Fort Worth Business Press, May 12, 2014 Vol. 26, No. 18 | Page 13
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fwbusinesspress.com | May 12 - 18, 2014
13
Fort Worth makes changes to incentive
policy on affordable housing
n Scott Nishimura
[email protected]
F
ort Worth is making changes to its
economic developing incentive
policy that will allow residential
developers who accept public money
to choose between setting aside a certain number of affordable-rate housing units or paying cash into a local
housing trust.
Each deal will be subject to city staff
and City Council review on whether
there’s already enough affordablerate housing within a short radius
around the proposed development. If
there is, the city may allow the developer the choice.
The council voted 7-2 on May 6 to
approve, with Council members Kelly
Allen Gray of District 8 and Jungus
Jordan of District 6 voting no. Gray
has objected to the policy change to
offer choice, arguing the city has too
great a need for affordable housing
and it will take too long for the trust
to build enough cash to do any good.
With new development continuing
to rush into the area, “who is going
MORE INFORMATION
www.fortworthgov.org
May 6, 2014 Council Packet
to work there, and where are they going to live?” are key questions, Gray
said on May 6. “I think it is incumbent upon as a council and the city of
Fort Worth have an affordable housing policy,” she added.
The council earlier this year let two
developments – Clearfork and Waterside, both in the path of the Chisholm Trail Parkway – pay into a
housing trust instead of setting aside
affordable housing units in their developments.
The council action codified the
choice. Developers not setting aside
affordable housing units would pay
$200 per unit in their development
per year they are receiving a city incentive into a city trust.
Money from the trust could be used
for anything from building new affordable housing to rehab, depending
on a policy to be formulated by the
Fort Worth Housing Finance Corp.,
and it would target the neighborhoods where affordable housing for
the lowest-income families is most
needed – those earning 30 percent or
less of area median income.
“We think it’s going to provide a
lot more flexibility and allow us to
respond to market conditions,” Jay
Chapa, the city’s housing and economic development director, said
May 6.
The need for affordable-rate housing is most significant at the lowest
income levels, city data shows.
Measuring affordability of rental housing for households earning
30 percent of area median income,
there’s a shortfall of 16,000 residential units, Chapa said.
But at 60 percent and 80 percent of
area median income, there’s a surplus
of 17,000 affordable-rate units, he
said. The city’s incentive policy has
been aimed at the 80-percent level.
Chapa estimated that if the new
policy had been applied to 11 city res-
“My goal is more
affordable housing
and more affordable
housing at the level
we are missing.”
– Danny Scarth, District 4 Councilman
idential incentive agreements dating
to 2005, it would produce $9 million
for the housing trust over the lives of
those agreements.
The agreements, as constructed,
have provided 367 affordable-rate
units, but none for households earning 30 percent of area median income
or less.
“My goal is more affordable housing and more affordable housing at
the level we are missing,” District 4
Councilman Danny Scarth said. “We
do have the option to create some
dollars, and then we can very specifically and directly create some units.
I’m willing to give it a shot.” n