden of deportation on children in Mexican immigrant families. Journal of
Marriage and Family, 74, 829-845.
57 https://www.communitypsychology.com/effects-of-deportation-on-families-communities/
58 Hagan, J.M., Castro, B., & Rodriguez, N. (2010). The effects of U.S. deportation policies on immigrant
families and communities: Cross-border perspectives. North Carolina Law Review, 88, 1799-1824.
59 Berkman, L. F., Glass, T., Brissette, I., & Seeman, T. E. (2000). From social integration to health:
Durkheim in the new millennium. Social Science & Medicine, 51(6), 843-857.
Fearfulness and mistrust can extend to local public safety officials when community members
feel federal law enforcement or legal systems are unjust or inconsistent. Families are reluctant
or unwilling to call local police for any reason after a deportation in their family or local
community.56 Unwillingness to call the police is strongest for those who are unauthorized with
70% of survey participants reporting that they would not call police even if they were victims of
crimes (compared to 44% of Latinx people who were documented immigrants or US citizens).59F
60
60 https://www.policylink.org/sites/default/files/INSECURE_COMMUNITIES_REPORT_FINAL.PDF
“Executive Summary”
The purpose of this item is to respond to a request from some members of Council for an off-cycle
general fund appropriation to create a Municipal Immigration Legal Fund pilot program. If approved, this
appropriation would create a pilot grant program to provide local access to immigration legal services for
Fort Collins residents seeking citizenship or lawful presence. Grant funds will be awarded to legal service
providers based on a competitive process and will be dedicated to program administration, education,
and outreach; providing defense for people at risk of deportation; children seeking Special Immigrant
Juvenile Status; and for community members seeking pathways to citizenship and lawful presence also
known as Affirmative Cases. The Council Finance Committee will review this appropriation request at its
April 19, 2021 meeting.
Approval of this appropriation request will support the following City’s Strategic Outcomes: Neighborhood
Livability & Social Health 1.4, Economic Health 3.2, Safe Communities 5.1, and High Performing
Government 7.3. It also supports the 2020 Legislative Policy Agenda, and City Council Resolution 2019-
100.
“Staff Recommendation”
Staff recommends adoption of the Ordinance on First Reading.
“Background/Discussion”
During the March 23 City Council Virtual Work Session, City staff from Neighborhood Services and the
Communications and Public Involvement Department presented their findings from the research conducted
on immigration legal defense funds implemented in 42 different jurisdictions across the country. The
information covered included demographic data and unmet needs assessment in Fort Collins, program
design from other jurisdictions, potential funding and service level options to assist undocumented residents
in Fort Collins with pathways to lawful citizenship and lawful presence, and strategic alignment with City
Council priorities to improve safety, community trust, equity and livability.
Key Findings on Greatest Needs in Fort Collins
City Staff worked with several service providers in Northern Colorado with expertise in immigration
services to assess current service levels and unmet need for immigration legal services. Based upon this
research, the following is a summary of our key findings to inform Council’s decision on the City’s role in
immigration services to Fort Collins residents.
• Limited Availability of Services: Currently there is only one immigration attorney practicing in
Fort Collins. Attorneys in other practice areas may take on immigration clients but are not focused
on complex systems of administrative or immigration law, making the representation challenging
and outcomes less consistent. In addition to the limited availability of direct legal representation for
immigration cases in Fort Collins, legal advice and documentation assistance for cases related to
extension of visas, DACA renewal, citizenship, or legal permanent resident (“LPR”) applications
are largely unavailable and can cost hundreds of dollars for consultation with an attorney.
• Affordability: According to data provided by community partners from target population surveys
and feedback from engagement activities, the lack of affordable legal services and representation
are considered the biggest barriers to successful integration for immigrants in Fort Collins. While
we do not have access to Fort Collins-specific information, data from regional partners working
with immigrant communities confirms that 2,963 Northern Larimer County residents are eligible
for immigration relief and need low-cost or pro bono legal services to pursue lawful paths to
citizenship and presence. We also learned that many need these services for multiple family
members in the same household. Out of pocket expenses for deportation defense range from
$6,000 to $20,000 in filing fees and $10,000 to $50,000 for attorney costs depending on the
specifics and complexity of the case. DACA, Visa, or LPR applications and renewals have varying
filing fees and though the total varies widely, average approximately $4,000 in attorney costs.
• High Demand for Services:
April 20, 2021 Municipal Immigration Legal Fund Appropriation AIS
o In Fort Collins, 2,200 residents are eligible for naturalization and the remaining 2,300
non-citizen immigrants are estimated to be undocumented and currently at risk for
detention and deportation. 0F1 According to local immigrant advocacy organizations
conducting outreach and operating immigration hotlines, the estimated unmet need for
Fort Collins Detention/Deportation cases is 75-100 per year, SIJS cases is 100 per year,
and affirmative cases (DACA, LPR, Naturalization) is 400 per year.
o As of December 2020, there were 418 Larimer County residents with pending
immigration deportation proceedings initiated by Department of Homeland Security, 83 of
whom lacked legal representation.7 The Larimer County case numbers and
unrepresented immigrants in detention as of December 2020 are almost double the 2019
case numbers.
o In the Poudre School District, there are 54 students who arrived in the U.S. as
unaccompanied minors seeking asylum because they are unable to return to their
countries of origin due to threat of death or imminent harm. These students could remain
in the United States through Special Immigrant Juvenile Status (“SIJS”). Due to the age
of the children and current placement in foster care or with relatives other than their
primary caregivers, these children only have access to immigration legal services through
community programs. The Interfaith Solidarity and Accompaniment Coalition fundraises
and connects children with legal service providers for SIJS cases, but their work is limited
by the amount raised and availability of pro bono attorneys willing to take Fort Collins
cases who are also skilled in complex SIJS cases.
Strategic Alignment
• Strategic Outcome - Neighborhood Livability & Social Health 1.4 Advance equity for all, leading
with race, so that a person’s identity or identities is not a predictor of outcomes.
• Strategic Outcome - Economic Health 3.2 Understand trends in the local labor market and work
with key partners to grow diverse employment opportunities.
• Strategic Outcome - Safe Communities 5.1 Improve overall community safety while continuing
to increase the level of public trust and willingness to use emergency services.
• Strategic Outcome - High Performing Government 7.3 Improve effectiveness of community
engagement with enhanced inclusion of all identities, languages and needs.
• 2020 Legislative Policy Agenda – Immigration and National Border Conditions 1. Supports the
humane treatment of persons who are detained by Immigration Officials and the rapid resolution
of legal proceedings to determine their status; 2. Supports a pathway to legal immigration into the
United States that is sustainable in the long term.
• City Council Resolution 2019-100 re: The Immigration Crisis at the Southern Border of the
United States and its Impact on the Fort Collins Community
• Social Sustainability Strategic Plan (2016) – Equity and Inclusion Theme B1.2.b Research
existing partner and community programs to help inform refugee and immigrant populations of
their legal rights and responsibilities; seek opportunities to create programs where none currently
exist.
Market Rates & Pilot Program Budget
To inform Council’s consideration of the fund amount, City Staff obtained attorney costs by case type in the
Fort Collins market from nonprofit immigration service providers, Rocky Mountain Immigrant Advocacy
Network (“RMIAN”) and Interfaith Solidarity and Accompaniment Coalition (“ISAAC”) and are based on
actual attorney and legal staff costs. The amounts listed cover limited filing fees associated with the pro
bono representation.
1 https://dornsife.usc.edu/csii/eligible-to-naturalize-map/
April 20, 2021 Municipal Immigration Legal Fund Appropriation AIS
Case Type Pro Bono Legal
Costs/Case in Fort
Collins market
Detention/Deportation $6,000/case
Special Immigrant Juvenile Status (SIJS) $4,000/case
“Affirmative Cases”- Deferred Action for Childhood
Arrivals (DACA), Lawful Permanent Resident
(LPR), or Naturalization
$1,000/case
Pilot Program Budget
Start up costs for the program would include funding program administration and pro bono attorney’s costs
to represent a minimum of 10 deportation cases to recruit and retain an attorney and support staff to provide
local representation.
The pilot program is proposed for 12 months from June 2021 to June 2022 to allow time to evaluate the
long term need and City role for this program. The program start up costs below are based on this
timeframe. This timing also allows for an informed discussion, if desired, as part of the 2023/2024 Strategic
Plan and Budgeting for Outcomes process.
Note: This timing would create a funding gap of approximately six months in 2022. If desired, Council
could consider an 18 month pilot program to address the funding gap.
Program Start Up Minimum
Item Amount Description
Program Administration $60,000 Program outreach to target populations, educational
materials, translation and interpretation services,
coordination of legal advice clinics and training sessions,
capacity-building activities for local and regional service
providers, administrative duties related to legal
representation and grant reporting
10 Deportation Cases $60,000 Direct legal representation, intake assessment, and legal
advice for Fort Collins residents facing detention and
deportation, including residents on bond from detention
awaiting immigration hearings
Additional Service Options
Item Amount Description
Additional Deportation
Cases
$6,000/case Direct legal representation, intake assessment, and legal
advice for Fort Collins residents facing detention and
deportation, including residents on bond from detention
awaiting immigration hearings
SIJS Cases $4,000/case Direct legal representation, intake assessment, and legal
advice for Fort Collins residents who arrived as
unaccompanied minors, are seeking asylum, and are
unable to return to their country of origin due to the threat
of death or imminent harm
“Affirmative” Cases
(DACA, LPR, or
Naturalization)
$1,000/case Direct legal representation, intake assessment, and legal
advice for Fort Collins residents who may qualify for
DACA, LPR, or Naturalization pathways to citizenship or
lawful presence
Program Structure
The appropriation for a Municipal Immigration Legal Fund in Fort Collins would establish a grant program
to provide funds to community partners, nonprofit organizations, or legal service providers to offer
April 20, 2021 Municipal Immigration Legal Fund Appropriation AIS
residents wrap-around, holistic immigration legal services to meet the most urgent needs, reach the
greatest number of impacted community members, and build trust in the immigrant community through
ongoing self-advocacy and program support from June 2021 to June 2022. If the fund is approved, City
Staff would initiate a request for proposal process and select service providers through competitive
review.
Services Provided
The delivery model for legal services will be outlined in applicants’ proposals and determined by the
review team through the selection process. Proposals will be requested for the following elements:
• Fort Collins residency requirement
• Direct legal representation for the lifecycle of immigration cases with client intake with the equity-
based universal representation model
• Support for legal pathways to citizenship or lawful presence
• Legal Advice and Consultations through legal clinics and Know Your Rights trainings
• Education and outreach that includes leadership and empowerment training to improve self-
advocacy
• Program coordinator based in a local nongovernmental organization
Potential future success of these elements in our community is further indicated by the outcomes of the
successful City of Fort Collins Eviction Legal Fund 2020 pilot, which incorporated similar services and
employed direct legal representation, education and outreach, self-advocacy empowerment, and
community partner leadership to reach residents and landlords in need of assistance with eviction
prevention.
Program Administration
The Neighborhood Services Department would oversee the grant application and review process, assure
completion of necessary City documentation for the program, and act as the City contact for grant
recipients. All other program administration and coordination among grant recipients will be carried out by
a program coordinator from a partner organization. Housing the program coordinator position with a
community partner rather than in the City of Fort Collins will increase community trust and avoid putting
the City in the position of providing direct legal services. Optimally, the coordinator role would be staffed
by someone with paralegal experience and the potential to assist with program fundraising.
The program coordinator will conduct outreach to target populations, manage creation and distribution of
educational materials that align with language equity principles, secure translation and interpretation
services, coordinate legal advice clinics and training sessions, assist local and regional service providers
with building capacity for immigration legal services, and perform other administrative duties related to
legal representation and grant reporting.
Program Metrics
Establishing program metrics that measure outputs, outcomes, and effectiveness are an important part of
concurrent evaluation and iterative improvement. The program will also offer an opportunity to have a
deeper understanding of the greatest challenges and unmet needs for Fort Collins residents (given limited
available datapoints). City Staff recommends considering the following potential program metrics to
assess program accomplishments and output-based metrics such as participant numbers or number of
cases resolved:
• # of people receiving free legal advice or training
• # of people receiving direct representation (adults/children & case type)
• # of people able to lawfully remain in the U.S. due to representation
• # of people released on bond during the program compared past years
• # of referrals to the program by other participants
• % of participants who feel they are safer due to the program
• % of participants who are more knowledgeable about their pathways to citizenship or lawful
presence after the program
April 20, 2021 Municipal Immigration Legal Fund Appropriation AIS
• % of participants reporting greater likelihood of accessing City or community resources due to the
program
It is important to note that some metrics may be difficult or impossible to ascertain during a 12-month pilot
program because of the length of time immigration cases take to navigate the system with average
resolution times for detention/deportation cases of one to two years and naturalization processes of more
than one year.
Potential Partners
Through extensive collaboration with stakeholders, Staff has identified a number of potential community
partners and grantor organizations that might be in positions to assist with providing services or
expanding a City-sponsored immigration legal fund.
Organization Potential Role Opportunities
Vera Institute of Justice Grantor Up to $100,000 matching grant funds for
municipal immigration legal funds for
detention/deportation cases
U.S. Citizenship &
Immigration Services
“Citizenship & Assimilation
Grants”
Grantor Average award of $250,000 to nonprofit
organizations for LPR citizenship preparation
services including education
Rocky Mountain Immigrant
Advocacy Network (RMIAN)
Grant Recipient Currently providing immigration legal services
to other Colorado communities with existing
relationships with attorneys
Catholic Charities Grant Recipient Currently providing immigration legal services
to other Colorado communities with existing
relationships with attorneys
Alianza NORCO Grant Recipient Currently providing education, outreach, and
support services to immigrants in Fort Collins
Interfaith Solidarity and
Accompaniment Coalition
(ISAAC)
Grant Recipient Currently providing support for SIJS cases
with existing relationships with attorneys
Fuerza Latina Grant Recipient Currently providing education, outreach, and
support services to immigrants in Fort Collins
Colorado State University Grant Recipient Currently providing immigration legal services
to all full-time students. Additional funding
might allow expansion to services for
undocumented staff and part-time students.
University of Colorado Law
School
Grant Recipient Currently providing student law office clinic
representation for some immigration cases
University of Denver – Sturm
College of Law
Grant Recipient Currently providing student law office clinic
representation for some immigration cases
Colorado Access to Justice
Commission
Technical
Assistance
Assistance connecting volunteer attorneys
with clients
City Manager, Darin Atteberry, contacted Larimer County Manager, Linda Hoffmann, in April 2021
regarding the potential for collaboration and partnership to provide immigration legal services to both City
and County residents. Partnerships with Larimer County will need to be aligned with policies regarding
the use of City funds to benefit the residents of Fort Collins.
Pilot Start Up Timeline
Timeline indicates an estimate of length of each step following a funding appropriation.
April 20, 2021 Municipal Immigration Legal Fund Appropriation AIS
Next Steps: If this appropriation is approved by City Council, Staff anticipates releasing a request for
proposal from legal service providers to perform work under a competitive selection process in the second
quarter of 2021 and anticipate work to begin in the third quarter of 2021.
Attachments:
Work Session Summary
Human Relations Commission Recommendation Memo to City Council
PowerPoint Presentation
One Month
Application,
Review, & Selection
(City Staff)
Two Weeks
Contracting
(City Staff & Service
Providers)
Two Weeks
Begin
Administrative
Services
(Grant Recipients)
Two Months
Begin Legal Services
(Grant Recipients
with Existing Legal
Providers)
Four Months
Begin All Legal
Services
(Grant Recipients)
1JC Ward, Leo Escalante
Municipal Immigration Legal Fund
Appropriation
Agenda Overview
2
1.Strategic Alignment
2.Key Local Findings
3.Market Rates
4.Pilot Program Budget
5.Program Structure, Services Provided, Program Administration & Metrics
6.Potential Partners
7.Pilot Start Up Timeline
CFC Direction Sought
3
1.What feedback does the Council Finance Committee have regarding
the research and unmet needs assessment for immigration legal
services in Fort Collins?
2.What feedback does the Council Finance Committee have regarding
the funding level or services that could be provided to Fort Collins
residents as part of a municipal immigration legal fund?
Strategic Alignment
4
Strategic Outcomes 2020 Legislative
Policy Agenda
City Council
Resolution 2019-100
Social Sustainability
Strategic Plan (2016)
Neighborhood Livability &
Social Health 1.4
Economic Health 3.2
Safe Communities 5.1
High Performing
Government 7.3
Immigration and National
Border Conditions
The Immigration Crisis at
the Southern Border of the
United States and its Impact
on the Fort Collins
Community
Equity and Inclusion Theme
B1.2.b
Key Local Findings
5
•Limited Availability of Local Immigration Legal Services
o One immigration attorney in Fort Collins
o No community partners providing pro bono legal advice clinics
•Affordability
o 2,963 Northern Larimer County residents are eligible for immigration relief and need low-cost or
pro bono legal services
o Immigration attorney costs range from $4,000 for affirmative cases and $10,000-50,000 for
deportation cases plus filing and application fees
•High Demand for Immigration Legal Services
o Approximately 2,300 Fort Collins residents are undocumented and at risk for deportation
o 83 Larimer County residents are in detention, facing deportation, and unrepresented
o 54 Poudre School District students are eligible for SIJS and need pro bono representation in the
process
Market Rates
6
Case Type Pro Bono
Legal Costs
per Case in Fort
Collins market
Detention/Deportation $6,000/case
Special Immigrant Juvenile
Status (SIJS)
$4,000/case
“Affirmative Cases”-Deferred
Action for Childhood Arrivals
(DACA),Lawful Permanent
Resident (LPR), or Naturalization
$1,000/case
•Information on pro bono attorney
costs by case type in the Fort
Collins market was provided by:
o Rocky Mountain Immigrant
Advocacy Network (RMIAN)
o Interfaith Solidarity and
Accompaniment Coalition
(ISAAC)
Pilot Program Budget
7
Item Cost for 1
year pilot
Program
Administration
$60,000
10 Deportation
Cases
$60,000
Program Start Up Minimum
Additional Service Options
Item Amount Description
Additional Deportation
Cases
$6,000/case Direct legal representation,intake assessment,and
legal advice for Fort Collins residents facing
detention and deportation,including residents on
bond from detention awaiting immigration
hearings
SIJS Cases $4,000/case Direct legal representation,intake assessment,and
legal advice for Fort Collins residents who arrived
as unaccompanied minors,are seeking asylum,and
are unable to return to their country of origin due
to the threat of death or imminent harm
“Affirmative” Cases
(DACA, LPR, or
Naturalization)
$1,000/case Direct legal representation,intake assessment,and
legal advice for Fort Collins residents who may
qualify for DACA,LPR,or Naturalization pathways
to citizenship or lawful presence
Program Structure
8
•Establish a grant program to provide funds to
community-based organizations and/or legal
service providers
•Grant recipients would offer residents wrap-
around, holistic immigration legal services to meet
most urgent needs, and build trust in the
immigrant community through ongoing self-
advocacy
•The City would initiate a request for
proposal process and select service providers
through competitive review
Program Metrics
9
•Nº of people receiving free legal advice or training
•Nºof people receiving direct representation
(adults/children & case type)
•Nºof people able to lawfully remain in the U.S.
due to representation
•Nºof people released on bond during the
program compared past years
•Nºof referrals to the program by other
participants
•Pct. of participants who feel they are safer due
to the program
•Pct.of participants who are more knowledgeable
about their pathways to citizenship or lawful
presence after the program
•Pct.of participants reporting greater likelihood of
accessing City or community resources due to the
program
Metrics
Adoption Consideration
1
0
1.What feedback does the Council Finance Committee have regarding
the research and unmet needs assessment for immigration legal
services in Fort Collins?
2.What feedback does the Council Finance Committee have regarding
the funding level or services that could be provided to Fort Collins
residents as part of a municipal immigration legal fund?
COUNCIL FINANCE COMMITTEE
AGENDA ITEM SUMMARY
Staff: Kyle Stannert, Deputy City Manager
Sue Beck-Ferkiss, Social Policy and Housing Program Manager, Social Sustainability
JC Ward, Sr. City Planner, CDNS
Ryan Mounce, City Planner, CDNS
Date: April 19, 2021
SUBJECT FOR DISCUSSION Hickory Village Mobile Home Park Sale
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
The purpose of this item is to provide an update on the potential for Hickory Village Mobile Home Park
(MHP) to become a resident owned community (ROC) and to seek feedback from the Council Finance
Committee members on the desired level of City engagement in that process.
On March 3, 2021, the owner of Hickory Village MHP agreed to sell the park to a corporate operator.
According to state law the potential sale triggered a 90-day window for residents to make an offer to
purchase the park and become a ROC. Neighborhood meetings with the Hickory Village community have
revealed that there is strong support to pursue this. Staff from CMO, Community Development and
Neighborhood Services, and Social Sustainability Departments met with representatives from Thistle, a
non-profit affordable housing organization, which provides technical assistance and helps arrange
financing for ROC’s in Colorado. With the high purchase price ($23 million) and short timeline, Thistle
staff have expressed a desire for local support for the formation of a ROC.
GENERAL DIRECTION SOUGHT AND SPECIFIC QUESTIONS TO BE ANSWERED
1) Does financial support of resident owned communities of mobile home parks align with the City’s
strategic goals for affordable housing?
2) Should the City engage in discussions to be a financial partner in support of a potential purchase
of Hickory Village in the event residents move forward with an offer to purchase the mobile home
park?
BACKGROUND/DISCUSSION
Hickory Village Sale Status & Timeline
Hickory Village is one of nine MHP’s in Fort Collins and contains approximately 200 manufactured
housing units, a majority of which are owned by their residents. In early March, residents and the City
received notification from the owner of the intent to sell the property to a buyer for a purchase price of $23
million.
Recently passed state legislation requires a 90-day advance notice of the sale of an MHP and provides
the opportunity for residents to submit their own offer to purchase the property, potentially leading to a
resident owned community. The City’s Housing Strategic Plan also contains a transformational strategy to
allow tenant right of first refusal/offer for cooperative ownership of multifamily or manufactured housing
community.
The decision to pursue resident ownership requires the support of a large majority of Hickory Village
residents as well as the ability to organize a cooperative, arrange financing, and submit an offer to the
current owner. Timing is an especially critical aspect to an y potential resident ownership decision, as
residents and partners have as few as 90 days from the original notice of the intent to sell (March 3,
2021) to complete these tasks.
Thistle, a ROC technical assistance provider, is meeting with Hickory Village residents and local partners
to provide information about resident ownership and to ascertain what level of interest residents at
Hickory Village may have in the idea of a resident ownership proposal. Key dates in the timeline thus far
include:
▪ March 3: Notice of sale mailed/posted for residents; trigger date for state required 90 -day notice
and opportunity to purchase period.
▪ March 9: The City receives mailed notice of intent to sell Hickory Village.
▪ March 15: Staff met with Mi Voz Leaders’ Council to discuss fears and outline potential paths
forward. Resident leaders had a strong interest in becoming a ROC.
▪ March 18: Staff met with Thistle to discuss the feasibility and process of Hickory Village becoming
a ROC.
▪ March 25: Thistle hosted a neighborhood meeting with 45 Hickory Village residents to provide
information and resources on becoming a ROC.
▪ April 3: Thistle hosted a follow -up neighborhood meeting with 125 Hickory Village residents to
provide information and resources on becoming a ROC. The residents have formed an interim
leadership board and are continuing pursuit of ownership.
▪ June 1: The end of the state-required 90-day notification period and the earliest a sale of the
property to another buyer could be completed.
Considerations for the City
Potential short-term City roles for Hickory Village MHP Sale
• Take no action: City staff would not actively participate in this process other than to direct
inquiries regarding this process to agencies involved.
• Be a convener: The City’s Neighborhood Services and CPIO departments can provide
engagement support; connecting residents, community partners such as Housing Catalyst, The
Family Center-La Familia and Thistle, and park owners (if/when appropriate).
• Be a convener and financial partner: The City can provide engagement as described above, as
well as financial support.
o Financial support would be used to avoid steep increases in rent due to the purchase.
o Significant investment would be necessary to keep park lot rents affordable. Without
subsidy, rent increases would likely be several hundred dollars a month.
Potential long-term City roles
City staff could create a program to assist in future conversions to ROC’s. This may include supporting
residents in the formation of residents’ associations and the creation of a plan for becoming resident -
owned should the opportunity arise. City staff can also continue their engagement with property owners,
ensuring they fully understand state laws regarding MHP sales and are aware of all selling options. Other
financial support considerations could be explored to include creation of a grant, loan, or other funding
program to prepare for future MHP sales.
ATTACHMENTS
1. Hickory Village Mobile Home Park Sale City Council Work Session AIS from April 13, 2021
2. Hickory Village Mobile Home Park Sale City Council Work Session Summary from April 13, 2021
DATE:
STAFF:
April 13, 2021
JC Ward, Senior Planner
Kyle Stannert, Deputy City Manager
Ryan Mounce, City Planner
Caryn Champine, Director of PDT
WORK SESSION ITEM
City Council
SUBJECT FOR DISCUSSION
Hickory Village Mobile Home Park Sale.
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
The purpose of this item is to provide an update on the potential for Hickory Village Mobile Home Park (MHP) to
become a resident-owned community (ROC) and to seek feedback from Council members on the desired level of
City engagement in that process.
GENERAL DIRECTION SOUGHT AND SPECIFIC QUESTIONS TO BE ANSWERED
Staff is seeking direction from Council on potential short - and long-term engagement actions:
1) Does Council have any questions or feedback on opportunities for the city to engage as community
conveners in the potential creation of a Resident Owned Community (ROC) for Hickory Village Mobile Home
Park?
2) In recognition of the quick timeline to form ROC's and the complexity of the process, should City programs be
developed to support future MHP sale/Resident Owned Community opportunities?
BACKGROUND / DISCUSSION
On March 3, 2021, the owner of Hickory Village MHP agreed to sell the park to a corporate operator. According
to state law the potential sale triggered a 90-day window for residents to make an offer to purchase the park and
become a ROC. Neighborhood meetings with the Hickory Village community have revealed that there is strong
support to pursue this option. Staff from Neighborhood Services and Planning Departments met with
representatives from Thistle, a non-profit affordable housing organization, which provides technical assistance
and helps arrange financing for ROC’s in Colorado. With the high purchase price ($23 million) and short timeline,
Thistle staff have expressed a desire for local support for the formation of a ROC.
Hickory Village Sale Status and Timeline
Hickory Village is one of nine MHP’s in Fort Collins and contains approximately 200 manufactured housing units,
a majority of which are owned by their residents. In early March, residents and the City received notification from
the owner of the intent to sell the property to a buyer for a purchase price of $23 million. Recently passed state
legislation requires 90-day advance notice of the sale of an MHP and provides the opportunity for residents to
submit their own offer to purchase the property, potentially leading to a resident owned community.
The decision to pursue resident ownership requires the support of a large majority of Hickory Village residents as
well as the ability to organize a cooperative, arrange financing, and submit an offer to the current owner. Timing is
an especially critical aspect to any potential resident ownership decision, as residents and partners have as few
as 90 days from the original notice of the intent to sell (March 3, 2021) to complete these tasks.
Thistle, a ROC technical assistance provider, is meeting with Hickory Village residen ts and local partners to
provide information about resident ownership and to ascertain what level of interest residents at Hickory Village
may have in the idea of a resident ownership proposal. Key dates in the timeline thus far include:
April 13, 2021 Page 2
• March 3: Notice of sale mailed/posted for residents; trigger date for state required 90 -day notice and
opportunity to purchase period.
• March 9: The City receives mailed notice of intent to sell Hickory Village.
• March 15: Staff met with Mi Voz Leaders’ Council to discuss fears and outline potential paths forward.
Resident leaders had a strong interest in becoming a ROC.
• March 18: Staff met with Thistle to discuss the feasibility and process of Hickory Village becoming a ROC.
• March 25: Thistle hosted a neighborhood meeting with 45 Hickory Village residents to provide information
and resources on becoming a ROC.
• April 3: Thistle hosted a follow-up neighborhood meeting with 125 Hickory Village residents to provide
information and resources on becoming a ROC. The residents have formed an interim leadership board and
are continuing pursuit of ownership.
• June 1: The end of the state-required 90-day notification period and the earliest a sale of the property to
another buyer could be completed.
Resident Owned Communities (ROC) Overview
Resident owned communities are a growing trend that gives manufactured housing residents greater control over
the rules, operations, maintenance, and monthly lot rent within their neighborhood. ROC’s often form when an
existing MHP is for sale as residents form a cooperative to own and operate the overall community. Residents still
own their individual units, but they also have a share in the larger cooperative which sets park rules and lot rent
which often are better aligned with the needs and priorities of its resident owners.
While a growing trend, resident ownership can be difficult to achieve for a variety of reasons:
• An existing MHP owner must be a willing seller and a large percentage of residents must agree to participate
to form the cooperative and submit a competing offer.
• In Colorado, MHP residents and ROC partners often have a limited time window to organize and find the
necessary financing.
• MHP’s are increasingly viewed as investment properties and residents and ROC p artners must often compete
against large corporations and private equity firms to purchase a community.
• Certain park characteristics may be needed to form a ROC, such as a minimum number of units, high
resident ownership rates, and acceptable infrastructure conditions.
• Although ROC’s typically stabilize rent long-term, at the time of conversion there may be a large one-time
increase in rental prices.
Process of Becoming a ROC
1. Either before or during a MHP sale, residents typically receive information and organizing assistance about
resident ownership so they can understand the opportunities and challenges. At Hickory Village, Thistle, a
certified technical assistance provider within the ROC USA, is currently working with residents and local
partners.
2. If residents decide to pursue resident ownership, a cooperative must be formed, and an interim Board of
Directors selected. The resident cooperative is the entity that purchases the property. Typically, 70 -80% of
residents need to agree to participate.
3. Due diligence is completed on all aspects of the property. Financial scenarios are reviewed while the
cooperative and its partners secure financing and submit their purchase offer to the park owner.
4. If successful, the cooperative becomes the landowner and helps manage future operations, rules, and lot
rent.
April 13, 2021 Page 3
Colorado ROC Trends
ROC’s are in operation across the country, with larger concentrations in the Northeast and Pacific Northwest.
ROC’s are relatively new to Colorado with several formed in the past several years in Canon City and Longmont.
Based on media reports and information from Thistle, several aspects appear to be common to the formation of
Colorado ROC’s thus far:
• Subsidies, grants, and other financial partnerships are often invol ved as part of financing a ROC. In Colorado,
this amount has been close to 25% of the purchase price. These grants, no/low interest loans or other
subsidies are typically used to help keep rents lower upon the transition to resident ownership. Key partners
in previous deals have included the Colorado Division of Housing, Colorado Health Foundation, and the
support of other local partners or jurisdictions where the MHP is located.
• Residents have a buy-in amount to help form the cooperative. The maximum buy -in amount is typically limited
to a maximum of $1,000 per household.
• The overall process for resident ownership generally takes 90-150 days. While it can extend longer, recent
Colorado legislation only requires a minimum of a 90-day sale notice and opportunity to purchase. As of April
13, the Hickory Village sale is 41 days into this timeline.
Summary of Colorado Mobile Home Park Act Section 38-12-217
• MHP owners are required to provide notice of their intent to sell to all tenant homeowners and the municipality
or county where the park is located.
• Within 14 days of the MHP owner listing the park for sale, they must provide notice to each tenant
homeowner, any homeowners association, the municipality or county where the park is located, and the
Colorado Division of Housing.
• Within 14 days of a MHP owner intending to make a final, unconditional acceptance of an offer for the sale or
transfer of the park, they must give notice to each tenant homeowner, any homeowners association, the
municipality or county where the park is located, and the Colorado Division of Housing.
• After each notice above, a MHP owner must give tenant homeowners a 90 -day opportunity to make an offer
to purchase the park. MHP owners must negotiate in good faith with any group o r association of homeowners
or their assignees who submits an offer to buy the park.
Violations of state law for Mobile Home Park Act Oversight or Residents’ Right to Purchase are enforced by the
Department of Local Affairs Mobile Home Park Oversight Program, which began in May 2020. However, It is
unlikely that DOLA could take action to stop the sale of a park, were DOLA to become engaged in this matter.
And, although it would seem appropriate for a delay in the sale to be an available remedy for a failu re to give
required notices, Colorado Revised Statutes Section 38-12-217(15) says DOLA and the office of administrative
courts do not have the authority to issue injunctive relief in response to a complaint alleging a violation of the
statute, or to delay a transfer or transaction involving the property.
ROC Benefits
ROC’s stabilize rent for residents (after initial increases at the time of purchase) and maintain rent at or below the
rents of nearby commercially owned communities, due to the absence of a profit margin in community costs.
Additionally, ROC members sign perpetual leases, meaning they can live in the ROC as long as they choose so
long as they pay rent and follow the rules. Therefore, ROC’s serve as one method of securing affordable housing
options, while providing residents with collective decision-making power regarding park rules and community
initiatives. These attributes align ROCs with City policy goals for affordable housing, residents’ rights, and
manufactured housing preservation.
A ROC also helps meet Council and City priorities for the preservation of manufactured housing and stabilizing
residents’ housing. As owners of the land underneath their homes, residents have the direct input and control
over the future of the property they traditionally lack when living within a non-resident owned community. A sale
April 13, 2021 Page 4
and potential closure of the property in a ROC could only occur through the consent of its resident owners. The
direct resident decision-making authority of a ROC provides an enhanced layer of protections and preservation
support beyond the City’s recent adoption of a manufactured housing zone district.
Considerations for the City
Potential short-term City roles for Hickory Village MHP Sale
• Take no action: City staff would not actively participate in this process other than to direct inquiries regarding
this process to agencies involved.
• Be a convener: The City’s Neighborhood Services and CPIO departments can provide engagement support;
connecting residents, community partners such as Housing Catalyst, The Family Center-La Familia and
Thistle, and park owners (if/when appropriate).
• Be a convener and financial partner: The City can provide engagement as described above, as well as
financial support.
Potential long-term City roles
Staff could create a program to assist in future conversions to ROC’s. This may include supporting residents in
the formation of residents’ associations and the creation of a plan for becoming resident -owned should the
opportunity arise. Staff can also continue their engagement with property owners, ensuring they fully understand
state laws regarding MHP sales and are aware of all selling options. Other financial support considerations could
be explored to include creation of a grant, loan, or other funding program to prepare for future MHP sales.
ATTACHMENTS
1. Powerpoint Presentation (PDF)
April 13, 2021
Hickory Village Mobile Home Park Sale
ATTACHMENT 1
2
Direction Sought
1)Does Council have any questions or feedback on opportunities for the City to
engage as community conveners in the potential creation of a Resident
Owned Community (ROC) for Hickory Village Mobile Home Park?
2)In recognition of the quick timeline to form ROC’s and the complexity of the
process, should City programs developed support future MHP sale/Resident
Owned Community opportunities?
Overview: Hickory Village Sale
§Hickory Village Mobile Home Park
§Located along Hickory Street, west of
N. College Ave
§Approximately 205 units
§Notice of sale published on March 3, 2021
§Recent state legislation requires a 90-
day notice before sale occurs
§Sale price: $23 million
3
Resident Ownership Opportunity
§90-day sale notice also provides opportunity for
residents to submit an offer to purchase.
§If accepted, offer would create a resident
owned community (ROC).
§Thistle, a ROC technical assistance provider, is
meeting with Hickory Village residents and local
partners.
§Education & training
§Determining interest & feasibility
§Prior involvement in other Colorado ROC's
4
Sale / Opportunity to Purchase Ti meline
§MAR 3:Notice of sale. Triggers 90-day notice & opportunity to purchase period
§MAR 9:City receives mailed Hickory Village sale notice
§MAR 15: Staff meet with Mi Voz Leaders’ Council to discuss Hickory Village sale and
outline potential paths
§MAR 18: Staff meet with Thistle to discuss sale and feasibility/history of other ROCs
in Colorado
§MAR 25: Thistle meets with Hickory Village residents to discuss ROC process
§APR 3:Follow-up meeting between Thistle and Hickory Village residents.The
majority of participating residents want to pursue a ROC.
§JUN 1: End of 90-day opportunity to purchase period
5
ROC Overview
§Resident Owned Communities (ROC):
§Resident cooperative is formed to purchase and operate their mobile
home community
§Cooperative owns the land and operates the community; better
alignment with resident priorities
§Lot rent, park rules, maintenance & amenities
§ROC's promote City policy goals:
§Preservation / stabilization of existing manufactured housing
§Alignment and accountability to resident priorities
§Residents’rights and livability improvements
6
ROC Challenges
§Difficult to organize and arrange financing within 90 days
§Hickory Village ~42 days into process (as of 4/13/21)
§Need a willing seller and must compete against private buyers
§Seller is not required to sell to residents, only to consider the
residents' offer in good faith
§Ty pically requires a large majority of resident support / participation
§One-time buy-in required to form cooperative
§A r ent increase upon transition to a ROC is likely
§Few local examples
§First ROC's in Colorado began several years ago
§Financial assistance by state and local entities have been required
7
City Engagement Roles:Hickory Village
§Ta ke no action:
§No longer participate in this process
§Direct all future resident inquiries to agencies involved
§Be a convener:
§Connect, facilitate, and support residents,community partners,
and park owners through process
8
City Engagement Roles:Hickory Village
§Be a convener and financial partner:
§Provide engagement and facilitation throughout the process
§Connect residents wi th community partners and MHC owners
§Financial support
§Low or no interest loans
§Grants
§Down payment assistance
9
City Engagement Role:Long-Te rm
§Resident Engagement:
§Organizing resident associations
§Roadmap to ROC
§Owner Engagement:
§Clarity on state law and selling options
§Financial Support:
§Designated ROC fund, loan, or grant program
§Partnerships with community funding organizations
10
11
Direction Sought
1)Does Council have any questions or feedback on opportunities for the City to
engage as community conveners in the potential creation of a Resident
Owned Community (ROC) for Hickory Village Mobile Home Park?
2)In recognition of the quick timeline to form ROC’s and the complexity of the
process, should City programs developed support future MHP sale/Resident
Owned Community opportunities?
City Manager’s Office
PO Box 580
300 LaPorte Ave.
Fort Collins, CO 80522
970.221.6505
970.224.6107 – fax
fcgov.com
MEMORANDUM
DATE: April 16, 2021
TO: Mayor Troxell and City Councilmembers
THRU: Darin Atteberry, City Manager
FROM: Kyle Stannert, Deputy City Manager
RE: April 13, 2021 Work Session Summary – Hickory Village Mobile Home Park Sale
At the April 13th City Council Work Session, staff provided an update on the proposed sale of the
Hickory Village Mobile Home Park and efforts by park residents and Thistle to submit an offer to
purchase the park and become a Resident Owned Community (ROC). The session focused on
the city’s role as a convener in the process of forming ROCs in the short term and reviewed
opportunities to support affordable housing efforts in mobile home communities in the long term.
All councilmembers were present for the virtual discussion as well as Andy Kadlec, a program
director from Thistle, who provided information on Thistle’s involvement in the process.
DISCUSSION SUMMARY:
Council's discussion ranged across several questions, ideas, and concerns. Specific items
included:
▪ Inquiries about the level of interest and participation of Hickory Village residents towards
making an offer to purchase the park, and what types of role Thistle, a non-profit technical
assistance provider, is providing in the process.
▪ Questions about the how financing a ROC is typically arranged and what types of
resources other jurisdictions and partners have provided in support of ROCs (e.g., grants,
loans, or other federal/state funding resources).
▪ Concern about any potential risks to the City if financial assistance is provided, as well as
the limited timeline to consider and develop a deal.
▪ Questions about the history and funding provided by the City’s prior down payment
assistance program.
▪ Ideas and questions about other types of long-term solutions to support ROCs, such as
proactive communication to residents about the process, application of city programs such
as broadband equity and Epic Home programs, what role Housing Catalyst could provide,
or if the City itself should consider owning and operating a park.
April 28, 2020 Council Work Session Summary Page 2
Manufactured Housing Zoning & Residents’ Rights Update
COUNCIL DIRECTION:
▪ Need to be clear about how any financial involvement from the City contributes towards
policy goals for affordable housing and preservation.
▪ In the short term, the Hickory Village sale and the opportunity for a ROC is a learning
experience and staff should continue to provide information, education, and convene
stakeholders and partners during the process.
▪ The City could consider financial assistance options in both the Hickory Village example
in the short term, and opportunities for programs that align with the Housing Strategic
Plan.
▪ Staff will meet with Thistle to determine potential resource amounts and how assistance
is best applied. Examples include deferred rent funds to help limit immediate increases in
lot rents, a subordinate financing position, providing closing/legal costs, or grants.
▪ Long term strategies should be developed to operationalize partnerships and financial
efforts for future mobile home park sales and closures. Given the limited timeline to provide
assistance, the City needs to have more proactive measures and guidance in place.
▪ Efforts should continue for capacity building in parks and to enhance local enforcement of
state laws.
Follow-up & Next Steps
▪ Staff is planning to provide an update and additional information on potential financial
assistance options at the next Council Finance Meeting on April 19, 2021.
Apr 19, 2021
Hickory Village Mobile Home Park Sale
2
Direction Sought
1)Does financial support of resident owned communities of mobile home parks
align with the City’s strategic goals for affordable housing?
2)Should the City engage in discussions to be a financial partner in support of a
potential purchase of Hickory Village in the event residents move forward with
an offer to purchase the mobile home park?
Overview: Hickory Village Sale
Hickory Village Mobile Home Park
Located along Hickory Street, west of
N. College Ave
Approximately 205 units
Notice of sale published on March 3, 2021
Recent state legislation requires a 90-
day notice before sale occurs
Sale price: $23 million
3
Resident Ownership Opportunity
90-day sale notice also provides opportunity for
residents to submit an offer to purchase.
If accepted, offer would create a resident
owned community (ROC).
Thistle, a ROC technical assistance provider, is
meeting with Hickory Village residents and local
partners.
Education & training
Determining interest & feasibility
Prior involvement in other Colorado ROC's
4
Sale / Opportunity to Purchase Timeline
MAR 3:Notice of sale. Triggers 90-day notice & opportunity to purchase period
MAR 9:City receives mailed Hickory Village sale notice
MAR 15: Staff meet with Mi Voz Leaders’ Council to discuss Hickory Village sale and
outline potential paths
MAR 18: Staff meet with Thistle to discuss sale and feasibility/history of other ROCs
in Colorado
MAR 25: Thistle meets with Hickory Village residents to discuss ROC process
APR 3:Follow-up meeting between Thistle and Hickory Village residents.The
majority of participating residents want to pursue a ROC.
JUN 1: End of 90-day opportunity to purchase period
5
ROC Overview
Resident Owned Communities (ROC):
Resident cooperative is formed to purchase and operate their mobile
home community
Cooperative owns the land and operates the community; better
alignment with resident priorities
Lot rent, park rules, maintenance & amenities
ROC's promote City policy goals:
Preservation / stabilization of existing manufactured housing
Alignment and accountability to resident priorities
Residents’ rights and livability improvements
Housing Strategic Plan
6
ROC Challenges
Difficult to organize and arrange financing within 90 days
Hickory Village ~48 days into process (as of 4/19/21)
Need a willing seller and must compete against private buyers
Seller is not required to sell to residents, only to consider the
residents' offer in good faith
Typically requires a large majority of resident support / participation
One-time buy-in required to form cooperative
A rent increase upon transition to a ROC is likely
Few local examples
First ROC's in Colorado began several years ago
Financial assistance by state and local entities have been required
7
City Engagement Roles:Hickory Village
Already convenor and facilitator
Provide engagement and facilitation throughout the process
Connect residents with community partners and MHC owners
Financial support?
Low or no interest loans
Grants
Down payment assistance
Source of funding?
8
9
Direction Sought
1)Does financial support of resident owned communities of mobile home parks
align with the City’s strategic goals for affordable housing?
2)Should the City engage in discussions to be a financial partner in support of a
potential purchase of Hickory Village in the event residents move forward with
an offer to purchase the mobile home park?
Back Up slides
10
City Engagement Role:Long-Term
Resident Engagement:
Organizing resident associations
Roadmap to ROC
Owner Engagement:
Clarity on state law and selling options
Financial Support:
Designated ROC fund, loan, or grant program
Partnerships with community funding organizations
11